Obrazy na stronie
PDF
ePub

Have a flock bed

over your featherbed.

On rising, remember God, brush your breeches, put on

your hose, stretch,

[* Fol. E. iii.]

go to stool.

or els of pure flockes or of cleane wolle, and let the couerynge of it be of whyte fustyan, and laye it on the fetherbed that you do lye on; and in your bed lye not to hote nor to colde, but in a temporaunce. Olde auncyent Doctors of physicke sayth .viii. howres of slepe in sommer, and ix. in wynter, is suffycent for any man: but I do thynke that slepe ought to be taken as the complexion of man is. Whan you do ryse in the mornynge, ryse with myrth and remembre God. Let your hosen be brusshed within & without, and flauer the insyde of them agaynst the fyre; vse lynnen sockes, or lynnen hosen nexte your legges : whan you be out of your bedde, stretche forth your *legges & armes, & your body; cough, and spytte, and than go to your stoole to make your egestyon, and exonerate youre selfe at all tymes, that nature wolde expell. For yf you do make any restryction in kepynge your egestyon or your vryne, or ventosyte, it maye put you to dyspleasure in breadynge dyuers infyrmyties. After you haue euacuated your bodye, & trussed your poyntes,' kayme your heade oft, and so do dyuers tymes wash your hands in the day. And wasshe your handes & wrestes, your face, & eyes, and your teeth, with colde water; and after yt you be apparayled, walke in your gardyn or parke, a thousande pase or two. And than great and noble men doth vse to here masse, & other men that can not do so, but muste applye theyr busynes, doth serue god with some prayers, surrendrynge thankes to hym for hys manyfolde goodnes, with askynge mercye

Truss your points, comb your head,

and face,

take a stroll,

pray to God.

Of Frication

1 Fricacion is one of the euacuacions, yea, or clensynges of mankinde, as all the learned affirmeth: that mankinde should rise in the mornyng, and haue his apparell warme, stretchyng foorthe his handes and legges. Preparyng the bodie to the stoole, and then and combing the begin with a fine Combe, to kembe the heere vp and down: then with a course warme clothe, to chafe or rubbe the hedde, necke, breast, armeholes, bellie, thighes, &c., and this is good to open the pores. 1562 Bullein's Bulwarke, The booke of the vse of sicke men and medicenes, fol. lxvij. See Vaughan below, No. 2, p. 249.

head,

And before you go to your refec

for theyr offences. ti*on, moderatly exercise your body with some labour, [* Fol. E. iii. b.] or playeng at the tennys, or castyng a bowle, or paysyng Play at tennis, weyghtes or plommettes of leede in your handes, or

some other thyng, to open your poores, & to augment

1

or wield weights.

naturall heate. At dyner and supper vse not to drynke At meals, sundry drynkes, and eate not of dyuers meates: but

dishes;

let supper-dishes

be light.

feede of .ii. or .iii. dysshes at the moste. After that eat only of 2 or 3 you haue dyned and supte, laboure not by and by after, but make a pause, syttynge or standynge vpryght the space of an howre or more with some pastyme: drynke not moch after dyner. At your supper, vse lyght meates of dygestyon, and refrayne from grose meates; go not to bed with a full nor an emptye stomacke. And after your supper make a pause or you go to bed; and go to bed, as I sayde, with myrth. Furthermore as concernynge your apparell. wynter, next your shert vse you to weare a petycote of Wear a scarlet scarlet your dowb*let vse at plesure: But I do aduertyse you to lyne your Iacket vnder this fasshyon or maner. Bye you fyne skynnes of whyte lambe & blacke lambe. And let your skynner cut both y sortes of the skynnes in smale peces triangle wyse, lyke halfe And than sewe a quarell of a glasse wyndowe. togyther a whyte pece and a blacke, lyke a whole. quarell of a glasse wyndowe: and so sewe vp togyther

In

1 Drunkards, bench-wislers, that will quaffe untill thei are starcke staring madde like Marche Hares: Fleming-like Sinckars; brainlesse like infernall Furies. Drinkyng, braulyng, tossyng of the pitcher, staryng, pissyng*, and sauyng your reuerence, beastly spuyng vntill midnight. Therefore let men take hede of dronkennes to bedward, for feare of sodain death: although the Flemishe† nacion vse this horrible custome in their vnnaturall watching all the night. Bullein, fol. lxix-lxx, see also fol. xj.

* Compare A. Borde of the "base Doche man," in his Introduction.
+ I am a Flemyng, what for all that

Although I wyll be dronken other whyles as a rat.
A. Borde, Introduction.

pety cote.
[* Fol. B. iv.]

Have a jacket

of white and black diamond-wise.

lambskin sewn

[* MS. a a]

Keep your neck kepe euer your necke warme.

warm.

Wear goatskin gloves.

on grass or stones.

quarell wyse as moche as wyll lyne your Iacket: this furre, for holsommes, is praysed aboue sables, or any other fur. Your exteryall aparel vse accordyng to your honour. In sommer vse to were a scarlet petycote made of stamell or lynse wolse. In wynter and sommer kepe not your bed to hote, nor bynde it to strayte; In somer kepe your necke and face from the sonne; vse to wear gloues made of goote skyn, perfumed with Amber degrece. [* Fol. E. iv. b.] And beware in standyng or lyeng on the *grounde in the reflection of the sonne, but be mouable. If thou Don't stand long shalt common or talke with any man: stande not styll in one place yf it be vpon y bare grounde, or grasse, or stones: but be mouable in suche places. Stande nor syt vpon no stone or stones: Stande nor syt longe barehed vnder a vawte of stone. Also beware that you do not lye in olde chambres which be not occupyed, specyally suche chambres as myse and rattes and snayles resorteth vnto: lye not in suche chambres, the whiche be depreued cleane from the sonne and open ayre; nor lye in no lowe Chambre, excepte it be boorded. BeDon't take cold in ware that you take no colde on your feete and legges. And of all weather beware that you do not ryde nor go in great and Impytous wyndes. (a Compendyous Regyment or a Dyetary of helth, made in Mountpylior: ComPyled by Andrewe Boorde, of Physicke Doctor. (Colophon.) Imprinted by me Robert Wyer: Dwellynge at the sygne of seynt John Euangelyst, in S. Martyns Parysshe, besyde Charynge Crosse.)

Don't sleep in ratty rooms.

your feet.

William Vaughan's

Fifteen Directions to preserve Health.

(From his Naturall & Artificial Directions
for health, 1602, p. 57-63.)

Declare vnto mee a dayly dyet, whereby I may liue in health, and not trouble my selfe in Physicke.

:

yourself.

(1) I will first of all in the morning when you 1. Stretch are about to rise vp, stretch your self strongly for thereby the animall heate is somewhat forced into the outward partes, the memorie is quickned, and the bodie strengthened.

(2) Secondarily, rub and chafe your body with the 2. Rub yourself. palmes of your hands, or with a course linnen cloth; the breast, back, and belly, gently: but the armes, thighes, and legges roughly, till they seem ruddy and

warme.

(3) Euacuate your selfe.

8. Go to stool.

clothes.

(4) Put on your apparell: which in the summer 4. Put on your time must be for the most part silke, or buffe, made of buckes skinne, for it resisteth venime and contagious ayres in winter your vpper garment must be of cotton or friezeadow.

head.

(5) When you have apparelled your selfe han- 5. Comb your somely, combe your head softly and easily with an Iuorie combe: for nothing recreateth the memorie

more.

(6) Picke and rub your teeth: and because I 6. Clean your would not haue you to bestow much cost in making

teeth.

(How to keep the

teeth sound and

the breath sweet,

Use Vaughan's
Water

dentrifices for them; I will aduertise you by foure rules of importance how to keepe your teeth white and vncorruyt (sic), and also to haue a sweete breath. First, wash well your mouth when you haue eaten your meat secondly, sleepe with your mouth somewhat open. Thirdly, spit out in the morning that which is gathered together that night in the throate: then take a linnen cloth, and rub your teeth well within and without, to take away the fumositie of the meat and the yellownesse of the teeth. For it is that which putrifieth them and infecteth the breath. But least peraduenture your teeth become loose and filthy, I will shew you a water farre better then pouders, which shall fasten them, scoure the mouth, make sound the gums, and cause the flesh to growe againe, if it were fallen away. Take halfe a glasse-full of vineger, and as much of the water of the mastick tree (if it may easily be gotten) of rosemarie, myrrhe, mastick, bole Armoniake, Dragons herbe, roche allome, of each of them an ounce; of fine cinnamon halfe an ounce, and of fountaine water three glassefulles; mingle all well together and let it boile with a small fire, adding to it halfe a pound of honie, and taking away the scumme of it; then put in a little bengwine, and when it hath sodden a quarter of an houre, take it from the fire, and keepe it in a cleane bottle, and wash your teeth therewithall as well before meate as after; if you hould some of it in your mouth a little while, it doth much good to the head, and sweetneth the breath. I take this water to be better worth then a thousand of 1000 Dentrifices.) their dentifrices.

made after this recipe.

It's better than

7. Wash.

(7) Wash your face, eyes, eares and hands, with fountaine water. I have knowne diuers students which vsed to bathe their eyes onely in well water twise a day, whereby they preserued their eyesight free from all passions and bloudsheds, and sharpened

« PoprzedniaDalej »