The breuiarie of health vvherin doth folow, remedies, for all maner of sicknesses & diseases, the which may be in man or woman. Expressing the obscure termes of Greke, Araby, Latin, Barbary, and English, concerning phisick and chirurgerie. Compyled by Andrew Boord, Doctor of phisicke: an English-man.

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Title
The breuiarie of health vvherin doth folow, remedies, for all maner of sicknesses & diseases, the which may be in man or woman. Expressing the obscure termes of Greke, Araby, Latin, Barbary, and English, concerning phisick and chirurgerie. Compyled by Andrew Boord, Doctor of phisicke: an English-man.
Author
Boorde, Andrew, 1490?-1549.
Publication
Imprinted at London :: By Thomas East,
1587.
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Subject terms
Medicine -- Early works to 1800.
Cite this Item
"The breuiarie of health vvherin doth folow, remedies, for all maner of sicknesses & diseases, the which may be in man or woman. Expressing the obscure termes of Greke, Araby, Latin, Barbary, and English, concerning phisick and chirurgerie. Compyled by Andrew Boord, Doctor of phisicke: an English-man." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A16466.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 6, 2024.

Pages

The 329. Chapter doth shew of a mans spirit.

SPiritus is the latin word. In gréeke it is named Pnoae or Pneuma. In English it is named a spirite, I doe not pre∣tend héere to speake of any spirite in heauen or in hell, nor no other spirit but onely of the spirits in man, in the which doth consist the life of man, and there be thrée, natural, ani∣mall, and vitall: the naturall spirit resteth in the head, the animall spirit doth rest in the liuer, and the vitall spirit re∣steth in the heart of man

To comfort and to reioyce these spirites.

First liue out of sin, and folow Christes doctrine, and then vse honest mirth, and honest company, and vse to eate good meate, and drinke moderately. For this matter, looke in the Chapter named Anima.

For Squame, looke in ye Extrauag. in ye ende of this booke

For Squinancia, looke in the Chap. named Angina.

Notes

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