This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
A42537 | s.n.,[ Oxford? |
A06768 | And should our gallants bee drunke? |
A06768 | Did the Master preferre thee over his house, and goods for the satisfying of thine inordinarie appetite, and thy childrens only? |
A28830 | Borlase, Edmund, d. 1682? |
A28830 | Borlase, Edmund, d. 1682? |
A63801 | and do not you find that they are hard of Concoction? |
A63801 | how doth she Groan in a Language, severely to be felt, tho not heard? |
A63797 | And on the contrary, those that drink Wine, and feed on the highest food, have not they Spirits accordingly? |
A63797 | Do not all or most that do accustome themselves to such things quickly spoil their Healths? |
A63797 | How many miseries an ● aking hearts do Women endure with their Sickly Children? |
A63797 | and how strongly and violently are all the Centers and Powers of nature stirred up? |
A63797 | on the contrary, do not soft and pleasant words pacifie wrath by awakening their Simile? |
A77586 | Customs how to be altered? |
A77586 | For Distribution, how can that be performed when the Passages are choakt up through the abundance of Meats? |
A77586 | In the observation of these small Matters how much doth Health consist? |
A77586 | Notes, typically marginal, from the original text Notes for div A77586e-3070 Health, what it is? |
A77586 | These experimental Events who can deny? |
A77586 | WHat mean you Sir? |
A77586 | Whence is the Multitude of Physicians, but from the frequency and Multitude of Diseases? |
A77586 | Whether Customary Physicking is to be continued? |
A77586 | Whether Physick be Necessary for the preservation of Health? |
A77586 | Whether may be allowed, the larger Dinner or Supper? |
A77586 | Which the best Aire in general? |
A77586 | and whence that frequency and Multitude, but from Excess? |
A77586 | so will it mine also: Doth it un- man him? |
A77586 | sure it doth so in me also: Doth it impair his Health? |
A63820 | And what is it but vanity to affect that which does us no good? |
A63820 | And wherefore does Man esteem himself in a better state, or more highly graduated than they? |
A63820 | Did not all such things originally arise from the Bottomless Pit, that deep dark poysonous Abyss of Fierceness and Wrath? |
A63820 | He that takes his Liberty in what he may shall Repent him, how much more when he runs out into what he should not? |
A63820 | Will any body say, that such things are necessary to the Life and well- being of Man? |
A19740 | Alas then, in what miserable estate are their patients? |
A19740 | And hauing viewed the vrine, he said, is not this your wiues vrine? |
A19740 | But admit that it doth not purge; which is very euident; yet it altereth the body much: and how can that be done in yoong and strong men without hurt? |
A19740 | But this bringeth nothing to the credit of Empiriks: for what are these few things in comparison of all those that are required in a Physician? |
A19740 | But what see you more? |
A19740 | Doth not Tabacco then threaten a short life to the great takers of it? |
A19740 | Doth not Tabacco this much more? |
A19740 | Empiriks alwayes take away blood without due examination of these,( for how can they examine those that they know not?) |
A19740 | Here if they mistake the disease or the nature of it, who conceiueth not what hurt may ensue, though altogether against their wils? |
A19740 | How can any man then call an Empirike to the cure of his body without great danger? |
A19740 | I confesse that experience will teach them what medicine will purge gently, and what strongly; but what is that to the whole mystery of purging? |
A19740 | What can be here said in defence of Empiriks? |
A19740 | What can experience learne in this great variety? |
A19740 | What though Epicures obiect, Qui medicè viuit, miserè viuit? |
A19740 | What though it be vsually taken by fume, and not in substance, or infusion? |
A19740 | What though they can iudge of the gout, the palsie, and the dropsie? |
A19740 | What thought he can in some things satisfie the ignorant vulgar with some shew of reason? |
A19070 | But some man will say, is Venus requisite to the preservation of health? |
A19070 | But some will say: may diet prolong a mans life? |
A19070 | But this custome is beastlike rather then princelike: for what doth a bruit beast other than eate his fill of meat, and drinke abundantly, afterward? |
A19070 | Duxi uxorem: quam ibi miseram vidi? |
A19070 | For so hee saith, what shall I say of other Nations? |
A19070 | How then lived Priests in health in time past unmarried? |
A19070 | Nam quis potest dicere, mundum est c ● r meum? |
A19070 | Or how live students at this day in the Vniversities that be of any society, who may not marry while they have interest in their Colledge? |
A19070 | Procul fugere quid? |
A19070 | Stulte quid est somnus, gelidae nisi mortis imago? |
A19070 | Verum hic impransi mecum disquirite cur hoc? |
A19070 | What meaneth this, but that meates and dri ● kes doe alter our bodies, and either temper th ● m or distemper them greatly? |
A46281 | ( Unde nefas tantum Zeli fautoribus?) |
A46281 | Again, fire having but one quality to work withall, whereby he must unite the other three Elements, what shall bring and unite fire unto them? |
A46281 | Also if a cold ambient be able to make cold water hot, why should not a hot ambient make it more cold? |
A46281 | Also there are salt Lakes, as the Terentine Lake in Italy? |
A46281 | Also, why should the Sun heat some few Fountains and pass over an infinite number of others, which are left cold? |
A46281 | But if it be a Gum, faith Solinander, why should it abound more after earth- quakes? |
A46281 | But what shall we judge of those Lamps, which have been found burning in old Sepulchres? |
A46281 | But what? |
A46281 | But why should it suck more than it hath need of? |
A46281 | Corpore( quis neget hoc?) |
A46281 | For how can they give these affections to other things, when they have them not themselves? |
A46281 | For how the could water be humidissimum medicamentum, if it were not humidissimum elementum? |
A46281 | Horrida de innocuis fertur sententia famis; Abbatiae pereunt, fpoliantur Templa, rapinis Tecta patent, reditus, fundi, Sacraria; quid non? |
A46281 | Num pietatis amor an amor sceleratus habendi? |
A46281 | Quod si tam celebrem mereatur guttula laudem, Praemia quae referet largos qui funditat imbres? |
A46281 | Sed quid? |
A46281 | Si non est ab elementis gustare, quare sit gustari? |
A46281 | So for fat and unctuous substances, as Sulphur, Bitumen, Oyle, Grease,& c. unto what Element shall we ascribe them? |
A46281 | What taste have any of these Elements? |
A46281 | and how shall it cast it forth beyond the place of use to the superficies of the earth? |
A46281 | and why should it burn and not dissolve in water? |
A46281 | specioso haec templa Jacobus Donavit praesul( pia nam decreta bonorum AEquivalent factis) animam Rex ipse Jacobus( Hoc quoque quis dubitat?) |
A40451 | ( because it is less resisted, by reason of the small quantity of water in them) than on the Ocean? |
A40451 | And are they not a hot and dry exhalation? |
A40451 | And as these Springs differ in their heat according to their nearness, or remoteness to their fire, so also in their Bituminous odour? |
A40451 | And can not the burnings of the Aetnean, Visuvian, Nymphean mountains convince us a little of this? |
A40451 | And hath it not been observed that a fiery Bituminous matter doth sometimes flow out of hot Springs? |
A40451 | And whence crudities, saith Hippocrates, but from fulnes, affirming also, that to eat without fulnes is the rule of health? |
A40451 | And will not this rust being boiled in rain- water yield a Vitrial? |
A40451 | How comes this Bitumen to be kindled in the earth? |
A40451 | Ignem quid humoris expers pabulatur? |
A40451 | Or might not their patients be unwilling to drink the water regulary; or disorder themselves in respect of diet, exercise and the like? |
A40451 | Quid enim creatum complectitur natur a rerum non ex aqua humectante,& coalescente adultum,& animatum? |
A40451 | Quid spirat, vernat, crescit, consistit sine suo fluore? |
A40451 | This might be true, but what then? |
A40451 | Who would have thought that the dropping- well would have yielded a stony pouder upon evaporation, and coagulate milk? |
A40451 | vomiting, purging, bleeding, sweat, and urine? |
A47787 | A book for Temperance? |
A47787 | A happy soul, that all the way To heav''n rides in a summers day? |
A47787 | A soul, whose intellectual beams No mists do mask, no lazy steams? |
A47787 | As when a piece of wanton lawn, A thin aerial vail is drawn, O''re Beauties face; seeming to hide, More sweetly shows the blushing bride? |
A47787 | But is''t a thing which profit brings? |
A47787 | But some will say, It''s not in every bodies power,( or at least not with convenience) to observe this exact course of diet: what then? |
A47787 | But what do I raking up this carrion? |
A47787 | Could not one tongue serve temperance to taste? |
A47787 | Dost thou condemne then what I do? |
A47787 | Dost thou no gluttons vertuous know? |
A47787 | HEark hither, Reader, Wouldst thou see Nature her own Physician be? |
A47787 | HOw''s this? |
A47787 | His own musick, his own health? |
A47787 | IS this your temp''rate diet? |
A47787 | Is''t now i''th''press? |
A47787 | Is''t this which brings infirmities? |
A47787 | Is''t this which dulls the sharpest wit? |
A47787 | Now what can be imagined more unsavory, or loathsome, then these dainties, assoon as they have received a little alteration in the stomack? |
A47787 | Now what child can eat three pounds of bread at once? |
A47787 | Now what man( I pray) devoted to the exercises of the mind is there, that can at one repast eat up four pounds, or forty eight ounces of dry bread? |
A47787 | Shall I therein find ease and pleasure? |
A47787 | That it mitigates the Passion? |
A47787 | This rare one, Reader, wouldst thou see? |
A47787 | To mind, or body? |
A47787 | Warm thoughts, free spirits, flattering Winters self into a spring? |
A47787 | What Physician could have discovered these hidden qualities to me, if I had not found them out by long experience? |
A47787 | What can be more vile and undecent for a man, than to be a slave to his belly? |
A47787 | What? |
A47787 | Whither will''t bring my soul? |
A47787 | Who would believe that old wine should hurt my stomach, and new should help it; or that cinnamon should heat me more than pepper? |
A47787 | Who''s that which giveth me the lie? |
A47787 | Will it my life on earth prolong? |
A47787 | Will''t bring me to eternal bliss? |
A47787 | Will''t hurt me if I drink too much? |
A47787 | Will''t make me vigorous untill death? |
A47787 | Would''st have me temperate till I die? |
A47787 | Wouldst see a man whose well- warm''d blood Bathes him in a genuine flood: A man, whose tuned humours be A set of rarest harmony? |
A47787 | Wouldst see a nest of roses grow In a bed of reverend snow? |
A47787 | Wouldst see blithe looks, fresh cheeks beguile Age? |
A47787 | and to expose our selves to the lash of all those evils both of Soul and Body, wherewith Intemperance scourgeth her followers? |
A47787 | canst tell? |
A47787 | is there no other way for a man to preserve his health, and to prolong his life? |
A47787 | must moderate temperance, she Live in perpetual exile, because we Turn such voluptuous Epicures? |
A47787 | or to both? |
A47787 | wouldst see December smile? |
A47787 | — Ridentem dicere verum Quid vetat? |
A63798 | And is it also not a Friend to the Laborious Husbandman, by encouraging the Consumption of a great quantity of fine Flower? |
A63798 | And what Delight can any Person have in the best and choicest Meats and Drinks, when his whole Body is Indisposed, or invaded by various Diseases? |
A63798 | But what can be said, or who can convince the great Ignorance and Blindness of Mankind? |
A63798 | Do not all the Herbs, Fruits, Seeds and Grains, and whatever else appears in Bodies, Shapes and Forms? |
A63798 | How many hundreds of cruel Diseases hath Man brought on himself, and worst of all hath intailed them on his Posterity? |
A63798 | If any Person becomes Master of a Thousand Sheep, Cows, Horses, or any other Creatures, has not our Laws and Customs made him Lord over them? |
A63798 | If this were not so, why should not Stones beaten into Powder make Mortar? |
A63798 | Is not this most clear and manifest in all the Bea ● … ts and Vegetables of the Earth? |
A63798 | Man''s Heart, and am not I in the midst thereof? |
A63798 | Now, when these things are understood and well considered, how is it possible, that Mankind can arrive at the Haven or Port of Rest? |
A63798 | Or on the other side, a Christian to be a Turk? |
A63798 | Sixthly, Then for the Confectioners, what do, or indeed can they do without Sugar? |
A63798 | The like is to be understood in all Religions, can any perswade a Turk to become a Christian after 20 years of Age? |
A63798 | Their Sleep being but a kind of waking, in comparison of Mans; for what Creature in the World is so drowsy and heavy as Man? |
A63798 | What wonderful satisfaction and pleasure should we take in using clean and innocent Foods? |
A63798 | Would it not amaze a Man seriously to consider, upon what inconsiderable motives Men are thus hurri ● … to their own and others ruin? |
A63798 | and do not Vegetables do the same, whose variety in Nature are beyond Humane Number? |
A63798 | and had no Hopes? |
A63798 | and how can you be justly blamed for it? |
A63798 | and how mightily would Concord, Simplicity and Unity be generated and advanced? |
A63798 | and is it 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 for ● … ple of all sort ● … and Religions; to break that great and important Co ● … dment? |
A63798 | and that he hath not the use of them to that degree as the Beasts have? |
A63798 | as Horses, is not their Strength encreased in general through their whole Bodies? |
A63798 | doth it not at once compleatly Indulge and Gratify the whole? |
A63798 | how frequently do they put themselves upon the Rack, both of their Bodies, Minds and Purses? |
A63798 | in a word, what would not young People do that they may appear in the Fashion, or be equal with those that are in the highest Mode? |
A63798 | is he not endued with all the principles and powers of Body, Soul and Spirits? |
A63798 | or Barley when broken,( and not Malted) yield forth its Virtues into the Water? |
A63798 | or can any Creature break their Circle in which Gods Law hath bounded it? |
A63798 | or how could he Subsist or be Supported, and his Life preserved by them? |
A63798 | or what Person would break open a House, if he did not hope to do it and not to be taken? |
A63798 | will not they use all Wicked Methods of Life, as Whoreing, Robbing, Stealing; nay, Murder it self? |
A14298 | Aduise me how I should build mee an house for pleasure, health and profit? |
A14298 | And whether the same be wholesome for sicke persons? |
A14298 | Are not sweatings and hot- houses wholesome? |
A14298 | At what time are VVine and Beere readie to turne and change? |
A14298 | At what time is it best to exercise? |
A14298 | But what is the reason, that some were black, and some white at the funerall of their friends? |
A14298 | Doe these affections hurt the soule, as well as the body? |
A14298 | Doth not his breath stinck, his tongue falter? |
A14298 | Doth not his nose seeme rotten, withered, or worme- eaten? |
A14298 | Doth the nature of places alter the quality of the Aire? |
A14298 | Doth the nature of the time of the yeare alter the Ayre? |
A14298 | How doe the temperature of the bodily affections, and the soules affections agree together? |
A14298 | How is wheaten bread and pastery to be vsed in Phisicke? |
A14298 | How many houres may a man sleepe? |
A14298 | How many kindes of Euacuations are there? |
A14298 | How many kindes of Sorrowes are there? |
A14298 | How many kindes of waters be there? |
A14298 | How many sorts of Drunkards are there? |
A14298 | How many sorts of dreames be there? |
A14298 | How many sorts of fearefull persons are there? |
A14298 | How many things are to be considered in purgations? |
A14298 | How might I helpe wine that reboyleth? |
A14298 | How shall I discerne good Ale from bad? |
A14298 | How shall I helpe Beere or Ale, which begin to be sowre, or dead? |
A14298 | How shall I know good water? |
A14298 | How shall I know whether hony or water be mingled with wine? |
A14298 | How shall I reuiue waters that begin to putrifie? |
A14298 | How shall a man bathe himselfe in Winter time when waters be frozen? |
A14298 | Into how many ages is mans life diuided? |
A14298 | Is bathing of the head wholsome? |
A14298 | Is moderate fasting good? |
A14298 | Is not Snow water as good as Raine water? |
A14298 | Is not his body crazed, subiect to gouts and dropsies? |
A14298 | Is wine hurtfull to sicke folkes? |
A14298 | Looke but on the countenance of a drunkard, and is not he disfigured? |
A14298 | May a man conueniently lie vpright on his backe? |
A14298 | Our stomack is our bodies kitchin, which being distempered, how can we liue in temperate order? |
A14298 | Shew me a diet for melancholicke men? |
A14298 | Shew me how Egges are to be prepared for Physicke? |
A14298 | Shew me how I may mundifie bloud? |
A14298 | Shew me how to correct the malicious vapours of wines? |
A14298 | Shew me how to make Ipocras and wine of Scene? |
A14298 | Shew me how to seperate water from wine? |
A14298 | Shew me particularly, how the Aire may be corrected for the recouerie of sicke folkes, according to the diuersities of places, times, and seasons? |
A14298 | Shew mee a way to discerne the effects of bloud- letting? |
A14298 | Tell me the certaine time, wherein man must of necessitie die? |
A14298 | VVhat be Excrements? |
A14298 | VVhat be the causes of both these kindes? |
A14298 | VVhat be the inconueniences of immoderate Venerie? |
A14298 | VVhat if the vomites worke not? |
A14298 | VVhat is Loue? |
A14298 | VVhat is barley Bread? |
A14298 | VVhat is fire? |
A14298 | VVhat is the cause of loue? |
A14298 | VVhat is the chiefest cause of death? |
A14298 | VVhat is the flegmaticke humour? |
A14298 | VVhat is the nature of the sanguine humour? |
A14298 | VVhat is the vse of Beere? |
A14298 | VVhat is the vse of Mascadell, Malmesie, and browne Bastard? |
A14298 | VVhat is the vse of Perry? |
A14298 | VVhat is the vse of Rhenish wine? |
A14298 | VVhat is the vse of Sack? |
A14298 | VVhat is the vse of bread? |
A14298 | VVhat is the vse of white wine? |
A14298 | VVhat shall I doe, if I vomite too much? |
A14298 | VVhen is water wholesomest? |
A14298 | VVherein consists the cure of the spirituall maladies? |
A14298 | VVhich are the best vomites? |
A14298 | VVhich are the chiefest passions of the soule? |
A14298 | VVhich be the most dangerous yeares in mans life? |
A14298 | VVhich humors are predominant in the night season, and which in the day time? |
A14298 | Vnto what complexion doth Exercise most appertaine? |
A14298 | Vpon which side must a man sleepe first? |
A14298 | What Flesh is best to be eaten? |
A14298 | What are Dreames? |
A14298 | What are the commodities of early rising? |
A14298 | What are the effects of Mirth? |
A14298 | What be passions of the minde? |
A14298 | What be the best and sauory sauces for our meates? |
A14298 | What be the causes of colde infirmities? |
A14298 | What be the causes of the preseruation of Mans health? |
A14298 | What be the commodities of Exercise? |
A14298 | What be the commodities of sleepe? |
A14298 | What be the discommodities of sleepe? |
A14298 | What exercise should short winded men vse? |
A14298 | What humours are fittest to be purged? |
A14298 | What if the purgation doth euacuate too much? |
A14298 | What is Anger? |
A14298 | What is Ayre? |
A14298 | What is Choler? |
A14298 | What is Cyder? |
A14298 | What is Enuie? |
A14298 | What is Feare? |
A14298 | What is Iealousie? |
A14298 | What is Meath? |
A14298 | What is Meatheglin? |
A14298 | What is Rie Bread? |
A14298 | What is Vrine? |
A14298 | What is a vomite? |
A14298 | What is an Humour? |
A14298 | What is sorrow? |
A14298 | What is the Cholericke? |
A14298 | What is the Melancholicke humour? |
A14298 | What is the best fish? |
A14298 | What is the cause, that the Aire changeth so oft? |
A14298 | What is the effect of Sorrow? |
A14298 | What is the nature of Autumne? |
A14298 | What is the nature of Spring time? |
A14298 | What is the nature of Summer? |
A14298 | What is the nature of Winter? |
A14298 | What is the nature of fountaine water? |
A14298 | What is the principall naturall meanes to prolong life? |
A14298 | What is the property of wine? |
A14298 | What is the reason that men imagine such impossible and vaine things? |
A14298 | What is the use of our common meates? |
A14298 | What is the vse of Ale? |
A14298 | What is the vse of Bathes? |
A14298 | What is the vse of Cheese? |
A14298 | What is the vse of Fruit? |
A14298 | What is the vse of Purgations? |
A14298 | What is the vse of Tobacco? |
A14298 | What is the vse of Venery? |
A14298 | What is the vse of butter? |
A14298 | What is the vse of milke? |
A14298 | What is water? |
A14298 | What is your opinion of Fowle? |
A14298 | What kinde of Exercise is good? |
A14298 | What kinde of fire is best? |
A14298 | What mirth doe the common people loue best? |
A14298 | What mirth doe wise men like? |
A14298 | What must I doe before purging? |
A14298 | What shall I doe, if the Purgation will not worke? |
A14298 | What shall a man doe, if the Aire be either too hot, too cold, or too corrupt? |
A14298 | What shall poore men drincke when Malt is extreame deere? |
A14298 | What sicknesses doth the Aire cause? |
A14298 | What thinke you of bloud- letting? |
A14298 | What thinke you of noone sleepe? |
A14298 | When is the best vse of carnall copulation? |
A14298 | Wherefore did God giue affections vnto men? |
A14298 | Whether water being drunke doth nourish? |
A14298 | Which be the criticall daies? |
A14298 | Which is the best ayre? |
A14298 | Who are apt to take Purgatians and who not? |
A14298 | Why did men liue longer before the floud, then they doe now? |
A14298 | Why doe fearefull men looke pale? |
A14298 | Why doe some looke red, and others pale when they be angry? |
A14298 | Why is there so great a diuersitie among men? |
A14298 | Why then will men be so headie, as to take their owne destruction, seeing that they may liue in health without Phisick- helpe? |
A14295 | ? |
A14295 | Are not sweatings and hot houses wholesome? |
A14295 | At what time is it best to exercise? |
A14295 | Doe these affections hurt the soule, as well as the bodie? |
A14295 | For choler? |
A14295 | For melancholie? |
A14295 | How doe the temperature of the bodilie affections, and the soules affections agree together? |
A14295 | How many houres may a man sleepe? |
A14295 | How many kindes of salts are there? |
A14295 | How many things are to be considered in purgations? |
A14295 | How might I help wine, that reboyleth? |
A14295 | How shall I discerne good ale from bad? |
A14295 | How shall I help beere or ale, which beginne to be sowre or dead? |
A14295 | How shall I know good water? |
A14295 | How shall I know whether hony or water be mingled with wine? |
A14295 | How shall I reuiue waters, that begin to putrifie? |
A14295 | How shall a man bathe himselfe in winter time, when waters be frozen? |
A14295 | Into how many ages is mans life diuided? |
A14295 | Is bathing of the head wholesome? |
A14295 | Is moderate fasting good? |
A14295 | Is not the falling sicknesse onely cured by the spirit of vitrioll? |
A14295 | May a man conueniently ly vpright on his back? |
A14295 | Our stomack is our bodies kitchin, which being distepered, how cā we liue in tēperat order? |
A14295 | Seeing that glisters be very commodious, shew me a way to make some? |
A14295 | Shew me a diet, for melancholike men? |
A14295 | Shew me a way to fallen capons in most short time? |
A14295 | Shew me how I may mundifie bloud? |
A14295 | Shew me some remedies to procure sleep? |
A14295 | Shew mee a speedie drink for trauellers, when they want beere or ale at their Inne? |
A14295 | Shew mee a way to discerne the effectes of bloud- letting? |
A14295 | Shew mee a way to keepe Oisters, lobsters, and such like, sweet and good for some few dayes? |
A14295 | Shew mee a way to make the heart merrie? |
A14295 | Shew mee a way to preserue flesh and foule, sound and sweet, for one moneth, notwithstanding the contagiousnesse of the weather? |
A14295 | Shew mee a way to preserue my lyfe, if perhaps I be constrayned to straggle in deserts? |
A14295 | Shew mee the best and safest purgation for sleagme? |
A14295 | Shew mee the best sallet? |
A14295 | Teach me, how wiuelesse batchelers and husbandlesse maidens should driue away their vncleane dre tming of venerie, at nights? |
A14295 | Teach mee a way to make beere or ale to become stale, within two or three daies? |
A14295 | Teach mee to prognosticate by vrines? |
A14295 | Tell mee the certaine time, wherein man must of necessitie die? |
A14295 | They must not bee eaten in those monethes, which in pronouncing wante the letter R. What is the vse of Cra- fishes? |
A14295 | VVhat are dreames? |
A14295 | VVhat are the commodities of earely rising? |
A14295 | VVhat are the effectes of mirth? |
A14295 | VVhat humoures are fittest to be purged? |
A14295 | VVhat is a vomite? |
A14295 | VVhat is loue? |
A14295 | VVhat is mirth? |
A14295 | VVhat is the vse of Bathes? |
A14295 | VVhat is the vse of Cinnamon? |
A14295 | VVhat is the vse of Cloues? |
A14295 | VVhat is the vse of Orenges? |
A14295 | VVhat is the vse of beanes? |
A14295 | VVhat is the vse of bread? |
A14295 | VVhat is the vse of figges? |
A14295 | VVhat is the vse of onions, leekes, and garlick? |
A14295 | VVhat is the vse of pease? |
A14295 | VVhat is the vse of plummes and damsons? |
A14295 | VVhat is the vse of prunes? |
A14295 | VVhat is the vse of raisins and curraines? |
A14295 | VVhat is the vse of rice? |
A14295 | VVhat is the vse of straweberries? |
A14295 | VVhat is the vse of woodcockes and snites? |
A14295 | VVhat mirth do the common people loue best? |
A14295 | VVhat think you of noone sleepe? |
A14295 | VVho are apt to take purgations, and who not? |
A14295 | Vnto which cóplexiō doth exercise most appertaine? |
A14295 | Vpon which side must a man sleepe first? |
A14295 | What Direction neede you to respect, that are entered the right path? |
A14295 | What are salmon and trouts? |
A14295 | What be the causes of cold infirmities? |
A14295 | What be the causes of infirmities? |
A14295 | What be the causes of the preseruation of mans health? |
A14295 | What be the commodities of exercise? |
A14295 | What be the discommodities of sleepe? |
A14295 | What be the incōueniences of immoder at venerie? |
A14295 | What bee the commodities of sleepe? |
A14295 | What colour of vrine is most commendable? |
A14295 | What exercise should short winded men vse? |
A14295 | What if the purgation doth euacuate too much? |
A14295 | What is Aire? |
A14295 | What is Meatheglin? |
A14295 | What is an humour? |
A14295 | What is anger? |
A14295 | What is enuie? |
A14295 | What is feare? |
A14295 | What is fire? |
A14295 | What is meath? |
A14295 | What is sorrow? |
A14295 | What is that salt hearb which killeth wormes in childrens bodies? |
A14295 | What is the cause of loue? |
A14295 | What is the chiefest cause of death? |
A14295 | What is the cholerick? |
A14295 | What is the effect of sorrow? |
A14295 | What is the nature of Autumne? |
A14295 | What is the nature of Winter? |
A14295 | What is the nature of summer? |
A14295 | What is the nature of the sanguine humour? |
A14295 | What is the nature of the spring time? |
A14295 | What is the propertie of oyles? |
A14295 | What is the propertie of wine? |
A14295 | What is the sleagmatick humour? |
A14295 | What is the vse of Ale? |
A14295 | What is the vse of Almonds and nuttes? |
A14295 | What is the vse of Apples? |
A14295 | What is the vse of Barbles? |
A14295 | What is the vse of Cabbages? |
A14295 | What is the vse of Carpe? |
A14295 | What is the vse of Creame? |
A14295 | What is the vse of Cuttles? |
A14295 | What is the vse of Duckes? |
A14295 | What is the vse of Eeles? |
A14295 | What is the vse of Kid? |
A14295 | What is the vse of Lampreyes? |
A14295 | What is the vse of Muscadell, Malmesie, and browne Bastard? |
A14295 | What is the vse of Oisters? |
A14295 | What is the vse of Partridges? |
A14295 | What is the vse of Perches? |
A14295 | What is the vse of Pigeons? |
A14295 | What is the vse of Pikes? |
A14295 | What is the vse of Rhenish wine? |
A14295 | What is the vse of Sack? |
A14295 | What is the vse of Tobacco? |
A14295 | What is the vse of Venison? |
A14295 | What is the vse of beefe? |
A14295 | What is the vse of beere? |
A14295 | What is the vse of borage? |
A14295 | What is the vse of cucumbers? |
A14295 | What is the vse of egges? |
A14295 | What is the vse of ginger? |
A14295 | What is the vse of goese? |
A14295 | What is the vse of milke? |
A14295 | What is the vse of mustard? |
A14295 | What is the vse of mutton? |
A14295 | What is the vse of our common salt? |
A14295 | What is the vse of oyle of Oliues? |
A14295 | What is the vse of parsneeps, and carrets? |
A14295 | What is the vse of peares? |
A14295 | What is the vse of pepper? |
A14295 | What is the vse of purgations? |
A14295 | What is the vse of quailes? |
A14295 | What is the vse of radish? |
A14295 | What is the vse of saffron? |
A14295 | What is the vse of sower Whay? |
A14295 | What is the vse of sturgeons? |
A14295 | What is the vse of sugar? |
A14295 | What is the vse of swannes, turkies, perockes, hernes, and cra ● es? |
A14295 | What is the vse of swines fiesh? |
A14295 | What is the vse of tenches? |
A14295 | What is the vse of veale? |
A14295 | What is the vse of venerie? |
A14295 | What is the vse of vineger? |
A14295 | What is the vse of white wine? |
A14295 | What is vrine? |
A14295 | What is water? |
A14295 | What is your opinion of Capons, Hennes, and Chickens? |
A14295 | What kinde of exercise is good? |
A14295 | What kinde of fire is best? |
A14295 | What meate is of an hard digestion? |
A14295 | What mirth doe wise men like? |
A14295 | What must I doe before purging? |
A14295 | What shall I doe, if I vomite too much? |
A14295 | What shall I doe, if the purgation will not worke? |
A14295 | What shall a man doe, if the Aire be either too hot, or too cold? |
A14295 | What shall poore men drink, when malt is extreame deare? |
A14295 | What think you of Hare and Conies flesh? |
A14295 | What think you of larkes and sparrowes? |
A14295 | When is it best to vse carnall copulation? |
A14295 | When is water wholesomest? |
A14295 | Wherefore did God giue affections vnto men? |
A14295 | Which are the best vomites? |
A14295 | Which be the Criticall daies? |
A14295 | Which bee the most daungerous yeeres in mans life? |
A14295 | Which humours are predominant in the night season, and which in the day time? |
A14295 | Which is the best Aire? |
A14295 | Which is the best drink? |
A14295 | Which kinde of milke is best? |
A14295 | Why doe fearefull men looke pale? |
A14295 | Why doe some looke pale? |
A14295 | Why doe some looke red, when they be angrie? |
A14295 | Why then will men be so headie, as to take their owne destruction, seeing that they may liue in health without Physick- help? |
A14295 | doeth not oile of antimonie plucke vp at once the impurities of the feuer? |
A14295 | doth not mercurie heale the French poxe and the filthie scabbe? |