Bacon, Francis, Sylva sylvarum : or, a natural history in ten centuries

Table of contents

< >
[41.] LONDON, Printed for VVilliam Lee at the Turks-head in Fleetſtreet. 1669.
[42.] TO THE READER.
[43.] To the preſent Age and Poſterity, Greeting.
[44.] THE HISTORY OF Life and Death. The Preface.
[45.] THE Particular Topick Places; OR, ARTICLES of INQUISITION TOUCHING LIFE and DEATH.
[46.] Nature Durable, and not Durable. The History.
[47.] Obſervations.
[48.] The Hiſtory.
[49.] An Obſervation.
[50.] Deſiccation, Prohibiting of Deſiccation, and In-teneration of that which is deſiccated and dried. The Hiſtory.
[51.] Obſervations.
[52.] Length and Shortneß of Life in Living Creatures. The Hiſtory.
[53.] Obſervations.
[54.] Alimentation, or Nouriſhment: and the way of Nouriſhing. The History.
[55.] Length and Shortneſs of Life in Man. The Hiſt@ry.
[56.] Medicines for Long Life.
[57.] The Intentions.
[58.] The Operation upon the Spirits that they may remain Youthful, and renew their Vigour. The Hiſtory.
[59.] The Operation upon the Excluſion of the Air. 2. The Hiſtory.
[60.] The Operation upon the Bloud, and the Sanguifying Heat. 3. The Hiſtory.
[61.] The Operation upon the Juices of the Body. 4. The Hiſtory.
[62.] The Operation upon the Bowels for their Extruſion of Aliment. 5. The Hiſtory.
[63.] The Operation upon the Outward Parts for their Attraction of Aliment. 6. The Hiſtory.
[64.] The Operation upon the Aliment it ſelf for the Inſinuation thereof. 7. The Hiſtory.
[65.] The Operation upon the laſt Act of Aſsimilation. 8.
[66.] The Operation upon the Inteneration of that which begins to be Arefied, or the Malaciſſation of the Body. 9.
[67.] The Hiſtory.
[68.] The Operation upon the Purging away of old Juice, and Sup-plying of new Juice; or of Renovation by Turns. 10. The Hiſtory.
[69.] The Porches of Death.
[70.] The Hiſtory.
< >
page |< < (13) of 389 > >|
3313FRANCIS Lord BACON.
It h ath been deſired; That ſomething ſhould be ſignified,
touching his Diet;
And the Regiment of his Health: Of
which, in regard, of his Univerſal Inſight into Nature, he
may (perhaps,) be to ſome, an Example.
For his Diet;
It was rather a plentiful, and liberal, Diet, as his Sto-
mack would bear it, then a Reſtrained;
Which he alſo com-
mended in his Book of the Hiſtory of Life and Death.
In
his younger years, he was much given to the Finer and Light-
ter ſort of Meats, As of Fowles;
and ſuch like: But after-
ward, when he grew more Judicious;
He preferred the ſtron-
ger Meats;
ſuch as the Shambles afforded; As thoſe Meats,
which bred the more firm and ſutſtantial Juyces of the Bo-
dy, and leſs Diffipable:
upon which, be would often make
his Meal;
Though he had other Meats, upon the Table. You
may be ſure;
He would not neglect that Himſelf, which He ſo
much extolled in his Writings;
And that was the Uſe of Ni-
ter:
Where eof he took in the Quantity of about three Grains,
in thin warm Broath, every Morning, for thirty years toge-
ther, next before his Death.
And for Phyſick, he did, indeed,
live Phyſically, but not miſerably;
For be took only a
Maceration of Rhubarb;
Infuſed into a Draught of White
Wine, and Beer, mingled together, for the Space of half an
Hour;
Once in ſix or ſeven Dayes; Immediately before his
Meal, (whether Dinner, or Supper,) that it might dry, the
Body, leſſe:
which (as he ſaid,) did carry away frequently, the
Groſſer Humours of the Body, and not diminiſh, or carry
away, any of the Spirits, as Sweating doth.
And this was no
Grievous Thing to take.
As for other Phyſick, in an ordinary
way, (whatſoever bath been vulgarly ſpoken;)
he took not. His
Receit, for the Gout;
which did, constantly, eaſe him of his
Pain, within two Hours, Is already ſet down in the End, of the
Natural Hiſtory.
It may ſeem, the Moon, had ſome Principal Place, in the
Figure of his Nativity.
For the Moon, was never in her
Paſsion or Eclipſed, but he was ſurprized, with a ſudden Fit, of
Fainting:
And that, though he obſerved not, nor took any pre-
vious Knowledge, of the Eclipſe thereof;
and aſſoon as the
Eclipſe ceaſed, he was reſtored, to his former ſtrength again.

Text layer

  • Dictionary

Text normalization

  • Original
  • Regularized
  • Normalized

Search


  • Exact
  • All forms
  • Fulltext index
  • Morphological index