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Curperer’s ASTROLOGICALL _ JUDGMENT DISEASE 5 From the Decumbiture of'the fick + much Enlarged, 1.Fron Aven Ezra by way of Introds Tiom 2.From Noel Duret by way of Diredtion, Wherein is lad down, The way ind manner of finding out the Gaufe, Change, and End of thedifeate, Alto ‘wheeler the Sick be likely co live or die; and the Time when Recorery or Death is cobe expected, Wiel the Signs of Life or Death by the hody of the Siclt purcy, according to chejudy veut of H-ppacrater. Whereunts is ated, - A Table of Logifticall Logacithies, to finde the exact time of he Grif. Henne Tfneas upon the Bk De- rate of ee fick : ewing the Gghs & cone ures dieaand of life and dah, bythe good orev pofkion of tie Moo at the,uae of Phe Patents Iying downy ordaninding che ston: Tvl fgos 0 fvow of what complexion any pions whasfever Wiha compendious Treatile of Urine, By NICHOLAS CULPERER,Gem, Student in Phyfick and Aftroligies Di esfidiracalar fore fv esi, oades, Printed for AlztP,Brovles at the Golden Angel oa Corubityueer the Bxcbange, 1655, ASTROLOGICALL PHTSITIANS OF ENGLAND, NicHGLAs CuLpEreER mifheth peace and profperity in this World, and eternall beatitude in that abich is to come, Desre Soules, 10. you all, and toyouefpecially that heard thefe Lecturesdo I de- _.dicate them, and prefent them to you, not to look upon onely (for then I ad as good have fent you a piéture, and las much it would have pleafed your eye.) Man was madenot onely for fpe- culation, but alfofor prattices fpecula- tion brings onely pleafure toa mans fel, itspractice which benefits others; And ThopeI need not tell you chat man was A3 not The Epiftle. notborn for himfelfalone, Thee Rules will ferve (ifheedfully obferved by th: eyeof Reafon) to ballance your judg. mentin fayling through the Prognotti. cal part ofPhylick thet fo you may fteer your courte by the Card of Truth , and ot float unfetledly upon the waves of Exrour, Ignorance or Opinion, To you (ratherhen toany that I know) belongs the practice of Phyficksand that Prattice may be perfedt, Judgement ought to be found sandto make judgement found,is required an exquifite knowledge. Judge- ‘ment is perfected by knowledge, ‘know. ledge by experience:whenceit appeares, that the_more communicative kno edge is,fo much the more excellent itis, OF all ‘the men in the world I hate a drone moft that fucks the fwectneffe of other mens labours, but doth no good himfelfesand will as foon teach Phyfick or Aftrology to an Oake, xs to a creature thecenter of whofe actions is terminated inhimfelfe, Surely, furely, If God had not made thenature of man communi- cative,he would not have made one man to ftandiacontinuall need of another: but wefee the contrary, and the fons of wifdome know how to pick oat the incaning of God from it. The Epiftle. Thave given you here all my Prog-_ proftications frem the Decumbiture of he fick party: And although T ingen fully confefle the greateft part of them vill hold true, ina Horarie Queftion e~ bcded upon the fight of the Urine; of hvhich T have now added compendious catifesyct thisis my judgement at pre- ae That next the Nativity, theDe- [cumbiture isthe fafeftand fureft ground for you tobuild your judgement upons and you Shall always find it by experie @ ipxecllent and true was that Motto of Hermes Trefmegifus, Quod oft Juperins, fi fiensinferinssand this will appeare to theeye of every one that deferves the name ofareafonable mar, if he do but confider, That his body is made of the fame materials that the whole Univerfe is made of , thengh not in the fame formes namely of a compofition of con- i There is fearcea man breathing that _knowes his right hand irom his Ieft, but knowes that if you fet bottles of hot water to a mans feet, it wil rrakebis head fweats and therea~ s,tke mutual harreny of one part ofthe kedy with anothers why en we ~ The Epiftle. well fhould not the sine of bne partof the Creation produce as well effects in a. nother, that being alfo one entire body, compofed of the fame elements, and in| as great harmony ? What's the reafon| that aman wil doe more for his brother then he wil fora ftranger ? is it not be.| caufe he is formed by the blood of the fame mother,and begotten by the feed of | the fame Father? Why then fhould not thie Celeftial bodies aff upon the Terefti-. all, they being made of the fame matter, and by the finger of the fame God? He that willnot beleeve Keaton, let him be- leeve Experiences the that will beleive neither, ts litle better then an Infidel, I confelfe this way of Judicature hath been defired by many’. promifed by fomes but hitherto performed by'nones which was the motive caufe I then took the taskein hand my: felfe, which Ihave now ela “In performing whereof, in wfany’plces I corrected the faylings ot _my'Author, What was frivolous I eft oi€ "ns being unwilling to blot pa- per,and trouble your brains with imper- tinencies : where he was too large, 1 abbreviated. him sand where he was de- ficient fupplied’ him both with Pre- cept The Epifile. cept and example. If there be any faix lings,confider, 1 Nemo fine crimine vivit. That man nev'r breathed yet,nor never fhall, ‘that did all well,and bad no fault at al ’. My failings (if any be) were not in- tentional,but accidental 5 together with this Aftrlogicall judgement, have al fo gi- ven you the judgement of Hippocrates, and others. The rules whercof are drawn from the perfon of the ficks which al- though they have been often printed before , yet {have compated them with theoriginal Copy,and brought them in- toa phiner method, fothat you may have your defire at one fingleingreffe. If you makeufe of both thele waies toge= ther in judging of the difeafe, without a miracle you can hardly faite. fan frule with the thortnelic of my rules, them learn to walk worthy of thofe they have firltstheir own experience wil bring them mores he'sbue an apith Phyfician that builds all his pratlice upon other mens foundations: Man was born to look. afer knowledge, and in this particular you are fet in the way how to finde it, by one that defires to be a friend to all honeft and ingenuous Arts. eftand inge: . a The Epiftle. ‘Thus have you what Fhave done, and you know for whofe fakes! did ite What Yow remains, but that you labour with sight and ine for your own good, al the inereafe of your own knowledge to make experience of them? For sethe diligent hand maketh tich,(o the diligent mind eneveafeth knowledge 5 and formy own particular, never feare , but during the timel amamongft the living, I thall never ceafe to doe you good in’ what may or can, Spittleafields, next dove rothe Red-lyon, Nich. Culpeper. seesSeaetfesttasclcgeels Se Rea pee THE STATIONER tothe Reader. tcous Reader 1 is not unknown mith how great an ap- planfe this book, was attended when it was Jie made publique, For it overcame the envy of malicious tongnes with the generall gost ‘nbronebt, in difclofing even to ncan capaci~ ties the rareft andl decpoft myfteries of Pby- fike gic tllnow were concealed and lockt zp imunkxoon Larager 5 without he f= jase of large commendations advancing its ‘nen rejutation, amd the perpen of that raft noble Screncce Which when the Author {aiwfo wel approved by ner of judgement be nus not a little encouraged 10 takgit toa fe« cond review, that be might rot only reforme the crrours which caply might be overjiips it the beat of the frft conpefurcybut alfo enrich j with Annotations & additions of bis om. But erc he could perform this, Death took hime may , leaving noneto perfell spbat be bad iecam ad fro who with that diligence and indafiryendeavonred to be more accompliit 4a either To the Reader, cither in the fpeculution or the pratdiceof abut he profejed. Yet being unwilling that Jo good a werk fhould die with him, heen truficd bis Papers with Jome of bis neereft Jescids to be Publifked with thofé Experiens ces which he was forced to leave behind him, ‘Thus at length they came to our bands, and not till.al kengths which was the reafon that for atinse we fiaflrated not onely ow own promifes, Lut deceived the expetfations of o= ther mer, Eut tis hoped , Courteous Readers that now you know the canfe of the delay, you ill cafly grant our pardon, ‘and accept ta» ther late, then never, this Lecacy of a dying man,bequcathed to younpon his death-bed on theconficlence of bis former prathfic and.ex~ povience, Yours NatH. BRooKE. ATable or Contents of the Book. Bram Aven Exia of Criticall dayes, , bring an Invrodulion coche worke, page Neceliry Quettions anfwered abour the Crilis in Ditcales. Pe ne Chiper i. “The Definition of the word Ciifiies uel, ids, divifion and diflerence, Pig chapter 2. Re ‘The way co find our the Criticall days, a5 alfo the Decumbiture, both by ancient and moderne wee. chapter 3. : ofthe Sympathy and Anpthy of che sigh and Planes . Chapter 4. ‘The way of finding oue the Criticall and I M Dayesby a figure of cighe houless P3t i ‘Chapter $. ‘An Example of «he figure of cight houfes,and judge- ment uponit 34 ‘h Synopfis ar joyne.view of the'caleulation. Ps 37 ‘A Judgeimenc upon the ftce of Heaven at the Decurt- biture, Pe 4t Chaps 6 “The way to feta figure of 14. lous illuftcated by aDecumbiture judged pon. p44 &47 chapter. How to feta figure of ewelve loute for the Crifis. p48 The esample judged. P50, chapter. To ind cheexaft me ofthe Criisby a Table of Lor ~ The Table, fillical Logarithmes and Examples p. Chaper 9, Ae Twelve cert circa cen premiere the Prog Chater to Ba Fighecen go Pi x _qfisteen tevell ropofcations of the it Pat. A Difeaes each Plance figuiles. PB Part. ° What Difeafes difin ua seit Dif cindy te under erry fie of te aoe Part no piiiepaiarnas and mene of the body every ‘The pela of theo ae fgues Rihe Lodoek and Houta he heavens ee all thefe che Error ACS he Eros of authors ae coed by ibid Chatter 11. How the nature, and kind foam out by the Deenabitre ped doen al Ss fomd ut bythe Decunbrre layed down in 2 Shaper va. How to know whether ale be is oo iam gon whch the Dive be in the min Chapter Pits - _ How to know whar part of he body i and olnow whe afided. Pt Chater fi Whether th mi eater he Diefetal blongo Hert, moto Part. ee Signes of thore of ong fickne(Te in so. Aphorifns, Panta, ae Signes of life at the Decumbiture in 16 Aphoritines, pat Part 3. ‘the Table. Pant 3. siquesodeach at the Pecumbieare in. 44 ‘Apho- ines, Py2s win trnegii pon the fete Decanbiare of he Jskeby te puiton of the Moon. pz a i eevaions from Cadanyother exper PHY sian, with atonal Figures p33, Fear wee and ceath by the body of he fick paver pst Chapter 1. . pss pers pis £5 ibid ibid 51 pict ibid pi pein 9.073 ‘Peelges by a face 7 te Ihceyes and LDS Wee) ee mae of ying in bed rcs he eet dre adc and ies Fetesby the hands Prelages by the breath Pretages by the fERKe Wictaes by tom Veelages by apottiumes. Prefages by droptics im feavers. Prelages cf life and death Prefages by te ccficles, pig Peelags by leering. : ibid Ferme by ee excrement of che eltyin fevers F178 Meee by windin cRebowells and wom Ps ne res ume in fears Pi Pretges by vom it feavers i Vrefges hy foie im feavers. Prefages by taeezing in feavers. Meee oflappurato in apothame. Me ofthe katonsin apofianes Prefaes of apoftames avout ee cares. Prcties of pothumes inthe Fee ee bladder in Faves Prelages im, feavers. Vielaes of the atinleys eefsgesty the Uivala. Treiages of vomiting in feavers feavers: P. 9 p36 pat P99 ia The Table, Infalibe gn vo dicern of what complexion ay pesfon is. pei Signs ofa Cholerick Melancholy man. * pay Signs of a Melancholy; Cholerickman, ay. Signs of Melancholy’ man, Signs of Melancholy Sanguine man. Signs ofa Sanguine Melancholy man, Signes of a Sanguine man, Signs ofa Sanguine Plegmatick man.) Signs ofa Plepimatick sanguine man, Signs of Phlegmatick man Signs of a Phlegmatick Choterick man, Signes of a Cholerick Phlegaaick man, The Table to theTreatife of Urines,, Chapter, 1, OF Biiege Bloat, Chapter. 2, ‘Oftheinflammation of the Reins, Chapter. 3, Of the ftone in the Reins, 4 aR. 154. Piss, Pest. Chapter, Oftinweatrabe pita P16h, hapler. §. # «Of Ulcersin the Reines. P.r6st Chapter. 9. eee OfBlood curdled inthe bladder, Pads, 7 Chapter. 8 OF Inflammation in the bladder, Chapter. 9, ‘Oftilcers in the blader. Chapter. io, Pi6y. P.168, Ofthe Strangury. P70, Pein. Cop. Chapter, n, » Of dMculty ot uring” ‘The Table, Chapter: 12. sopping ofthe Urine, ‘Of fopping of t ‘Chapter. 13+ ftileersin the Yard. ifed a Table of explanation of fond words in one piece of the book; buchaving looked over the book, {can find none but thofe at that placewhich can exceed almoft the meanctt capacity. "The words there re thefe three, Uvula, Gargareon, Columella + the fignifcation of themisall one: Tihall tell you “y. se What ie fblanee and placeis, fee are . The hala Gargarcon or Columella chnfeyou whether, isa red {pungy piece fh ficking co the roof of the mouth neare oad Its ules are Z 1 Togivepleafantne(to the voice theree fore in hoarceneffe this is aftlited, 2.To fay theairthac it paffe"not too fat upon he Lungs heer fh a hve cannot fing well. ; Be elon fach liquid ehings ase eat, from comming out at our Nofes. Pig. Paint Yours, Nich. Culpeper. x Reader, Theft Books following are print Son Nath Brookssord ov toleralla ta Shop at the Angel in Cornhil, ; 1Pimes Trealary or Acadeny for G r ny for € for their acomplithmen im Arguments cshabicsfalhions {amming ip ail ina sof Honour. by ReBrethman Big, 2+ Morton on the Steramns in fol tatecllen yi of Bayon ak Hic Mecoputeopie, the S) rt Prapovtigs and al Molesof debate fabje%t of Dicams: to which is added che are of Memory. By Randers Fo ot Theatron Chemican Britannicums conti ileal Poca ie of oor famous ExglibPhilfophery which have wee the ermstique Myferies-in.cheic antient Lan- gage dhe truly noble Ba le By _§- Chivomancy: or,theart of divining by Eiesigavn i dot man Uy Dae ataresin 19 Genituresswich a learned difcone ofthe the Woy Geol barony wales oe Hoy, colle and gathered owe of Seipre, Cella ancient Father i ante to D Pane’ Lf ene rettaed bone, 7 Edin Chifentule Bl, cient 9. Talimstviea, or, the Geor 9. Taloniriay metry of Regus Br fer a nev mates in Salty with le fallicerimencs with new Expense ne fore ceemsfor Ganzi A worke afl .aremploged in the Art Metvicall, By yi ro Ar Atologict!t di ookt fald by Nath.Brooks. rations proving, the influence "ined lars upon Elementary 7 Sic Chr. Heydon Knight, on fick Atrology vindicated by H.JVarren rasAn Aleologicalljudgenene ‘of difeafes tical! Demont jon the Decumbieure ofthe fick: alfo theway jot tinding 6ue the caute,changeand cnd of a di- Healesallo whether the fick be likely to live or Five, The fecond Edicion much enlarged by ich Culpeper” 13 Caturaphe Magnatun by NeCulpeper. 1 sEphererdes forthe year 1652.by N-Culpe * e fosicial ‘Attrology vindicatedjand Da monolozy confared By 17. Ranféy, Gente 16, The Hiftory of the Golden Als. 17. The Painting of the Antients, The begin~ ninggprogre(& confamating ofthat noble Art Hiiels edemption,or the propheticall Hiftory ofourSavicnrs kingdom on Ear theby R.Mation, 18,An Introduétion tothe Teutonick Philo- 2 a determination of the Original fophy, being cine Soul, by C. Hotham, Fellow of Peter houfe in Camb. 19. Teratalgiasory a difcovery of Gods won ders, manifefcd in former and moderne times by Bloody Rain and Waters,By 1S. : 20.Fovs Lachrywaruszor,a tountain of Tears, sith an Elegy upon Sir Ch.Lwcasby LQuarles 8 a1, Oedipgs. oF a Refolver of Secrets in Nav ture, Bc refolution of Amorous 5; Navural. Pro blems. By G Mf. ae The Celetial Lamp, enlightning every fred foul from the depth of everlafting 23. dark. By Tho, Fettiplacee Books fold by Nath.Brooks 43, Noftinenal Lricubrations, with Epigea and Epitaphs,By X. Chamberlain, 24, The unfortunate Mother.A Tragedy, § ‘Tho, Nabi, 7 “a, The Rebellion, A Comedy,By TR, Tragedy of Mefalinaby Ne Richard a7. K ‘treatife of Contentation, Fit for chef fad and troublefom times, By Jo).Hall late Bf Exoh and Norwich. 28, The grand Sactiledge of the Church o Romesin taking away the Sacred Cup from thd Laity atthe LordsTable,by Daniel Fégtly DD 4g. The caufe & cure of Ignorance 5 Error. Prophayefts or,a more hopeful way to Grace Salvation. By R, Young.8. 30, A Bridle for the times, tending to file murmuring, to fettle the wavering, to fay the wandering , to flrengthen the fainting 5 by Brinfley Minifter ac Yarmouth, 31.Comforts againft che fear of deathswhere in are feveral evidences of the work of Grace,by| JGollins of Norwich. 32, Jucob’s feed:orythe excellency of fecking God by prayersby Jer.Burronghs, Minitter of the Gofpel at Stepney and Cripplegate . 33. The Zealous Magittcate, a Sermon "ty Tho. Threfeit. 34, Britannia Rediviva, a Sermon befote tlie Judges, Aug. 1649. by J. Sham Minitter of Flull, 35.The Prince(s Royal, Sermoa before the Judges, March 24.1650.by J.Shaw Mintfh,of Flull, 36. Anatomy of Mortality,in 8 Heads: 1. The certainty of Death,2.Meditation of Death.3.Pre- paratlons at the Arfgel in Commbil. ations for decth, 4» The right behaviour in ich.5, TheComfore in our own death.6.The Priore agault the death of friends. 7. The pe bercin is laiful or unlawful co defice jth. 8. The glorious Eftace. of Gods Children rer death By George Stroude see 7. New Ferien, in vor for tlig Socie Arologers. Aug. 1651. ; % Maton: of Complements, fited forLa> 3, Gaewomen, Scholars, and Strangers, ci forms of fpeaking, and writing of Letters (tin flbion, with witty Poems, anda Table pounling hard Englith words. Ee. Cabinet of Jewels difcovering the nature, fac, value of pretious Scones: with infyUlible les o cape the deceit of all counterfet, by Nicholes. q Be Quakers caufe at fccond hearing, being il aniwer to their Tenets. ty no Enemy to Aftrology : a Ser ciety of Aftrologers for ehe year . Tho, Swadlin, Hiftorical Relation of the firft planting, of hc Englifhin New England in the year 1628. the year 1653,andall the material paflages :ppening there, Exa€lly performed. 43. Seleét Thoughts : or, Choice Helps for a ‘aus (pirit, beholding the excellency of her oid Jefts, by 1, Hall, B. of Nor, A new pieces ‘4g Theholy Order, or Fraternity of Mour~ persin Zion, To which is added Songsin the hight; ory Chearfulneffe under Afliétion, by i, Hallithop of Norwich, Anew we ma Books fold by Nath-Brooks, 4§-The Art of Memory» a cu Memory, ufelul coll peifons, from tke Gong tothe Clowne. A new piece. A4b-Hiltory of Belvan, and Ionakyand Toby Baptift, in Verfe : with other Poemszby Io.Har ay Bfq. A new piece, 47. Re-allertion of grace, Vindicie Evangel orxthe Vindication of the Gotpel.Ory a reply q My Anthony Burge Vindicie Legis, and to} Ratherford,by Kclert'Forue. AK neve piece, 48.Anabaptifts anacomized and filenced se a Difpute with Mu Yombs, by M. Joba Cragge. } new piece. 49. Praétical Divinity: or the grounds of Re Tigion in a Caccchitlical way s by M. Chrilgh Live. A new piece, 450. The Yurk ure Spam, of the Waters in the curing fes, neceffary to be kuown thither, $1, That conipleat piece calted the Exact Surveyord Land, thewing how to plot all manner of Grounds 3 toredueeand divide che fame, Alo fish meat, tei ced toRnglifh flacute native, fetal for all that ct fell or purchate,by 1. By ‘$2, Judgement fer, and Gcoks opened, Religion tri whether ithe of God or Nien, by N.Wevler, $4. Milk fer cluliven, or 3 plan and cafe Neth teaching to Xeat and co Write, with briel Rules for Ma Mets vo infect cicie Families by Dr. Thomas, $4. Calpers ¥ovfcah avd cs" gil Remainsyor hi ‘own admired Expesience,never publified before,uow by his Wife, fora wei the vertueand ul f desperate Dies all chat repaic 55 Culpeper: Senintca, ce his Altological Judgement fdifeles much calarg.d by Aieb, Clyper a INIS. it. Sa ae eae CuLPer Pers Judgement of Difeafes enlarged. AprawaM AVENEZRA, Of Critical Dayes, Lis. i ne, that God carries men to the prine 48 ciples of graceby the Book ef the ples cf graceby PPPS Creatures s Forthisbegitning of Abrabani Aveneara an Arabian Phyfitian,and a fingular Aftrologer (whom thé Pris of our times call a Heathen) favoureth of the things beyond Heathenifims for in this Treatlfe of Critical Dayes, he begins thus : Tentreat che Lord Gud, that he would tis fighcen my heart wich his light and truth, fo Jong as miy Spirie remaines in me, or his light lnvery delightful and good for the eje of my Tonle to fee by 5 for fo thall the itight be ene hed to me asthe day; iter thal. the louds thadow its, isthall ot be likethe light tbe Suny diy Beate inal ocbe aud : ts, QL Qo QT isa palpable and apparene truth 1 a 2 Culpepper’s Affrological Judgement ‘eds nor like the light of the Moon, becautle it fhall never be diminithed as her lightis, Ged! hath made thele lights as he hath made man, andhe appointed the greater light to rule the day, and the lellerto rule the night : Henceic appears, theSun was madecorule the day, aad not to give light to i only,as the Priltsafirm ‘nd the Moon was madetoiule thenight, not to give ighecoitonely as apears Gv bee cauile the hath no light togives alfohe hath made the whole hoft of Heaven, the fixed Stars and Planets, and gave them vertues , together with che Luminaries s but their vertues are not fo great as the vertucs of the Luminaries neix ther is the vertue of the Moon fo great as the vertu of the Sun, becaule fhe borrows her light from theSun 5 alfo che whole holt of Heaven, thar is, the fixed Stars, move all in the fame Spherey and therefore their diftance is alwayes the fame the one from the other, and their lati- tudeisalwayesthe fames butitisnotfo with the planetss for their courfe is various, and fo is their diftance the one from the other 5 and (0 istheir latitude for fometimes they, areupon the Ecliptick , fometimes North from it, fome- times South, fometimes Retrograde, fometimes dire , fometimes in conjunttion one with a nother, fometimes in oppolition, fometimes in other alpedts; che reafon of this is, becaufe the Sphere of one is lower then the Sphere of the o- ther, and the lower the Sphere is, the fooner they make their revolution. henecrefttothe earth of all the Plane! sit Libr. Of Difeafes enlarged, 3 the Moon y and therefore her courfe is (wifteft : andbelidesher difference in longitude and’ lax fide, there happen other accidents to Wer which arenot vilible co other Planets, forfome times fhe increafcth, fometimes decreafeth, and fometimesthe is invitible or failech in Tight :the reaion why the Planets are not feen horned ag theMoon , is, becaufe their diftance is greatte from us all che Planets feem biggcft when they areat thelr greatcltdiflance froin the Sun, or when they are neercitto the earth, according to Copernicus § alfo Cometimes the Moon is'Eclip= fed, but not in the fame manner as the Sun for theSunnever lofeth its light, buc is onely tha owed from a particular people or place, by the body of the Moon; butthe Moon Eclipfed to tally lofeth her lights and the reafon Is, tie ‘Suns light is his owne, but che Moon isa boi= rowed light. This being premifed, confider that all things under the Moone tiniverfally , whether men, beafts, or plants, are changed, and never remap inthe fame tate, neither are their thoughts and deeds che fame: take counfell of your headan& tewill certifie you whac I {peak is trueyand they arevaried according to the various courfe and ei(poftion ofthe Planets: look upon your own gents} and you fhall find your thoughts moved to choler,, fo often as the Moone tranfites the pliewhere the body or afpedt of Mars wasia Your getefs s and to melancholy when the doth the Uke to Saturne s ‘the reafon is, becattfe, the Moohitsaflinilated co the body ofan ! thot? ~ Ba vere a 4 Culpepper’s Aftrological judgement vertue as well as her light increafeth and dimi-| fifheth 5 for the brings down the vertue of the other Planers to the creatures, and to man if be Tives upon the earth. ‘The Sun caufeth heat and cold,day and night, Winter and Summer. When he arrives to the} houfe of his honour or exaltation,to wit, Aries, then the trees {pring, living creatures are coms forted, thebirds fing, the whole creation re+ oyceth, and fickneffesin thebody thew chen qelves in their colours: Alfo when he arrives at his all, to wit, Libra, the leaves of the trees fall, all creatures are lumpith, and mourne like the trees in Odeber. Alfo another notable experimentis, ufually| fick people are fomething eafed from midnight to noon, becaufe chen the Sun is in the afcend- ing part of the Heaven ; but they are moft rot bled when he is defcending, that is, from noon] tomidnight. ‘The courfe of theMoon is to be obferyed in many operations both in the Sea and Rivers, Vegetables, Shel-ffhes, as alfo in the bones and| marrow of men, and all creatures 5 alfo feed] fown at the wain of the Moon, grows either not at all, orto no purpofe. Alfowife men have experiences of many ver tues of the Sears, and have left them to pofteri ty : and Phyfitians in old time (when they ‘were minded to be honeft) have found out the changes and terminations of difeafes by the} courfe of the Moon ; Wherefore the 7514, 29) or 21, 27, 28) or 29, dayes of fickneffes aca t butby the-courfe of the Moone; for let not your braine relt in the number of thedayes cau the Moone is fometimes fwifter, fomes times lower. ‘Asforfuch difeafes as doe not terminate in js mioneth (Imeane a Lunar moneth) viz. the tine the Moone traceth round the Zodiack, ich is 27 dayes, fome odd houresy fome few minutes 5 you mutt judge of thefe by the courfe fof theSun: Theday isnot called Critical be» aufe itis the feventh day fcom thedecumbi- ure, as if the vertue lay in the number 7, but ecaufe the Moone comes to the Quartile of + ine place the was in atthe decumbiture , its no inter whether ic be a day fooner or later, When the comes to the proton of the rlace fhe was in at the day of the decumbiturey ie makes a fecond Crifis , the third when (he comes to the fecond quartile, and the fourch shen the comes to the place fhe was in at the Hicumbiture » and its well fhe can make fa many. The reafon of the difference of the Moones ation is the difference of her diftance from the wth s for when thecenter ofher circle is neae eftco the center of the Earth,(he is fwift in mos ions and hence ic comes to paffe that fome= ines fhe moves more then 15, degrees in 24. joures, fomerimes leffe then 42. therefore if the fivife in motion, thecomes to her own quare le in fix dayess if flow,not in feven 5 therefore bul you judge according co the motion of B3 the 6 -Culpepper's Afrrological Judgement theMoon, and not according to the number é thedayes, : : “Upon a Critical day, if the Moon be well ae fpedted with goodPlanass , ic goes welll with the fick 5 if by ill Planets, ic goes ills bucT know you would be refolved in one particular, whichis, If the Crifisdepend upon the motion ofthe Moon, and her afpett co the Planers, what Fsthe reafon,if two men be taken fick at one and “the fame timeythae yet the Crifis of the one falls out well,and not foin the other ? Tanfwer, The vertue working is changed ace cording to the diverlcy of the vertae receivings for yout all know che Sun makes the clay hard, and the wax {oft it. makes the cloth whit dnd theface black 5 fo then, ifone bea childe hofenature is hot and moifsthe other a young man, and the third an old man y the Crilis works diverfly in chem all , becaule their ages with a flegmatick man by reafon of age orcomplexion in Winter. Thirdly, To this Tadde y tunin fuppofe at the be ginning of a difeafe the Moone was in the place of Mars in the genelisywhofe nature is hot if the difeafebe of heat, it mightily age it the Nativities of fuc Lib. 1. of Difeaferenlarged, 7 full feldome finde two men that had Mars in oneaid the fameplace in their genefis fall fick hueryand the difeate differ neither at che le nor at theend, ! Pat the cafe the age of the people, andihe eafon of the year be the fame, and the jebe the fams,twould che Crifisbe the fame, year no? 1 anfwer'thus 5 Their complexions may be iffrene » the onehot and dry 5 the other cold and moift: If the difeates be hot and dry , the ist {o violent upona cold and il it willbeupon a hotand drys te fire will fooncr fcize upon that which is ioe and diy y then chat which is cold and wil, 2, Imagine the complexions to be the fame pon bot parties ? Lantwer, That isimpoffible there muftbe fome diffee ice upon complaxionss for though they may bethefamein theuniverfal y yecin particulars there muftneeds be fome difference by reafon f their differen dyer, exercife aud climate, une His they be born and brought up aleogether un+ Jer one latitude. 3. Lecusimaginechey be all alike , yet die ers things may ineervene and alter the Crilis heirnativiccs may not agrees for example, IE te Moone in the place of Saturne or Mars in he nativity, the difeafe is dangerous: notfoif be in the place where Jupiter or Venus was in hen orit’s pollible ite or Venus may hurt to whofe afcendents they iba. of Difeafer enlarged, 9 ree Children borne at one and the fame time he cveyt proved) at five yeares of age they Ilchveebad Convultions, whereby they were ileicee lame of one leg, the boyes on the right ; reg and the pir] on che lefts at 14. years of age vrshiney ily dyed altogether in oneand che fame day ewer ofthe {mall pox. yicat Thirdly , if the Nativity cannot be gotten, jew the urine, and erett a cecleftial Scheme up~ nthe light of it, and if you have the decumbi- turescompare the decumbirure with the ccleftial Scheme at theview of the urine, and you may judec clearly ofthe Crifis. To proceed to the matter, if the Moone be fironpwhen the comes to the Quartile , oF OP 1 0 poftion of the place fhe was in at the decumbi~ Creek ture, viz. inher houfe or exaltation, thefick re- "ys,909 coversy if fhe beafpetted co no Planet, Judge theMike of the Sun in Chronical dif yg calis, but judge the contrary if either of them. <, be in their detriments or fals 5 for chere is as much difference beeween them as there is be» ‘ween the Zenith ai d the Narder : if the Moon bevoid of courfe at the beginning of adifeate, thefigne is neither good nor bad. Look then to the ligne afcending,at the beginning of a difeate, and let the Moon alone for a time. 5 Ifthe Moon beangularat the decumbieure, ¢ #/~: andin the Afcendent, judge of heralone , and make ule of no other lignificator§ if fhebe not fo,joynthe Lord of the A(cendent with herin your judgement. ms ‘Tis 8 Culpepper’s Aftrological Judgement they are inimical or policed in the fixth of eighth houles. “ge Again Saturne may be Lord of the one nativity,and not of che other sand then he may hhuretheone and not che other, whofe nativiy heis Lord or, for the Devil will noc hyre his own: thelike of Murs. ; Innumerable fuch things may be added, a that the one may provide for the ficknefs before hand, not the other, but itis needlels, Objet, But then youwill fay, there can beng certainty a¢ all found in the Cris 2 Tanfiver, Aftrologers paffe judgemfne two manner of wayes in difeates, ‘The firft we call Univertal , and fo Saturn rulesConfumptions, Mars Fevers, Venus over women, Mercury over Schollers, &c. ‘The Second is particular, and fo the Seventh fhoufe hath dominion over women, the ninth o- yer Schollers, fc. Now no particular can deftroy an univerfal; for example, if Venys be ill feated in a nativity, and the Lord of the Seventh well feated, we fay} the native fhall generally incur evil by women though fome particular good may incur fron themts inlike manner judge in this cafe by th ‘general. fignificators of ficknels, viz. Saturn and Mars. Bue Secondly, if you can polibly gee thens} tivities, you fhall not erre ; Andnow give m Jeave to quote one experiment of my. own. I the Nativities be one and the fame, the Crifi will be one and the fame ; For example, I know Heo S were, $ nraims Beate i F 10 Culpepper's 4frological Fudemen quaytile or off clizion of the place the was in at the decung eure » for ufwually at fuch atime death turn Pirylician, Itin the beginning of ficknef$ the Moon tf ina moveablelign, the ficknels foon moves tof an end one way or other + fixed figns prolong ficknefs, and common figns fet a ftap to the wit ffi brain in the world. Allo thisisa certain rule, as fare as the Sun isup at noon day, that difeates of plenitude are very dangerous, when aman is taken fick upon afull Moon, Difeales of falling or emprinels are moftdangerous, when a man is taken fick upon anew Muon, Let me intreat you to give Phyfick fora dicate, of emptinels when, fhe is near the Full. And for difeates of fulne(s when the Moon hath lofther light, Diminitha humour when the Moon diminie frevh in light : Incceafe when {he increateth in Jight + Flegm oppofeth Choler, Melancholy oypolcth Bloud: 'Tis none of the wortt wayes todiminih choler by increafing flegm ; a word is enough to the wife. "Tis very bad when ficknefs the Moon is the humour offending Naturally when fhe is in afiery fign, amend adifeafe of flegm s but if choler abound, *tis very good if fhe be in a watry figns youmay in the beginning of a a fign of thenature , of know by a penny how a filling is coyned. Hf che Moon be in conjunftion or afpeét wich any Tis very dangerous when the Moon is Bilk iaydora®e clipted, when the comes to the i . r of Difeafes enlarged. ae J neither of them have latitude < Cate be fin 2 i chey differ much in ore the Crilis will be weak. ; Hig en in conpaution with Satur at ee een sss Long ficknels and if Sanne or otion, fo much che worfe Cand bad theta) ac all times in fuch a cal, ie gnbe retrograde whieh he comes tothe ton ofthe Sn bear of a reap isu bate Non Tadede bere dhe ck isbound much it body. Ifthe moon k eto eccopede Plane, the fick vomits MiePhylick, tips morein ihe Sicknefes of young nando chen edo in old” ah diate come of est, ems helps mor hn Jape ithe dae comes more of cold, acips more then Vein Ifthe dilate 7m there is not a more peflilent Pla~ the Yeas thn al or Tp of jupiter: in yefecutions of Religion Ht of better then the Devil 5 call help i Venu in uch a cafe, Merci occidental and fkong, inditeate, : PE len aut the dif, ens elps more then Tuser5 if Saturne,then Iupiter more then th { Jcoines of Love fignifies good se : thebeginning of a Sicknefs the moon bin onfantion with any fined ars ofthe mgd whofe laid from the Elite isbue fal, you may afely judge of dileates by the nature of that Star fhe is joyned tor 12 Culpepper’s Aprological Judgment ofehebe of the nature of a Planet Good or} id, take him according to his nature. When the moon is joyned to any planeeby body or afpett in the beginning of any Sicknel if he afpett that Planet when fhe comes to the quartile or oppafition of the place, the Cris will befimand lubleyand ‘vill move no fate then ahoule,and ‘wil not be alecred be it good orbad, Butif when (he comes to the quartile or oppo- > fition,fhe meets with another Planet, be fare the difeale changes either to better or worfe, accor dingo the nature of chat ftar fhe meets witha, ‘And this will appear in the fick party, or ele in the Phyfitian, or in the courfe of phytick. See what houte the Planets the meets wichall at the Crifisis Lord of in the decumbiture, and judgeaccordingly and fo a fick perfon may happen tohave more wit then an old doting Phylidin, it bea fixed far of another nature to that fixed lar the was withal athe decumbiture it will noc alter (0 much, or at leaft there will not bea univerfal alteration of the difeafe; and my reafonis, becaufe the fixed ftars are fo far from the Earth. And the laf thing is, ‘Whatlocver isaid of the Moon in acute dift ¢a(es, will hold as cue of the Sun in Chronick Diteates, Lig. Ih, By Aftrological Judgement upon . DIS EASES: OR, Methodical way tofind out ths Caufe, Nature, Symptoms, and change ofa Dif- cafe, together with the parts of the afidked , the exaé time of reco- very 5 of diffolutions by the Decumbiture; Amplifed by Examples. cere HE Bafis of the Story was borrow= elfrom Ne Dat Clorapes T to the King of France, and the m¢ Rae pxeellent Cardinal the Dake of Rie chelien. : isconfef, in fome place Ihave abbreviated ior comers corteted him lee another doe he key me: What Fhave done,Thave done, ind amor afhamed the world fould (eit, Tizogh the neering merce of God hid an opportunity pue into my han fo neh deed folong wir works iba, of Difeafes enlarged. 15 nla fick man can be brougheto nothing elfe, nlefe you, will make him a beatt of aman. far overy fviteand faddain change whereever happens, whether in the Moon or the Aire, ek body, Galen playes the man and calls ris, and from this Crilis is judgement given, ether the fick be liketo live or dye, ‘The word Crilis is aGrecke word derived, isi xpina Which fignifieth to judge or dil rn, or pals fentence upon a thing, therefore “iticall dayes are nothing elfe but dayes inereina man may difcern a difeate, or give rulgmentupon it, beit good or bad, it mat rsnotmuch, tis taken by a Metaphor from he judiciall Court to the Art of Phyfick, be- aule, tis (omething. like to plead a mans caufe rhis life, and to labour acately undera di- reale to be drawn by inimical accufers before he judgemenc Seat, and to run the hazzard ife, witha cruell and hoflil Diteafe, Moreover ere are three things rig toa judiciall ‘ourt, the Accufey, the Perfon indiéted, and he Jadge.So likewife are there three thingsby khich the Art of Phyfick confifteth, and by hich every cure is perfected: 1. The Difeafe. 2. lature, and the Phyfitian, which is natures fer ant, or at leaft fhould befos and 3, the acci- Hents which manifelt what the difeafe is, and fand as witnefles. The caufe of the Crifis is twofold,inward,out- fard, the internal caufe is taken from its own Proper principlef you will believe Hippocrates, jad that is double or twofold, for cither na ture 14 Culpepper’s Aftrological Judgement if there be any weakneffe in it, it is my ov if there be any excellency in it, give God ty glory. He that writes Ignominie upon the back {id ofan other mans book, never feteing forth any of his own, let thename of Ignominy be bra ded, and not ingraven upon his Sepulcher, Twould fain fee the pifs prophets of this ag deliver fuch a judgement of difeatesby the Ul rines he that can doe fo, Frit mibi magnus Apel Why doe I trouble my head wich the Phyl ans whofe Covetoufneffe or lazinefley or both] or fomething worle, will not fuffer them tf ftudy thofe Ares which are Effentiall to theif Monopolized calling s butI will be filent, oj thei fall is approaching by reafon. of the pride, if hewrote true that writes, that pridd foes before a fall, anda haughty mind befor leftcuStion: my Genius is toodall to commen my Author oro give she choufanth a of his due praife, Idefire to be cenfured by Drj Experience, who will give judgment withou partiality: andI hope tis no difparagement ta Monjieur Duret that Ideliver him int my ow language. CHAP. I, ‘The Definition of the word Crifis y its Ufey Cau] Kinds, Divifion and Difference. (Rifis according to Galen,is a {wift and fud- rdain ‘change of ang-difeafe, whereby thi fick is eleher brought to recovery y or ac . a 16 Culpepper’s Affrological Judgenren ture labours to expell the humour that caut the difeafe, or clte the humour ic felf bei drawn toa place, and not ft for Excretion, its oun we'ght or quality, burdens natu and fo breaks our, Hippocrates was but a ma andT am no more x aman, {aith he, is tra bled when heis in a Fever, and the fign is ho rory tremblings, running hither, and hich throughout the Microcoimsthis is one intemal caufe The fecond internal caufe Others there be,tis no’matter who,that afc the efficient caufe of the Crifis eo nature ic fe lature ifthe be ftrongsisa good Phyfitian f all difeales, and concoéts the humour whid canfes the difeafe, and feparates thac which good from that which isbad, and having do fo, > Prepares that which breedes annoyances f Excretion, and at Jat makes a fhift to caf i out, The exeernall caufe of the Crifis, is caufed b an alteration of the Aire, whenee’arifeth alcration ofthe breath mari draws ingfrod could t0 heat, from dry to moi waresta dhembors 7 amen te or Hippacateshimtelfe in his fix Aphorif and in his Treatife de nature humana, Fpeake down dunftable language, that heat abel ina fare in the bod pores forward the Crifiss lifcafes, fome faith he, come by il] hq byte Air we daw ieee 0 then the Dyet asi breeds fic and fad humours in'thebody,is internal, but the ib. 2, of Difeafes entlarged. 17 re draw in, is the externall caufe of the Critis. ‘And now give me leave to leave my Aus horyand yet Iwill not forgec him quite nei Wet Tord eternal in che beginning, when ‘made the Creation, made it of a compofition Ff concrariess difcord makes a harmony as in aicke; if the world be compofed of acompo* Fcion of contraries, various muft needs be the potion of mans life: Hence comes fomes imes healch 5 fometimes fickneffe, fometimes relancholy, fometimes choler to the body of anand happy is that man that knows hime flee ‘Thele qualities in man being altered by the rious influences ofthe Stars, the Sphere of the ne carrying a {wifter motion then the {phere f the other » then various muft needs be the hifpofition of mans body. The Luminaries carry che greatel ftrengeh Jn theheavens, and fodo the time fervers inthe Biate; and this needs riot be doubuful to any body, if you confider that che found of a Drum br Trumpet incites a man tovaloury and the found of a Fiddle to dancing. Befidesjother anifelt effets of the Luminaries appeare to pur eyes. Who makes hours and dayesy and fafons in the yeare ? is it not the Sun who nakes altetations in the Aire, in Plants, and a living Creatures ? what is the reafon that Dytersare fuller ac ete ful moon then at the ev 7To the number of Oyfters, joyne Crabs bnd Lobfter, nay the marrow in the body of Pan; isit not the Moon 7 Aman if he pleafeth c may 18 Culpepper's Aftrological Fudgemtent may fay his right hand is his ley and'a prati Pricit may preach his pleafure let Dottor perience be judge. Now then we have broug the matter to this purpofe , that the Univer caufe of theCrilis is the influence of the vens ¢ for the Celetial bodies either by hex Jight, motion, or afpe€, configuration, oral of them, or fome of them, aft not only inth four Elements, but Elementary bodiess fori they a& in the one, they mult needs in the o ther,and then by confequencein man, whichi but compounded of Elements. The Earth is a greac lump of dire rolled uf together, and by an only wife God hanged i the Aire: the Stars are no more, neither is th Moon ; onely whae mete the Sun 1s made ofl know not. If the bodies of men are elementary, compo} fed of Five, Aire, Earth and Water he maf needs participate in one meafure or other of thefe Elements. The Elements being contra ries, cannot alwayesagree s hence cones thy caule of health fometimes of ficknels,Cometime] death ie fells and teas half of my opi ion when he wrote thefe words:From che rag ‘and dew of Heaven both good and bad thingy arecaufed tobud, The kinds of Ciifis are two; Kinds of Cr one in acute difeafes » and they. fis. are co be jniged by the Moons the other into and lating, or chronick difeafes, which are t be judgedt of by the Sun:For thote Crifes which goin rom tet oxm proper prteiplgare ro the ibs. of Difeafes eitlarged. ig intenial eaufe depending onely upon the hutions of zhe Moon and her Configurations id Afpedts to the place the was in at the De+ unbiture. Buc you muftnote in acite difeates y the af efts or radiations of the Moon 5 co wit, het Facile or oppotition, are not taken from the anjnétion of che Moon to the Sun, as they Nate is rein Almanacks or Ephemerides, which is but “jsut 94: Ihe Father of an Almaniack, but from the place Jnwhich the Moon was found at the Decum- Fire as hall appear by a few examples heres fer. "There are Acute and Chronitk difeafes, i Of Acute difeafes, fomearefimply acute; o& *, fhersare peracutey others are very acute y pers“. acute, or exceeding acute, “Thole which are fimply acute, are finithed in B. 10.11. 14.20.21. dayes, and they are called nonthly difeafes By fome,and lanary by others nd chey none of che greatelt fools neithery they swt Dist tte eae ; dats Pace re terminated in the time the Moon traceth thé!" hz, Celeftial Signs of the Zodiack , which isi 1, 7. dayesy fome odd hours, and forhe odd mi« ites. Thofeactite difeafes whith fuffer changes ot Hegenerate, are to be judged of by ain imperfeék ray 5 for fometimes they increafey fortetifies hey are remitted 5 they are-as fickleas a wea wr-cocks according as the Moon heets wit the beams citer of good or evil Planets ¢ ahi at ig not all thie trick they Have neither otitis they thange out of Acute difeafes €4 ito ein to GalB | 20 Culpepper's Affrological Judgement’ into Chronick difeates; and fo a continued Fe} ver may change into an He@ick Fever 5 or: intermitting Fever into a continual Fever 5 thefe difeafes terminate in forty days 5 very cutedifeates , {uch asare concluded in 5.6.7. dayes, among which isthe difeafe the Gre call mtqmty pore, an inflammation of the Lunj Excecding acute difea(csythey are fuch whid end in three or four days at furthelt, as Peftil cies, Apoplexies, 8c. Chronick difeates follow the motion of 1 Son, and "tis about ninety days before the fi Grilis appearssfor in thactime the Sun comes the proper quartile of the place he was in atth Decumbitue, as appears in Hettick Fevers Droplies : but when he comes to his Sextile, of Trine Afpec of the place he was inar the De cumbiture,fomemotion appears whereby a may ifhehave any guts in hisbrains, may judged the Crifis to come. Te falls out well, if the Sun be well afpedt by Good Planets ; and worfe ifto evill Planets and this holds true, if youconfider it from ¢ Nativity, throughout all the whole courle anans life : for difeafes are particular atten dants ona mans life, if Dottor Experience el tru, Moreover of che Crlfes,fome are perfe€t,(o ave imperfett. . ‘A perfe&t Crifis is when the difeafe appea ‘nticely and perfettly to be judged of ; and th is fometinies hopeful , fometimes defperace hhopefull 5 when there is great probability ‘ alt jb.a... Of Difeafes enlarged. an althand secovery 5 defperate when there is Ipable igns of death, ‘An imperfect Crilis, is when the difeafe i hanged upon every light occafion 5 and if ripe Author of the difeate,.andin a figne ’ double body , upon my life you fhall not ily for the Crifis happensas true asthe Weae recor ‘Your fafeft way then to judge of the difcafe, by the Atpetts of the Moon to the Planets : en the Moon meets with the inimical or ho- ms of Satur or Mars,have a care of your ‘And if you know what hinders, thefame reafon you may know what helps. fins in former times,when they were wile, dminded the common good, and not their wn gain, they diftinguithed the Crifis of dif- aes hus + Some were fafe, fome doubrful ; fome fic to judged, and fome not fitto be judged. “That Crifis is fafe which comes without great nd pernicious afpetts, : tis -loubiful, (ufpicious, I had almoft aid ngerous, which comes with great pernicious ets. Tine difea(eis fc to be judged, when figns of oncoftion come the fourth day, and then cer= hinly the Crifis will appear theninth. |The 0 movesnot upon an equal motion 5 there~ fore you had beft truft to her motion rather fhen the days, TheSun hath dominion in Chronick difea~ fesythe Moon in acute s if you be a wife wan, your Bp * \, y © 2 4 ~ v 22 Culpepper’s Affrological Judgement: your judgement fhall be as fureas the San, thar never fails wichout a miracle, , In ime of yore when nosed men went a begging for its and they that hi gotten knowledge,monopolized it, A few fes of Adams happinels in Paradife, whi Fappinefsal the world have been reaching 4 ever fince, : They knew well enough the moon moved many degrees in fo many days ; an evil Ange (I had almott faid the Devil ) perceiving. der Wwas want of knowledge in the world, ses a transforms himfelf inco an Angel of light; ag taughie men to coune thetime by days : "Tis no great mervail the Keyptians fhould worftty Ga lick and Onyons tor Gods, when- we defi Chriftmeseday,though perhaps may be cloudy What I have fpoken, Uhave ouly {pokes t thew that it is the motion of Sun & Moon thai produceth the Crifis in difeafes, and not- the dumber of days. T mutt return tothe place I intended ; Of fome are called by their own name, Criti ‘ays, other are called Judicial days, and| they are fo called, becaufe ipon them dame Ne ture and her fon Dr, Reafon would make mani felt what the diteafe is, and Dr. Experience tel me'tis true, Another time is called Intercidental , which is atime falls out between the Judicial dayes and Critical. Upon thefe Intercidental Gays, the difeafe is ulually remitted 5 if foj’then a Cod Crilis may be expelted s ifnot, an owl i al ‘Bie moon cot ib. | Of Difeafes enlarged, 2 93 fe terms before go further 5 & ce tthe Bit oii det the nie of the difeafe be what you will 5 when the ve comes to thetame degree of the next fig yas in ae the Decumbitnre, there is-the Ju ws aye sfor in that time the difeate thews it if in ite coloursywith bag and baggage When 4 nes coher Sei ic brings the ne ental day, and fhould mitigate the dif ie ye ani alpettd teil Plas fest and it fhe be afpeéted o ill: Planets an N\Grifs isto be expetedyand fo the ootiraiy § nd yon ll never find this fail. : 7 ed CHar IS 4 rey tofinde out the Criticall dayes , as ulfo the Deumbitare y both by Ancient and Dee der Weriterss . Ident Phylitians y becaufe they were ige raat ofthe motion of the Moon, though cof heroperation asmany of our modern re, madetheir account by number of dayes y doing, erred egregioully : And al~ ough Duret hy Author quotcs their opini- ns, I hold ic not worth time to recite mens taiw ings : Butof the certain rerm or time when 1 Criticall dayes begin,{ fhall quote thefe few ord, . : When any notable fea comes you would 94 Culpepper's Aftrological Fudgensent difcern whether ic tends to Health, Death, Mi tation, or Continuance, ic isneceffry thaty, begin at_the firft pun of time of the Invafi of thedifeafe. This Galen faith is very ha if not impollible co find 5 "is taken pro‘conf thatit may be cafily known, when a man tak hisbed in his ficknefss but when the beginni of the ficknefs is, that’s the queftion : For Tufly flout man bears the difeafe longer , and Tonger betore he takes his bed, then’a pun weakly fickly man is + a meer-{utpition ‘of Sicknefs will fend a faint-hearted man to bed; you may perfwade him he is fick, whether he orno, Notwithftanding this is moft certain, thatin} molt acute difeafes, as alfo in many other difea fs, a8 che Falling Sickneffey Palfies, Apopl} xie Plurefies, &c, ‘tis an eafte thing tofind the Beginning, or the precife time of the inv ‘on of the difeafe, Thecommon opinion of fich as are learn in Afvology is , and according to their opi conT aflime, thac char moment of timeis to bt taken for the beginning of the difeafe, in whi aman finds a manifeft paine or hurt in_ his bo} dy : for inflance, when a man hath got a Fe ver, ufually the head akes certain dayes before; this isnot the Fever, but a Meffenger or fore- runner of the Fever the true beginning of the Fever is when the difeate as does ufually in the thatis the beginning of the difeafe, when the difeate iba, of Difeafes enlarged. 33 safe appeares manifeeo fens And this was } of Hippocrates, one ofthe honeft- te vtans © And you fall find this al~ that more ace the ial the ifelt the beginning of it isto fenfer re an hats alot impolite that eeinning fhould lie hid from any one tha rentereafon, if he have but fente, rr. — Cuap. IIL Of the Sympathy, and Antipathy of the Signes aad Planets, Efore we come to prognottick, we mutt Brow that there is a Sympathy are Celeltiall and Terreftiall bodyess which wil tally appear, if we confider that the whole treation Ys oneentire and united body, com poled by the power ofan All wile God, of ‘ion of difcords. “Re ‘there is friendfhip and hatred between one fign of the Zodiack and another 5 for fery fignes are contrary to watry, and noéturna diurnall, &e. coo Ce The Plas are allo friendly and inimiad one to anothers but in their friendthip and comity, what sever the matter is,] cannot agree neither with ancient nor modern writers, And when T cannot do fo, He fy coDr. Reafon for advice,they hold Mars and Venus to Difrien 7 26 Culpepper's Affrological Judgement And what your opinion is of all the re, yoo may find by Mr. Lilles Introduétion; My ow opinion grotindad upon reafon, is this, that therearecwo caufes of friendlhip’ and enmity) between Planets Effentiall and Accidental Planets are effentially inimicall three wayes, Fir, when their Hoin(es: or ‘Exalcacions are oppofite one to the other, and.fo Saturn is an enemy to both Luminaries, Jupiter to Mercury, and é contra Mars to Venus, 2. Planets are Inimical one to che other,when their _temperatuées ior’ qualities are oppolite, aad fo Jupiter isan enemy co Suu, he being hot and moift, Saturn cold anddry:So Mars is eneiny to Ventis, hebeing hot and dry, thecold and moift, 2.g,Planets are Inimical when their conditiony differ; fo there is enmity beeween Sol and Say turn for one lovesthe Court; and che other the Connery, Jupiter is enemy to Mars, for he loves Peace and jultice, Mars violence and oppreflis ong Mars is enemy to Venus, for he rejoyceth inthe field; the in the beds he.loves to be pute Tique, the playes'leaft in fight, And thus you fee in every refpedt, what a difficult ching it js to make Mars and Venus rationally friendes, Accidental inimicalneffe to Planets, is when they arein fquare or oppolition &c. the one to the other. Alfo Inimicalneffe mutt needs be in the Signessfor if cold and heat, moiftare and aryneffe "be inconfiftent together in one and the fame place, as your eyes will tell you, if you pil but pleafe to cake a pale of water and throw i iba, of Difeafes enlarged. ay ingo the fire, then canshey not be in one ae eee place in the heavens. And if fo, sis moft true, then muft fignes be , fome if fome hot, and fome oil: one fgn mast weds cherith one quality more then anothers ws feeng che fife qualities are adverfe the one he other, there is ancceflcy,chac fometimes Koemuft yeild, and fometimes overcome: and his is the reafon of the corruption, genera+ fion and vicifitude of things. ‘ Moreover the Moon confiuted in.a figney / commonly frikes upon che nature ofthe figne fteis nz asifthe bein afery fign, the irs up ery es f Cele ax every Element hath vio. qualities fohathevery celefiall fign, che. Atveal fignes archot and moi, the Earthly fignes cold and diy, theFiery finnes hot and dry, the watry’ fgnesceld aid moift: And thus you fee-hov. thr concords are made of difcords + for: Aerg fignesare joyened to fiery by heat, and to. wa uy by moire: and to earthly By coldnelfe 5 theEarthly are joyned to the watry by coldy neffe, andco fiery by dryneffe: this is ‘an old Mrucauaxime of Phitofophers, which I hall nog atthis time be captions againtt Bales the congreffe and configurature of thePlanets and fixed Stars is diligently to be heededs f thefe, fome areobnoxious and hate- fall;a Quartile and Oppofition, as alfo the Conjaninn bad Plates: others are health Bars and Te, ad Connon of ‘ indeed the chiefeftgpare o good Planets; and in Se cay 30 Culpepper’s Ajtrological Fudgurem the twelfth Signe from him: 2, béfides dif Brees more in qual 36 5 A Sextile Afpett is good, becanfé che $j which are in Sextile the one to the other, both ofthe fame aétive quality, both ofa fa both of atime, forexample Aries and Genin are both mafculine, both Diurnall ; Taurus an Cancer are both cold, both Feminine, bot Nofturnall ; bue becaufe they differall in pa five qualities itis not altogether fo freindly a trine alpett is, for that confits aleogether af Signes of the fame nature, fexe, quality ang time, and are correfpondent the one to the otha every way. ah Ceniniion or Synods che rong |, and cannot properly be called an. Conjundtion of good Planets. with wet A Srceding goodhit is good inthe hij ‘A Conjunttion ofbad Planets with isas padyas the former was on of good Planets with bad is no ways cone mendable. I trave now done, if you will bePler fed bucto take notice, thas the conjunétion of all Planets with the Sun is bad, becaufe the Sun who gives them their efficacy, takes ita: ‘way at fuch times. I could be Criticall at this, ‘bus Ufhall forbear ie at chis sime, GHAP, ib. of Difeafes enlargide | 3X Cuap.lVi ve nay of finding ot Soe Critical and Tadiciall ws ayesby a igure ofeght bois. isis the method of Hippocrates, and from him Galen ufed, and it is tobe done in this nner T Make your (cheme of eight equal parts. 2 Search out the Sign,Degree and Minute the oon was inat, the beginning, of the fickneffes Place the figne,degree & minute the Moon asin at the beginning of the fickneffe upon the nipe of thefirt houfe as though that wereae ending at the time. ig Add forty five degrees to chissyou need not reggrd the latitude ofthe Region, for it isof no fie in Criticall Figures , but take the degrees rely from the Ecliptick, when you have ad- ed forty five degrees to thie place of the Moor tthe decumbiture the point of the Zodiack inferable to that {hall makethe cufpe of the cond howe, : Forty five depres more added to that, wil bring you to the Cutpeof cheahird Houle to which when the Moon comes’, fhe comes to the Quartile of the place the was in atthe decumbi- ture,and this makes the firft Crifis. 6 Forty five degrees more added to this,makes the fourth Houle; 45. degrees more added to that, 32 Culpeppet’s Aftrological Fudgmen that points out the place of the true oppol of the Moon to the place the was in at the d cumbiture, and this makes the fecond Crify The fecond quartile of the Moon to her o\ place at the decumbiture,makes the third Crifi And the fourth is when thecomes to the fa fign, degree and minute that fhe was in at decumbitures The time or houfes noted betwixt the Crili are called the judiciall times, or fuch ti wherein aman may judge what the difeatei ‘or what it will be; remember thisall alongi fach kinds of judgement 5 and do not forget n to number the time by dayes as the ancien did, or they were either ignorant, Ieffe of the courfe of the Moon; for the M comes to the judicial! or Critical days fo times fooner, fometimes latter, as fhe is eith Swifter or flower in motion. Now the time called Critical, is altwaies ei becaufe of the contrariety of the figne the Moos isin then to the fign the was in before, or th contrariety of her nature tothe oppofite pla At fich a time there arifeth a cortcrovertic battaile as it were between the difeafe and neo lon ‘ture; the Moon maincains nature in acute difea fes; And now you have the reafon why, tha] if the be aflited upon a Criticall day by thy bodies or ill beams of Saturn or Mars or th Lord of death, (which isalwaies Lord of thy cighth Houfe;and fometimes Lord of the fourt Houfe, wil ferve the turn, if he be a malevolent becaufe he fignifies the grave, ) the defeate in} creafeth ina, of ifr ole 54 creafeth, and fometimesehe fick dies : Bue i a arche time of the Cris beholds the ne othe Afendenc or che fortans foreunacly, tdvenfacefor the. malady is vanguifted and ced in theconflit I che difeate terminate not upon the firit Crifis; fe how the Moon is conligursted on the cond ‘ifand jue then by the fame Hales ifie terminate not then neicher, as fometimes ating ape vee cid Cand dye by hat the fame way 5 if your judgee ent ballanced by reafon and” the former ils cere you the diffe will not end one are, which is about dventy feven days ciphr hours, and fome few minus; and fee How the Hoon is then feated, and to what Planers the is nfguated then: And this of necefy uml be ZO he end of all acute difeates. Thusyou fee an acute difeate can loft bue & noneth at longeltsnor one in a hundred Iaftceh jolonge not onc in twenty laftech above halfe Jong. Hehe difeafe end not then, the acute difcafe sumed into_a Chronick difeafe: And all Chronic difeafes muftbe judged of by the Sta rerules of judging, of Chronicall difeafes by: ‘p. he Sun, are the fame by which we judge ol cute difeafes by the Moon, As for judiciall days. which fall owe jaftin he midft heewixee the Criticall dayes, i that dD yale 34 Culpepper's Afirological Judgement palfe them by acthis time, becaufe I fancy nol this way of judgement by a, Figure of ei hhoufes; yet fhall not fo paffechem By, but ¢ Lfhall remember them in ths Treatife. al Cuar.V: ‘The former rules illrated by an example, certaineman fell fick of an acute difca(} at Paris it France,Anno 1641. Tan. 12. about eight of the clock in the afternoon, at which} time the Moon was pofited in Aquarius, 10. 1] This] place in the Afcendent. To this Aquarius 10, 19. 1 adde forty fr ddegeeess the produét is pilces 25: 19. whic makes the ‘irft judiciall times To which adding forty five degrees mor it will bring you to Taurus 10.195 to whici place when the Moon arrives fhe comes to th exadt quartile of the place fhe was in at ty decumbiture, and makes the firftCrifis, ‘Ade forty five degrees to that, and it pro} duceth Gemini 25. 19. which is the fecon judiciall time, If you would know when the fecond Cri} fis comes aboutsit is but only Adding 45 de} grees to that, and you will find the refult beLso 10.19.iuft the place oppofite to the Mood at the decumbiture, The remainder are found ‘out in the fame manner, Whey tha, of Difeafes enlarged. 35 When you have done fo, it is no more but Fir, Seck the time when the Moon comes Taurus 10.19) and you fhall find it comes a the.ag of Zen, about ight ofthe Clock night. Secondly, View firft the face of heaven, fe~ b:dly the polition and configuration of the nets one with another ar the fame time, a fate according co the Decum- ~ biture, her afpeéts , as alfo ¢he maru- pes of the Planets. Dad KSadQehS OYVOOF > tccnboag ‘good Crifis co be expedted. OSS, Desens ‘Dad A } Threatens an ill Crifis, Dad A % A good Grifis to behoped Dad A Qherecovers, 38 Culpepper's Aftrological Fudgement The Hiflory of this obfervation is of a c taine perfon , who by reafon of great weai neffein ajourney, was farprized with a Fer fatthe time before mentioned 5 together wid hisFeverhe hada Cough anda Plurifie: Fever cameto a rerameuis. I never read of ty name in Galensas I remember 5 I take it boi by Motnfieur Durats defcription and alfo his Figure of Heaven, to be the very fame whi Galen calls wats, Thepriginal of this difcafe is Choler puri AR Blood in the veines, and is the m violent of all Fevers, The night atter the dj cumbiture the Fever appeat'd, although ond third day all (taking lefehim , yet fele not Patient the leaft intermiffion, the Moon being Aguarin 10.19. Aquarins bring allo a figne infirmity, the Moon being in Sextile to Mq applying to Venus and Sattency Mars aflicti the Sun with a Quartilejasalfo Jupiter and Ms cary who were in combuttion. "Fhe 16. day of the fame moneth of Jem thedi(eafeincreafed, at which time the Mo came to a Semi-quadrat making the Grftjudi altime, And mecting then with never an fpett, the Grifis could be expetted no otherti foubeful and unfortunate. ‘The 19.day of the fame moneth at cight theclock in the afternoon , the firt Crifisca about, fome litelefweat the difeafed had. A if Tmay bebold to leave my Author for lit time, if you view the prefages of Hippocra which you ftall find at che Tatter end of iba, of Difeafesenlarged, 39 Thewordsrun thus, or to this purpofe: It vary hopefal when a man fick of a Fever fwcatsupona Critical day 5 however my Au- ror confelfes, thacboth his Cough, and his bine in his lide left him, though his Fever ftill rmnainednay increafed,by reaion of the Quar Hleof Marsand Venu at the fame timeyMercury bring Lord of the Afcendent at the Decumbi- Lire. Alfo itis worth noting, that the Moon King in Aquarius at the Decumbiture, and fomes to Taurus at the fift Crifis , both Tau- sand Aquariue arefignes of infirmity ; yet jou fee the Plurifie left him, the Moone be- rg trong in her exaleation , though void of ourles Tpalsby my Authors inficmities in this and bther things. January 23, When the Moon by tranfit made he ficond judicial time, the was affidted by the ine of Suture, which prognofticates caute e= ough of ear in the fecond Crifis. Tanuary 27. at §.50. in the morning,the Moon ame to the true oppofition, to the place the was Ja at the decumbicure, fhe being then without a 7 Mfpeftycither good or evil s this brought no jopes to the fick man of cure at that time; and deed the fick was at that time very bad; yeay fobad that his Phyfitians were in doubt whes her he would live or die, Tamary the 30. at 3.houres 44. minutes after Inoon, comes about the third judicialtdime, at which time the Moon was in Trine to Iupitery ibich gives fleong hopes that ahealehful and prow yo Culpepper's Afrolagical Fudgemey Proptions Cris would gnu, and cd for tipon * . February the fccond at nine a clock af noon, the Moon comming to 10, degrecs 9 nutes of the Scorpion, where fhe made the cond Quartile to the place fhe was in at the d cambicure, and the third Crifis the applyed the Trine of beautiful Venus » his Fever beg toleave him, and hebegan to attain to hisp fine health. By this one example you may fee the wo derfull harmony and confent of difeafes wid the motions of the Heavens, which that it ma appear morecleer, and be vifible o all, unl it be to fuch as are fo blind they will not fe my Author adjoynes a rational Figure of Decumbiture , and gives his judgement uf ‘on it. iba, of Difeafesenlarged, sat ‘A Rationall figure upon the Decumbitures HM. January 12 & &% P.M Stilonovo, 1641 An afrolgicell Tadgemen upon the face of Heag ‘ven at the Decumbiture. are the Afcendent and Mercury Lord of it, Retrograde in Capricorne, a moveable Signe in the 5 th Houle of the Heaven, and in the fe of Saturne, ithe 6th Houfe and his Lord Stturne in Aguas in the 6h HoufeAroog and potent Te chief Significators of this igure “q2 Culpepper's Aftrological Fudgmenl The Moon in the 6th houfe upon the cup of its Sol in the sthHoufe with the Lord q the cighth affi&ed by the Quartile of Mars j afiery Signe; this plainly thewes a difeateq Choler, Jupiter in a moveable Signe in the 5 Houtfe, who rules the Scomack Liver and Sid combuft and in Quartile to Mars, ftirred Plurifie, and Mercury affli&ted thewed 2a Cough. Hence itappears that Mounfieur Dir was no Phyfician; for ifhe had, he would caf have known that a Plurifie never comes with} out a dry Coughs the moft excellent of mal muy have fallings, The Moon in Aquarius applying to Satum at the bepinning ot the difcate, fhows the di feafe comes of Wearindffe : according to th Doftrine both of Hyprcrates and Hermess bu here arifes another queftion; Shall the difeae be long or fhores This is anfwered chussthe fixed Signe upon the cufpe of the 6th Houle fhexs Tength of the difeate, Saturne in the 6th. Houte fhews nq 4effe bu tels the fame tale, Againe Saturne Lord of the 6th. fronger| then the Lord of the Afcendent, thews a vio- ent increafe of the difeate, Seeing Mars in a fiery figne afllifts both Luminaries, the Sun bya Quartile and the Moon by a Sextiles hence we may fafely gather, that Sayfine and Mars are Authors of the| difeate, topart flakes between them 5 the| ont made it violent, the other continuing. : yt of Difeafes enlarged, : 43 5 eave now a litde to pafle my aiid upon this Figure : when Grit ted the Figure, upon the firft blufhl ad~ evil the man fhould live, the Lord of the pied jane being, combult, & applyed_ to the Mars cating sulin che Sn, the : the Cufpe of the 6th. cum mulis eo rmenely veatons that 1 could finde of ite thetes ; i wercand Mars areboth rong, and ne ‘af them Lord of death, though both of (hew chemnelves like potent enemies, that hnure their for, but {Corne it; though theyareenemies co life ye they are honorable coumies, becaute trong. ib.2 the ‘The Moon appli 7 icant nS 7 the ofthe a ich ‘thews the difeafe might be cured ick ifa wie Phyfician haditin hand, oe is a Reception between the Sun and Macewhich tyes the Sword of Mars from kille hi i ification ofthe 6th Venus beautifieth the fignifcation of the poficlmetas muchas Satzne deformsit. Neither Saturne nor Marsbeholdthe Ax cendintyand thats good. HH ererpedfetecameby the mans own mifgu dinghimfelfe,becaufe the Lord of the 12-and dent are together. ; aeetne Moon applies to fortune which hath Apiplicitic in the ‘Afcendent, though inan ill i . yim confident the man journyed ee wed 44 Culpepper's Affrological Fudemen foon ashe was well; Firft, becaufe Mars Ly ofthe endjis necr the Houeof joumyes a decumbitures Secondly, becaufe’ the Moon Pliesto the Lady ofthe third Houfeat the de cumbiture, which is Venus. ——. Cuan VIL ‘The way to fate Figure of 16 Hones, T way of fetting this Figure, differs no thing from the former, fave onely th the Heavens are divided into ewice as many parts. The manner of eredting it, is this, th true place of the Moon being taken at thed cumbiture, place that upon the culp of te Alcendent, as though itwere afcending atthe time, to which adde 22 degrees 30 minute, and you have the irft intercidentall time, 22 30being added to that they the firtt judicial fimesas many more being added to that fhew the fecond intercidentiall cime, and as many add+ ed to them brings about the frft Crifiss this hal be clearly thewed in chis Example. A Figure of Crifis in 16, saa053 aH PAYS TE SHO TAF Bumndseh pues or soqddeg | pe: -adoye mTD OF Ps 46 Calpepper's Afrological Judgement J, The Hiftory of this fecond obfervation is off certaine religious perfon, fomemonke or Fry era hundred toone elfe; who in 1640 Decem ber the ninth, ftilo nove, was taken with a Feaya] and fhivering at eight of the Clock in the men ning, the next day the fhivering left him, thi Of Difeafes onlarged. a7 ware upon the Decumbiture, Feaver remaining, The Feaver feeming liked. Hemitritzr, or double tertian, or a Cautay which isa contihuall burning Feaver, which a them foever it was,this is certaing, it arofe ron] fome cholerick matter. The fecond day ithad another acceffe and thethird a worfe then that, The place ofthe Moon at the decumbiuure fC wasinapreterited trineofSaturne. The Moon applyed to the Sextile of Mercury, Venus and jupiter. 7 ‘he Fifthteenth day of the fame month of| December appeares the firft Crifiss and though to feat well many medicines ere apy and thofe powerfull; yetthe Feaver gave not way an inch, becaufe the Moon applyed to ‘Mars, and the Sun to Saturne, though by good afpetts, nither was icmitigated till the cigh- teenth day,at whieh time the Moon applyed to Meccury,Venusand Jupiter. Here was that Aphorifme of Hippocrates rat fied,Chap. §. Apbor 15. that ifthe Moon be not afflidted at the decumbiture,yet if the be with the beames of the Malevolents at the Crifis, a good Crifis is not tobe expetted, buc health willbe ved of, 4 ‘An Aftrclogicll Tudgement. upon she Figares in this judgement my Author is ogy te isdeus and [ fall not make roiahis faults: however this is erue; In this sare Capricorn is upon the cufpe ofthe afcen= fics and itisa moveable figne, therefore the hifeafe is likely to be fhort. 2 Saturne Lord of ity is very pote and 48 Culpepper's Affrological Judgement frrong in his owne houfe, and fwift in cour ther's aSecond Argument. 3. Both fortunes in the afcendent may w makeup a third. 4 The Moone applying to the fortunes) upa fourths this is enough; only the Quart ofthe Sun and Mars thewes the ficknetfe of Jer, Tcould give you mine owne obfervatia upon this difeate, if t would; bue! lett ale and leave every manto hig owne heuretes, — — Cuar, VIL How fet a Bigure of twelve Heafes for the Cris ‘His feems to me to be the moft rationall all the refts and i is the moft eafily af readily done 5 and it may be that’s the real my Author lefc it out, though he promifedit And indecd the ways of God are all eafie, 1 ty cafie, Tis the wayes of then that are crabb sAijand diffcule, | Uthall firtof all thew you the way how doe its fecondly give you an example of mi owne upon it. Firft of all if you would know how to mak fach a critical figure upon a decumbitu make you a Figure after the vulgar fornis tha inote what figne, degree and minute the Mooni in ar the decumbicure ft that figne,degree an minut iho, “Of Difeafer enlarged. ~ 3 49 inute on the afcendent, and thirty degrees to Ivand che fine degree and minuteof the x figne will be upon the Cufpe of the fecond aufe; the worke Is as eafie as walktug up-and Hone without a ftaff, as 1 tall by and by ike appear by an example, : Then be pleafed to take notice, that the fir "Mb oufc is the decumbiture,the fecond thejudical ing, the third che intercideneal 5 which word by Phage of Midburp insuffi his Book called con agytorvn fo Gilly esan(lates Mavealsy ilaking the word Cedoto killsfor Cado tot i wherein theman moft egrepioufly ewed! is deficiency, both in Scholler-ihip and Phys: ck: yet this commendation ile give hint, hes art was more free co do good then his brain| as able, The fourth +houfe brings the: firlt Crifis a} ut: and when yout are come’to that, begin a Lines you did before : you may fee the val houca pare of fpeftacles by the decumbis) rethat have quoted: You may takeit pro con fa fyoupleale, that Ihave many decuinibie resby aie: Bur Fwant time to infert chem or did not, would not blot paper wich them.» Beplealed to. acceptof this one in lieu of all eet. : 5 E $4 Culpeppes's Aftrological Judgement | [A tational Figure upon the Decumbiture, DeH. M. Decem. “yn 11. 58 Pa Me n® 1647. old fi a¥¥ add *Y AxS Poli. §1.34 is unhappy creature being un-oward ‘matched with an unnatural! frisband came up to London and lived in'a fei vice: andi her.fervice was furprifed with. a furious dife at the time, and under the face of heaven. bela noted, . Vial ff give avaconall judgement ie Crifis. Figure,and afterwards treat, of t The perfon_ of this yong woman is figné by Venus in Sagittarius: and craly I beléece was an pipright dealing creature. That the: ba. . if Difeafer cblerged, gt et difeafe lay hid, or atleatt very obfeure, plainly fignified by fo many planets being der the cath. =~ ‘That fhe procured her owne difeate, becaufe le Lord of 6th. is in the ewelfths As alfobes ifethe Lord of che afcendent is cifpofed by a nec in che 22th. ifces is che Cufpe of the 6th. Her difeate ine by wet taken at thefce'. Jupiter in Virgo ve corruption in blood, and infirmicies in the wels; with what they were, more anon, Venus with the Scorpicns heart thews avis ant Feavers neither proved it to beany leffe,. The Sun and Mars in the Fourth houfe with Dragont- tay in Quartile to,theafcendent, * Jw violence in the difea(e, danger of poyfon an ill end of it her Phyfician is fignified by rs which was @ French-quack which lay in, houfe, aftd he wasas like Mars in Capris i¢,as.a Pomewater is toan Apple, % He was alfo troubled with fore eyes,a man; forlorne fortunes; view the pofition of Marty. ld you thall eafily fee the reafon without 2 lire of {pettacles. The potition of Mars in the Fourth curmbuft ththe Dragons tayl, and in the Quant of afeendent, Firlt, clonded his- judgement s, condly, corrupted’ his practices Thijs fet Id for her lifes Tis a'fad thing when the Lord of death mutt. the Phyfician in the difeafe. tr difeafe was the {mal pox:in which bel keedingly band in body, nocgoing co ft a 2 or in 2 Culpepper’s 4ftrological Fudgmey jn a week together and above, he applyed b il chat time with fhrong purges, (ob acute isan!) never one of them working’ nor fom as coming from her though there was Scam nie in every one of them, that had not f fo fo asT knew of it perfiwaded her Nurfe to give agile every day, the had abfolutely peri hher purges increaling her feaver, and poy on herbody, and this Tam confident was the {on, both ofher being fo much disighred her difeafe, and of her Aches and {welling the knees (for Mars was in Capricorne) whq continued upon hr unsill her dying day, whi followed about a year and ahalfe after. ‘Neither was her Drs.judement one jot in tohis prattice; for in the beginning of hed cafe, viz. thenext day afcer the fell fick! accidentally to the houfe, and found all howchould weeping: every one that could an egge thed a teare, A Joyner was buie pul down the bed fteds, the whole hous ? paring for aflight with bag and baggage. ‘And what was the reafon thinke you? Dr. had palfeda wilde piece of Non-fencey fhehad gor the peftilence, and was full of tokens up run Tto fee the Creature: 1 fail her in a ftrong Feaver,thats true: but I could fick, which the very exaétly gave mg: And h ving taken the paines to ereét the figure, 4 what could to cherifh up her fp irits. 1 coldly my judgment was that fhe wouldlive:l cer of Difeafis enlarged, > fre houthould that fhehad no fuch difeafe as be etilence, much leffe any cokens : And thus Maever Tol, thejoyner legot money by the rgaine on bot hands: Fr pulling the bed- TE pid eables to peeces, and for feecing them feather againes And chas.you fee cis anill Meh that lowes no body no profit, have bueewo queltions to anfwer, and then cometo the Crilis. 1 Wil fhe live or dye? ' Wil her ficknefle be long or fhort ? To the firt of thefe I anfwer, That Mars is ord of death and alfo an. affiidting Planet, in Fnetothe Lord of the Sixth, and inSextileto Mc Moon; he wich the Sun areinQuartile to the cendents this is all the Signs of death, thacis icles the great figne (viz.)her dottor wore fhe ould die, and could not poffibly live, hae ing, as the Cox-comb faid, not fo much of crlangs left, as: amounted to the quantity of Mb ce of her fingers a likely tale forooth, wes nor? T wasa diligent obferver of every. paffage in isficknefle, and found italways trucy that luring her ficknelf the Moon by -ranfi to the body or beamnes of Mars affited her forely. Bat not fo tothe beames of Sacurne; for tive Arey polled her body with coldieie aid pilnelie, That he thould live, is very cleer, the Moon being with the Sexcile of Jupiter, and the Lord b the Afcendent no way affidted fave only by Scorpions heart. To iba, of Difeafes enlarged. 53 ‘The ft judicial time is when the toon ames to Sagitarius 10. 40. ics called ajudi¢i- Pime,becaufe achat time che difeafe appears his colours, that aman may know what it ids t+ The fecond time which you may find up- a the third Houfe in the Critical Figure, is cale Oercidental, becaufe it fals between judicl- Mand Critical cimes: and upon this intercident~ time, there is u(ually fome remiffion of dhe (eae, that fonature may have time to rally her forces agalurt her encounter with the Lrealeon her Crlfty And according asit falls Ficupon the ineercidencal time either to good bad, fo a good or bad Crifis may beexpelt- 4, But to retturnes, the Moon comes to Sagiteas iso. 4. upon the 14, of December, about ifean houre after fix in the Morning. Ifyou 54 Culpepper's Aftrological Judgemeny ; To the Second Queftion, namely,’ whet her difeafe fhould be long or fhorts 1 ‘The Angles being all Cardinal, and Moon fwift in motion,and in dent, and the Lord of the Sixth being bo ftationary,prolong the difeafe. being ‘And indeed though the difeate taken u der the notion 7 ‘acute, were long, yet tak according to reafon, it is fh searing it is fhoster then could hupon the Carpe inthe afcendent, newly Ce- rated from the body of Vents, and the Quar- x i Ficof Jupiter: now the fmall pox came ou, et nd nor eill now. *¢\ The ict incercidentat time happens when the i fon comes to 10. degrees 46 minuts of Ca- ricomn, the place where Mars was atthe De> inbitare, and now fhe applies to his body, ving, newly lefe the Trine of Jupiter, Ifyou ieafeo fet the Figure, the time was December fé. hone, 24 minuts, P.M. Saturn is upon the ‘pe of the afeendents about this time he got Tu cold, ‘And Iam of opinion, that theafcendent and fixth 56 Culpepper’s Affrological Judgement fixe Houle being earthly fignes at this time, ng theAZoon in Conjunétion with Mars in an of earthly fign, doth clearly thew her being bou inbody. This day which fhould have mitigen her difeate, increatcd its and now her Dri may call him fo without a Solecifm) begins lay the aneiquest had almcft faid che mad m; Now he execeileh his purging faculty, andl hiswits abed and afleepe wich his lait nigh Miftrefle. Sure 1 am,a Phylician would admi toheare Scammony giventoa Creature th had the final] pox coming out upon hers Tj concludeya very ill Criljg threatned. The firt Critis evmes''gour upon the 18/4 Decemer, three quarters of an hour pat 114 night : the face of heaven is not much alter from what it was at the Decambicure, Th Moon feparates from the Sextile of Venus Ladi cof thea(cendent, and applies to the Quartile Saturnsand had Dr, Dunce onely judged, (i would havedycd now, as indeed he did, might have been pardoned, although he haf fail'd; but alas, he poor man had lite sili times and feaons 5 his skil was imployed q know a woman froma manywhen he had go her in bed, Hedid not onely fay, but alfo fore that swould dye about the intercidental time, thoy fach a thing be feldome fecne in a mans ag4 but lecus to our Art; and Jet the Dottors igno} rancealone. You fhall finde if you pleafe to fee the pofity ‘on of Heaven, the Scheme almoft the fame wit b.2. of Difeafes enlarged: 7 cumbiture; the moon carries the a Seale of the afcendent to the Quar- of Sarum. The Sun and Macs cat hurtfall Mfpeseo the afcendent: and indeed my own inion is,that lad the Moon applied to Mass, s fhe did to Saturn, ithad kild her. aL Howlorver, the premifes confidered , ic is ear, that this is likely to be the time of greaceft ngerin all her fcknelles and fo indeed icwas: low mutt che difeafe needs be ftrongeft, nature veakel, ard if this time bepaffed, thebitter= Wik of death is paft. Indeed ac this time, the ombate was fore, the diftragted, fenfeleffe, the nll pox began to fall downy and withall, ength almoft fpentibuc above allsthe Doktor fore fhe could not live while morning, | | Rationall: hopes of her lifeare the digniies ¢ Saturn in the afcendent, but efpecially the ine of the Sun and Jupiter upon that day. Je fhe opinign ofthe learned in this Are, that Jet dhe Signiticators of life or death be! feated or die otc as badly as they can be; yet ifthe Sin be Hr Conjanétion or good afpeck with Jupicersthe fick will lives and truly fo did fheyalmoft co adr Imitation, ; But fome will aske, and tis aqueftion worth the anfiverings tHat if the Sun and Jupiter pee* eve lifesas you fay, when they are {0 feated: what's the reafon men dye at that time? for wwe feemen dye daily. | Tothis aniwer brie that truly in ining tivity of fome people, Jupiter is the ki Plateyand inte ickaelfe of ch Gk — =D) $8 Culpepper’s Afrological Fudgemmns Jupiter wil as foon Kill as Saturn and Afars: very planet mult do his Offic: I proceed, The fecond judicial time comes -about thei of December, at noon, or avery little after: a which time Mars is Lord of the afcendent,ftrong and in his exaltation. The Moon having Jefe the Sextile of the Suni f applies to his Sextile, The faceof heaven is quia and clean altered from what it was-a¢ the De| cumbicaresa manifelt figne of fore change. Be fides, though Saturn be in the'afcendent,and Marsiin the 1oth Houfe: yet Jupiter i in ete 6 therefore fame good may be hoped: 1 do not know that cis befides therule of Art, if (hould affine that as Mars in the ath Houte of the Daj cambiture kept her Dottors (you itiay call in) folly, or madneffe( which yout pleate) clot, fo now in the roth heute reveates ie, Now, ail not till now did Iknowr of her Do8tors frantick ccourfe of Phylick, and of her hot going to foo! from this time fhe took a Gliffer every day «il the amended. The fecond Crifis comes about upon the Sun, the 26 of Deceur. about one hour after noon: at which time the Moon is {trong in her own exak tation, and applycs tothe Trine of the Sur, and Mercury; at thie time her Feaver left her,and fhe began to recover: And upon the third Crifs, which hapned upon the firlt of Fanvary, the went abroad, CHAP, of Difeafes enlarged: ~° $y ib. 2 meseeeey Cuap. VII. ry finde the ‘exalt time of the Crifs by a Table of Legiticall Lagaritbmes, Eng that many are unailfallin ings or ealculating the truetime of the Crifis after the Decumbiture 5 I have in this Edition nferted a Table by which it may be eafily per- ormed, if the following Rules be daely obfer- ed (andif they be not, cannot help It.)'. In the hicad of the Table is placed the 24 houresof the natural day, which alfo ferve for degrees, as occafion ferveth. Inthe little Co- lume to the left hand is placed che minutesy “as is ufval in other Tables: iathe greater Colums _ are placed the Legftical! Logarithms of ny hou - and minute of the natural day, Sc. a oe When youwould finde the Logi a tbe of any hour apd minute, or Dg a minute, (eX the hotire on degree in tite Head," and thy nfihaces in the fide, and at the angle of meeting yourhave thefame, > = Example: ifticall Logarithide of houtes and 4o minutes, I feek for 6 at the head cf the dexter page, and fer 4ocin thefide, and . . at Twonld"know’the La 60 Culpepper's Aftrological Judgement ae the angle of mecting,I have 12859, the Logi Logar. thereof. en You have 4 Logavitiné “and ws know the hours and minutes belonging there feek the fame or the neereft thereto ( for thi wil ferve very wel } inthe Table, and at th head ofthat colunine where you find ito fhavethe houre, and then caft your eye toh Fitele columne on the left hand, and you har the minutes, Example, 7 Tivould know what hours and minutes ti Lagarithme 9025.doth belong to shaving foun the famein the Table, at the head of that co Jomnegerel inde i i inate itee Dip bed, pare ep he Satay ae orn [in ape 4 pe theo # Va : A Tb rene 7 ot of jr Nob. ape hows boy be Fire ne ee thom 4 by bo Hall fees wot é Poche se eee, nin peak isd teens * Some 2 é Capt pagetne TM whe a off Juin — ey hoot od CHoce fers epee oh fiawmnd Ju ft he ett ke lacs 46 “tore sant j fm tie > eh toa z wi rks pyre joven famwh. fe me er makooy off hi egy He Ua i piel are ea tet tet sie bye ates car YR 127 3] 4) s ye TEr21gt 4p s1s Al 31780] 24849] 20794) 17919] us684 1906) 737926 [22618] 19253 [16740 |14733 31816] 24766] 20739] 17876] 6565313831 27645] 20881) 19205 [16703 |14703 31453] 24684) 20684) 17835) 15620] 138.) 27$06|22485| 19138 |16666 | 14693 31294} 24603] 20629] 17793] 15587) 13789) 27399 |22420] 19102 \16629 | 14643 31135| 24521] 20575] 17752] 15554] 1396, 27291 29354 19064 16593 Is 30981] 24441] 205201 yaa] 15$211 13725 27186 fpa2go| 1901816556 goB27| 24354] 20466] 17571] 15486] 13598 27080 18971 [16519 30578] 24281] 20413] 17630] 15455] 1670 26997 f22152|18995 [16584 3959] 24204] 203$9) 17590] 15423] 136) 26874 22068! 18879 |16448 8 4! 24125] 20% 61 6773] 22035| 18833 16412 30384} 24120} 20307] 17550) 15391] 13616] 26773] 22038| 18833 [164 Leeson awe ey 30239] 24049|20254! 19 509] 15358] 13589] ML 135835] 26672 [21972] 18788 [16376 30058] 25972] 20301] 17469] 13326) 13562] Mt | 36591! 26873 [21910] 18742|16341 25951] 28896) 20149] 17430] 15294] 13535] Mal 3334726474 21818 18607 [16308 23820} 23221120097] 17350] 15262] 13509] ua 35115] 26577 [28787] 186$2|16269 29684] 23744] acogs| 19351] 15230] 13481, 34884 aa 18507 | 16234 85| 29550] 23572] 19994) 17311] 15198] 13455} 34660] 26185 |21665) 18563116199 29417/ 23597] 19943! 17272] 15166) 13428| [us| 24437] 26089 [216c4] 1851916154, 29287| 23524] 19892! 172331 15125] 13402| fur] 94225] 2595621544] 18474 [16129 29152| 23451] 198411 17194] 15103113375] [BiB] 34012] 25903 [21484] 184301604 (43893| 29030] 23375] 9791) 17156] 15072113349] Mug! 33809 25817|21425] 1838 7|16060 dy }12761| 28904] 23307] 19741) 17119] 15048] 15322] Myo) 33804) 25719 [21364 18343 26025 42292) 2878] 23237] 19691] 17079] 15010113296] [Asi |s3308 l213¢7] 1830015991 Bt] 8657] 23169] 15641) x7o4o] 14978] vga70| [s2| gai] 95839 2245] 1825918956 }+1379) 285 36] 23096] 195921 17000] 24949] 1gaqa) Mhss|33023 Jatigi|18a1gjtsg22 40943] 28414) 23026) 195.431 16954) 14916113218 \2s36a{ans3| 28a fise8s [19543 |28278| 225s9t1949s! 16097] 148841 agica 2107 ir ts H2445]48182] 22885) rods! 148$5/13155| Bs) }21019| 1808 15820 | 139272]28086) 228 20] 19399] 16883] 14824] 13140 }20963| 18043] 15787 2791 | 90752] 193.494 16814) tasty 120906] 180ot| 15753 147531430 31980)24934|20850] 17959] 15720, — t7Boff48 49] 20794] 17919} 15485 64 ATable ————_ ne Mo eas 12321 p08) 8755! 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When Planets are direct, fubftra& their plac the day precedent from their placethe day fub fequent, and you have their diurriall motion bucwhen they are retrograde , fubftea& thei place che fabiequenc day from their place th precedentday, and you have likewife their urnal motions. Unto the Logiftical Logarithm of the hour and minutes afternoon of the Decymbituré,adé feverally theLaeifticall Logaritbm of the Plane ditirnal motions , and the fumys thal] be the L: gillicall Legarithm of the or minute + which when Planets are dirc& (i Sun and Moon are alwaies fo , if you call yo} felfeto remembrance) mutt be added to the place the day precedent 5 bue when they are trograde, it muft be fubltratted from thi place the day precedent, and then their aggy gate or remaindec wil be their true place até Decumbiture. Having found the Moons place at the Dect biture, by adding “5 degrees thereto, you ha her place at the fiift judicial time; by addi three figns to her place at the Decumbitur youhave her place at the firft Crifis; and fo¥ ‘acontinnal addition of 45 degrees, the Moo place atthe Crifis and judicial. daies is four asis hewed Chap.$ Obferve in the Ephemerides what day Moot iba. © of Difeafes cirlarged, 69 loons place is nate ‘Tefe'‘then her place‘at the sili or judicial day, and note chedifference 5 nd allo note the diurnal motion’ that days hen from che Logifticall Logarithm of the diffe= neeof the Moons place at noon that day, and te place at the Crifis, fubttrage che Lagfticall «garish Of her diurnal motion » and the re- hinder wil be the Logi. Logar. of the time jernoon,of the Crifisor judicial day, Exanple, Amman fell fick of a Fever 1652, November 7. ing Sunday,at 8& 10, minuces acnights At hich time he was taken wich agreat horrour, od with fkaking, as in a violent aguc,Scc. innyy Epkemerit for that ycer you wil finde iif you look) the planets places upon the 7 & 8 iiesof that moneth as followeth ; [O9| > Je] ¥ ist) e[e i 1 430, 4712 3018 34 my | at = | | 284 GB 413 3 uF at, 34s net Then fabstrad their places the day from Heir places the 8 day, becaufethey are all di- hiyand the-diurnall motion wil be of > 133381] 012 h ¥ & 2 1® I=\ ea laalnat The Logiftical! Logarithm of houres 10: 70 Culpepper's:4firalagical Judgement is soyo.wbich added unto the Legificall Lge rithm of the Planets diurnal motions, the wort} wil beas in the following examples, 11 diurnal mot. 3164 Lagi. Logar. ot 10 time afternoon, to74 0 a1 tobe added, + 7 42396 produce © plave in'n| to25, 47. ‘which wil 26 degrees and § min, (13. 33 diurnal mot, D sy] Logit. Logar. of 8 10 time aft. noon, 1078) 4 37 tobeadded — 6432 to20 1 31 D place the 7 day, which wil male 2g degrees 8 min. in 1 5 her place at the De} cumbicure, - Ifyou deale after the fame manner with the reftof the Planets, as inthefe two examples ¢f theSun and Moon, their places at the Decum biwure wil be ¥wis 1149 0 $919 321130) bo Bor 2608 | 2908 Then the fir judicial day wil be when ) commeth to 10. 8.of &. on the 10 day of thy famemoneth, D place is 29. 52% , being th next leffe, and waneeth of 10.8 in Lee, 10.16} andher diurnal motion is 13.27. of Difeafes cnlarged. 10 16 the difference Lopift.Logay. of } 12 27 thediurn.mot. 19 48 the time int fernoon that the fislt judicial day fallech on, z.the 11 day at 7 and 48, in the hiorning, Lib.2. 7 By9n 6553 The firftCrifis happeneth when > commeth 025.8'R.on the r4day, D placd isin ™ 19, mand wanteth of 25 8.5 240 her diurnal notion is 116556 "5 24 the difference bap tegea S 55 thediumn, mot. yoct E fo 53 the time raed feernoon of the firft Crifis, viz. at 10 a clock and s3.min at night,the 14 day of November, 14g The fecond Crifis wil be when’) commmeth i325, 8, of f.the at.day, D”placeds 14. 50 in f and wanteth of 25.8. (the place at the ils, 10. 18, and her diurnal motion is 12 p. ; 18 18 thedifference 459 leit agot Sta 40 thediumnamot, 639 19 31 thetime 3098 of the fecond Crifis aiternoon, viz. at halfe an oar after’ in the morning the 22 day. The like mcthod ufed in the other,asin thefe ixamples 5 the Moons place, attd time, &e, wil eas in the following Synoplise A —— ff of Difeafes enlarged: - > 73; Certaine Precepts premifed before the Prognofticks, lit of all, ake notice that the Significators of Difeates are to be taken under thefe wo ion 1 Gungelor mare principal 2, Par Wecular, or leffe principal : The general or more DXARAAR tether, che Sun, the Moon, and the feendene ; of chefe che Sun is molt principal- y tobe lookt upon in Chronick difeates , the loon in Acute. ' Spiros particular or lef principal are hele: 1. TheLord of the Acendent. SW™ tee |B a. Thefixth Houle, soquowon mq | 3, The Lord of thesixth Houle, ooo ¢ dhe Planets in. the A(cendent or fixth ul, rigger xr | Saturn and Mars ;. for they naturally burt bebody,whatfoever the matter is. 2, The fixth Houfe and its Lord and the Hanets in iy if there be any chere, belt deferibe henature of the difeafe ufually , nay alwayes ichey aff either of the Luminaries , or the Lird of the Afcendent, 3. The Afpeéts of the Moon to the Planets tre alwayes to benoted 5 for they fill produce fomething tothe fick, but efpecially ufo ia ical ‘The Lunar Afpedts, and the nuraall ‘Alpetts of the Plane: Bi dd See Time of inci- dence, 12 00.9 00 0 «0 00 09g 3 q vu ® 3 Ss s = > x 2s Decambirure 74 Culpepper’s Affrological Judgement .+/ tical and Judicial dayess for you thall finde a certain erat, even as certaine as the Sun (a henever failes without a miracle) Thae wl the Moott paffes by the bodies of Jupiter a Venus, or their Alpetts, efpecially their god _, Ones if they benor Lords of death » rerints FA, Venus helps more then Jupeter 5 les chem y fo ill bueif you will’ be ruled by me, hake ufe of that fortune whichis ftrongeft 5 a ich friend may relieve your wants, a poore iend cannot, he may with you well and fo rth ; But ituppofe you dare not fy while lhe Moone come to the good afpe& of Jupiter nd Venus, adminifter you medicine when theis nthe place where one of them was at the fumbiture; if you dare not ftay chat time neie er for delay is dangetous in acute difeates, be ire you place one of them twoin the Afcend~ nt when you adminifter the medicine : Puc all hee tOgether, and ie will eell you in words at Jength and not in figures, That a Phyfitian without Aftrology, is likea pudding without it hich the Moon is feparated at the decumbi- ure, and the condition of the Planetalfo (for Planets are of different condicions as well as 0 fome good, and fome bad ) is to be heeded, Ifyou pleafe to obferve the tate ofthat fame Planet, by it you may know the ftate of the fick, ind what che caufe of his ficknefs is. When $ Thatplace and ffate of the Planet from. in osimini 76 Culpepper's Aftrolagical Judgement: When you have donefo,itis your wife wa toconlider to what Planet the Moon applic: arid chen do but fo niuch as view whiat fign tha Planetis in , whathis conditions be , whetha| hie be benevolent or malevolent 5 whether he be Mafculine or Feminine, Diurnal or Nodturna, hot, dry, cold or moit he governs, and what 7. Confider whether the Planet the Moon ap, plies to, bein an Angle, in a fucceeding oria cadenchoute , and when you have done fo, but fo much as confider what the Houle he isin fignifies, and what members of the body it go vernes, and then take but alittle notice whe ther the Planet joy in the Houfe or notsthat you may not bemitaken herein, I will certifie you in what Houfes every Planet takes his delights being confident even amongft Aftrologers, mor are ignorant of iethen know it. 1. The Sun delightech in the fourch , ninth, and eleventh houfes, 2. The Moon rejoyceth in the third and fe. venth houfes, 3. Saturn rejoyceth in the Afcendent,eighib and cwelfth houfes, ms 4 Jupiter rejoy eth in the fecond,ninth and eleventh, 5. Mars rejoyceth in the third, fixth, and tenth. 9. Venns rejoyceth in the fifth and twelfth. 7. Mercury rejoyceth in the Afcendent and fixth. Here's hut a few words, yet fo fignificanr,that the iba. Of Difeafes enlarged, 77 enatureand condition, the Sympathy and mipahy of the Planers, and ty confequence IF the Creation, may be known from it + ’Tis tiny prefent {cope to-tell you which ways et yotr"witsupon ity and they will be the er . 'f Confder whethe the Planet the Moon ape ies to bedireét or retrograde 3 fife or flow j motion, Oriental, Occidental, or Combutt, ether fortunated or inforcanated by other lanetss g-And when youhavedone fo, it is your wie at ray to confider whether the threataing Pla bein his own Houfe or Exaleation, or other Afential dignities, whether he be in Planets of dterms or vills for if agcod Planet have gottenan ill Planet in his Term, he will order kin, ‘Towinde up this in one word , conlider shether the thrgatning Planet have power to jxccutehis will or nots for fomecimes a cusft cow hath thort horns. 10, Dobut fo much asnote what configura~ trons the Lord of the Afcendentslix and eight Hosfes have one with another: And amongit the ret, doe not forget the lord of the feventh and ewelfth Houtes, and Ile give you my reafon uhy: The eventh, becaufe it oppofeth the A= feendent , heaffaules life openly, and is nota fhawed of what he doth : he playes the pare of Ajax, goes to’t with downsright blowes with- loutpolicy. The fixth,cighth, and twelfch Hou feshave no affinity: at all. with the Afcendent : And they bave more of Wnfes in them then d- jen 98 Culpepper's Aftrological Fudgemensi jexsthey takea way a mans life when hee {leep, or elfe when he knows net how. 11- Partile afpelts are far more ftrong an prevalent then pfatick, 12, Be pleafed but to confider, that che fx Houfeand his Lord fignifies the fickneffe: The-feventh the Phyfitian: the eighth Deat the tenth the Medicine: the fourth the end « the Difeafe: and when you have done fo I hav done with this point. Thefe things thus premifed, when you hay, sead chem,you thal! find Jfirft came (o—~» \ CHAP. X. Geuerall prognotications of the Difeafe, F: ft of all (quoth my Author ) The Hout of Heaven is of more force then the Signs and is very likes and che Signe then che plane and the planct then the fixed ftar he is with: But Dottor Reafon told me, the Planet was ol more force then the figne, becaule Ite was near et to. theearth, 2.1F the afcendent, and the luminaries, and their Lords be affitted by the Malevolent, o¢ byanill Houfe, orby the Lord of death, (its hho great matter what ftar it is) and the beneve- Jents lend no aid, tis threwdly to befufpedted thefickneffe drags death at's tailes he's awit Phyfitian chat can cut the cord. Picison Cage, 1. Of Riftefee eolargede:'..> 7g" med posts be well dif filigted,: the feare of death is Para ib. 5.1 the forenal pied, and not al ore then theharme, j, A Benevolent Planet in the fixth, cures the iea(e without the helpe of a Phyfician, S.A Malevolent Planet chere caufath achange nthe difeate, and nfvally fom bettor to worte, 6, An infortune in che deventh thews but a icy Phyfician, though he bea CollepiateA prune there, the contrary. 7A fortune in the centh thewes proper phy- who evergives it. +» t : $A fortune in the fourth brings thedifeafeco good and fpecdy end ( unleffe he BeLord of hecight, ) Every man mutt do his office sand as he cafe may be ordered y Jupicer may kill'a nanas foon'as Saturne,. 9, Jupiter helps moftin cold difeafes, Venus in ote 10, Thebodies of Jupiter and Venus fooi cure heficks their Trines and Sextiles wil shot be nuch ‘behind hand in the bufineffe: And ¢o tel au mY own opinion wirkane any comple atts The Quartile and Oppolition of Jupiter ind Venus is better then the Sextileand Tring Saturn or Mars in this cal4,unleffe they be Lord of the afcendent. And’ by the time you have been acquainted with Dr. Experience but halfe fo Longe as | have been, hec’| makeyou be+ ave that what I fay is true, a1 A Malevolent in the afcendent threatens fécaths and makes the fick as croffegrained as Bajezet tho Turkith Emperour when he was in is 12 Good © ql mour they governet They dpe the like if th be affidted wich malevolent s was thever any you that reads thefe lines abufed by honeft pte ple? P13 The conjunékion of the Moon and Merc is as conflant-asa weather-cocke the dif fion of Mercury is very various according his pofition and afpeét: with the Forcunes hei better then either’; He's jut ike the people d this Nations he followes the fwinge of the time 14 The Moon in conjunétion with the Su upon a criticall day, alwayes portends mic hiefes ind fay Itold you of its no alpett ist propitious to the Moon as the Trine and Sex tile of the Sun. Nothing fo hateful co the {quer mith Virgin as his Conjunétion Quareile a] Oppofition. 15, Ifthe Mocn upon a Critical day apply toamalevolent, you'l fay that is buta fcuny figne : 1am half of your opinion : yet itis go to be wileyand that you may be fo, fee whid} cf them is itrongelt, the Mfoon, or the. Malev Tent: ifthe Moon be flrongeft,fhe'l make a han foome fhife with him + ifthe beweakeflyou kno the old proverb The weake/? goes to the Wali and the fick is liketo beforcedto make ufe ofa] winding fheet inflead of a feather bed. 16, Ifthe Moon upon a Critical day be wi the bodies of Sol, Mars, or Saturn: and whic of them (he’s withall, be Lord of the eight Honfe, away trots life to feeke a new habieat ‘ons for fhee’s weary of her old Houfe. r o iba | of Difeafesenlargeds"") Bt 17. Ifthe Mdon ona Critical day be ftrong in Houle or exaltation, thongh afpetted to nd lance at all? heel play her part ftoutly (for all sa woman) that fhe!l relorethelick to his tine health, if fhe were not too too much af= Jad arch Decumbirare, 18, If the Moon be not atall afflicted at the cimbiture( as fach a thing may be) yer if the affied on the Critical day, a good Crifis not be expetted : Sicknefle keeps his old aunefe death diff fff him. This in ge« val; Bat hethat would go thewifelt way to orke in judging of difeates, mult come c¢¢par= julars.The ching I promifed you in this Chap ; was general Prognoftications of dileates y hich that I may make Jucidly appeareto you, for you thall not find one of Pharaohs Taske= kis of me, to fet you to make Bricks, and you wo feew3) Bebut pleafed ferioufly to tigh in the Ballance of Reafon, thefe particus in 1. Fink ofall, Whac difeafes every Planey of infelfe diftintly caufech. ; 2. What difeafes diftinétly are under. every, eall ligne of the Zodiack!”°", 3, What particular pare and member of the dy, every France generally raleth, 4, 4 What particular parcand member.of the pay, isunder the influence of every figne of the icak, and houfe of the heavens in a Celefi« Scheme, ; 5, What parc of the botly every Planet par larly rules, according to his erahlie throuel thfgne 8 bf of Ba Culpepper'sAftrological jadgment, Wx ' Of difeapei, Bnlatged)' > 83 Ofall thefe in Order, and in che {athe Ord, or both 5 cake dhs fora ‘Maxinie of trinh, they are fet down sand if 1 thould happenafd fay Htold you foi! A Planet #tiling a pare be a licle critical againft my Author, whoudht he hovly, ithe be weak ‘in tht Geriefs, thar helpe ic? oe st of che body is naturally weale:'T-confeffel 7 howd wherefore Art was made bite rohelp —- —— fuwce The eyes are under the Lihtinaries; pd whofoever hath thein weak in thetr'Genefis, Part. Vs chbuc weak fight. The Lungsate under Jus ers Mercury is the oppofice Planet to Jupiter : The difeales the Planets fignifie. ‘ow then, if Jupiter be weak, heis hot able.to: : ngthen the Limgs as he thould docs if Mfer= 3, MpAHe Sun cauieth Pimples & Burlesinaihy be che aflidting Plance 5 he weakens che “Tig tion deat ings by oppofition : IF you have bur wit e« ing, Teemblings, FuintingsTimpanies, foagh coknow By a penny how ‘a shilling’ s Eyer, and difeates of the mouth Cramps, Call yned, ; [ver €) vulfionspall difeates of the Heart anid Brain, i heir detendants y vis. the Nerves and Arte Senfhus hecinlis (vec nbn ef pari )¥epone, a oobey ory Hnking breathgCathar', rote Feavery " Authors, And ifany aske why I mention ad ford thefe dines e place amidtt your fenyesy more,tell che here’s more then istruc, Nol ind be aot gul’d by fpeciows pretencess tothe purpofe. ae 7 Fir "OF all Timpanies are under the Mob J have how leaped from the Sut'to the Mdon; Thave known the Sun givea fiery difeafe, tind he (they fay) caufeth Apeplexies,Pullies, nevet a watty. igpPolick, Belly-ach,difeaes in the Stones, Blad- 5 4 2, Cramps and Convulfions are underlie, and inttruments*6F Genetation ; flopping 7 °° Moon; and fo are all difeafes that often ret verflowing of che Termés in Women, as Agues doe: you hall finde the fame in ammb:opfies, Fluxes, all cold and Rhumatick di- ther Aphorifin afterwards y and although fis #Cone, Scan» Worms in he Bll, * ™% B- ‘Author coutradiét himfelf, Idoe not delight Bhurncs, and hurts in the Eyes , Surfeits, rot- imitate him in chat {port. é Conghes, Convullfions , Falling-fickneffe, 3. The head, brain, and nerves, arenottiing Evi, Apofttinmesy {mall Pox,and Meafless dectheSun, as you fhall heare hereafter. | Hillcospulate and evade hutonrs in any part 44-Catarr’s areunder either Mercany oF JoMltthe body y Lechargies , and all difeales of lgmesthus my Author, G2 Amongft Hane Foe eo broken Bo 84 Culpepper's Afrologicaltudgment “-Amongltthele Texceptagaini 1, 3. Apopee and youll deny rt withina quajter of an hour -unleffeyougall fleep with reading. ce 2, Difeafes in the Inflruments of Generatiog for they are caufed by Venus and Mars ; by th cone by Sympathy, by the other by Antipathy, 3. The Gout is caufed by Saturneey Wh knowes but that's the reafon, why he moves {lowly ? ‘i Now muft leave the Moon, and mount up Saturne, for Yam Yikethe world, never in aS tion, 4 Under Suturne fay Authors, are Apoplexi| Tooth-ach Quartain Agues ; all difeat which come of Melancholy , cold and drinefi Leprotie, Rhumes, Confumptions, Black- Jan dife, Pallies, Trembling, vainefeares,forinide ble fancies of a HobgoblingDroplies, Goutsd all forts 5 #Dog-like-hunger , Hemorthoit| s, aud Diflocations, Deaf! pi in the bones, Rupuuresit he be in Leo or Sem or in an jl] afpect co Vevus.: Niack paffion,Chin} Bune %"¥ cough ,'Cathan’s, pains in the ladder al long difeates, all’ madneffe chat comes of Nel Lancholy, fear, or griefe, If you will giveme leave (after I havebea fift a licele Critical) I will be (fecondly, al tleinfiudtive, 4. Texcept againft Apoplexies 5 and if yo would learne why you thall fo foon as Yel have learned a little patience. 2. except againtt Dropfies,for they are unde che Moon. . ib.2. of Difeafes enlargech, 85" 4, Fekceptagainit Catharr's, for tidy areun- Jr Jupiter gr Mercury, orboth. ©" ig lexcepeagaingt Dog-like hunger , for it’s, der Mar 7 ‘Afew inftrndtions! would I vor} seillingly iveyous if1 choughtyou would be fo tite co: ed theths~ Thad as good give them you under’ #; asunder another Planet." 1 will not vethgm you under eat Plandt Becanf@ hee's fool’ Mulicidn thar harps ales on one Pleedauteyaiesfess +4, Bp Sympat ? ? 2 yf Antipathy! And asthe caufe it} Tormuftthe cure be, uns) cfeyoit vill doeas Stopging did y'Itrike hi Bhat flands. next’ ou Bee ‘another abufes ou Thele difeates Sattrne caufeth by Sympathy 5 Footh-ach, broken bones ; the reafon is becaule erulesthe bones. Deafneffe he caufeth be- aufehe rulesthe ates.” Melancholy and all af ofthe ipleen by the {ame argument, 2, Allorhe afliéts all the parts of the body hat are under the Moon by antipathy s and icewifehe playes the fame tricks with thofe fatareunder the Suns you fhall know what Ixy areby and by. The great wiledome of a tylitian is toknow whether Saturwe caufe the jieafe by Sympathy or Antipathy 5 and then ke notice, that as the caufeis , fois che cure, Bimpathetical, or ancipathetical 5 and withal je not forger, thae fympathetical cues ftrengehin 86 Culpepper's Affeclogical Judgemen, frengehen natures Antipathetical curgs, in on degree or another weaken ity And now you ‘awn mother-wit (ifyou have any} will tea you that Antipachetical Medicins are not ob fed , unle( to fach Patients whom Dottor| norance of Doftor Carelefnells hath shad Tong in hand, that Sympathetical will jjot fe the tune, To bring all this to. the point i hand sat i may: be ‘ybeful + 1 Sarg cal ¢ difeate by Sympathy, cureig by the Sym thevcal heats of Satur." Wf he eaule he feale by Antipathy , note whether it be Anti thy to Sun or Moon; or if it Dapp ie flruments of generation , be fre, it, thy to Venu, Make yfe of the, Sympathetial Fearbs of thofe Plants retell fro ey fhall not live the age o give you rational inftrutions for them all:] now leave: Saturte and come a lietle lope to——— ‘ Iupiter. lupiter they fay caufeth io by: Ants a Titele 6th. belong Lib.2. . ef Difealer enlarged. 2, Againtt corruption ofblbod + For Saturn oxrupts te blood by melancholy » and Mars by choler. . "ee Difeates under! Mors are pellilences, ining feavers, Tertian and quotidian agues’ rari Carbuncles and Plague fores 5 Burning? « Fading, Ring-wormes, Blifters,PhrenfieFury> ice-braines 5 (udden diftempers. in the head omming of heat yellow-jaundice , Bloody Hix, Fiftula’s. All’ wourmds whatfoowens: Di- Fafes in the Inftcurments of generations the Ronein the relnsand bladder : {cars andi pock- ples in cheface : all husss by-Ivonand fire; the Rabi » Calenturesy Sty:Anry + all difeafescomming of choler,ans ber, of pallion}. 5 Roovuftall thefe Fean. july excepo:but a inf one 3, and that is. the falling fickntffe, hich is under the Moon. And yourfelf will bs of my opinion ifyoit pleate buc to take ho~ come at con~ andes! all infirmiti csof the Liver and Veingy inflamnull, tionsofthe Lungs, Plurifies, and other A hums about the Breaft and ‘Ribs , all*difd proceeding of putrefattion of blood and wind ghinicy Havers and others dies hi thors ither forwant of wie or fuper-abin dance ofignorance are pleted to auribuet him. : Againftthete T except. 1. Againft Apoplexicss for it cannot-co1 aboucthat all the Planets fhould caufe Apo + plexies 5 if(o,they would be more frequent thi they are, Ven. Difeafes under Venus are all difcates H che vomube whatfoever, as Suffocation, Pre« diflocation, &it,; All difeafes inci~ bers of generation 5. the (Reines bed Navel, as the running of the: Reines the tnch Pox, 8c. All difeafes conming by: ine dinate love or Iu, priapifaus, imypodenoyin heat ‘of encationupeares of all forts :: AIL hfcafes belonging to the usine as Difuria, 1+ tia and Stranguria,{liack’palion,Diabetes,8 Againtt 87° a vente F 1 esc, 88 Culpepper's Aftrotogical udgemenh Hib. 2, of Difeafes enlarged! > 8g Againh chele fexcept 5 + ron clon ; 1. Impocency in the a8 of generation, fa i ee ae for : PART. Ik i 2. Ruptures for he hath a fhite in Tbe om for i ; tha pat difeafes diftingily are anderevery figne of the 3. Difeafes of the Urine , forttey.areunday dndiavk, Prt ted ow fark. 1 a othea'p 4- Thelliack palin which iscuinder Muifl.prpNder Aviesare all puthes » “Whelkes and curye . ‘ bon te y mples, freckles and Suntwbucai vinithe _Merainy. Under:Mercury! ate almoft all fife; the (mall. Pok and Meafles»Polipus og dicafes of the braite y as Vertogo's, ‘Madueii-me tangere 5 all difeafes in the Head ¢ as Bc, all dileafes of the Lungs, as Afthuic, Phihiiead-ack of all forts 5 Vertigo; Frenzy; Lithare ftkss Re. Allimperfeftions ofthe Tongue, fly Forgdtnelle, Catalepi, Apoplesy, déad 4. ster» Stanmering, Lifping, 8c, Hoartnl ff, Cough pli Coma, falling Sickneffey Goniulfidnss jf, Samfling in the nofes alle of the Meno Cramps, Madnelfe, Melancholy erembling wir ryy!Gout y ftopping of the heady Dumbndfall Amongitall thefe I can juftly éxcepe buo-ae’ Folly.and fimpliotty , (che Epidemiical deta eaintt one, which is (mall Pox and Meaflen. + cftheisime):and whatfoever-hurts the intel 2, Under Taurus all difeafes incident to. the Jeftual facuity, Thidat , asKinge-evil , Quinfit y\fore Thivats: Againtt thefe I exept, for Wehsin the neck, Flux of hhume ithe T broach 1 Againtt the dcfeets of the mentory for Soff :.3) Difeafes under Gemini ave all fuch at ate; surcehath a gseacthare in that. incident to the hands, armer'and fhoulders,wlies: 2, Againll theGoue, for Saturn wholly rulolf herthey comeveally or by accidentyasfraGhites that, “ts we “Hi dil cations, and fch as comeby blood-lettingy Vhavenow done with this pare andi anf coruption of che:blood y windlneffe in the ounettersaske why. Fhave noegiven Real lod s and indecd | have often found by expe, for all | havefpokent Tell them the Reafoniff sence, hat Gemini fignifieth winde in the blood: chave in the'mattcrs and he thatis not abletolf morethen any other figne. have now done with Geunini, after Uhave told you my own opi- nion, whichis, that the upper part of the thot, 1" decynamely that with which we carry burthens, ' isunder Taurus, which is the Embleme of lar bour, and riot under Gemini, as the common received opinion is. 4Under go Culpeppér's Affrologi¢al Judcerteng' 4 Under Cancer areall imperfections of breaft, omack,-or Liver whatfoever , as a whatloever are incident tq the breatts of wo men, a8 Cancersthere, and that inflammati which womenicommonly call the Ague init brefts plurifies, want of appetite to victualsyvt of digeftion of viduals, coldneffe and over-hea| dkaheRRamtc, droplics, conghes you firide: our. abe. seth. your iglves,s the sul plaime as the nofe in a mans face, 50) idee Levaveall paffions af the heart, a eeailfions faith my Author, ‘ ‘nh j-Buci€t may tuake fabold 9s to digroffe ait lesb thall teld ya, and prove ie tao when I hay done, that couyulfions are nota difeale of ti heart, but of che-braine, us “The truth is, itiscne of old Ariftrtes apa ‘ons y which crape into his noddle, as he was marring plat'sPhilofophys The Nerves bare their originalifcom che beainey convulfion is plucking or ewitching of the Nerves, Erges igi a difeafe of thebraine.and not of the heart, But toreturne to my purpofes under Leoart all difeates, the heart or bath id Fabjeét ta, as qualmes and paflions,palpitation and treosbling of the heart, :violent burning feaverd, fore eyes, theyellow jaundice, and:all difeates of cholen and finch difeafts as come of aduftion of blood, asthepeflitences andl am afraid Bondo will fmde this too true fo foon as Saturné coines into La. pray God micigate this evil influence to» ward them ac that time: +1 Under Virgo are all difeafes incident i ib. a, of Difedfescnlarged, gn a ‘ele, the meferaick veincs, the Omentum er tarega ple, Take fer inbloges ye Erciclar wormes winde, ithe gus, ptrudions, the cholick and Hiack ,pallignsy cdacfle of the fpleqa » hypondriagk mmelann ly. ; ane Rio” Libra are difgates of the eines or. iineyes, which you pleafe 5 for the, fignifican. Fons of the words are the Came 5 heaé,of ‘ines in women , which fometiones gautecl Heulsintyavaile, many times abortion, al- ayes hard labour 5, the fone cor gravel in the ines, And now let mpeteach you lirele 5.4 h me Ggnificacor: ‘of the difeale, and in Yingos xis the wind-cholick, withoue appearance tle ther ofgravel or fone, ie Haxoa cage of your patient , leaft it eurneta ravel in the kidneyes; when. he comes into Lx €——), na, and ta the fone of the blagder, when he comesinto the Scorpion, 1, Do By your own ingenuity , if you have any, you aay by this example finde out: twenty more like to-it. , eee Lallly, onder Libra are all difeafes , coming of windeand corruptions of blood. . 8, Under the Scorpim are gravel and ftane inthe bladder, inflammations and ulcer ther, alldifticulties of urine whatfoever 5 all inspec feltions of the uyine, ruptures, fiftula's, hemors thoids, the french pox y running ofthe reinety priapifonug all difsafes:that infeft the privities afmen or women. Tee 9. All difeates of the wombe, of which more in a 9 Culpepper’s Afrological elgement in my Guide for' women, alréaity th Pai, 9. Under Sagitteria are all ieatet tnt thighes dnd hip § as the Sciatica &c: fiQulaey shufe’places, heat of blodd, peftilenéial feaver arid tatce chfs fora generat rule, that ‘Les! and Sagittarius iguities tall from horfes , and bury by fotitioredl-beatts §: they being boch of they fignes ofhorfemanthip ; belidesSagiftarin pre jdicech th! budy by cholet, heat, fire, andin| temperancéin (portsi 7 10, Uniler Capricamne. are all di(éates int Iknees andthams5 as paines, fprains, fraCture id diflocations, leprofies, itch, feabs, all di feafes of telancholy 4 aiid, all ramditts calc Schievas: Sb tt rt, Under Aquarius are all difeates'thciden totheliegband Aikley, all melancholy cox sult inehe blood, cramps 5 and the'truthis| thickielfe of blood moftanfually prdceeds from this figne, Askeold Sélure and he will tl you the reafyn, By thisthe ingenuotis haves pplaine way to finde.ue mores and by cht Doftr Experience got materials to, worke with, 12. Under Pifies is all lamene‘fe, aches and difed(de'sncidkent to the feet, as poutd} kibes, chifdbhater) Sc, All difeates comming'of fal flegyit nlbxe hutowtes, fcabs, itch,botches, and breakingyeavabuut the body ,. the fmall por and meafles4 all: cold and moift difeatee , and fac dy tative by: catching! wet-and cold atthe fect. And iffwb wall be. pleafed. but to ‘nite i the ia. . Of Difeafes chilarged, i ity Pifces holds with ries 3ypt will: callinity Picts ee was al pikes (0 fpeedily up tothe head,” ynr, Peer powegof ie heavens Uv. have Ie fame gniications with the fignes 5 ue ft wae with Aries, the fecond with Tamas, and f Analogically till you come to. the twelfeh pale, Which hach the faine lignifications that pices hacks Ce have now done with shis pare, only be reafedeo take notice that the fiery lignes fir <5, rials ofcholery airy fignes. difeales of ane slignes uf(double bodics}ifeates of mine ;3 x tr ) ions ; ae ‘and chus much for this party the paines'o hich has been mine, the benef thall be yours, Fyauuill carne but idlewefle out of Doors, nd place ingenuity in his room. 7 Pant Jk ite particular parts and Members of the bedy> which the Planets generally ral. Ercin I muftcithera lietle be eritical , or Ife part from my loving friend Doétor eaiom Tam loth co doe the latter, and there Fe multiake bold wie cheformers + 1. Saturue fay Authors, rules in the body of un the fpleeny and eherebe keeps his Cau: iterighe Fare, the Bladder the Bones, t Teeth y che retentive faculties thoughout 94 Culpepper's Affrological Yadgement body j' which whatit.is5 be pleafed'to feeny fhort ‘Freatife of humane vertties yin the latagphings end of my Ephemerides, for Annd:1651. uke yyoulhall finde not onely whae ie'is, buc aif ‘whaticis gdod for. ‘Againft all chis I excepebut againft only on which is the Bladder, forthat is under thedo inion of the Moon, 2. They fay Iupiter rales the lungs, ribs fides, iver, veines, bloud, the digetivefacaly, the natural vertue of man which he rules, 3 Lawyers call it, toto &- in folido, © Befides Authors fay, he rules the arterics and feed; but how they can bring it about I knon notynor I think themielves neither ¢ why fhoul Jupiter vale the arteries, when the Sun rulesie heart? 7 Hethat can givea reatom erit mibi magna pollo, and as little reafon can be pivenand thas Tittle enough, why Iipiterhould rule the (ed, which is dame Venter feeefimples furely he Planets will not rob one another 5 though man does howfoever Jip feemes to keep his Coun in the Liver;and if you are minded to ftrengehen hisoperations in yourbodies, begin there. 3. Mars rulesin the body of man , the gall, thereines, theweines, the fecrets, the left eare; thus Authors: And there is but two erue words init, whithis thegall and the left eare, Th truth iy hertles tHe appretienfion , and thes the reafon that cholerick men are fo quick- witted, ; ‘Yeajaman ofa mean apprehenfion when he iy of Dealt eerga "98 , will make k'quicker.appiehenkion in jefying his fury abenm tan ofa quic» fiummonsupall the powers ‘ofehe body and inde to revenge Wrongs though it be but imix nary. And then again Mars stiles chat fie ites oxen co valciw § he'makes every inch of hira he forthe zsthe{mells and that’s the reafon Martleal veatares have fo good Cinels, as dogs, Bic, = {ue very licelereafon,or none avall junle(fe jou will make ® reafon oftraificion, who dee ives his pedigree rather from Dx. Corruption, then Dottor Reafon:Why, Mars fhould cule the Veineseeing Jupicer rulesthe Liver, If Jupiter rule the founcain (hal he bedeni’d the ftreams? fand then the Reynes and Secrets are under Vee rusand that’s apparant without any niore dif pure ofthe flory. ‘4. Venus rules.she Wombe, Teftcles, Yards call the inftruments of Generation,the Reynes or Kidneyes, the Throat, Womens breafts,and Milk contained within themsthe feed and Liver? Bot by my Authors favour,¥ can give noo ther reafon why Venus fhould rate the Liver, unleffe | fhoald give this for a reafon s becaufe Ieper ote the feed from her before, fhe vo quie feores with him fteales away: the Liver frot im, § Under the dominion of Mercury is the Eraine, efpecially the rational part of its the imagination, the tongue, hands, -and feet, the motional part of man, And 96 Culpeppor'sAjfrologitel Fudguvet| + And thatls, gheteafan Mercuriarifts ( if Me uty be ftrong:) are fo fwift it. motions, fo fe ent of fpeech, int + J. He gives quick apprehenfiony. a {trong ima. ination arid:conceited ; he makesa good Pei aman y and firs up that faculey'in man whic) caufeth a thirft-'atier knowledge; he is ve fickle in his difpofition s and that’s that tha} makes men fo fickle-headed: If Saturne vouchfafe him a friendly look, he invery.conftane.s atherwile i yon look upon a Weather-cock y you may fafely. draw his Pidure,, ahd to difparagement to his perfor neither. 6, ;The Sun governs, if you will believe Au thors, thebraineand nerves, the heart andar 2, the fight, the eyes sand in the eyes, right eye of a man, the left eye of woman. Ary gainft thefe I except, againft the braine and nerves, the hulk. ‘ofwiich is under the Moon, Their operation is under Mercury 5 now ther if Mercury affli&t the braine, the failing isin the operation. Ifthe Moon, in thebulk orbody of the brain or nerves y he thatis a Phyfitian knowes what the operations of nature are: and then he Anowes what I fay is truth, and the foundation ofit buile upon a Rock. He will efteem it as a Jewel. Teisthe property ofa fool to carpe at whit he cannot imitate. 7. Under the Moon is the bulk of the brain, the flomack, the bowels, the Blader heal «the ipa iAifeapt ntatated® YD og je Jefeehve ofa man, the right eye of Woman : «ecm of hoples cannot draw meto believe chat lheMoon rullesthetafte,. liyou pleafe to perufe my Treatife of hue Lane veriues ac the lacter nd ofmy Ephemes ies for Anne 1651.1 think you fhall finde there pacJupiter vules it: and iny teafon for itmay «rebe found. Belldes have foniething from Dofor Experience for it, my own tafte being, ceeding good and yet che Moon excédifig, jak in my Genefiss Being in aCadent hiotte'and in Gemini, a jpiewhich ih my opitiion inore affli&s the Hoon then Capricorne, Iconfeffe Mr. Lilly affirmes Gemini to bea ofinobletignes bit I dare (carce believe him, fsisthe moft princtpal of all the fighes 5 Ge= pwiiscadentfrom Aries. ErgosScx But not fw to enter into aconcelt with that famous ny towmhom this Nations {0 much Beliole ing. : Bleed to take tiotice, tha: the uwelfth fi ure inimical co the alcendene then pefeventh s which if fo,then is the Mooi. nibre ‘Red in Geministhen in Capricartte 8 Culpepper'e dfiralogicad ucgemyn, Partly 70" ‘The particular parts of the body, under the frond nes ofthe Zoditiky and tbe honfes in the b ss ide Chaat Stem : ap yNder Aries is the head, and whatever lougs tot. as its bones, the face, braiy haire, beard, eyes, eares, fofe, tongues se Sc, whatfoever in man is above the ft Veet of the neck. ] 2, Under Taurus isthe neck, throat, the Ve tebraof theneck, which are in number (eax ‘The chanel bone, the fhoulder blade, accord tomy opinion. : Alfo ‘Taurus hath again figutficacton ini volce » forhewillroarelikea Bull. 3. Under Gemini are the thoulders, hou bones, Armes, hands, fingers, together, wi theirbag and baggage. ai 4. UnderCenceris the breaft, ribs, lig pss » the ventricle of the ftomack , wom reafls theliver, {pleen, &c. and yerDot Reafon told me the other'nighe that the pled was under Virgo. 5. Under Leo isthe heart, theback, andd Vertebraz of the breaft , which are in numb4 twelve 5 The Pericardinws fome Authors ff the ftomack is under Leasbnt I can fcarce bei it: Tam perfivaded che appetite is under 9. Under Scorpio are 7 fecretg of hoth Sexess af a fn, of Difeafes enlarged. - 99 nd that's the reafon, Auch as haye da ge ats oding in their Genelis aro tich greedy eaters. "You thacare Aftrologers, and have the Nati- ity of ich perlons in ydur hands y you know 5 the prevalency of other nifcators fhould happen to contradigt it, "You know the old proverbe, one Swallow bakes not a Summer, (6, Under Virgo istheBelly and bowels, tlie wviland {pleeny the oniencim, aid all their prtenances, &c. "Thi is chac dhe rule, and fhebids you by my nto bechalt. ‘i Under the Ballance fay Authors, arethe cin, loynes, and kidneyes, beeween which in yjaigement 5 is asmuch differenceas isbee ween eight pence and two groats, Under Li- rebelde they fay, arethe hams, buteocks, bladders and navel 5 thus Authors, Ant cted it onely to this end, that yoing Stu: Rents may fee what a moniter tradition is 5 and vy avoid being Jey the nofe by i as Beare ed to the ftake. You know well enough if the blind lead cheblind, what, will become of both: Let every one that defires to be billed by the name of Arcift, have his wits in is head, (for that’s che plate ordaiied for them) and not in his books, The hams are under Capricort, the bladder bader Scrpie,the navel under Virgo, ask Doftor Reafon,and fee ifhe tell you not the fame tale, rooCulpepper’s Affrolog 2chlJudgm ent Stisnot very fittingforme to nante chem a alfo the feminal veffels ; all the veffels dedica} ted to the generation of man , the bladder an fandament : and thetefdre though Artitscry| ‘out fo much againtt the Scorpion for a falfe, dt ccitful, treacherous, mtifchievous, violent poy} fonfome fign lee them look back to the ra from whence they arehewen: Ie shay ethq fhall fee the reafons of (ome of thelr violef fpeeches againft my felfe. A word is’ enoug towife men. Lecchcrn not {peak: evil of wha} they know not. This is moft certaine, from thofe parts oft body under the dominion of Scorpto have al men ann women in general the inflachee dj their propagation, And in them take they their greateft Be fcr fare; and thushave 1 {poken fomething Signe which every one fpeaks againtt, ‘9. Time will not ftay, therefore mf biiefe : under Segittarins are the chighes yt furry whi jully i Bone called Oar, ubich wet a a hors invented whine called, or unjaflly, Tknow not, It is cit Jewith fuperfition or worfe. The rump-bory the thigh-bone, together with all the appure nances belonging to the thigh. Some Authors fay the hams are under Sag staring, but then they are befide the Cuthion. 10, Under Gapricorne are the kntees y hang and what belongstnto them. 1" 11. Under Aquarins are the legs aud wh foever belongs unto thent , even Bom dhe d ward skin called Cuticude, to the midft of th ib.2. ° of Difeafesonlarged,,° 101 row inboth boners, for, there are wo of im, which Chirurgions becaufe ehey would pyavin ignorance, called Facile majus ie minty or ifyou wi), tibie & fibula. They know what thebones are but a quarter of sm arenot able to,pive you areafon why the pncsarefocalled. Pray take notice of ehis in sing gout to make flaves of you y they have ade fools of themsfelves, 12. Laftly, Pifces claimes the fect and ancles, bs and all the bones, To write like afcholler, verfusmetatarfisy and the bones of the toes qulesalfo che skin of thefpot , the fleth and ftsbecwiae the skin and the Bones. Forthough the fign be the weakeft in the odiackicis unwilling altogether to leave you ought but skin and bones. Alfofome Authors hold an opinion that the anes carry the famefignification in order that he houfes of heaven doe, and chat Aries fhould. pif life 5 Taurus etate Gemini brethren and fore journeyes s you ktiow the reft. Truly, My is, and when they liad done, fet themdowne opolterity. for truths who taking them up ithout tryal,cloathed Tradition in Plufh,and Je poor Reafon to goe in Rags. An Aurhor id fo Ergo tis true, right or wrong, Ttake this co be one of that generation, and T vove itthus ; By this account Cencerfhould leche Fathers sbut experience els us, that an Planet in Cancer in the Genefls threatens c= il to the Mother but in Leo to the Father, A wor 402 Culpepper’s Affrologital judgment wordis enough toawifemat, fo there is nother fignifcs Planets according to the reas nat arein; Every Planet making his Avier in hi ownhoufe, [forbeareit here 5 Firft of allt caufe it conduceth not ntuch tomy prec feopes for example,a Urine came'td me abou yeate agoes Mercury was the affiing Plane and in Ariess according to this rgee Mer rales the legaand vitiet 5 but the fan afeated inhis head, for he was mad, gave you a Table ofit in my Gitide fort tne aad ama oh to meee ne gees as you are to pay for one'thiing twice, this will not content yous you aré fo hard be plea ed that fhall not undertake’ to pl ‘ou, but to pleafemy felfes and in fo doin am confident go pleave (ome body elle, CHAP. XL How the nature and kinde of the dij found out by the figure of tbe Yates? He mature ofthe difeae is to be f peecttee ayes: Fu by che boule wl tei which ent venta 2, By the nature of the fignes , of which fi fens gi choles and Gea henr ing earthly fignes fignie uhedifeaes of Tanchoy - Of difeafir, Enlangeds Past KOS holy 5 aery fignes alfates of Bhool? and inde. any gn, difeafes of waccyaud fale es nae 3. By the Planets themfelyes ‘and their’ a cts; All this all make ‘cleer,by this (abte~ vent difcourfe , before which T fhall-premife fe followin Aphorifmes = 1. If Satnrjie figs vRechedifeate, ‘id liketoconeinue long’ e- ugh, if rrot too long + yet if he be with benes lents it mitigates , if with thalevolencé ic ene Percafcch che evil. 2-Saturae in ‘Leo, of Captie mre with the Dragons head’ or tajle, or with firs rns combultyor with vidIee fixed fre MB pfilencet or othe pethicious feavErsthat elite better,’ 3» Saturge alone in fiery fignes wes ick fevers : iL ik 4 In_ way’ fignes ficknbffes or as mous. The anes fe Tous umours » which will continue long with con inual fluxes and cold tremblings. g.Soturatin moveable fignes thewes fluit of humours in all parts of the body 5 Inagine the Dropfieor other dieafesTike to it: and yet fe isfomequeftjon co me whether Sanithé cade Droplesyea orna, unlefté afited by tHe Moon infignificetiony ¢ ° . 6" Satumne n-common fignes pives compotind difeafes, and fach as run out Of onedifea fe into another, and yet thay paffeIeafurely out of one difeate into another t03 You may almoft whip 4 fiaileas fathyou may ealily {eet before it come ifyour eyesbe in your head. ‘qe Saturne in Reed fignes, if in Leo, gives heftique se (arm be wel, i Nele wel. ar will they come, even as fwite as the windg Mee wr athouland tp one ifie jos Culpepper's Affedlocical udcemey, hedrique)feavers, in other fixed Agnes quarta aguet, gous, leprofies, and otherdifeates th ftay longer then they are welcomet. _ 8. 1Flupite cauteiheifeyle , Look to theif yer; for that's ied. the digeftion is bad blood abqundseither in quantity. or qualiy| 0¢ benot toohor. ick. 9. lypiter i ery Ggnes beftowes upon ma sol" (uch fevers 8 going of blood without pure faBtion, fechas the Greckscall Sy gchar nny tride they laftbut a yery liste ule, 19. Mars gives violent feavers wit fattions, andthe Sun gives no ous aa fau(e Lords of the’ oppofite place of the Moon) he Moon and Mercury werealfu in Oppofition- The 14 day from the time of the wound, he was taken with a feyér, which was Jan.2. The 3, of Hen. whert the Moon came to the body of Mars he died. Thus Cardan, Here are verified the 79 nd-71. Aphoriffms,and others. ie 3% r 140 Culpepper’s Affrological judgmrens A’Rutional figure on the fourth Obfervation, [To houfe hoe — alcend, isin A ahoule + Bin | 3 hoate | A oule 16 me 16% =| 1582. BY |Dec. haga it si tg day | = qi af. pa 9,Houfe: | Jib.2. of Difeeferenlargeds 144 ‘The ff obfervation is from Bederiue. 1 the yer 1545-({aith Boderins) I being mugh wwearied widh a Diurnall fever, together wich heavibelle of my breaft and hypocondiacks, took aly hed , on the day and houre hereafcer vrrationed , the Moon having feparatedt from 7 & B, and in che midft berween the budies of $8, and in 4 wo ¥, Although phe I daies were fortified wich corlvenienc afpefte, yet the did novreduce me.co heal che fignifica- tors in Tropicall fignes 5 the difeafe very often doth exceed a moneth, Iwas troubled with thefe diftempers feven weeks, and then they cur= pentoaquartain feaver, which held tne about qwoyeers, the ¢ of ® & & did portend. fach a fikvaffes for d canfeth accute difeafes , and © Cronick, the D being in ¢ with chem did adde tery mach to che length of the difeafes many ehat cinewere mich troubled wich the like fieale, of whom they that were in yeeres fell into dropfics: all this being ducly confidered, I had the advice of many Phyficions, who unani- noufly afirmed Lwould be hy dropical: nacure began robe fomewhat raifed,yetfor prevention prepared a decostion of Liguus Sanctus 5 cone aay cothe advice of the Phyficians, of which I thank ten daies,and began tobe bettered by ity and yithin a few monethsafier my body which ttas nigh fpent with thele difeafesgrew healthy and. perfeétly amended. "This one thing was tunknown to me that 6&4 thould portend quartain fevers, chiefly > beingin & or afpeft wich them. ‘Thus Bode- uM This 142 Culpepper's Aftrological Jugdement ‘This is indeed a remarkable eu iiresand} many have admired it’did noc end. in deat fuddenly,for ¢ & © with D quickly termina the difeafe in deftrudtion ; but being ¥ Lord the Horofcope was fafe and powerfull inhi own houte, and angular, beholding the Luni naries joyned to d with a 4, he would doute| leffe preferve the patient from death , but nol withoura long fickneffe :icewas fo that h, wh was the caufe of the quartane was mitigated by 2. Saturn in the afcendent caufeth long fick} neffes alwaics. uhoule $houte 12 honfe Shoute 7 houte of Difeafis.ealargedn ib. 26 143 the fixth obfervation ‘isfrom the fame Boderint. Certain Prieft fell fick of a diumall fever 1551. Aufl 30. the Moon in 17, Virgo, ring not one degece feparated from the Sun = [bout a month this dita much tioubled and iefted Him: chen this diurnal fever turned to rectiangand afterwards ince aquareane; at aft having brought up much by ff iting 12 daick re che quartane tee Me, bbe, we may her thus much, that the Moon Being, within F rayes combufldid indjcace a malignant, but ota mortal fickneffe. | im Certainly we mufl acknowledge this Decumtp hiture co bea very dangérous ons j for belides ttat Luna was combuft of Sol, within one dew eof Long, (whjch ip judgement might ax fee feem ficient to de oV as ape by he is.Aphor.) both the Luminaries ‘were partly aflied by the Oppofitibn of Satyrn Lord at the A(cendent, ahd the Shnahd' Mbon in the & houle, agreeable to the 70 Aphot: | But Jupieer being very ftrong, and alpeding theLuminaries with a Sextile, and Venus alfaafforded-hes afflance to the Hor ots ile, ic was theleffe tobe admired tHat after p long ficke ° niffe the Patient did recover. ‘The “Moon w: {eparating from the Sun , and had North latte tude, which made her to be more occidental by three degrees, which is very worthy confidera thon, A 144 Culpepper's Aftrological Judgment A rational figire on the 6 Decumbiture, which; 1551. Angu the 30, at 3.P. M. ToHoe 3M 1h --———|- Hoye {24M a 13 Houle itl -Afeerddenk | rt. “| tit fem vied. ¢ Heute’ ‘| hes Tey —— Fpited, afpetted Sacurne with a Tiny iba. of Difeafes enlarged. 145 he feventh Obfervation is the Decumbiture of Jobn Antonio Maginus, an eminent * Mathematician, Bipan torbe fick (faith he) of arquarvaine fever, under this policion of heaven,in which urn, author of the difeafe, and Lord of the feendent wasin thefixth, and the Moon fepae jating from a Quartile of Mars and fextil of Hie Sungapplied to fextile of Jupiter herdif- oftor, By this figne might a long, ficknelebe iicerned-, but: to. terminatein health-at: lat: bad that elpecially becaute Jupiter a§ radically and the Kunin my Genelis, who is prorogatur.of life, is disetted co the Trine of Saturnsin 11.20 Leo, Jind afterwards to the Antifcion of Venus, and Trine of Mercury. In the figure of the Decume icure Sol is in pppofition co Sacurnjin the Ra tix, Saurn.snog being far fom thé Sun , as nay be feen in my Genefis y in: out Tables of irettion,’ being 1555. June rath, 6.57. P.M. Iwas freed from this quarane whew the Sun ame to the 29 degree of Sagittarius, being the gle plc ‘of Saturn at the beginning of the tileafeganid nocfae from the fextile of Jupicer, atthe Decumbiture and that on the 11.0fDe= ember the-fame yeere, for then Thad my laft ity neither was Tever- after fenfible of it} foron the 14.day of the fame moneth,when I expetted my fit,there appeared nothing of it. The Sun ‘was chen in oppofition tobis radical placeand the 446 Culpepper’s Affrological judgment the Moon in 18 Sagitearius, feparating frem Qyartile of Venus,and applying wo 5 the Sun,neer her place mie Destine . figure ofthe feventh Obtervation,bein Bipt.ag day br. 14 mine PAM fils rohoule 4 Houte 16 & 5 Houfe ibaa. of Difeafes enlarged. 147 hetighth Obfervation is of the Decumburé of Jobn Baprifta Triandula,one of Veron. His is a very remarkable obfervation, for . Wwhilft this unfortunate young man (being spyeers of age) Was a fludenc at Padua, he re- seed a dangerous wound in his right knee, by seas of which wound at length his whole leg fusamputated and though he was moftgri= vouly afliéted, fothat Phyficians did often de~ fraireof his life, yet notwithftanding he reco: Pred and lived about ewo yeers, going upon @ ‘wooden leg. ‘Whether therefore nbedominators of rot much for they are ouske the Sun or Moon ¢ afcendant , it matters both affiGted by male- talents the Moon by Conjunétion of Saturn, tnd the Sun by Conjunétion of Mars; alfo the Moon by the Quartile of Mars, and the Sun by theQuertile of Satur fo thavit isnot tobe tdmired that this young man was fo much op= pred under fo unfortunate 2 pofition of Hea- Foiywhich did not yet deliroy him,becaufe both thefortunes confpired to helpthe Luminaries fotheir mutual antifcions , Venus fling the Moon, and Jupiter theSun , did fomewhat re- prelethe force of themalevolens: of the pro= qrelfof the curejand the time of recovery, 1am Fpnoranc, for Iwas more follicitous o fee how the natives penicure did prediét {uch an acci- dents ‘The Native was born 1554. die Marts, June 12.35 min, after Sun feeting. : In 148 Culpepper's 4frological Judgement In this Genicure there is no diverfion of an fignifier in che Estipigue agreeable’ to this se cident, viz.the wound; for we cannot take the Horofeope to the Trine of Mars, becaife that will make the Geniture precede: the eftimatiye} time halfean hour,which is not probable, Wherefore diretting the Horofcope to tht Quartile of Mars in the Equator (according to our ufuat manner ) it ancicipates the time ele mative but 10 min, and the event doth very wel anfwer hereunto, the Quartile of Mars falleth in 331. 28, and meeteth with the Horofcope in ib.2, hole the Bcliptique, with 108 26, Aquarius,the ark of diverfion being 27.25, which isequivalee to 2 yeeres and 5 moneths, according tothe common opinion. That Mars was authour of the event, wilap- pear clearly, if weconfider ferioufly his nature inthis place, being encompaffed with many fixed flars of violent nature, as the Hyades and flars of Orion, with which he defcendeth ; he isalfo in kwich Sacurn,he lived two yeers after the wound,and then died a natural death(being. aged 29. yeers ) when Luna the primary giver of life was directed to die Quartile of Saturn jn the Equator,which hapned in 269.53. thereof, the Moons eircle or potion isalmolt a4. and her obliqueafcention 240, 22, which fubltra- ed fron the foremencioned Quareile, eaveth theark of diveétion 29. 31. The Sun alfo ap- Plied toa fextile of Mars at che cime of death. of Difeafes enlarged, .. . ¥4g ar 11 4 Rational gure on the eighth Obfervatton. ghoul es shout |' 19 10 Culpeppet’s Affrological Judgement |A Figure of theGenefis to the eighth Obferva. tion appertainin 623m 1554. ine ath Shor, 18 mi. PM, in af difeafer, Enlarged, pefiges of life and death, by the body of the Patient being fick, 1Wo wales did the famous Hippecrates leave fterity 5 for the judging of the life and jth of fick peoples one by the Celdtial af ts of the Planets,and he other by the Symp» hme of the body of the man lying fick, The iter of thefe muftfrltbe performed 5 the pro of whichsfor tis good for fomething, accor= ng to Hippocratesyis fick che credie of the Pifs + fir of all, he hence avoids defamation, evil jeeches and reproaches; the world fhiall never fy heis a Dance. ‘.ltwil better his own knowledge, heneed vt apply living medicines to a dying man. Bicondly,for the profit of the fick , hereby you ay give them warning of death before it nes and they wil the more confidently com~ it themfelves to the hands of a Phyfitian hen they know he knows fomethings Ifthe credit of Hippocrates may paffe for ftar~ jhe protefs chat what I here write,was cone Fined in all his prattifes in Ethiopia , Lybia, Hcsritenia,the Mle of Delos, Schytbia,and Iraly. ‘And he that diligently obterves thele, and fmpares them with the afpetts of heavenly bodies, can never withouta miracle faile in his figment upon difeafes. For my own part , I recommend the greateft part of them for au ntick though I have not made trial] of chem 5 yee'disvery probable, fet the antiquity of she 162 Culgepper's Aftrologicat Judgement the Authcur alide, that the meaneft of them ( wel heedeel)may make «more infalliblejudge ment vipomradifeafe, then a whdle cub fall Phylicians. Thavefgmewhac inyerted, Hippocrates order and my redfon was, becayfe Lwould bring th bufineff: into one fingleingrsflegand make thea as plain tothe meancft capect y as a pikecttaff and if they cannot underfland chem 5 as I hav comanitted them to pefterity y the faule isi the dulnetfe of their own wits, and chere let rt. Hipfocrites divides them into three books,ang 4a shat 1 wil fallow him toa haire, The firltbook } fhall divide into ch prefayes of difeates, thee par 1 The faces 2 Theeyes and lips, 3, The manner of lying, 4 The tect. 5 Ulcers or Iffues. 6 The Hands, 7 Thebreath, 8 Thefwear. 9 Tumours and Apofthumes, iba. of Difealiscnlgsged. — Cuar.d, - Prefuages by the Paces LF ina fick body the face look asitdid in the hetime of health , or bue lite diffevane 5 thc hope of recovery is noe fmall: figns of death, in the tace of a fick body, are hele 1 The noftcils are excenuaced and very fharp. a The eyesare hollow. | 3 The skin of the foreshead or eye-browsy hard dry, and looles and looksas though it were tan'd. 4 The Eares are cold, firunkand: almoft dou- bled. i § Thefice is black, pale, orsfwarthy, or de~ formed he looksbue il-favouvedly. If chele, or moft of thefe appeare (be not too rah neither, for rathrelfe is the daughter of ig rorance but be fober- minded, and JA: fk enquire shetherthe Patient have nog f4(yd much y or eanted feep, or had aflux’g long tinne: ifthe rany of the(e had not a being before the figke nuflythe daniger of death isto befeare, "+, If the fickneffe have been foyr or five dies, before you fee thefe Sympramysy they, ate bye acaba of deat tn bs Yollows dhgpae the ail, 7 Na CHAP. 164 Culpeppet’s Aftrological judgmtent Cupa. IL Prefages by the eyes and lips: aiCllgnes of death by the eyes ares if theybg ieprived of fight, or weep againft the pati ens wil. 2 If they feem asthough they would fal o of his head. 2ihen one of the eyes become leffe then th other, “4 When the whice of the eyes become rei § When they areblear-ey’d, or dimeey'd,and not ufed tobe fo before, 6 Whenthey are very sing up and down,or fu moveable, gathfl, nk deep into the head, zien the fick grows fquinteey'd, and nol (obefore, and flaresup and down as though he was frighted. '$ When the Patiene fleeps with his eyes open] and wasinot fo accuftomed to do. "Then enquire if thefe come not by Qux, nat fanativemediciness if not , they arefignes of death. '9 When the Eyerlids,Nofe and Lips,are croo] edyor drawn into one fide. - 10 If thelipsare chin,cold,paleyand hanging down,and the nofe very fharp,it denotes death CHAP, of Difeafes enlarged: 165 Cuap. Il, Prefages by the manner of lying in Bed. isbeft whel? men Iie ft Bed in that fortify” gy Were in hedlh, licknefs as they did when the mortal figns are file. 1.When the neck hands, and feet are exten. ded iff atid inflextble,nor tube moved, ’ Suddain flarting up ouc of thebed...- Cafting their head down tothe feet of the {Sleeping with cheir mouth open, contrary, to former cuftome. s Toufing and tumbling » or throwing hime idle from one end of the bed to the other fhewa ne man in a terrible condition, if not in a dying condition, ! 6 To fleep with the belly downward » cons vary to cuftom, thewsaches of the belly, o lcle leffe thqh madneffe. 7 Ifuhe ddfie in fickneffebe to go out of one oom into another , miftake the room for a world, $ He that is impatient and forceth himfelf to ie upon a Critical day, puts himéelfe in great danger : ifthe difeafe be violent and touch his Lbungs,the Critical day may provemortal, CHAR, + BE Culpepipel S4pPrologicaludgment 4 a . 7 Caitav. IV. Prefiagey by the teetby Nathintg. of copsh in a Fevep,,if not na Erhldsis dangerous fign.. | vif withall hebe deprived of his fences and bislickneffe onely.a,Pexer, not a Frenfie, and gnalhinghis teeth’ ‘he calls forrdeath y and he wil quickly copy. . Ey a 7 ‘ é Ci eV yas BrefegePhy Ulcers dnd Ifues, BX afick perfoithavéah-Ucer “or Hue» whe. her ig came beforg the fickneffe , or with it} Chereis nova halfperily to chioofe) and ied tip axetbecome eréen;black, or fwaethy , ifthe Patiene become worfeand worle, Doétor det 4s cofhming o cure him. Cuap, VL Prefages by the hands, in Feversor any other acute dileafes Fret excepted, thelick by pedling or plucking Lib.e + of Difeafescularged. 167 ihe bedecloaths, or pulling ftraws , ifhe could nd-shim, thoutand roone if he lives the age fal tlefith, Judge the like,ifhe take violent hold che bed-cloaths, fecling or wall, Cuar: VIL” Trefaces by the Breathe YY the breath is bell, ‘nd ve tpiritsshearc and fu {ya difeate have invaded the fpirits Cand that isthegrickefEwway to kill aman) carry a Uris malfull cFPiffe co the Daftar and he wil fay heaylesnothing 5 the reafon is, there is nodi- tificn found in the urine becaufe the difeale taieth rot the bodys bur che fpivits. A man is toubledin wind, kis Wafe and children do not pleee him being troubled, is fick for madnefles hiswifeyas bad at fhe is loves him,and wil carry bisPife othe Doftofs he looks upion it, and thinks the man az wel ashimfelfe (and thavis ud enough ) only his erouble is (0 preaty he knowsas much by his urine as if hehad loo ked intoa Grows nefts hehach no more skil in Arologie, chen | have in making of Candles 5 themar {peaks outall the wit at oncegand faith her husband ails nothings i¢ may be he ailes nothing, but only tobeout of theworlds the dife of this dilcourfe is only to fhew you fome Adifeates feifeth only uy on the fpiries, others on- iy upon the body. To this purpofte 1 The rement given upon 168 Culpepper’s Affrolagical udgemens 1 The diftance between breathing, it be tod Jong,and coldneffe of the breath, hows death is otabove two or three foot off , Fentle brea in hot difeafes isan argument of death, Cuar. VII Prefages by feat. Tir. kind {weats which happen upon Judi cial or Critical daies, are wholfome, com mendable,and good, for they are fent by Dott Health, If tweat be univerfal eis excellent sand ifth Patient mend by his fweacing, ‘is a foresrunne a Cure,” 3 Morcal Gents ari ofl old 4 Onely in one partof ahebody, ufually i eheforchead and fae yf the Patient alley fuck fweats die not , his difeafes wil continu Jonger then he would have it. Cuap. IX. Prefages by Tumours. i the Patient chat lieth fick of a Fever, fc a ane pain , inflammation, tumour ot hare jis ribs," on a es spon ‘or neere about his ribs, ts ay If any of thefebe there, and upon both fides lib. 2» of Difeaferenlarged, es, "sue a bad ign at ehe bel 4f hefeel great motions and pullations in oof his fidesit prognocates great pain and vation of his fenfes. Tfwith his pulfation, his eyes move fafer ic hey thould doe, the Patiencis in danger co fall into a frenaie,if not to mifchief himfelf, 169 The lft chapter of Apofbumes, 1 The Colleétion of an Apoftume in botls {es in a burning Fever,is more dangerous then. ifit had been but upon one fides for women wil fooner kill a man then one. 2'Tis more dangerous on the left fide chen ontheright. : aif continue 20 daies , and the Fevercea- fe notyneither che Apoftumes diminifhech, it wilcometo maturation. If there come a Flux of blood through the wot upon the firft critical day , iteafech the Patients only he wil be pained in his head, and troubled with dimneffe of fight ac noon day, shyt hebeabout thirty, or thirty five yeers ofage. § When dhe Apoftume is (oft, and within when "tis handled, ic requires a longer time to, cure then theformerdid , butnot halfe fo dan Berous, 6 Such a one may continue two months bee fore it comes to be ripe. 7 That Apottume chatis hard, great, amt painful, if icbe not mortal, | am fare itis dan= Brrous, 8 Apos 270 Culpepper's ftrological Judgment 8 Apoftumes of the belly are never {0 gecg as they tac grow under the midyifes and ye thofe that grow under the Navel are leffe thed they and uttially come to fuppuration, 9'Tisa good fivn when thy purge by a Fi of blued in the nattrile, 10 Some Apoftumes, purge unely outwards| and they are little, round, and ttarp pointed | and they are moft healehfal,leff morgh 11 Such asare large, groffe, orround, bu flat, are moft dangerous, 12 Thofe that purge, and breake-within the belly,and make tumours outwardly.areas bids as the Devil himlelf, or Rebin Gosdfillw, and are very ‘outwardly excel then as far as ee {hor of a Canon donh that of a Piftol. 13 The matter which comes out of the Ine poftumes,being whice,and noc unfavoury,isvery good and healthful. ' 14 The more the colour differs feom white, the worfeit is : and;thus much for. the fit Book. vo rniciouss hole that makeno tumour fl Y 'b.2. Of Difeafer enlarged, 171 ORAL L LDS GIRS he Second Book, of the Prefages of° Hippocrates, you ball finde mare foalled in tuis order, i if of ay Pres by Drops in Fevers. } age ope Fee, iy the hurd and Teficles. 5 Sleping and Dresoing, Bae Bxsrements nthe Bowls 8 Byi'ind inthe Bowes By Dine. B vomiting; 9 By Spittle, 10 By Sneezing. 11 By Suppuration or Inpoftanes 1 Boadbetin of breaking. 13) paffonsof the Lungs. 14 By Apeftumes inthe fet 1§ Byibe Bladder and Fevers. 172 Culpepper’s. Aftrological Fudgemens fain know a reafon : Tle cel yous a Fever proy ceeds of heat, Droplies of cold : and as firea water agree,(o doth a Fever and a Dropfie and what you give co mittigate a Fever, encreafeth a Droplies a Dropfic and a Fever agree like fie and water; theSun having drawn up a fier] quality from the earth, and invellopeded it round with acloud of Snow, thence'comes| Tightning and thunder, and terrifies the people; and aswel doth aFever and a Dropfie aggee in Microcofms as fire and water doth in the Ree gion of the aires many gen know there is @ middle Region inthe aire’ but few know what itis, and as little where 5 only a few fonsywhom mother Wifdom hath inftrudted in ic. a If the Dropfie and a Fever meet in one body, they wil play reakes (as fometimes they doe, though not often) the Liver pays all the fcore. 3 Ic afflidts the ene /edtua,and moft common- Iy the guts themfelves; the legs are prefently ‘tormented,and they cannot march handfomlys aflux follows , and the fwelling in che belly is nota whit leffned by it. 4 Mf cheLiver be mof aflited , the Paes a tjb.2, of Difeafes eilarged, §— 173 rath got adry cough , and he knowsnot how fohelp tes he fpits but very little andwithes I redid (pie more the belly is very hard , and iihe goes to lool , ‘cis with more pain ther he ould willingly endure his feet (wel, thereis Famous, inflammation in his fides, Cometinies thy difipaeyand Comecimes they fwel again. — Cuap. IL Prelages of Life and Death in Fevers: Hen the Patient i¢cold on his head or face, or hath cold iweats there : alfoif fis hands and feet be cold, but hisbelly and fides hot and burning, thecafe is extream dan- ferous and is afiene that death hath taken fofleion of the houfe and clay where life for« erly dwelt, Itisa healthful figne in a Fever 5 when all the partsof the body are equally hot, though they be omething hotter then they should be. 3 The body heavy, the nailes of a leaden fwarthy colour the difeafe wil be cured by deathyand not by Phyfick. : ‘¢nduring of a fickneffe without anguith, fhews frengeh of nature and fo long as fhe holds up herhead,there is fomehopes. 5 Let every onethae viewsa Patlent, if he would a& the part ofa wife man, enquireafier thecuftome of the mans body when he was in health 5 174 Culpepper’s Affrological Judgement health ; and if his (pettle,tleep,or excrement, eas they were when the budy was in health, recovery is comming.an tit comesapacey and wil (pecdily be with the firk forhis comfort, ‘The move thele figns diff-r in fickneffs from] what qhey were inhealth , the more is the din} crs fé By thefe igns you may alfo know in fome eafiare, what part of the body is affited, and by whae humour , if you can but underftand their langage sf yon cannot, goe to the (choo of dame Natute, the is an excellent School Miftris. Cuap. IL Prefiges by the Teficles, Hen the Yard and Tefticles are fhrurk in, and apparencly diminifhed again nature, it fignifies. great pain and angnith and cach follows them at che heeles as fwift as the wind. Cuap. IV. Prefages of Sleeping, itrefal, when the fc ees fn che nigh, and keeps walking in the day,thisis ufually a| "of Difeafes enlarged: 175 lovely hopeful figi of recovery to the fick; the rynes of guvernment.are not yet foreed out of ihe hands of dame natures and fhe, if the be not hisdred by intemperance, or other impedi» ents governs prudently, 2 Although it be not altogether wholfome to(leep from break of day till cight or nine of the clock in the morning yet itis more com Inendable to fleep then, then any other time of tiedtay. 3 Continual] watching is-extream dange- oussand, cries aloud that deprivation of fences isat hand, if itbe notalready come, Lib.2. CHAP. V: refuges by the excremients of the belly in Fevers. Re of all, the moft commendable igne is, when he that is furprized with a Fever, ree tainsthe fame cuftome in avoyding bis excre- nents which he ordinarily ufed when his body wasbeftin health. 2, Alwaies in excrements you nuift regard ie quay and quaniy of he dye for cake thisfor a certain rule and you fhall finde it ne» ‘ervary without amiracle, how much the ex- cements are different from chat,fo much worle isthe fign. ; 3p Laudable excrements are neither too thick norto thin, yet ic is worfe chat they be too thick, then too thins for aftringency ina Fever is 176 Culpepper’s Aftrological Fugdemens is naughtyand not to beallowed. He is Ber make a Hangman then a Phyfician, that cakesng care that his Patient goe orderly to ftoole, ‘A, loofneffe in a Fever proclaimes to th world that the Patient kept ill dyet before, 4olt is exceeding, good thac the colour of te excrements be according to the food taken, § It isvery good chat the patient go to fod without pains for if nature be troubled to expe natural excrements, fhe wil find a harder pull ‘of it co expell the difeafe. 6.[f the excrements be liquid, viz. if the may thatis fick of a Feaver have a loofnelfe , and what comes from him, come without vivlence, ain or wind , it isa hopefull fign , for nature Path found ouca way to earn out the dieaeax the back-door. "7 Yet] befeech you take notice of this: fe uent going co ftool weakens. thefick 5 fpoils thedigeRion,mars the retentive faculey,make the fick froward and faint. 8 Worms coming forth of the body with exe crements}, at theend of the malady, isa good fign and hopeful ; butat che beginning of the fickneffe cis defperates the poor worms know when nature isa decayingyand therefore leave the body before it is breathlelfe, Here's a firange thing, that the wormes have asmuch knowledge ‘as a Phyfician. a lt’svery good in every fickneffe, when the belly is foft,and not pufe up with wind: wind is an a@tive creature, and playes reaks in the body of man when it gets where iy fhould not es 10 The ~ Of difeafis, Enlarged. + ing \" yo The excrements shen they arevery was ey, hice, or very ved or frothy, they are very lngerous. L Bue by the leave of Hippocratesy not alwaies fnurcal. 11 Exerements black, greeny or flimy 5 give foufair warning, if any warning wil lerve the fun, that the difeate may end in death, and has moft probable. m2 Mixcure of the forcnamed colours is no i dangerous, but fhews longer continuance Hi chediteale in ehe former the fick runs tohis raveas hard as he can drives, in this he walks the fame place, as though he cold his fteps. . 13 When fieleskivs, like the peling of pats omeforth of the excrements; the difeale is» gerous. This fymprome was ordinarily fan that Epldemical difeate in London 1649. ich fo puzled the Colledge of Phyliciansy, at their learned ignotance was fo far. fcom tring of it that chey could not éell what it as, When 4 For Mr. Gallen (for they know nor where» Linenatire the mother of Phyficians divels) ‘Sted them in'no fuch. principles. Mine own’ fon, about three yeers of age was. bien of the fame difcale; my fell being ih the cuntry 5 when the hopes of life were but final was fen for up : what came from bim (and news oncein an houre ) was wrape round in ins ; eared: hintby only boyling Mallotrs in his kano mane my thankulnefl ro God for 178. Culpepper's Afirological Judcement for fo greata mercy, Uhere declare itto th world, . oe CHAP. VI. Prefages by wind inthe Bowels and Womb. Pte wind iffving forth gently and vor Tuntarily , is the belt and moft wholfome sign, e Worfe then that when it comes forth with pain and griping. 3 Worfl of all when it is retainedyand canna come ort at all,but caufes fwellings there. ‘4 Swellings of thesvind in the belly accor ding to Hippocratesare belt cured by expulfion downward, or by Urine thusmy Author. Tcare not greatly if Trelace the cure done i fuch a cafeby one of the wifelt Phy fitians tha ever the Sun thon upon in England, Dr.Butle ol Ganbridge. A Gencleman was pollffed wit wind in his belly; a great inflamation there wa there. The Dottor comes to him,and perceiving the original of it was wind, for he was a mand penetrating judgement calling for a rolling pins The man was never fibjeEt to covetot! neffe,and as little to pride: Down curnshe thd cloaths from the bed: up he gets boots and all not regarding the Holland-fheetss and fals rolling the mans belly with a Rowling-piv the Patients fundament founds an alarm, ang 7 certifies Lib,.2, of Difea/es enlarged. 9 certifies all the company chat eafe was a come wing, Crap. VII Trefages by the Urirw in'a Fever. eft of all,if the Urine in a Feveryar any o- ther ficknefs,have refidencenter the bottomy incolour white,in form like a Picamid. 2 So much the more the Urine: differs ftom this,o unuch che worfe it is. 3 Groffe refolusions, like duft or bran in the botrom of the Ucinsiea very evil fign, Bue ‘cis worfe then that wlicn they ate like als of fit. : 4 The Efrinte white and clear,Ggnifies melan~ holy and is very badyfonif cheretentive faculty ke canted by melancholy , the difeate is like fnough to hold long,far melancholy wil retair is wel whatit fhould notjas what-itfhould, 5 A cloud hanging itt the Line fignifies ealch if ic be white 5 iFitbeblack y ‘ris danges fous; and then yous mother wit wil tell yous hac the blacker ir is, itis che more dangeroub: . 6 The Urine yeriow, very cleare, and fubtiley news the fickneffe wil continte longer then the ck party would-willingly bave tes ccudity gind digetion Hag taken otcafion to fhoulder he oar healeh ln fuch a Gale there is feares and that pot Qa : fiedey 180 Culpépper's Aftrological Jugdement Ficele, left the fick die before the humour come toconcoftion; what a trick’s that co cut of nature before fhe can doe her bufineffe? and,let metell youthis, I knew aman in London, tha fhall be nameleffe, thac was furprifed with furious mercileffe peltilencial Fevers his Uring was according to this Aphorifme, he had 4 {welling in his Emunttuary of the brain,(vs,} under his eare. » Tearofeasfaitly as fair could be, even till i Hour of his death, yechedieds nature did: th beft fhe could to expell the difeafe, but the war antlcipated:: did you never know a-tnat diein the prime of his health? ifnoc, goeto St.TH bitis,and you may be informed, . 8Slimyy muddy, blac cays dirty,filthy, Minking urine isntually mozeall, glf achildsurine bebrought to you , andit Jook pale and. cleer, like Ghiduit water, icig tery bad I know you long for a reafon, you shall not Jof your longing: 'Ttold you ber fic a humour was che badge of a melancholy dilpofition 5 youth is naturally hot and moif: melancholy cold and dry, ergs’ extream ini ealto youth. 9 If you fpie in’the Urine a thing like cobsweb fwimming on the topyit is but afeuryy figne: ote uy neck sclaa Thick Urine fignifies but‘ thin body, fo hethae ntade i¢hach a confimpeton. tl White ‘clonds in the Uctheand:neer thd bottom, are commendable; black clouds neex the top are bad and vituperous. . eed . Lib. of Difeafes enlarged. wae Inall thefe have regard to the Bladder foraf that be difeafed,all chefe prefages are in vain. ‘Thus Hippocrates t'the trudh isy many of thei ce to me pretty: rational, neither am I able to conteadiét the reff, as Lave been a piff-Prophet all my lifes yee this 1 know tobe trucy and Dr. Experience is my wieneffe, that ifehe man te lick of a Fever, and the Urine appears like theurine of a healthy man, as T have known it inmore then one y and by this argument wil I provevery uncertainty in urine, death’s acom- ing, provide for him. Tipake with Dr, Reafon at the fame time, f.r they two brethren feldom goe afuinder 5 and he told me the reafon was, becaufe the difeafe ra pon the frtsand netupon the boy = and that’s as ready a way to kill a man as to chop offhis head. Cuap. VII, Poefages of Vemiting in Feavers, Vif to vomit up fleeme and choler ina Feae Fc isavery good figne, becaufe they are batter outof your body then in ies they arebut fourvy inmates when they keepnat their proper place, : 3 2 If what be vomited up be green, livid, or black,’cis dangerous. slficbemixed or compounded of de Vt ql Inf ooreal, £82 Culpepper’s Aftrological Judgment »- lit ftink fo that you cannot enduretg hold your nofe over it, and have bat ‘one d thefe colours, death comes gallowping thy Hippocrates Hippocrates wasa brave Phyfician,1 confefe Galen mended his works in Phylick, jultas ri fiotle mended Platocs in Philofopby, and that i ‘as foure Ale mends in Summer, Cuap. IX Prefages by Spittle in Feavers, 1Giinein all fes of the lungsyand ‘ies under the ribs, ifit come in the begin- ning of adifeafe, without pain, of fuch a colour as{pittle thould be, wel digelted, not vifcious ie’s very commendable, ther's fome hopes of it 2 IF the fpittle come not up without vehement coughing, itsan ill figne when nature is foreed| by violence to afl out her enemy, 3 White (pitele, tough and knotty » isvery dangerous in a Fever;bue when men {pitblood, its Worle, and yet fuch things happen fone} inp Hehe fide b fleth _ 5 lfthe fpietle be green or fefhy,ic gives no} tice of ¢ bad and ill-conditioned fife '5 Black fpettle is the worftof all , for tht grim death’s a coming, 6 When the matter which thould be fpit out} remains fill, within the lungs and troubles the Wwindpipe,there'sbue litele fecurity of life za Lib.o. of Difeafes cularged. 183 }am confident never a one of the Colledge \ecpsan infirance office for fuch a bufineffe;nor wil enfire thereupon at 50 per cent. 7 What we told yom was wholfome at the beginning of themalady, ific continue longer then che fit Crifis, its tafpicious, if it be noe dangerous. 8 If the pain be eafed by fpicting, its very oud, Jet the wind blow which way ie wilgand then 9 Ifthe (pittle be black, and ifthe fpittle doe forchew death is thac yee if the pain be eafed by it, chough I cannot fay ic is hopefull,yet this Ifay, cis leffe dangerous, Cura. X Prefages Ly Sneezing in Feavers: 1CNeczing in hot inaladies, et he malady be dangerous asa halter) itis hopefull and conmendableyand may procure a reprieve. 2 Yee in maladies of the lungs, if it come with much shetume , and pain be ele afer, itis dangerous cone it when iewil, whether in the fiyor prefendy after, Lib.a of Difeaferenlarged. 185 ith the eternall providence » and in her brain irene knowledge of all chings,in words atlength, and not in figures : fhe alwaies goes oyarnls Heaven,and if you ask her, fhee'l bid ou come afcer: God is her father, and her mo~ ihers name is the good of thecreation if you follow her, you fal not want: fhe treads upon theworld, and looks upwards theis a virgin, tile, and a widow : the wil give you apa~ cr in your hand, in which is written, Know ir lfez the hath no money, yetis Miftris of che tniaes in India : in all her words you thall finde more truth then eloquence: if you pleafe toask moretther Commition , the wil fhew ie you fgned by Jebouelynotby Ante or Galen. Het sles are very plain, you may finde chem in the darkeft night, without a candle and lane thorn :theis alwaies every where, and yet fill with me, theesmy mother: {hee’s a woman,and yetan Academick : thee’ prefenttoall chat call iipon her yet not Ubiquitary ; fhe alwaies wep, and yer I never faw her laugh. 1 hope pone wil blame me for waiting this defcription of my Mother fo nuch defpifed, (0 litle thouphe of by the Rabbies of ote age. Noverint ane er eet that the is my Mother, and her two fons, Dr, Reafon, and Dr. Experience, any brethren. 384 Culpepper’s Aftrological Ju:lgement Cuap. XL Prefages of Suppuration in Apo(thumes, ATF the pain of an Impofthume ceafenor by , to which adde laxative medicines, and letting blood, tis torty to one if it come not to fuppuration. 2 When the Apofthume breaketh, the fpittle giving notice of choler , whether matter come out with the fpitele,or after,it is dangerous, 3 Hf the matecr come upon che firlt Crifs ir comes to tell you death wil come upon the fe cond Crifis, unleffe the Phyfician be all the} wifer to ftave him off: doth there not fuch a one Tive in Amen-Corner ? 4ifthe former Aphorifme appeareyand other ealehful lignes appeare together with it, Dame mature may happen to help herfelfe, and never be beholding to the Colledge and if you'l be ruled by me, cake acquaintance with her: and thatyou may doc fo, ile defcribe her to you thatyou may know her when you meet her in the freee ¢ fhee's a plain homely woman in a| Deggarly contemptible condition, regarded by} none (anleffe it be the children of wifdom) {he hath truth writeen upon her breatts thofe that think chemfelves wife tread her under foots the carries Dr. Reafon in her right hand , and Dr, Fsperiencein he let, herhesdis round abou with CHAP. 186 Culpeppes's dftrological judgment Cuap. XII, Prefages by the time of the Ruptures of Apoffhumes, Hat all Apofthumes have not one and the fame time of muturation,is fo certain,thar ‘it needs no further difpute of the ftory. 2 It is moft ufual and moft wholfome for Apofthumes to break upcn judicial daies 5 what hey beyarid when they happen, you know ale geady ule you began at the latter end of the ‘Book firft. Hippocrates reckons. them by num- ber of daies, tis trues but fo have wot I; but by thecourfe ofthe Moon. - Donot blame Hope crates for a {aall faulty rather think your lv Srgazed to him fordoing any thing. iemay be awas Galensfaultynothis, 9g Take notice that Hipprcrater was guided ‘by good principles for be cls you thatthe be ginning ofthat, whence acetic a feaver, Riffoelle, pain, pricking, of thing elfechaedenotersidieate 44 When you fel chat,do but fo much for me, as to make tat timethe bafis to proguoflcate the event. Coughing, fpitcing, and fpawling, pain, diffcuty of Breating are te progeolicks that the Apofthame is neer breaking. 6 As by the Forlorn-hope you may judge what che Army is, f0 by chefefignes you may judge of Difcafes evlarged. 187 indgeof the greatneffe of the Apofthume, TAs by ¢ Citizens (pending you may jodge ow long Kewil hold {0 by the fwiftneffe of the figns you may judge how foon the Apof- fume wil break. 'g Sometimes the Apofthume breaks, and life isundoneby ic; fomecimes it break, and death rinsaway for feare of the noife, ‘Twere worth the while co knowhow this mightbe known 5 lletell you how, and never goe fofar as Amen corer tor it neither, Ifwhen the Apofthumes broken the man be» insto fall tohis viduals, and feed like a Fare mers ifthe matter be white, wal, falt, and tomy out without pain, take thefe to be fignes af peedy healt and fay Trold you fo. gif ehe Feaver ceafe not,or ceafing come with atelh apply. twere worth the while co know tihether iewil reeurn again or no3 Vetell you how to know, Cif you wil but readit,) Téthe Fever wil return again , the thirft remains fill tokeep poflelfion : and when the Fever doth re- tumagain , the Feces being very watry, grectly livid ot flimy,fortifie againtt death, for heis not far off. 10 Ifthe Patient feel pain on both fides,both fides are Apotthumated 5. wherefore do they ake dfe chink you? a1 Ifhefeel more pain on onefides then on the other, caufe him to lye on. thefoundeftifide : fhe fcel heavineffe there, be fure there is an Ax pofthume alfo. 12 Iffome good figns appeareyand fomeball, com+ 188 Culpopper’s Aflrological Judgement compare them all cogether, and judge by moft teftimony 5 make ule of all the rlales you can, that fo you may finde the wuth ,’ and avoyd infamy. Cuar. XI Prefages of Apaftumes about the eares, Filta when Apotthumes which come ee about orunder thecares, come to maturae tion and break,the biteerneffe of death is pat. 2 Youmay know when there's an Apokhime there by fwelling and pain, by heat and bui- ning, by redneffe of colowrand inflammation about the place, Cuap. XIV. Apoftlumes in the feet, 1 JIN vehement and dangerous difeates of the lungs, it conduceth much co the help of the Patient when {mall puftules or Apofthumes ape peare in the fect, 2 If withall the fpettle change from red to white, it gives certain teftimony that recovery approacheth, 3 If the fpettle turn not from red to white, then the pain ceafeth not, and the finews of the yarc Lib.2. of Difeafes enlarged: 189 art Apoftumted, arein danger of (hrinking, ilfcogether with the former,the Apofthumes Mo vanith away, the man lofeth his fences fir, and his lifeafterwards, 5 Aged. people are more ufually troubled with the difeafes in che lungs, then young, peo- is tes very dangerous in all Apofthumes when ihe pain afcends upwards, ; 7 Exfie (pitting white fpitle, and not tink inva commendable fgn i all diteaes of the Jungs ; but if your fpictle be red, black,or ftinc« Kings deadly. EEE GEE Leber tse eee ve CHAP. XV: refuges by the Bladder in Fevers, fi,hardneffe and pain in the Blatlder in quotidian Fevers,utually fore-(hews each isapproaching. wa If withall the Urinebe ftopped's.-Padge che likes een 3 In Apoftuines of che Bladdet cwhen they come in feurvy place) if theUtine be like'mat h revof dhe Apofthume, and thepain éeafe' ahd the Fever mitigate,and the bladder be molifed 5 when you fee thefe fignes,you may beconfident thework is pat 44 This difeafe ufually happensto few , bue children, and to them moft ufuaily about the feventh and fourteenth yeers of their age, The 190 Culpepper’s Aftrologtcal Judgement PEVROLELOLH HOGS The Third Book, of the Prefages of Hippocrates. Te Book I confeffe isbut Shore, yet the better order it is in, the handfommer wil it Took s and the reafon is, becaisfe God is the God of order. 7 Let noman blame that gallant foule Hip crates for writing a little diforderly s rather let himbleffe God that he wrote at all » Let our Colledge of Phyficians write fo to purpofe, and in their mother tongue as he did in his and the reftof my daies fhall be fpent in admiring and applauding of them. ‘Buco return to my purpofe, you fhall finde this third book prefented to your view in this Order. 1 Prefages ins Fevers. 3 Quincies, $.TheVoula. + 4 Vomiting in Fevers, OF all chefein orders Lib.2. Of Difeafet enlarged. “198 aoe Cuap. I Profages in Beverse “pHisis moft certain , and verified by conti~ nual experience, thata Fever terminates in dath to one, and iu lifeto another, inboth spon one: and the fume day 5 and the reafon shy, you may finde in the beginning of this Sook in that part, the bafelt of which was bore rowed from the famous Avenga, a Then wil youfeea reaton, why it isas ree auilce go view the body of che fick } as he po- rion of the ftars, Ieis a cullome in Zra/r, or at leaftit was, but afew yoeres fincey that a Phyficiah might not deay toviewra fick body , if he had but his fee given big, which amounted but co 18 dyfter. ithe carried two Schollers with him . bug ha 12 d-mmoteyif the Patient were willing to give ic him 5 which being added eo the forme amounts jult to: 4 6 ds ithe carted cwenty Scholer she tad no more. : Tothe Patient contes he, for he dares not de~ ny lewhat ere the difeafebes if he bein healthy and at liberty : there doth he inftrué& the Scho less by the Ucine,by the Sympromes.of the di- fealcsitscontinuation ahd accidents,Sc.whether the fick be like to live or die, how the difeats oppofech ttatitre, and which ways *this rf 293. Culpepper’s Aftrological Judgment This makes the/talian Phytitians able men, when the greateft part of ours are like to die dunces; who daresdeny , that hasbut wit to know his right hand from his lefts but that fee- ing the body, hearing the relation , and feeling the pulfe of the fick , is a better way to judge, then gazing ac as much piffe as the Thames wil hold ? I with fiom my heart our prefent State would take this matter into confideration, and take a itele care for the lives of the poor Cominonal- ty, thaca‘poore man that wants money to buy’ his wife and childred bread may not peri for: want of an Angel to feea proud infuleing do-- thineering Phyfician to give hima vifits think itisa duty belonging to the Keepers of the Li-’ erty of England. Twould help my poor brev thren in this particualar if T could, but Teannot. Whofoever reads what I’ have here written, and approvesof its lec'hint joyn withme ina petition totheState, for thereétifying of this diforder. vo rvita Thofe which approvenot ot it let therh ane fiver me to this queftion: who made a difference between the Rich and the poor ? wasit God,or the world? 7 If the world, it ismoft cerédin then Ie wil nor find for the falhion of the world pad away, D rls ifmany good figns appeat# dt che beghnning: of aFeversnote the fighe and degree the Moon isin at the DécumbitureAnd the party wil dif- cover when the Moon comesto the a the Lib.at of Difeafes enlargeds 135 theplacefhewas in then. Hippocrates was an Aftrologer, asappears by this ‘Rokoritin And aur Colledge, the Phin hug his writting iuder their arms,but follow him as wuch as the Rope follows Saint Peter. i Note the placethe moon is in at the De« i i * obicue, then view thefick body, when he _—<) noon conics to the Sextile of that place: if you ind ill Symptoms of thefick body then you nay fear deachywhen fhe comes to the Quartile {that placc,and you have caufe enough, §.Shore Maladies are better judged of then lng sa great deale of time may produce moré ikeration then a licele, @ lfFevershappen to women in childbedy min the Calculation at the time of herdelives «==;{) y, and not at the Initiation of the fickneffe,and tae their Crifis that way. 7. Ifthe Bever continne to the thted Crifis abich isnot oftensyou may prefage bleeding at lheNofe s and icis twenty ¢o one sit comesnot iron the day of the third Crifie, or nearit. 8.1f the Patient bleed notat the Nofe, be firehe hath an Impoftume in fome of the isferi~ bur parts of his body. 9 Flux of blood in fuch a cafe moft ufually aps to people that are under thirty years izes Impoflumes to them that are older. toll the fick find a vehement pain about his- foreshead, or place nearie, heis very fubjeét to Meed at the Noféand that may fave hus life. 11, Young perfons oftener, dye at the firt ils inn Fevers y then ancient 5 arid the reafon : PR iy 136 Culpepper’s Aftrological Judgment fLib.2. Of Difeafes enlarged. 137 is sbecaufe their natureis hotter and the mordlir when they appeat' ourwatdly, then when fabje€tto take fire: for he that knows but higihey donot.» ABCin Phyfick,knowsa Fever comes of heat, J 4. JF the {welling appear not ottewardly the 12.014 perfons fooner dye upon relapfeschafslly Kill within four days at the furtheft, then young:‘and the reafon is,becaufe their bof{ithough no Crifis come at thac time. My own = dies are weaker. tpinion is, though I hold an abfolute truth in, 13.Ulcerations in the throatare ufually mong Crifis,as I have laid chem down in this book, tal in hot difeafes. cwithall Tknowas well, that thereis a dif ” Fence to be made bectween thettinde that the fafeovercomes the vitals, and the tlite of the ifolucionsas al(osthat in a propera cure difeafe the moon to the femi 'Sexcile ofthe place the asin at che Dectmbicure, often kills becaufe eis then in a figne oppofive in refpet of nattire je ,and time. gilfared tumor appear outwardly, and fall againthe danger of death ie greac : Life may brrow a lietlecime, and fo forth, but'tis to be jared, mutt be forced co yelld to her enemy Death at att. : 6.lfehe camout ina Quinfey increafe upon Critical day, and break neither inwardly not lawardly ,death ora relapfe, or fome ching, sbadis to be feared, though the Patient feel (efor the tinte. 14 Fevers continue longer in ancient peopld then they doe in young, and the reafon iol aufe the bodys of ancient people are colde xy wood will burn moltviolently ic is conf but wet wood will be longer a burning. 15 Ancient people are more fubjeGt to quar ten Agues then young s and the reafon is, be caule Saturn cauteth them : a child wil fea playing with his father,to play with his equi Cuar. IL Brefages of the Quinfey. 3. AX LiQuinfeys.are extceam dangerousan’ fometimes mortal. ac The mot dangerous nein Quinfey ar reat pain, great difticuley in breathing, yettn Aelibe cuwardly appewing :for ifthe ie ing appear, the exeernal part of the throat i mioftaflited,And if you do noc believe better t have the External part of the throat aft then the Internal, I with you did. 3Here you find that in the Quinfey, itis bet+ ufualls| CHAP, IL. Prefages by the Veale, He prefages are few: happily honelt Hi crates whom Authors call divine for hi iy rater then religion didi bcsue the P2 y ifeates -138 Culpepper's Aftrological Fudgmwent difeates.in this part of the body are but. fv and thofe few appear but feldome, ‘Ihitilion inthe Uvuls, Gargarion or Co} Jumella, when itis fwoln red or grofle,is dange rouss Phylicians Jove to trouble yaur pac hard words; for if chey would write plaine Eng! Tilk, they could not make filly people beliy wonders, and then heir Diana would down you fall find an explanation of all uch word which he that can but read his Primer fhal find at the latter end of the book. ‘lf che Uvula look pale or livid, and the up per pare not welled, you may make an inc ‘on without danger. 3 Be fureyou purge thebelly before you b too bufic in making incifion in thofe pars} Thus Hippocrates. The truth is, | cannot fn any reafon why any incifion at all fhould § made theresa man may aswell plead Excife a Caftome for it,for ought I know. ; If there be an inflammation there,bloodletting fin the arme will ferve the tusne: if putrefattior orulcer,as fometinies, happen to fich as ou company of Chyrurgcons Flux for che Frency pox,either forwant of care or skill; or fom thing elfe, clenfing medicines wil do the: deed. do nor in this Treatife profelfe wo write ay ‘Anatomy if did, could tel you what che! ofthe Uivila was, and how difficult an incifia Chereisand how dangerous the effets of ie my provesbue I paffe ityand cometo Lib, 2, ° of Difeafes enlarged, ° ' £494 ee nnrenneenl Cuap. lV. Prefrges of vomiting in a Fever. uftofall when there appears blacke thingsy orthings like Bi Tike flies before the eyes of hint thathath a Feaver, viz. when he thinks he fees fies, when there's nofach thing neer him y: ba fareche fick wil vomit yellow choler, and the farecif withall hefind vn ilneff: avis lomack. aif there bea fifiueffe and chilineffe in thofe parts weet the Hypocondriay che vomiting wil che fooner behattened, fara ‘ 33 My Author doth not tell whettier this vou niting be good or bad in a Feaver : therefore Ile tell it you for him: it thews ftrengeh of na- ture; therefore take ie as a hopfull figne: the choler which is vomited np lies in the ftomack, and thats not the place dame nature hath pro- vided tohold choler. Dame nature is like @ Piince in the body, and holds in. tenure by Soc» cageunder Almighty God; nd if the can expel hereneiny out ofher dominions, doth fhe not do wel? gif together with what was mentioned bee fore, there happen felling or ringings by rea fon of wind under one of the fides, be not too hifly co predi@t vomiting: itis more probab‘e tobe only bleeding at the nofe. 5 Bleedingacthengfein fuch a cafenfually happens Lib.2. of Difeafes eularged: 143 digeion in fuch perfons ismeetly fang » and thir palfe lefle and flower then in cholerice r(ons their urine is yellow and thin and They dream of falling from high places, of robe beries,murders,harmes proceeding of fice; Fighey ingyanger and uch like, 4342 Culpepper’s Aftrologicle Judgement may digelt more then he hath appetite for ; his palle is fife and rong, his nrine,yellow, and thin in fubltance : as touching their digeltion, they are often coftive, they deca of fire, fights ing,and anger; of lightning and dreadfull ap- paritions of the ayre, by themeans of hot and dey fumofities and vapors afeending, from the flomack into the head, which trouble the brat and virtue imaginative, Sigues of a Melancholy cholevick, map. 4 ‘Elanchaly Cholerick men are tall of flay Mies by reafon chat naturall heat is fee bie, and thereby many fumofiies are ingens dredsbutyet they are Tied and flendee of body, beeaufe ofdrineffe y therefore there skim is rough and hard , andcold in touching.: they have buc very littlehaire on their bodies, and ae long withote beards, by meanes of cold which ftoppeth che Pores, and fuffereth not the putter weareolhaire is ingendrd vo come forth; Alfothey havemuch {uperfluity. in the ole: there.golouris pale, fhaddowed with line nigritude or darknelfe. And concer sing their conditions, they. are gentle, given tofobrietic, folitary, ftudious, doubtfull, avar tious, thamefaft timorous, ftubbornty fret» fall, penfive,conftant, and true in attion, with. ddeepefurihife, and flow wie, wich: iobliyionf- nelfe: their-haire is brown and thin, their di- geltion feeble, and-lefe then their appetite, the pulle little and flack, their urine fubcicrine and thinn 28 they dreame offalling from high places fearful dreams, andundry, varieties. ; i 1 Sigies of a chulerich melancholy mans olerick melancholy men are higher of C ture then cholerick, becaufe violent beat ig tiem is more remniffe and flack, whereby:fue moficies are the more ingendered ,. and radical moylture the lee walted 5 yet they are litle and lean of body becaute of drineffe, with skin rough and hard, meanly haitie, anel temperate infeclings their colour is palith, drawing to- wards a brimitone colour, tor init is (egn a lite tle thew of ycllowithneffe 5 they have not beads fo fon as cholerick men, and the calosr of their bairis raldith, or light abun, And touch ing the conditions, or natural inclination ot fuch perfons , they are not altogether fo preg- nant witced, bold, favious, quarrel(ome , frau- dalent, prodigal, flout, and couragious as chor Jerick nen s neither fo graceleffe 5 unconitant, fatcering, fwifty and tcorntal as they + yee they are (ufpicions, frecful, nigardith, and more fo itary; Rudious, and curious then cholerick, aid retain their anger longer. The verene of digettion Sigues aagg Calpepper's Aprolagical Jugdeneent Signesof Melancholy men, Macs see of feature, and feldom very tall:for excels cold doth binde the fubltance, and fuffereth it not to feretch in lengths and although melancholie beedy in temperature, yet they are litle, and flender of body, the occalion is ( as 1 Imagine) ofexceffe cold, by means whereof much fuper- fluitie is ingendred,which fomewhat allayeth the drineffe, for melancholick men arefullof phlegme, and rheamatiqie matter. iTheir col- ‘our is dutkith & fwartith pale, their fkinn is rough, and cold in feeling, they have very litle ‘or no haire on their bodies, and are long without beards, yea fomtimes beardleffe, the Colour of theire haire is duskifh: As touching their conditions , they are naturally couetes ous, felfelovers, fearfull_ without caufes pulil- Jamious, folicary, careful, lumpith feldome merry of laghing, ftoue, ftubborn, ambitious envious, fretfal, obftinate in opinions, of-a dee cogitation, mittrulful, fafpicious, vexed wid dolours of the mind , and dreadful imaginati. ‘ons, (asthough they were infefted with evil fpirits) and are very fpightful, curious y {queae milfh, and yet flovens,. high-minded, and very majeltical-in behaviour, and retain thei anger Jong ; the virgue of concoétion in thens is very fecbles yet they have'very good appetite to their Meat. Their urine is palifh and mean in fube ftance Lib.2, of Difeafes enlarged. 145 flancesand they dream of fearful chings,tervible sifions,and darkneffe, Signs of « Metenckelick fanguine man, Blancholick fanguine men are higher of Mitcure then melancholick 5 for in them ratural heat is temperate 5 wherefore fumo- fiies and radical moffture are meanly ingen dred, whereby they are meanly big, Aethier, and Gem of body:their colour is after a darkith ied, their skin neither hard, nor rough , buc temperate in heat and foftneffe, and not very huiry sthey have beards about 21 yeers of age = and touching their conditions, they are more Iiberall, bolder, merrier, leffe ftubborn,and noc fopufilfanious, folitary, and penfive,as melan= cholick perfons, nor fo vexed with dreadful imaginations as they aret alfo chey are gentle, fober,patient,truftieymerciful,and affable; and toconclude, for as much as this complexion istemperate in quality, fo likewife icis boon in conditions; for vertwe isa mean between two extreams. ‘Their urine is of a light faffronith colour,and mean in fubftance: their pulfes are temperate in motion + chey have pleafant dreams, and many times refpondent to truch 5 and theiv'digeftion is meanly ftrong. Sigues Lib. of Difeafes enlarged, 147 for they cannot weep > although ite in a mase ter thax concerns them neere,but yet their copi- tation thereofis imprinted in their hearts. The fangtne mai» hath good appetite, and quick digaftionzhis urine is yellow and thickybis palfe gieat and full, and dreamech of red things and pleafane, conccits. 146 Culpepper’s 4frological Judgement Signés of a Sanguine Melancholick man, ‘AnguineMelancholick men aremean of flae Lure, with bodies wel compatt with reines and arteries Aelby, but notfac : they have skin meetly {mooth,and hot in feeling,and are fomee what hairy,and foon have beards’; the colour of their haire isdark aburo , their cheeks red, fhadowed with afuteall colour. Theit condi. tionsare much likeunto a fanguine mans , but they are not aleogether fo liberal , merry, and bold, for they haveas ic were a pice of the in- clination of melancholy’ perfons. Their paltes aregreat and full, urine yellowand meanin fabilance, with dreaming of deep ples,wels,and fuch like jcheic digeftion is indifferent, Sigues of «Sanguine phlegmatique man, Anguine phlegmatique men are higher of Gist then Sinvuine becanfe more fupert aities are ingendred in their bodies 5 and are of fubfance much like unto fanguine; their fait is Aaxen or light abun , their colour is Tikered, bre not intermixed as Sanguine are: astouching their conditionsythey ave lefsliber~ all, fader, and not fo bold as fanguine are,noe fo hairie their urine is.fubcitrine and mean in fubftancestheir pulfes moderate, with good appetteand digltion indifferent 5 They dream Fhving in the aire, apa falling downe. from fome mountaine, or high place into water 5 or fuch like. Signs oft Phlegmatigue Sangxine man, Signes of 4 Sanguine man. Anguine men are of améan form, their bo- lies wel compofed y with larger limbsand fichier, bue not fat s with great veines and are teries, imooth skins, hotand moift in fegling, the body hairy,anit foon bearded 5 their colour iswhige,intermixed withredneffe in the checks; their haire for the moft-part is brown, And touching their conditions, they are merry , lie beral, bountiful, merciful, courteous, bold e nough, trufty, fiithful, and of good behaviour: alittle thing wil caufe him to weep, and when that isdone, no further griefefriketh to their hearts : which is contrary to melancholy mete for HHlegmatique fanguine men are mean offta~ Pu and Tnewhat grofsof bady, with a tmooth and foft skinn, and cold in touching < their bodies not haivie, & Jong withour beardss their haice is light yellow or flaxen, plain an {mooth 5 their colour if neither hike not ed, Of difeafes, Enlarged. 4g and aremore hairie, and fooner have beards ¢ their haireds ight Abuene, in which Come thew ofyellow 5 and are temperatein feeling : And touching, theie conditions , they arenimbler, bolder, and kinder then phlegmaticke, and are not fo drowlie, and flnggith as they are, but merrier, and quicker witted 5 heir face for the molt pareis full of freckles, and their colour 448 Culpepper’s Aftrological Judgement red , but mean between both j of conditions, neither very merry,nor much fad:npt liberal,or coveteotis: not much bold,not very feareful, fr, The vertueof degeftion in them ‘is fomewhat flack, and leffer then their appetite, their pulfes are Tow and litle, with dreaming of fundry fax es. Signes of a Phlegwatick man. piteme« menare fhorter of flature + for ‘although much vapoes and fuperfluitie is ingendred in their bodies,yet by means of cold- neffe the fubftance is bound and ftaid from firetching in length : nevertheleffe moifture dea- Jeth it felfin bredth, and maketh chem groffe and fat. Their veines and arteries are{mall, their bodies without Haire: they have litle beards, and their haire isflaxen : their colour whitith, with fmooth skin, and cold in touch: As concerning their condition, they are vey dial,heavy;floathful,fleepy, cowardith, fearful, covetous,felfelovers,flow of motion fhamefacd, and fober, In them the vertue of digeftion and appetite is very feeble, (through detett of nae ‘mnral heat}ehelr pulfes are licle and flow , and their urine pale and thick : with dreaming of water,8c. mean in fatftance dreaming of fwimming in rratir, of fnoW or rain. Siguesof a Cholerich phlegmatick man, Cite phlegmatick men are mean of j}acurestivmand ftrong of body and neither facnor lean, with greatlegs, and their skin falryy and moderate in feeling y their haire is yelowith,and their colour the fame; their con tions are not much different from chotcrick: ren,butchey arenot altogether fo furious and bold aschey, neither fo prodigal,and guileful ; lor phlegme doth fomavhae allay the heac of choler: their digeftion is perfeét , their pulfe {wiftaand their urine like Saffcon and thin, with dreaming of battels,hifey lightning, and hot seater. Signes of Pblegmatick Cholerick man: Pitensce cholerick men are tall of {le Urinalie ture, and not fo big and fac as phlepmatick, and URINALIA: A Treatile of the Crisis hapning to the Urine = Through defaule either of the Reines, Bladder, Yard, Conduits, or Paflages. With their Caufes , Signes, and Cures. BY Nicwotas Curperen Student in Phyficke, and Affrologic. LONDON, "Printed for Nuth, Brooks at the Angel in Cornhill, 1655+ sheesipeshereleeativeton ea ese URINALTA. Y onechild being annoyed with one of thele Difeafes about the yeer 1645¢ made me fecand fix my ftidies upon. dbistidjett the method of which will appeare by this Table, ATable of the Difeafes handled in this Treatife. O; piffing of blood Chap.2 of Injlanation of the reines Ghap.2 Of the Stone inthe reines Chap.3 of unmeafurable pilfing Chap.4 of Vleers in the reines Chap. 5 ofthe Stone in the bladder Chap.6 (blood curdled in the bladder — Chap.7 of nflanations in the bludsler — Chap.8 of Vlcersin the bladder Chap. 9 of the Strangury Chap.10 of difficulty of Urine Chap. 11 Of floppage of the Urine Chap. 12 Of Ulcers in the Tard Chap. 13 Chap, Lib.3. of Difeafir enlarged 155 psscnied Vefatine gated in tbe Bow of Vey peaabe Mau is with berms Librayis medicinallfor sil difeafes in the rains. For compounds;Trochy (kes uf Amber 5 of Terra lemniayof Spodium,thote calle! Gordon, {yprup made with fugar and the joyce of Mari- galdssPomgranaterindsand lowers; the Leaves of Oakes mirtle berries &c. If itproceed ofaveine thavis broken, you sna prefentl lec blood on the arme ofthe fame file, shat the blood may be curned s then keep "154 Culpepper’s Aftrological Jugdement Cuar. Le Of piffing blood. ‘Tis canted diverfe waies, cave. Ls, Through weaknelfe of the reignes. 2.Through diffolucion of the vena cave, Bleedingé 3, Through over lifting, ov fome fall, wher rn 5 Then iin enh |S gl hag tnt ae 4.Through tharpe humors,that caule excori- and Vinegeryufing the former Mediciies, ‘ation, But if it come by excoriation caufed by cor« cout ee humors rf. roding humors, purge Buty all meanes keepe him feom asl Iherpe and four things for they canfe bumors tha sncreafeqhe carefon« Osher medicinesfor this,you may find in tay chapter which reates of; ulcerations in the j veines. . {eu noteythat in piling blood coming of wbetcanfe Jnverit profiter mus to drinke new Milke i €- Loundence, andno other drinke but that. 5. Through flopping of the Hemorthoydes. It this difeafe be caufed through weakens ofthe reines y the blood that comes out lookes wheyith, If through diffolution of the vena cave, ic comes forth without any paine at all Itof breaking a veine,the blood comes out boundantly, with great wakenes of the back Buti ic proceed of corrofion, it comesforth by little and little, with vehement paine in the raines, cure. If ft proceed of weakneffe of the raines or diffolution of the vene cava, you mult ufere- flridtive medicines. Abftain from fuch things as provoke urine: and from venery. For fimples:Comfry rootes, Gum tracacanth and Arabicke, | is lematites, Willow leaves Mii juyee of Knotgratfisand above all she hear of te ws Sines. Ccutlon, Cuap. IL Cautions Of Taflainasiinns in the Reines, T iscauted either through corruption of cau, -syor drinking of medicines chat caule fnarsyor fe 156 Culpepper's Affrological. Judgement caufe Inflamation, orthrough cdxti Vien ee igh cOytinuall and ere chanceth to them that labs i signes, difeafe, a beating pain, in the fmal waite ete above the baftard ribs, which extendeh ie felfe downward, to the hips, bladder, and privities, an affonithment in the legs diffienlty to goes and if they chance to fneeze , they ate vexed with vehement pair There folfoweth alfo di pilfe often and painfully, . The calves of the legsand feet are cold, they cannot ftop without great pain s thevurineis groffeand filthy,and eheir body feaverifh; Some hed pronenefe co vont an ome doe vomit choller: fone are troubled (vith bel- chings, fome fiveat, and fore faint. Bacall arcexcecdingly troubled wih’ wind, ce, it sthor mens 7 = Let the fitk-abftain from a! it Diet gnawing, or fale meats, Deere This difeafe bapnetb nae to women with child. Hes, ”_ Hearbs mediéinal are, Endive, Cichory, Lee tice,Plantan, Purllain, Water=lillies, Houlleck, and night-hade, ; Lodging. Teuthnk iiein'a fofe"bed. ; et than hor ing rf wf oan falling» for fajting cavjal einulfion made with the four greater cold feeds Wiite Poypyctaeds, Almonds Par tuna and Suga profi much, a Caan a D Suan anuch ufed any ways Thole Lib.3. af Difeafes enlarged. 157 Thole wopfien. with child that are troubled are alwaies troubled with an extream pearing down , as though thechild were mile placed + their labors are tedious, and by reafon Sy Pi heheat of their eines hey eaily fff ax Beaton and continually fall in labour Long, before their times My own wifehath in every child been ex- treamly perplexed wich this difeafe yet | never knew the caufe of it before the writing hereof. 7 In cure of this difeafe you miuft avoid all Cautions anedicines that provoke urine, Nourith the region of the reines with any © oes, ° all the Oples (mean not Chymical Oyles but Oyler made by decodtion of che hearb in Oyle) ofthe hearbs aforesmentioned. Ifmen be troubled with it,you may let blood Bleeding: freely without feare , for that cools the blood sre dakes leffe of i: but bleodleting im women sith bil takes aoe tbe orient ofthe ebild and canfeth abortion. Th fine,lee dhem drink ewo ounces of the j4¥C€ potion, ofClary, and as nnuch juyce of Nightlhade in fiecunces of tale Aleymorning and evening. withit, iculty'of urineshey Cuap, Ill. Fmalfion; Of the Stone in the Reines. He Stone in the reines hapneth oftner to men of perfett age ten to children, Ie 158 Culpepper's Affrological juclgment Teiscauled cf entivwall cradnieed rasneff the lemeckywterely abourlonce:f py fle reek uumors avé gathered tonerber, webich the tery heat Aaa the reines parcheth and hardneth Tikea fone. The flones that hein the rcines neer their venticlesdiffer anne ft shemfelves in greatnes, falhion fharpnelfe,& colour: fur fomeareblack, fome white,and fome ofa pale or afhy colour, The lick of this difeafe have a fore pain in the reinesof theback , pricking, as though an Aule were thruftin yee no welling appeares onawardly: he can hardly move his back atall, the leg that is nexe the difcated fide is fo be- at, and are fub- ne cither is very ittle in quantity,or elfe quite ftopped, They have many motions to ftool, and yet are aflsnseney alfotheurinchath «gravelly ri ance Hide paity beyoung and full of blood, you may breach a vein, otherwife forbear, * But however forget not co purge the groffe mlancholick humours with black Hellcbore, corredted with Cinamon,or Lignin Caffe, if favength be very weak , and the patient by reifun of ageor other impediment, not fit for ucgation you mult keep his body falluble ish gentie clifters, in which put oyleof Rews DEL Chamoun, Sc, Keep the region of ther Ysdions, ccd with oyle of Camomel, over which apply & Tobsceg leafe warmed and changed ewice in 24 bone The Ditleren- ces of flones in the seins, Signes. sxmmied : They loath thei jet to vomiutng: thir ns alwaiesannoyn- Lib.g. of Pifeafes enlarged. 159 The beftmfAicine ever I read or heard of,for rotions this difea(ciis to drink the juyce of Pellitory of the wall every morning. : ‘Neither doe I believe the juyce of Camomel is nich inferior €0 it Powders medicinal for this difeafe are + ThE ep fecds of Ammi,Gromwel, Marfli-mallows: the Seeds. roots of Marfh-mallows,Sparagus,Fannel, Par- Roots, ily, Brafcus, Saxifrage, Filipendula, Ariftolo- Decodt- chia rottinda, Mather, che herbs of Pellitory of om the wall, Marfemallows, Mallows, Chamomel, yeahs, Polymouncain, Peniroyal. q Cinamon,Bdellium,Winter-cherrics, gum of Plumetrees, Holly-berrics , the flones of fea~ fponges,lapis Judaicu Boyle thofe that are to beboyled , and beat the reltinto powder, and give it. Moreover thefe ftones are often brought by caution, force of mdicine from the reines, and yet ftick ; at the neck of the bladder, flop the urine, prick by theirown fharpneffe, and fo put the patient to worfe torture then before, : In fuch cafes you pnuft firft let oue the Wine yesihecee with anlnftrument. Then muft you labour to break the ftone in the bladder, with fuch medicines as you fhall findein the chapter of the ftone in the bladder. ‘Again , fometimes the ftone paffeth the neck = of the bladder y andyetfirkethin themidft of Caution? the yard , and fometimes caufeth exulceration y octia, there too. I fich cafes you mult hold the yard in Oyle of Camomel as hot as can be endured, The Sncition Preferva- wives, Diet. Bleeding Purge, The belt way to make Oyle of hamomel for fach utes, isto boyle the juyce of Chamomel, ficit clarified ) wich the like quantity of Sallet- oyle, till the juyce be confiumed. If by thismeans, and his raining hard to piflisic benot expelled, you have no other way but to ule incifion, Which muft be made on the upper pater’ theyard through the glans, and draw it out through the incifion with an inftrament. For if you make the incifion in the lower part ofthe yard, icalwaiesfitulates, and the Urine comes out there, Afterthe patient is whole, let himufe pre- fervatives which may keep him from the like again, for commonly the difeafe often returns, Tethim chew his meat well but let him cat bur litelecurn,cheefe, normilke y nor of any thing that is made of them, Let him avoid fith,all wines but white-wines, all meats of bad juyee,and hard of digeltion. Let him not ett much acone time, and that hich he dosh let ie be quick of digettion. Tet him often drink wormwood-beere. Parfnips are exceecing good food for him, fo aremaft of the hearbs mentioned in the cures with theroors and feeds, If blood abound, breath a veine. Hvicious humors draw rogether, ufea purge which fits their temperature, 160 Culpepper’s eens Chap. Lib.3 pPlitocded CHAP, IV, Sderirage Of unmeafarable piffing. | ahs is a difcafe in the reines,wherein what- pe foever is drunksis prefently piffed out again. Teiscaufed by reafon of weakneffe of the re- tentive vertue of the reines, and the atraétive Caule draws freely without controll. There accompanies this difeafean immode- signes! rate heat all over the body ; a flubborn delire of dike neither is their thirft quenched by drin- ings Therealwaies isa fever accompanying this difeafesand the whole body wafteth,confumeth and pineth away, : The cure confifeth in two things = 1, To ftop the tharpneffe of the humors, To corre the retentive faculty of the srcinets : ‘Therefore it is a laudable remedy ofeen to Vomity -caufethem to vomitupagain what they have drunk. Let his diet be things that lack mordacity or Diets gnawing, and provoke no urine 5 fuch be eggs, Jean fiwineseflethy much fodden, new cheele without fale, milk wherein Flineftones or red hot flee! hath been quiche Yer if the patienc be aftringent,asmy own daughter was (for under this difeafe fhe Inbow, re tor wes Cautions redalong time, and went not deftoole all the 162 Culpepper’s oo, time without compulfion ) you nbult avoid the Tater, for ie caufeth aftringency. -hearbs oS For Po Purtlan Medicinal for the difeafey are Knorgraff, Lloodwvortythe juyce of them if ic may be had, Gonvtry,DatessMirtle berries, Peares ufed in de- coftions, Trochilikes of Spodiuen, ‘Allo {weet wines are very medicinal to drink, for it changeth the falt umours which anf thi, and makes the blood and humors fees, That which Hound molt benefe by in-ny daughters fickneffe was , by applying lho orang, OPpEE fsa nok walbed all, (pried wich Caanla 4g Fitgle white wine-vinegar, and applicd wer will Allo thrce holly leaves boyled in whiee wine for her to drink. And thete Hearned ofan Healian *, Allo thefe thiiygs are good to’ annoynt the ia, tins Relerofe-vinegary Nighufhadey Letiry Dackt-mear,Pellitory of the wall,Purllane, &cy Doyled in Oyle of Roafes,or Mirtles. Rresbs Welicas Drink, CHAP. V. Of Ulcers in the reines. ene Ts arecaufed either of rupeare of fome veines in their reins,or through fome inflae mation there, or through fharp humors catried thicherywhich caufech exe sriation, Thue Lib. 3. of Difesforenlarged, 163 ‘Thert isinythis ifeafe paineand howineffe Sime .- falcin the lofes,the urine comes forth without any ‘unpediment, and thereby iis known from login the blader there is matter piffed ont wich theurine, sd fometimes haivess and take itfora general maxinaeylfattery fae be pffed ont with she urine theve isan ulcer: f the nine come witb mach paint, the ulcer is in the bladder s sate is inthe reins, “hee the fick efchue cruditis, fatiety and i neffeall raw meatsall meats that fpeedily rurn Cautions toputtefadtion, or that caufe inflamation or windineffe, [Let him avoid all (aleoure, and fharp things, ail ings thar ongender chellersluch be gach thitf afinence,bzer labour wrath,peatcbing cc: He mutt above all things avoid violent mo pq, tionsridingsyas alfo perpetual idleneffe: Lethis bread be new,and not leavened. Lethis meat be lithe of digction and of good | juyce, {uch As chicken, lamb, young rabbes, birds of the mountains,8c. ‘Alfo milk fodden with eggs , and thickned | with white flarch,is very good. But above all,and beforeall other medicines, you muftbe fure co clenfe the reines well, elfe your going about to cure then is but Labour » in vain, are ‘That you miay doe by pilMaftichine or pilde Succino if the putrefa€tion benot greats ifit be, youmuf ufe a drying diet compoted of Guaja tm bermodatils,SennayEpitbiniiSteckas,Anifeds Which lett ic thould caufe inflamation by its itsheats you may adde to it cOwling and flip- pery lieaibs, as Mullows, Mars-thallows roots and leaves, Endive, Cichory, 8c. Medicines After you may adminitter {uch medicines as Stopping {top gnawing, and corrhoding humors firch be gnawing Endive, Sorrel, Lettice, Pureflaine : the foure humors. greater. cold Seeds,Fenugreck feeds boyled in Honey. ‘Alfo let him drink much Honey and Milk, for Honey cleanfeth ulcers exceedingly. : Let him by all means avoid all cold drinks, Cautions. for cold isan eneny to ulcers, Entafon «him» ule Emulfions made with Almond, ufion and cold feeds, gi. Tracanth, Arabick, and bar- Jeyewater. rains being wel cleanfed, you torehiftives. feet Si be bole Armeniacy Dragons blood, Glutina- gi.Arabicke,and Tracantb,Terra- Vices tives, larch, Spodium,f&c. eee Allo. outwardly you may ftrengehen the Localia, place wich Oyle of Rofes,Mirtles,Frankincente be with Op Mircles,Frankincente, 164 oe coe Cuar, VI Of the Stone in the Bladder, Ti Stone in the Bladder ingendveth ofimer in childrens then in ald ee A people, Icis caufed by abundance of gtoffe and thick ; urine, Lib.3. of difeafes, Enlarged, 165 sine, carried into the bladder, and fetling there like te lees of wine, is compaéted toge- ther and hardned intoa ftonesby the heat of the Bladder, and parts adjacent. Thofe that have this difeafe, their privy signe, members itch much, they handle them often many times they fwel s they make water often, and by drops, and their waters gravelly 5 alfo they feclea weight or bearing down about their fandament. Lec their body be kept foluble, oe Belides the things mentioned in the chapter of the ftone in the reins the approved remedy isa Hedge-fparrow killed in the right time, (I fhall Godwilling hereafter write a Treatife of the erue time of gathering hearbs for all difeae fes, to which I refer youforthis: ) and faleed tupyand eaten raw for this difeafe’, which will break and bring away the hardeft fone that can be in thebody ofan. ‘Alfo the juyce of Chamomel caft up into the bladder with a fpring, wil break the ftone, and bring it away fpecdily. The like effe& hath Goats blood taken in- Lamlorry wardly, thisis(o Sometimes the flone rufheth into the neck of ME the bladder, and ftopsby that means the urine + in {uch cafes you mutt place the patient inhis bedfo at lying onbisback his pivtes may be highefl, and then remove the lone with an nfumene, Thus have you waies encugh for the cure of the Stone without cutting, which is a medicine Blood Ieccing, Locilia, 166 Culpepper’s Afrofogical Judgement yedicine invented rather to ki en cure the difeafed. Cua, VIL Of blood curdled in the Bladder, F aycine chance to break in the bladder’, as fometimes there doth, then the blood that falls out of it into the bladder thickens and curdles. ; In fuch cafes the patients heart failes him, his vilage waxeth pale, his pulfesare ftnall, deep, and thickshe is forrowfal,cold, and his ftrength decayes. ‘Alfo fometimes a clod of blood hapneth into the paffage of the urine,and ftoppeth it. In ll breakings out of bloud you mun be as peedy in yr cnr as you cam delays are dangerous, Aud therefore in this Teftrength and age permit,let blood prefently, etblood often, and bu little ata time, for hat turns the blood and draws itback. Boyle Knotgraffe, Plantane, Bramble leaves, Comfry,and Pomgranat flowers, in water and vinegaryof each a like quantity,and wet cloaths and foment the region of the bladder ofcen,and tecafupe made of Bais lic alwaies wet to the slace, *Inwardly, the foregoing hearbs, asalfo Mo- sherwort, Stachas, Citron pil, Wormpood, Saute Lib.3. of Difeafes,enlarged, 167 Southerntvood, Calaminth, Elder-Leaves,Bieue inenJudaicumgam Ammoniacum,and Sperma ceci are medicinal. Ifthe clotted blood ftop the paffige of the asineyyou muft bring ouc dhs urine with a® Sy catheter, ringeyas in the ftone. Cuap, VII Inflamnation of the Bladder, F all difesfes in he bladder this isthe mo vous and deadly. Therefolloweth this difeate a (harp feaver, they raveand cannot flep, and talk they know signes aoe what: Theit urine is flopped, fometimes they vomit puce choler. Their groyne is hard, and vehemently pained thy haveadelire to goeto toole, yet many tings can do nothing y as ithappensin the die feafe Tenafmus. Thole that havethis difeale if rength and Bleeding. age permit bleed them inftantly_in the ancles. Lec them abftaine from all meate and caution, broaths made of meate, Let his drinkebe only waterin which barly brink: * and cinnamon are fodden, Levall*cold chings be avoyded, for the blad- *Coldin desis ull of finnews, and all cold isan enemy to telneBof the fines, baka ‘Ton muptrefrefo tbe region of the bladder with Pt" oyl wherein Dill and Linfeed hath been boyled. Localia, R Byoyd 1€8 Culpeppers Afirolecitall udemint Avcid by all means all medicines that coole ard bind , fertkey prchibite thewdiffolving of thofe kumors that caufe the inflammation, Tat the guts be alwaics kepe walked with nile and futcclyfters. Then boylewhite Poppy thels in oyley and mingle Satfiony Myrrhe, and Opium, with the ican wee a little wool in i, lament when the lifter is iug the fickneff. Alfo you may boy] Linfecd, Fenugreck feed, and Mar ihemallowe Ieaves,and roots, and putit Jiquor and all intoa cote ftoole, and let the Pacicnt sit with his fundament over the fteme ot it Lee him abfltin from much drink, and all things that provoke wsineyor caute fhaipnefle of 1 lifters, Nodulus, Cantion. indi Binding extrcam parts Some ule cupying-glaffes, but I never knew them doe good but harm. Cuap. IX. Boxing. Of Ulcers in the Bladder, ers happen in the bladder either by fame leonora atic hack hhapned before, or through fome rupture and gnawing fx from thereincs, There followeth this difeafe, a fharp_painin the bladder,pifing of macter and filth with thie urine Alfoif urgent occafion bes you may bind the’ Lib. of Difeafessenlarged, urine,and making water with great d and it inketh abominably, Jf the ulcer liein the bortom of che bladd then chere ispain about chegroyn; but if in the neck of the bladder, the pain is moftextreant fe maketh water, both ia the bevinning and end of his pifling. They delice cosic fooping forward continue ally, and cannot ftind upright, nor relt, lying along, but arecroubled wich continuall watch= ings and confumings of body , and it many times brings chem co a feveryand {i kils chem. Tcured two of this difeafeand Thold ieto be Reafons themoltdiffculedifeafe to cure that is, none why ate excepted sand that for thele reafans : cers in Fi,the bladder is mighty full of finews and theblad- vs are dificult tocuce » ween they bappen m fm fetate ls re plate ‘rata Secondly, becaute of the great remotenelle of the placesthe medicine mutt paffe ewo concofti= pasbelides the reines and kidneys, before ie can ome to the bladder, & fo che nacurall frength, jt it is wel nigh {pene before iccan come to doe is fic inthe leaft meat Thirdly, theblaclder is a place appropriated pnely to keep excrements, and therefore the ex- cement of the medicine onely is. permitted to ome thither, Fourthly, becaufe the urine, which is by na- pretharps doth continually touch the ulcers, nd znaweth them , and thereby keepeth them Ham conglutinacign or joyning together, For when never'f much urine is fens out,fome Ra wil scalar Desrip- tion. 170 Culpeppers Afrologicall judement will remaine behind, and the bladder thrinketh, upyand falleth together, fo that the urine which is left,toucheth every part of the bladder, yea although ibe never fo licele, For the cure then of thisdangerousand diffe culedifeafe, in the fir place pertwadethe patic entto drinke nothing but new milke, and a bundance of it,for it alone in time wil cure him Allocate new milkeand oyle cf roles into the bladder with a fyringe, 7 For other medicines fecke them in the chaps ter of che Ulcers in the reines. Cuarp.X Of the Stranzury, of 8 apni Tees iscalled in Grecke cperpuiesin atin Stillicidium usin, in Engtith the angry. eis a difeafe whercin the urine di down by little, and littleby dropr,and caute 4 continual provocatien and defireto pill, eiscaufed either through the fharpencts of theurine, or by extlceration of the bladder, or by impofthumation of the liver or rcines, whereby filth and matcer is fent imo the blad- der, fharpnes of which canfeth a continuall de- fireto pie. You may know if come by tharpnes of the w= rine, by the cholleriquenes of the urines alfo, ‘gnawing about the bladder, and the whole flate Pfthe body thews choller to abound, 7 ib.3. of Difeafer,enlarged. wt Itby ulceration of the bladder or reines, the former Chapters wil direét you. If itbe caufed through fharpneffe of humors, you muft purge out the vicious humour with pug, ll {peed. Cafafidula is a delicate purge for this pur ole; fo is Lenitive ele€tuary an ounce of eithery - tuken at night going to bed, Lethis diet be moittning, and let him drink Diets warm milks Let him piffe continually, for the arpneft of the urine will ulcerate the bladder if it abide long init For fimples, Marfhemallow leaves and roots, the roots of Philipendula, and Ofmand roya), Gromwel feed, and winter Cherries, are medi- Cure. iethe fharpneffe of thenrine, you may cat in milk mingled wich whice arch, ine wih a Syringe, come of ulcers in the bladder » you mult care them,and then the frangury wil ceafe. Cuap. XI, Of difficulty of Urine. Aueusie In Greek, in Englith Difury sis a difeate Surasias wherein cheurine is made wich great difficuley Belerip- and hardnefle, : i Ie is caufed through great weakneffe or cold= cau, neffe of the bladder, or chrough aFlegmatique ~" s humor that flopgeth the neck of the bladder. You 179 Calp2pigzes ABralogion judgmmt You my know if itcomzof cold whiteneff: ofth: of Asien ttiq-te h away wich no Ginall p Mfitcom? of cold: things that ave dia sre Hedghogs dried the f(h of them Emcan calaminthes,Discuccumm fennel, Parley lage, with many others whi my volunzafheubant IFic proceed of gm itique humors, Aagnswhh Och ne fellieuan oe se fides the former micines you may feenge then the eegion ofthe bladder wich Orley of Rew,Dill, Scorpions,Catlrorcum, Chamomel Southernwood, Beteony,Mugwore,Calamiach, any of thelescomfderatis confiderand.p, 7 Alfoyoumay mikea Nodilus wich any of ef oy esjand pacup the fundamene, wy CHAD. XIL Of foppage in the Urine, sie in Greeks» fuf difeate wherein, ad Care, a the lad lecyu Such b: Di Smil= you may finde in Purging. Localia. Nodutas. eh fy wie inating vl neis torally Jetted and ager. tharthe Patien® canoe piffeatall, hs difeafe is canfed either through weaknels of the bladder , or by topping the paffige of thearineycither by a material floneor by grofl: humors, or by fomefvelling in che pallige, o¢ by inlummation which flops the palfige, and fometimesa Jittle piece of tth or hard knob grows Lib.s. of Difeafessenlarged,” 173 ercws in the poffageard fe metimes matter ene 2 Bicwn from the reins flops the paffage:and feme= jimes this difcafe chencah to bail folky cnedly Ihrcugh long retintion oftheir urine, If i ceme thrcuph weokneff of the bladder Signe, rc fhewed the fipnesin the former chapter, itof prcfle humors, itmay heknown by the Jit the Pavicnt keptyas idle liteferding en profs cas, 8c. If by inflammation or flne eye may find ie fipnes in their proper chapters, and their ure avo, f If it be gaufed of fome piece of th erowing iheresc carves the fame fiens with ulcers inthe cinsalfo a. cyringe pu in the urine comes outs ilo the picce of fldh being. touched with the cyrengescaufcth pain, whereby you may know eeabou lie lo by breaking pcs of Eu come cue with the urine,dnd blood alfo. IFitconieof clotted blood there went before criffng cf blocd, IF ic comes of mateerthere went before it the running of the rines, The cure is diverfe,according to the diverfity cue ef the caufes. Fit come of weakneffe ofthe bladder;nourith lhebladder with hoe Oyles mentioned in the former chapeer, fof a knob of ith you are fucnificd with medicines in the chapkec of the tovein thercins, The other cures may be found in the prece- pent chapters. Generally all things provoking urine aremedicinal for this difeate, 174 Culpeppers Affrologicall judgment fos Re ve > tof Cuap. XII * ih atid Of Uleersinthe Yard. Cie, lees are bred in the Yard through the tharpneflecf the humor inthe running of the reines, and then they come alwaies with ine flamation. Infeéion, They are then cured by injettions made with ‘rechifeialbi Khasis cum epio,Drach, 1. Planan water mogsmixed together, and callin with 4 Sysinges Sometimes they are caufed by gravel, which 1° PPM caufeuh excoriation in the yard, Then they are beft cured by drying medicines, Such be Paper burnt, Dill bumt,Aciftolochia rotunds,Mirche,Galls,Gum arabick , Dragons blood,Bole armenick, Tutty, Lapis Hematti Terra lemia, Thee orany of tel, conve a fired be foul ‘ Ifthe exulceration befoule, you may fil Clentng

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