The marrow of physicke. Or, a learned discourse of the severall parts of mans body. Being a Medicamentary teaching the maner and way of making ... such oiles, unguents, sirrups ... pilles, &c ... as shall be usefull and necessary in any private house ... And also an addition of divers experimented medicines. Which may serve against any disease that shall happen to the body. Together with some rare receipts for beauties, and the newest and best way of preserving and conserving: with divers other secrets never before published ... / Collected ... by ... T. B., Gen. Practitioner in Physicke and Chyrurgery.
- Thomas Brugis
- Date:
- 1640
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: The marrow of physicke. Or, a learned discourse of the severall parts of mans body. Being a Medicamentary teaching the maner and way of making ... such oiles, unguents, sirrups ... pilles, &c ... as shall be usefull and necessary in any private house ... And also an addition of divers experimented medicines. Which may serve against any disease that shall happen to the body. Together with some rare receipts for beauties, and the newest and best way of preserving and conserving: with divers other secrets never before published ... / Collected ... by ... T. B., Gen. Practitioner in Physicke and Chyrurgery. Source: Wellcome Collection.
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![anger Anger,is a fuddainc revocation or calling back the fpi- , rits to-the cxternall parts withadefirc of revenge j it ^ at catileth the fame effufion ofheatein us asjoy doth,but farre fpeedier; it inflameth the whole habitude of the body, fpirits, and humours. and alio the braines, and nerves. _ , - . Sorrow, dries and waftes the body by a lingring con- Grief*] furoption, beetle by it the heart is ftraitned,the heat ex- tin#, and the fpirits cannot be generated, nor if any be, yet they cannot freely pafle into the members with the bloud. p , Feare,is a motion which calles back and drawes in the J‘t4rei fpirits to the heart by the artcries,and not by little, and little, as (orrow, but fuddcnly, and violently which fuf- focateth the naturall heatc, caufeth trembling, maketh the face pale, and the extrearae parts cold, with an uni- verlall fhaking and puliation of the heart. Shame, is a motion of our body, mixedof anger, and shtmel fcarejangcr for being fufpe#cd or knownc in a fault,and fearing the judgement of others; if learc prevaile over anger, the factwaxeth pale, the blond running back to the hca rt.but if anger get the deminion,then on the con¬ trary,the bloud runnes to the face,and the cies look red j but there is another kind of lhamc which we calllhamc- . , faftnes, in which the bloud goes, and comes forward, and backward, but it is a gen'Ie motion not hurting the * heart, and is familiar to yong maids, who often blulh by being taken with a fault unawares. Thcle thirds ought to be confidered by every pra#iti- oner in the curing of any difeale jfor if any accident hap¬ pen that lhall procure any one or more of thefc pertur¬ bations and pailk>ns,you lhall cafily perceive a luddain# . ' ' alteration](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b30321001_0099.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)