Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n cold_a heat_n hot_a 2,925 5 7.7399 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A88614 Pambotanologia. Sive Enchiridion botanicum. Or A compleat herball containing the summe of what hath hitherto been published either by ancient or moderne authors both Galenicall and chymicall, touching trees, shrubs, plants, fruits, flowers, &c. In an alphabeticall order: wherein all that are not in the physick garden in Oxford are noted with asterisks. Shewing their place, time, names, kindes, temperature, vertues, use, dose, danger and antidotes. Together with an [brace] introduction to herbarisme, &c. appendix of exoticks. Universall index of plants: shewing what grow wild in England. / By Robert Lovell St. C.C. Ox. Lovell, Robert, 1630?-1690. 1659 (1659) Wing L3243; Thomason E1858_1; Thomason E1859_1; ESTC R202783 202,597 420

There are 16 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

kneaded together with aqua vitae or vineger 41. In Frontals to three or four pugills of flowers halfe an ounce of seeds if in a humid forme halfe an ounce of oiles to a sufficient quantity of unguentum populeon 42. In Oxyrrhodines to foure or six ounces of oiles two or three of vineger and foure of water being shaken together 43. In Cuoupha's of roots one ounce of dry leaves three handfulls of flowers two or three pugills of spices three drams or halfe an ounce of gums one or two drams of muske halfe a scruple or a scruple 24. In Moister Collyries of herbes appropriated to the eyes six or eight handfulls of seeds an ounce and halfe or two ounces of herbes for the head two handfulls of spices halfe an ounce or six drams of galls two ounces of urine halfe a pint or a quart of hony halfe a pound or a pinte of wine two pintes 45. In Apophlegmatismes the same quantity as in gargarismes 46. In Suffumigations of gums foure or six drams of powders three drams of amber muske and civet as every one pleaseth so in pomanders 47. In Stomack plaisters of mastick two ounces of powders half an ounce of sweet gums 2 drams of turpentine s q 48. In Pessaries of juyces 2 ounces or 3 of hony an ounce and halfe of powders halfe an cunce 49. In Injections for the Eares of powders halfe a scruple or a scruple of fats 2 drams of hony halfe an ounce c. For the Bladder of syrups one ounce of fine powders one or two drams II. As Compounds c. and so 1. Altering remedies if temperate they are given from 2 drams to 2 ounces if in the first degree from a scruple to an ounce if in the second from halfe a scruple to halfe an ounce if in the third from 5 graines to 2 drams if in the fourth degree from 2 graines and a halfe to a dram 2. Purging remedies in the first degree if in the first mansion from 2 ounces to 8 as syrups of roses and violets solutive in the second from 2 ounces and a halfe to 5. as the hony of roses and violets solutive in the third from two ounces to foure as the juyce of roses and violets and syrupe of peach flowers in the second degree if in the first mansion from halfe an ounce to two ounces as tamarindes and cassia in pulps in the second from halfe an ounce to an ounce and halfe as the seed of bastard saffron in infusion in the third from three drams to seaven as dodder of time in the third degree if in the first mansion from one dram to halfe an ounce as mirobalans or five drams as polypody in the second from two scruples to two drams as rhubarb agarick sene and bryonie of Mexico and Peru in the third from halfe a scruple to one dram as aloes hermodactiles turbith hedge hys●ope and jalap in the fourth degree if in the first mansion from ten graines to halfe a dram or two scruples as mezereon coccus Cnidius asarabacca and coloquintida in the second from five graines to fifteene as elaterium and the barke of black hellebore in the third from three graines to ten as euphorbium esula and scammonie 3. Apozems and distilled waters from two ounces and a halfe to five 4. Boles to one ounce 5. Clysters to those that are middle aged about a pinte to children two or three ounces or more c. 6. Confitures in the quantity of a wallnut so Conserves 7. Electuaries that are alterative and strengthening from one scruple to a dram and halfe the lenient from one dram to 4 the purging to an ounce or thereabouts 8. Elixyrs from halfe a scruple to a scruple halfe 9. Emulsions are to be taken often as need requireth 10. Extracts if harder and alterative from one scruple to a dram and halfe if cathartick or purging from one scruple to a dram 11. Liquors as of salts the like being dissolved from 5 drops to a scruple 12. Magisteries if corroborating and strengthening from halfe a dram to a dram the purging according to their efficacy 13. Morsells from one ounce to 2 or more 14. Oiles distilled from 2 graines to 15.15 Pills if laxative from halfe a dram to two drams if purging from 2 scruples to 4.16 Preparations from a scruple to a dram 17. Powders and species aromaticall or purging from a scruple and halfe to 4 scruples 18. Salts of vegetables from a scruple to a dram 19. Sapes and Syrups from one ounce to 3.20 Spirits if minerall from 3 graines to halfe a scruple or to 2 and more if weaker if of vegetables to a spoonefull when needfull 21. Troches to 4 scruples Here note that these quantities are proportioned for such as are strong and middle aged and for others they are to be moderated according to the ingredients and constitution of the patient as also that the more pleasant may be taken in a greater quantity and oftner but the unpleasant in a lesser and at once 11. The Chresiologie or use of them Thus Temperate remedies are used where there is no manifest distemper of the first qualities as heat and cold c. as also in fevers of flegme and to preserve the body in good temper strength and vigour and is to be done by such things that are appropriate thereunto The Rest as 1 The Hot if so in the first degree are used to reduce the body to naturall heat ease paines take away wearinesse and to help feavers as also to cause good digestion and breed good bloud if in the second to help moist stomacks remove obstructions and open the pores if in the third to cut tough humors provoke sweatings and to resist poyson if in the fourth to cause inflammations and raise blisters 2. The Cold if cold in the first degree they are used to qualifie the heat of food and asswage that of the intestines and bowells if in the second and third to asswage the heat of choller help the inflammations of hot swellings and to cause sleepe if in the fourth to mitigate paine by stupefying and dulling the senses 3. The Moist if so in the first degree to lenifie and lubrifie to help the cough and roughnesse of the threat if in the second to mitigate the sharpnesse of humours and loosen the belly and other parts 4. The Dry if so in the first degree to drink up moisture and stop fluxes and help the slipperinesse of the parts if in the second it strengtheneth the parts made feeble by too much moisture and disposeth them to action Remedies endued with the second qualities As 1. The Mollifying are used in scirrhus's and hard tumors and swellings 2. The Hardening are used to represse the heat of the humours in swellings and to hinder the flux of the thinner bloud and defluctions thereof 3. The Loosening are used in convulsions caused by cold and si●city 4. The Rarefying to open and dilate the pores that the vapours of the bloud may be
palenesse The wild drank in wine sc the seed h. winde and ap clenseth Currans Ribes P. Gardens naturally in Savoy and Switzerland T. Fl. in Spring the fruit is ripe at Midsummer N. Ceanothus levis Gesn Grossularia ultramarina Currans Johns K. as the red and white T. the berries are cold dry fine 2di with some astriction and tenuity of parts V. they h. heat of fevers choller and hot bloud resist putrefaction quench thirst h. the appetite stop vomiting and dysentery of a hot cause so the juice boiled called Rob de Ribes Park V. they h. the sainting of the stomack The black are used in sauces so also the leaves by many the scent and taste being very pleasant Gesn The white and red h. coughs Lob. The Arabian are in taste and vertues like barberries Schwenck The leaves of the black are hot ap to the nostrils they h. the epilepsie and mother and d. cause menses and h. the tormina Cypresse-tree Cupressus P. Hot countries as Candy Lycia and gardens T. The tame yeilds fruite in Jan. May and Sept. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The fruits are called Galbuli the tree Cyparissus Cypresse-tree Ger. K. as the garden and wild T. the fruits and leaves are dry 3° and astringent V. Diosc the nuts stamped and d. in wine stop all fluxes of bloud glew ulcers in hard bodies and suck up hidden moisture The leaves and nuts h. ruptures and the polypus also carbuncles and phag●dens with parched barley meale The leaves boyled in meade h. the strangury The smoke of the leaves driveth away gnats The shavings of the wood preserve from moths so the rosin also laid among garments Park the powder of the leaves with a little myrrhe and wine h. sluxes that sall on the bladder without mirrhe those of other parts The decoction h. coughs and short windednesse The chips d. cause menses the leaves h. spots D Daffodill Narcissus P. In gardens and meadows almost every where T. Fl. from February till May. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Of rush Daffodill Junquilias Bulbus vomitorius Diosc DAffodils Ger. J. K. as the purple circled c. T. the roots are hot dry 2° V. Gal. The roots glew the sinews tendons clense attract Stamped with hony and ap they h. burnings wrenches of the ancles aches and paines of the joynts With hony and nettle seed they h. sunburnings and morphew With axungia and leaven of rie bread it ripeneth impostumes Stamped with meale of darnell and hony it draweth thornes out of the body The root stamped strained and d. h. the cough collick and ptisicke The root eaten or d. c. vomit and being mingled with vineger and nettle seed h. spots in the face Bastard Daffodils T. are referred to the kinds of Narcissus V. the decoction of the roots of the yellow purgeth flegme water with anise seed and ginger The distilled water h. palsies rubbed in by the fire Daisy Bellis P. Meadows borders of fields almost every where T. Fl in May and June N. Herba Margarita The blew Globularia Daisies Ger K. as the great T. the great daisie is moist fine 2di cold initio V. the leaves h. all burning ulcers and apostumes inflamed and running eies ap Made into a salve with wax oile and turpentine it h. inflamed wounds especially in the joynts the juyce decoction or distilled water h. any inward burstings The herbe is used in vulnerary potions ap as a pultis with Mallowes and butter boiled it h. pains of the goute In clysters it h. heat in agues and torment of the gutts The little daisies T. are moist fine 2di cold initio V. they h. all paines especially in the joints and gout from a hot and dry humour stamped with fresh butter ap and operate more effectually with mallows The leaves boiled in pottage loosen the belly and in clysters h. the burning of feavers and inflammations of the intestines the juice of the leaves and roots as an errhine purgeth slimie humors and h. the megrim The leaves stamped and ap h. swellings and bruises The juyce instilled h. dim and watering eyes The decoction of the field daisie d. in water h. agues and inward heate Park they are all vulnerary decoct with wallwort and agrimony h. palsies The small is more binding Dandeleon Dens leonis P. In meadowes neer ditches and by high wayes T. They flower at most times in the yeare N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Taraxacon V●inaria Rostrum perci●um Caput mandchi Dandeleon Ger. J. K. as the common and knotty rooted T. is like succory or wild endive it is cold but dryeth more opening and clen●ing being bitter V. It operates as succory Boiled it strengthens the weake stomack and eaten raw stops the belly and h. the dysentery with lentills The juice drank h. gonorrhoeas boiled in vineger and the difficultie of making water and h. the jaundise Park It h. ulcers of the ureters The water h. severs and sores and c. rest Dane-wort Ebulus P. Vntilled ground borders of fields and by high wayes T. The fl are perfect in summer the berries in Aut. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Humilis Sambucus Chamaeacte Dane-wort Ger. T. is hot and dry 3° and wasting especially the leaves the root is purging V. the roots boiled in wine and d. h. the dropsie The leaves applyed wast hard swellings Diosc The roots soften and open the matrix and h. pain of the belly used in a bath The juice maketh haire black The tender leafe h. hot inflammations ap with barley meale burnings scaldings and bitings of mad doggs and with bulls tallow h. the gout drach 1. of the seed d. is a most excellent hydragogon and h. dropsies scr 1. of the seed bruised and taken with syrrup of roses and a little sack h. the dropsie and gout mightily purging watery humours taken once a week Pem. It h. the Sciatica agues stopping of the spleen stone of the kidnies S. Anthonies fire and scurvy and killeth wormes the leaves boiled in water and d. h. dry coughs and quinsies Dane-wort berries and seeds powdered and d. in wine fasting operate as the root In the decoction of ground-pine and a little Cinamon they h. the gout sciatica and French pox It operates as the Elder but more forcibly For the hip-gout take Dane-wort seed turbith hermodactyles sene tartar an drach 1. of cinamon drach 2. make all into fine pouder the dose is scr 4. in liquor convenient The juice as an errhine purgeth the braine the juice of the berries with hony put in●o the eares h. their paine an oyntment of the leaves with May butter h. all aches cramps and cold affections of the sinews comforteth strengthen●th warmeth and openeth all the outward parts ill affected It is to be given with anise seed car● away seed cinamon mace c. it hurts the head hot stomack and liver Park ap to the throat it h. the Kings evill as a pessary it draweth down the menses it h. lamenesse by
expelled and to mitigate paine 5. The Densant to strengthen the skin to resist externall injuries as also to prohibit too much sweat or the dissolution of the spirits 6. The Opening to help the quantity and pravity of the bloud and open the he morrhoids 7. The Attenuating to open obstructions purge the breast of flegme move the courses and cleanse the passages of the bowells 8. The Drawing to unload the bowells of vitious humours help the criticall evacuation in a●scesses draw out poyson and help chilled parts 9. The Discutient in diseases of repletion to dispell the serous humidity and evill vapours by sweat or insensible transpiration to draw out hydropick water help the goute and sciatica and to asswage phlegmons and other tumours 10 The Repelling in hot tumours pains of the head c. for hereby in fevers are the vapours diverted from the head they also hinder the increasing of phlegmons 11. The Burning to help dried tabid parts and almost extinct by causing attraction of aliment they also serve to extirpate haire hard rumors warts and to help hard and callous swellings and the polypus c. they also help cold griefes gouts old pains of the head and other cold and moist affections of the head as also fistula's and malignant ulcers together with dangerous fluxes of humours to the superficies and draw out the same 12. The Cleansing to take away the filth matter and excrements of ulcers 13. The Glewing to helpe the rage of the bloud suppurate and to stop fluxions Remedies endued with the third qualities as first those Causing matter are used to ripen phlegmons 2. Those Provoking urine to helpe dropsies c. 3. Those Moving the courses to help diseases caused by the retention of the menses to ease the body dropsie and epilepsie c. 4. Those Causing milke to prevent diseases by retention thereof c. 5. Those Generating sperme for the preservation of the species rather then voluptuousnesse 6. Those Easing paine to prevent the dangerousnesse of symptomes 7. Those Causing flesh to fit hollow ulcers for glutinating and cicatrizing remedies 8. Those Glewing wounds to help di●joyned continuity 9. Those Cicatrizing ulcers to perfect the cure of wounds 10. Those Refisting poyson to preserve the vitall faculty 11. The Beautifying for known purposes 12. The Occult in occult diseases The Appropriate as the cephalicke or those respecting the head parts thereof the pectorall cordiall stomachick splenetick nephritick cystick hysterick arthritick and cathartick or purging are various according to the intention or scope and variety of the griefe and part The Compounded remedies as first Syrups and Juleps are used to prepare the humours of the body for purgation open the passages remove obstructions cut tough humours deterge or clense digest and dissipate matter contained in the habit of the body oppugne distempers by their qualities and gently to purge 2. So Decoctions or apozems and Infusions 3. Clysters are used to purge temper humours ease paine heale ulcers and cause sleepe c. 4. Gargarismes in diseases of the head mouth and jawes sc to draw flegme from the head hinder the swellings of the mouth and discusse them or to cleanse and consolidate wounds 5. Errhines in old diseases of the head especially in the falling sicknesse dimnesse of the eyes stoppings of the nostrills and ulcers thereof want of the smell drawing of the face awry and Kings evill c. 6. Epithems in fevers hectick squalid burning and pestilentiall inflammations of the bowells and heat of the whole body also in the pantings of the heart and passions thereof in the erysipelas or St Anthonies fire and weaknesse of the body c. 7. Fomentations to rarify the skin and help perspiration to attenuate bloud and vitious humours in inflammations to concoct crude humours mollifie and digest by vapour as also to asswage and ease paine 8. Embrocations in hot diseases chiefely of the head to cause sleepe and in fevers with raging 9. Insessions in stead of baths and to help the decay of strength 10. Baths if laconick or dry to heate the humours in the body melt evacuate the same to loosen the skin and extenuate the corpulent if of sweet water moderately hot it 's usefull for children old people to heate moisten ease wearisomenesse mitigate paine help fulnesse soften hard parts discusse flatulencies cause sleep if luke warme to moisten and coole to help drying fevers and hecticks as also sunburnings and if too hot it heateth and moisteneth not so much if of milke to helpe leannesse also weaknesse and pining if of whay to help the itch and heat of the skin and breakings out in children if of wine to strengthen debilitated parts if of oile to help cold agues and pains of the sinews thence arising as also to help convu●sions caused by punctures or wounds and to strengthen naturall heat resolve hurtfull matter and help pains of the joynts c. if naturall to drie heat and binde c. 11. Lotions to cleanse the sweatings and filth of the head and open the pores of the skin If for the feet to draw the humours downewards from the upper parts help wearisomenesse and cause sleepe 12. Oiles to help paines roughnesse and many other maladies as also to make unguents cerots and plaisters 13. Powders and aromaticall species to strengthen the heart and restore nature c. 14. Tragaea's to strengthen the stomack dissipate flatulencies hinder vapours and to help the maladies of other intralls and parts 15. Electuaries if aromaticall to comfort the principall parts chiefly and the other to purge 16. Opiats in great paines collick griefes and other distempers requiring ease 17. Conserves are used for pleasure and to strengthen 18. Conditures for pleasure and help the stomack enfeebled by distempers 19. Lohoch's to help the roughnesse of the throat inflammation of the lungs ulcers difficulty of breathing coughs caused by the flowing of humours and distillation thereof and help those that expectorate tough matter ready to suffocate 20. Extracts are used when there is nauseousnesse by reason of the taking of medicines in a great quantity these operating in a small dose 21. Liniments to lenifie rough parts ease paine heat rarifie refrigerate dry moisten discusse cleanse mollifie or ripen 22. Unguents to alter mollifie digest cleanse c. 23. Plaisters to repell the fluxe of humours caused by inflammations ease paine strengthen the members soften discusse concoct ripen draw forth things infixed suppurate purge open glew and cicatrize 24. Cataplasmes to ease paine concoct humours and digest chiefely 25. Cerots to heat moisten loosen concoct binde c. 26. Dropaces in extenuations of the body to moisten warme attract the bloud repaire the losse of flesh to help vomiting crudities collicks and in stead of cataplasmes in old griefes 27. Sinapismes to draw from the center to the superficies in old affections as in the inveterate headache megrim falling sicknesse vertigo and madnesse also in distillations and long griefes of
the stomack and sciatica goute resolutions refrigerations as also in acute diseases sc the lethargy and catalepsie c. 28. Tablets and Morsells to purge alter and strengthen 29. Troches to preserve remedies and if used downeward to helpe diseases below the navell The other to alter purge open and strengthen 30. Pills to purge the head and habit of the body when cold 31. Collyries in diverse diseases and affections of the eyes as ulcers wounds fistula's and suffusions c. 32. Apophlegmatismes in all old affections of the head dimnesse of the eyes deafenesse resolutions of the tongue and wheals in the head or face 33. Errhines in old griefes of the head especially the falling sicknesse dimnesse of the sight obstructions of the nostrills want of smelling drawings awry of the face and kings evill 34. Confections to please the pallat and to strengthen the body 35. Suppositories to open the belly and prepare the body before bloud-letting in stead of glisters as also in burning feavers when vapours arise unto the head in sleepie diseases of the head when clysters worke not at a convenient time also for revulsion to kill wormes open the haemorrhoides and heale ulcers of the straight gut 36. Little baggs to heate coole strengthen c. 37. Pessaries if emollient or softening in the inflammations of the wombe exulcerations or aversions and windinesse if opening to draw out the termes and open the compressed wombe if astringent for the contrary purposes 38. Perfumes to comfort the spirits strengthen and preserve and Suffumigations to cause a good smell to help distillations from the head upon the inferiour parts to help heavinesse obstructions cold diseases of the braine and drive away the infection of the plague and are used to the nostrills also in asthma's and stoppages of the breast by cold and thick humours in suppurations coughs and stitches of the sides in the syncope in the recoveries from sicknesse as also in cold distempers of the liver and womb 39. Physicall wines in cold distempers of the body chronicall diseases as the asthma obstructions palsies crudities of the stomack if altering to discusse and consume the reliques of diseases strengthen provoke urine and help long diseases 40. Emulsions to lenifie coole and moisten to help the intralls fevers and cause sleepe 41. So Amygdalates 42. Ptisans in fevers to coole cleanse nourish moisten and to help the diseases of the breast and hecticks 43. Hydromel in cold flegmatick diseases as the palsie to strengthen naturall heat resist putrefaction provoke urine and cleanse if vinous it concocteth crude humours expectorates strengtheneth the stomack concocteth crudities and helps the asthma if physicall it helps inveterate cold griefes 43. Diet drinkes in long diseases to attenuate resolve consume rarefie and prepare the humours for purgation if evacuating in diseases deeply rooted to dissipate and discusse as in the dropsie and French pox c. 44. Hydrosaccharates to moisten coole and cleanse in fevers hot diseases of the liver stomack and reines 45. Broths restorative to nourish and repaire the solid substance 46. Bolès if purging they are used in distempers in the lower region and neere parts if roborating to strengthen the stomack and parts affected 47. Pandaleons as lohochs 48. Pills if purging in diseases in the habit of the body and third region especially in the pituitous and obstructions if usuall in bodies cacochymick to strengthen the stomack the altering to help hoarsenesse c. 49. Frontals chiefely to coole in fevers watchings to repell vapours as also to ease paines of the head and phrensies c. 50. So Oxyrrhodines and to repell thin fumes in burning fevers 51. Cucupha's in cold and moist diseases of the braine catarrhes fluxions and to recreate the animal spirits 52. Collyries liquid to help the heat of the eyes repel and discusse dry and clense 53. Stomack plaisters to strengthen the stomack cause concoction stop vomiting and help the cold distempers thereof 54. Injections to help inflammations paines ulcers to cleanse and cicatrize c. 12. The Cairologie or season and manner of using them So those that are temperate or of the first qualities are to 〈◊〉 be used when the body is in good temper or exceeding and defective therein Remedies of the second qualities as 1. the Attenuating are not to be used before the stomack and intralls are clensed of their evill humours lest they cause obstructions or fevers c. 2. The Discussing in the dec●ination of diseases and with the repelling in the increase or state of phlegmons 3. The Repelling in the beginning and increase of hot tumors when the humours are flowing and in the state with discutients also they are dangerous in great paines and where there is much matter except first evacuated 4. The Burning after the body hath been well purged the parts being first fortified and they mixed with correcters 5. The Extersive the body being neither plethorick nor cacochymick nor symptomes troublesome Remedies of the third qualities as first the Suppuring in the state of phlegmons 2. Those Provoking urine the urinarie passages being first opened 3. Those Moving the courses after purgation if the body be full of bad humours 4. So those Causing milke and sperme 5. Anodynes when symptomes are most violent with things respecting the cause 6. Those Causing flesh after the distemper paine and symptomes are removed and varie according to the scope 7. The Glewing after abstersion and incarnatives 8. The Cicatrizing when the ulcer is almost full of flesh observing the nature of the part affected 9. Those Resisting poyson according to the nature thereof using vomits purges and sweating remedies 10. Cosmeticks after preparation of the body Remedies Appropriate to certain parts of the body as to the head c. after generall and particular evacuation or purging sc the corroborating observing the times and symptomes of the disease and nature of the parts the purging three or foure houres before meate the lenient an houre or halfe an houre before but cephalick pills may be taken after Compounded remedies as 1. Syrupes and Juleps are to be used in the morning being warmed and in the evening if to cause sleepe 2. So Decoctions or Apozems and infusions the stomack being empty 3. Glysters two or three houres before meat and are to be retained about halfe an houre 4. Gargarismes in the morning and evening before meat 5. Errhines after purgation or bloudletting the stomack being empty and the mouth first filled with water 6. So Epithemes in the morning or evening in the state oftē 7. Fomentations before cataplasmes or unguents after evacuations of the body and in severs before their accessions the body not being full of humours and excrements 8. Embrocations are to be used often and renewed 9. Infessions two or three houres before meat the body being first purged and excrements evacuated being warme in which the aboad is to be about an houre 10. Baths if laconick or dry in the winter and beginning of spring
conjunct tenuity of parts but those moderately attract which are hot and dry in the second degree if in the third more effectually and chiefly those that are so in the fourth for the attraction is according to the degree of heate and is either more naturall or by putrefaction yet some things attract specifically and not by a manifest quality as things that are cathartick or purging and alexitery or resisting poyson 8. Apocroustick or repercutient repelling the humors flowing from the center as in those things which are frigid and of grosse parts For that which is cold repelleth and if it hath a crassitude of parts also it is more violent as that which is acerbe or austere yet those things also repell which are astringent especially those which are helped by the tenuity of their parts for the thinnesse of the substance doth much conduce to astriction therefore other things that are astrictive by reason of the crassitude of their substance cannot easily penetrate the more remote parts precluding the passages 9. Ryptick abstergent or cleansing removing glutinous and clammy humors in the superficies or adhering to the pores of the skin or ulcers and is in those things which have power to exiccate with tenuity of substance neither is it of any great moment whether they are hot or cold by reason that neither quality hindreth action except excessive 10. Eccathartick ecphractick and expurgatorie or removing obstructions not only opening the pores of the skin but the inferior ductus of the bowells as in those things that are nitrous and bitter although they have some small astriction and by reason of substance doe not differ from those that are absterfive but in degree for those things that cleanse the pores and inward passages have a greater tenuity of parts and are moderately hot as those things which are nitrous bitter but those things which being outwardly applyed to the skin do clense the skin or ulcers from their excrements are destitute of the astrictive faculty but being taken inwardly although having a certain astriction yet nevertheless they may purge cleanse the greater passages and withall strengthen the same 11. Leptyntick or attenuating and making thin as in all those things that are expurgatory hot and of thin parts extenuating grosse and tough humors 12. Emplastick viscid or clammie contrary to the abstersive for being applyed it doth tenaciously inhere in the pores of the skin fill and obstruct the same as in those things that are sat and glutinous as also terrene wanting acrimonie and asperity or roughnesse 13. Emphractick or obstructing pachyntick and thickening which are the same for as those things which are detergent and purging doe free the pores and passages from obstruction so these obstruct and fill the same and make the humors of the body tough and thick 14. Anodyne paregorick or easing paine as in those things which have thin parts and are moderately hot not much exceeding the temperate sc being hot in the first degree and rarefacient so evacuating digesting rarefying extenuating concocting and equalizing whatsoever humour either sharp tough or grosse is inhering in the smaller pores or grieved parts and all vaporous crass grosse or cold spirits not finding way of evacuation 15. Narcotick or stupifying the parts by its coldness and not properly mitigating the paine nor taking away the causes of the griefe yet stupor is somewhat lesse than insensibility or the privation of sense the same also is hypnotick or somnifick ●auseth sleep being taken sc its subject which doth vehemently refrigerate sc in the 4th degree so that it doth not only stupifie the sense but being liberally taken causeth death as opium that not only by its exuperant quality but also by a certaine propriety of substance and its concurring essence its narcotick vehemency being but little repressed by the mixture of hot correcters though it hath some bitter parts 16. Amyctick metasyncritick or rubefacient causing rednesse contrary to the former causing paine as in those things which heate and dissolve unity of this kind also are escharoticks causing crusts which are hotter caustick or burning not only hot and dry in the fourth degree but also of a grosse consistence therefore being fixed in any part they excruciate and torment the same by their stisnesse like unto these are those things that are septick or corrosive which are vehemently hot and dry but of thin parts and consistence which therefore with a little paine and biting or else without any sense of paine eliquate the part and are called also putrefactives The third Qualities arise from the mixture of the first and second and are 1. The Ecpuetick or suppurating turning into matter contused flesh and humors remaining in swellings as in those things which are moderately hot and next unto emollients yet differing in this that they have also an emplastick faculty obstructing the pores increasing the substance of heat and not intending the quality and are also called pepticks or maturatives 2. Sarcotick or generating flesh as in those things which produce flesh in hollow ulcers and fill the cavities and are hot in the first degree a little detersive and that without biting and astriction 3. Colletick or conglutinating as in those things which dry in the second degree and are in a meane as to those which generate flesh and cicatrize they are not abstersive but astringent and prohibit the flux of humors to the lips of wounds ulcers and fistula's they are also called symphyticks traumaticks and enaima 4. Epulotick or cicatrizing as in those things which greatly dry and bind without biting drinking the humidity of the flesh and contracting the same and covering with a thin callus like unto the skinne therefore doe more dry than incarnatives or glutinatives for they binde contract constipate and indurate there is also a sharp and biting epulotick that consumes dead flesh called cathairetick and a third drying without astriction 5. Porotick or generating callus by which broken bones are ferruminated and knit and is neither bone nor flesh but betwixt both being a hard dry white body to the generation of which are required a convenient dyer and medicines applyed which are emplastick and moderately hot 6. Diuretick or provoking urine as 1. In those things that are moist and liquid and of a thin consistence and easie penetration encreasing the quantity of urine so operate by accident 2. In those things which purge and attenuate and open the passages some of which are cold and of thin parts sometimes expelling what sticks in the passages which operate after a middle way sometimes by accident tempering exuperant heat which seiseth on the veines and resolveth the serous humidity that the humours may be more easily attracted by the reines and descend by the bladder 3. In these things which purge the passages and open the same extenuate grosse humors and the bloud and separate what is extenuated from the more grosse prts which the reines then easily attract and send
away by the urinarie passages which kinds of diureticks are very hot and dry to wit in the 3d degree sharp and of a very thin substance coactive and separating 7. Lithontriptick or breaking the stone dissolving expelling the gravell as in those things which are diuretick hot dry of thin parts sharp but more remissely and some what bitter 8. Emmenonagogick or drawing out the termes as in those things which are hot and of thin parts that they may concoct and digest crude humors extenuate and incide the grosse and tough and remove obstructions by clensing the passages such as are all propper diureticks which also promote the expurgation of the menses and if they are also stinking or bitter they are more effectuall stinking things depressing the wombe and the bitter being purging There are also accidentall hystericks as those which are analeptick or strengthening after extenuation or which refrigetate and humect the body dryed by too much heate to these also have affinity those things which expell the secundine dead birth especially those which are more strong sc hot of thin parts stinking bitter with acrimony especially if taken in a greater quantity and often 9. Bechick or helping the cough as in those things which cause or stop the same for those things which conduce to the expectoration of grosse humors doe also cause coughing but on the crontrary those things which incrassate thin humors stop and ease it but those things are hot and of thin parts and extenuating which expectorate tough humors yet there are also others which in some measure purge the breast not much hot nor very dry but a little moistening or at least lenifying what is exasperated yet diureticks of the middle kind also are agreeable to the breast and lungs which if they are cold they incrassate thin humors stop coughing and especially those which are narcotick or stupefying 10. Galactogenetick or generating milk as partly in meates partly in medicines as for meat it 's such as is euchymick polytrophick or of good juice and of much nourishment and a little hotter and dryer if the bloud be cold and pituitous but more moist and lesse hot if troubled with choller Medicaments causing milke are of thin parts and hot and of affinity to those things which properly provoke urine yet most gentle but those things which are more strong and provoke the courses hinder the generation thereof by too much eliquation of the humors 11. Spermatogenetick or generating sperme as in those things which are hot and not very dry but flatulent as also aliment of good juice and whatsoever increaseth the quantity of bloud The 4th Qualities are such which follow the substance or property of the essence are found out only by experience and are therefore called occult latent and specifick as in poisons theriack and alexipharmick remedies amulets and catharticks things antipathetick and sympathetick as also appropriate to any part or adverse unto the same the greatest signe of which according to some is Signature II. The Poiotichnologie or way of finding out these qualities as I. the manifest it is I. by reason 1. by odour or smell which is either sweet familiar unto the spirits of the brain a signe of heat or stinking and offensive cold moist the first is in hot bodies of thin parts among which there 's difference according to the degrees thereof but those things which are without odour are of a grosse essence and humid as those things which are salt and austere also such things which are of a mordicant and bitter smell are hot but those that smell like vineger and acerb are cold for in somethings the sense of odours is like that of sapors yet not of so safe conjecture by reason of the inequalitie of substance for most bodies are of an unlike consistence of each of which parts odour sheweth not the temper but where there are tenuous effluvium's or vapors whereof the sweet strengthen the heart the rank excite the animal spirits the stinking help the suffocation of the matrix 2. By Colour which is either 1. Lucid exciting the animal spirits and drawing them outwards as the white 2. Or tenebrose calling them inwards and causing sleep as the black 3. Yellow helping the jaundise 4. Or green usefull for the eyes the white and pale shew moistnesse of temper and imbecillity The yellow proceedeth from heat The red and croc●ous c. shew excessive siccity and calidity or heat The green and porraceous are signes of much moisture 3. By sapors or tastes which according to some are I. More perceptible or manifest I. The simple which are 1. hot first more hot so first of more thin parts as the sharp secondly of more thick parts as the bitter ●nitrous and salt secondly lesse hot as the sweet is diverse according to the diversity of tenuity and humidity 2. Cold first of grosse terrene parts First more grosse as the acerbe Secondly lesse grosse as the austere and astringent Secondly of subtile aqueous parts and doubtfull as the acid II. The mixt as the vinous compounded of the acid and sweet II. Lesse perceptible and almost insipid 1. Aqueous first more subtile as the aquinsipid secondly more grosse First glutinous as the humilent Secondly fat as the oleous 2. Terrene 1. succulent as the adoreous 2. More dry as the lignite●reous The sapors or tastes are I. Active 1. Bitter or Aloetick which is contrary to the nature of living creatures the taste whereof doth vellicate the tongue It consisteth of terrene combust parts of which some are more subtile others more grosse and terrene exiccated by exuperant heat or coagulated by cold as appeares in opium and aloes It is not nutritive it openeth the mouthes of the veines causeth hemorrhages and thirst makes the bloud fluxible it attenuateth incideth biteth exasperates cleanseth melteth attracteth yet more moderately dryeth and heateth it consumeth and resisteth putrefaction drinking up supervacaneous humors and resisting sweetness its hot and dry in the second degree terra usta 2. Sharp aromaticall or arsenical hot dry and burning pricking the tongue and biting the mouth it consisteth of thin dry and hot parts as pepper onions c. If it be not vehement and hot under the third degree taken inwardly it doth penetrate open and attenuate thick humors applyed outwardly it rarifieth the skin and draweth forth humors If it be hot above the 3d degree it troubleth the head with thin vapors If it be of a more grosse essence it is caustick and causeth blisters scabs and if it be of an adverse substance it 's septick and deadly also it is of quick operation and strong it attracteth from remote parts it separates corrodes incideth heateth burneth and inflameth it resolves discusseth excoriates exulcerates strongly inciteth to expurgation if of more thin parts it 's diureticall if of thicker caustick it 's more intense in dryer bodies and more remisse where there is an
by high ways c. T. It floureth in June and later and seedeth in Summer N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eupatoria Lappa inversa Philanthropos Agrimony Ger T. is hot and moderately bindeth it 's temperate in drinesse Gal. Of subtill parts cutting and scouring it openeth the Liver and strengtheneth it V. The leaves decoct h. naughty livers and pissing of blood the seed d. in wine h. the bloody-flix and biting of Serpents the leaves stamped with old swines grease ap close ulcers that be hardly healed boyled in wine and d. it h. hepatick fluxes in old people The water Ag. Ger. J. K. as the common common Durch Ag T. the leaves and root are hot and dry 2° scoure open and attenuate and d. h. scabbs jaundice wounds and tertians Park K. as the bastard hemp like and broad leafed hempe-like Ag of America V. the sweet is the best which being decoct and d. h. the Collick and cough ap with swines grease it is magneticall draweth out things fixed in the flesh and h. luxations the juyce dropped into the eares h. impostumes so the distilled water and hempelike Agrimony d. it h. dropsies and all impostumes c. by cold boyled with Fumitory in whey and d. it h. the itch scr 1. taken kills worms Matth. the herb or seed d. in wine h. the dysenterie and unc 6. d. in white wine with sugar h. the strangury Ague-tree Sassafras * P. In the west Indies neer the sea in temperate places T. It is green and flourisheth all the yeare N. It is called by the Indians Pavame Winanke Ague-tree Ger. T. the wood and branches are hot and drie 2° of somewhat subtil parts the rind is hotter sc 3° V. the best of the tree is the root and that the best which hath the rinde fast cleaving to it of a tawny colour and sweet smell The distilled water thereof smelleth and tasteth as the Cinamon and produceth the same effects the decoction of the wood in water boyled to the colour of Claret wine d. for certain daies h. the dropsie openeth the Liver and cureth quotidian and tertian agues and long fevers the root comforteth the liver and feeble stomack 〈◊〉 appetite consumeth winde stops vomiting and persumeth the breath it provoketh urine and c. fruitfulnesse Park The decoction of the branches is inwardly given in all cold diseases and obstructions of the liver and spleen as also in cold rheumes and defluctions of the head on the teeth eyes or lungs warming and drying up the moysture and strengthning the parts It h. coughs and other cold diseases in the upper parts it also drieth up the moysture of the wombe which in most is the cause of barrennesse it s generally used in all diseases c. of cold raw thin and corrupt humors it h. the French disease the leaves ap h. wounds Alder tree Alnus * P. Groweth in low and moist places T. The black fl in spring berries in Aut. the fruit of the 2d is ripe in Sept. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the common Amedamus The other is called Frangula Avornus Alder-tree black Ger T. it s inner barke is purging and drying V. the infusion thereof purgeth phlegm and choller by stoole and vomit decoct in vineger it h. the tooth-ache and scabs c. the drie is lesse violent the leaves c. milk in beasts The common and rough leaved Al T. the leaves and barke are cold drie and astringent V. the leaves h. hot swellings ulcers and all inward inflammations as of the almonds c. the barke serveth for the Diers Park the leaves put under the feet refresh travellers the other's bark boyled with agrimony wormwood dodder hopps fennell smallage and endive roots d. h. Cachexy the outmost barke h. lasks Alexander Hipposelinum P. Groweth almost every where the 2d in Candy T. The seed is ripe An. 2. in Aug. the 2d fl in June N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Equapium apium Sylv. Smyrnium petrosel Mac. Alexander Ger T. the seeds and root are hot and drie 3° as of the garden parsly cleansing attennuating V. and eaten h. the stomack the seeds bring down the flowers expell the secundine break winde provoke urine and h. the strangury so the root decoct with wine That of Candy T. Is hot and drie 3° V. the leaves dissolve wens drie ulcers and green wounds the seed is opening and diuretick h. the lungs the root h. the asthma and coughs Park the seed taken in wine h. the bitings of Serpents Alkanet Anchusa P. Montpellier Narborne Kent Cornwall T. Fl in the summer months the roots are bloody in harvest N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Fucus herba Onocleia Buglossa Hisp Orchanet Alkanet Ger J. K. as the red yellow and small Alk. T. the roots are cold and drie Gal. binding bitter and cleansing choler the leaves are weaker V. Diosc a cerot of the root with oile h. old ulcers with parched barly meal it h. the lepry tetters ring-wormes as a pessarie it extracts the dead birth the decoction with hydromel d. h. the yellow jaundice diseases of the kidnies the spleen and agues the leaves d. in wine h. laskes the root boiled with wine and sweet butter taken h. bruises by falling d. with hot beere it expells the measles and pox unc 2. of the root with oile olive a pint earth-worms pp. no. 20 boiled and ap h. deep punctures the root is used by women to paint the face Park K. the tall and low V. kill wormes d. with hyssop and cresses the leaves and root d. in wine h. the mother Bauh the root boyled with oyle and wax h. burnings ap with barley meale it h. the erysipelas The other called Alcibiadion being taken h. the bitings of venemous beasts Plin the leaves ap with hony and meale h. luxations All-heale Panax P. The 1. groweth in Syria Boeotia c. the Clownes-Allheale in moist places T. The 1 Fl. from May to the end of Septemb the 2. in Aug. and seedeth in Septemb. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Clownes Allh is called Stachys palust and aquat tertiola All-heale Ger K. as that of Hercules and the great Allh. T. the barke of the root is hot and dry Gal yet lesse then the juyce so 3° V. the seed powdered and d. in wormewood wine h. poyson and the bitings of venemous beasts the leafe or root stamped with hony till like an unguent ap cureth ulcers and wounds and covereth naked bones The Clownes All-heale T. is hot 2° drie 1° V. the leaves stamped with axungia h. green wounds ap as a pultise so also with oile and turpentine taking inwardly Saracens confound with hony and sugar boiled in Claret wine Park K. as the American with shining leaves the crusted berried and costus-like all-heale V. the gum of that of Herc. purgeth flegme from remote parts ap and d. it h. cold diseases so the last All-seed Atriplex sylvestris P. Neere path wayes ditches and dung-hils T. Fl and
comforteth the heart and cureth the bitings of venemous beasts so the wild but lesse effectually Park K. as the mountain great water Ang. V. the distilled water h. all pains of cold and winde 3 spoonefulls taken at once and with the powder of the root h. the pleurisie and diseases of the breast collick strangury tumors and stoppages the juyce ap h. the scotoma deafenesse tooth-ach ulcers and sciatica Pem. the distilled water d. h. the mother and ap h. the gout Aniseed Anisum P. Candy Syria the East Countries and Gardens T. It s to be sown in May the seed is ripe in Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Matahalna yerva dulce Hisp Aniseed Ger J. K. as the common and starry headed An. T. Gal. the seed is hot and drie 3° as others 2° or drie 1° hot 2° V. the seed h. wind and belchings and gripings of the belly gently provoketh urine causeth milke and lust h. laskes and the whites chewed it sweetens the breath h. short wind and dropsie quencheth thirst and h. the hicket dried and taken with hony it clenseth the breast from flegme with bitter Almonds it h. old coughs it prevents falling sicknesse with hony vineger and hyssope gently boyled h. Squinancy being gargled Park V. the seeds h. consumptions decoct with figgs and licorish 3 or 4 dropps of the oyle d. in wine h. giddinesse ap it draws things out of the eyes and h. bitings sc the seed with oile of roses ap it h. the ears the quintessence h convulsions Appletree Malus P. Orchards and fertile ground the rest in horsedung T. It bloom's in Aprill and May the fr is ripe in July and Septemb. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Malum the fruit and pomus the tree Apples Ger K. as the pome-water Bakers ditch apple the Queening the summer and winter Peare-maine T. are all cold and moist superfluously the sweet are not so cold and moist but more nutritive and descend more slowly the soure are colder and moister of lesse nourishment and eaten before meat mollify the body the austere unripe are cold c. grosse blood winde and the colick the middle tasted retain the faculties of the other V. the roasted are better then the raw apples h. a hot stomack the austere strengthen it enfeebled by heat and ap h. all inflammations the juyce of the sweet and middle tasted temper melancholy the ointment of the pulpe with swines grease and rose water beautifieth the face and h. rough skinnes the pulpe of the roasted n° 4 or 5. especially of the pomewater apples m in a quart of faire water till like lambs-wooll and d. last at night h. the strangury and gonorrhaea's c. the leaves coole and binde and h. inflammations in the beginning apples cut in pieces and distilled with camphire and butter-milke h. the markes of the small pocks ap in their state taking also milke with saffron or mithridate d. Madde apples Ger mala insana T. are cold ferè 4° and hurtfull yet those of Toledo eate them with scraped cheese pickled to procure lust The apples of love Ger are very cold and moist V. they are olygotrophicke and cacochymicke yet in hot countries are eaten boiled with pepper salt and oyle The Aethiopian apples T. are as those of Love V. they are eaten as sauce as the former The thorny apples and those of Peru. T. are cold 4° and narcoticke as Mandrake V the juyce boyled with axungia to a salve h. all inflammations burnings and the leaves with oile olive boyled till crisped and strained then with wax rosin and a little turpentine boyled to a salve h old ulcers and sores of the secrets and new wounds Park V. the soure h. thirst the sharp cut flegme h. the appetite the rotten h inflammations Adams apple T. as lemmons yet milder dissect and ap with powder of brimstone heated under cinders it h. the itch and scabbs The Indian T. is binding and h. laskes The tart Indian h. the appetite chollerick agues and ap the web in the eye Thornie apples V the seed h. the stone and urine Adams apple Serap fructus musae T. heateth and moistneth fine primi V. the fr is of little nourishment h a hot breast the lungs and bladder provoketh urine and c venery too much eaten it hurts the stomack and stopps the liver Apricock-tree Malus Armen P. Gardens against walls T. Fl in Aprill the fruit is ripe in July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Praecocia the lesser Chrysomelon Apricocks Ger K as the greater and lesser T. are cold and moist 2° yet not so moist as Peaches V. they are more wholsome to the stomack then Peaches oligotrophick and full of excrements they putrifie taken after meate and before it cause other meats to descend as Peaches the kernel is sweet the leaves not yet used Park V. apricocks have no use in Physick Matth the oyle of the kernells h inflamed piles tumors hoarsness and pains of the eares unc 5. d. with unc 1. of muscadell h. the stone and collick Arch-angell Lamium P. By hedges walls waies borders of fields T. Fl all summer chiefly the beginning of May. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vrtica iners mortua Archangelica Arch-angell Ger J K. as the white yellow red Hungary hedge Hungary with the variegated floure T. they are hotter and drier then nettles nigh to hore-hound V. stamped with vineger ap as a pultis they h● wens hard swellings the Kings evill inflamed kernels under the eares and ●awes neck arme-holes and slankes so bathed being decoct the white flowres conserved and taken stay the whites the distilled water c. a good colour mirth and refresheth the vitall spirits Park also the Spanish V as the rest h. obstructed and hard spleenes d. and ap it h. the gout and draweth out splinters and stopps bleeding ap to the neck Aromaticall reed Acorus P. The 1 in gardens planted the 2d in Arabia T They put forth their leaves in spring N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Calamus Aromaticus to which Acorus is a substitute Aromaticall reed Ger K. as the true acorus and true aromaticall reed of the antients T. Diosc the roots are hot Gal. Plin hot and dry and of subtill parts V. the decoction of the root of calamus d. provoketh urine h. pain in the side liver spleen and brest convulsions gripings and burstings and h. strangury provokes the courses d. or the fume taken the juyce with hony h. dimme eyes the hardnesse of the spleen and all infirmities of the blood the root boiled in wine stamped and ap to the secret parts h. all swellings and hardnesse thereof scr 2. ss of the root d. in unc 4. of muskadel h. bruises by falls the root is alexipharmick and in lohocks h. the chest opprest with cold humors Johns the root preserved h. the stomack prevents contagion by the aire Diosc the best acorus is well compact white within full The true calamus Dios d. is
to be sowen in the spring is ever green N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The white is called Sicula and Sicla Beete Ger J K. as the white red and red Roman T. the white is temperate in hear and moisture the other are drie and all abstersive the white cold moist and nitrous so clensing and an errhine V. boiled and eaten it looseth the belly and is of little nourishment the juyce put in the nostrills purgeth phlegme out of the head The great Beet with vineger oyle and salt is a good sallad The Ro be et boyled and eaten with oyle vineger and pepper is a good salled also Pem the juyce provoketh urine openeth the liver and spleen h. venime vertigo's and head-ach the red stopps flu●es ap h. bleans in the skin kibes cankers and scurse Park K. the prickly stalked and candy as the rest h. inflammations Bell-flower Campanula P. The 2 first in Gardens the rest in sandy places T. Fl From May to Aug. N. Rapunculus and Rapuntium Bell-floure Ger. K. as the Peach-leafed steeple milky round leafed yellow little white and little purple T. these especially the 4. last are cold dry V. of the nature of Rampions whereof they are kinds Park the roots of the wild bell-flours K. as of the wild field and time leased V. with vineger oyle and pepper h. the stomacke eaten and cause appetite milke in Nurses sc the greater roots and beaten with the meale of Lupines h. spots so the water They may also be used in gargles for the mouth Bettony Betonica P. Shadowy woods borders of pastures c. T. Fl. in June and July the second in Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vetonica cestron that of the water Clymenon Betony Ger. T. is hot and drie 2° Gal. cutting V. it h. deseases of the head of a cold cause and the falling sicknesse it clenseth the lungs and chest h. obstructions of the Liver Milt and Gall and the yellow Jaundise It c. a good appetite h sower belchings and the strangury pain in the Kidnies and the Bladder it breaketh and expelleth the stone it h. ruptures cramps and convusions the bitings of mad dogs and serpents and poyson d. and ap it h the sciatica A conserve of the flowrs h. the head-ach drach 1. of the root d in honyed water causeth to vomit grosse humours The powder of the leaves d. in wine h. the spitting pissing of bloud and all inward wounds the pouder with meate loosneth the belly gently and h. the epilepsie with madnesse and head-ach and all paines of the head it killeth wormes h. agues clenseth the mother and cureth bruisings Water Bettony T. is hot and drie V. the leaves scoure and clense mundify ulcers that are foule especially the juice boyled with hony the juyce ap h. red faces and deformity Pem the 1. h. the dropsie m. with hony the cough and thin rheume and wind collick d. Ap. it draweth out splinters h. biles The juyce instilled helpe the paine of the eares Park with axungia it h. plague sores d. with pennyroyall and mede it h. agues Bezar-tree Moringa * P. It groweth in Malabar T. The time is not observed N. The Arabians and Turkes call it Morian the Persians Tame Bezar tree Park T. the seeds are sharp the roots alexipharmick as effectual as unicornes horn bezarstone or any treacle V. the natives use it against all kindes of poysons and bitings of venimous creatures even of that most venimous serpent called by the Portugalls Culebras de Capillo d. and ap it also h. the winde collick and leprosie it being used many have been cured thereof it is mixed also with those medicines that purge melancholy All which is also affirmed by Bauhinus Binde-weed Volubilis P. Almost every where the blew in Syria T. Fl from may to Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Of the Prickly Sarsa parilla that of the Sea Soldana Binde-weed Ger J K. as the great smooth small lavender leafed silver-leased and black T. are hot and drie V. the juyce of the black much openeth the belly the stamped leaves ap dissolve wast hard swellings the rest are not used in physick Blew bind-week K. as the common round leaved and small T. is hot and dry 1° Serap 3° V. it purgeth thick phlegmatick and melancholicke humors expelleth wormes and troubleth the belly Rough bindweed K. as of Peru the common that of Portugall and Germany T. the roots are hot and drie of subtill parts and decoct c. sweat V. the roots h. old paines of the head and joynts and cold diseases and such as are cured by sweating if there be no ague joyned the leaves d. h. poyson Sea bind-weed Soldanella K. as the common mountaine and small mountaine T. is hot and drie 2° the 2d bitter and astringent V. it mightily purgeth waterish humors openeth the liver and h the dropsie d. in fat broth the pouder in weak bodies must be mixed with aniseed cinnamon ginger and sugar The leaves of the mountaine bind-weed ap to the navill draw out hydropick water so in other parts and h. wounds the whole herb troubles the stomack Purging bindweed Scammonium K. as the Syrian that of Valentia and the French T. it 's the strongest purger that is moderately hot and dry V. it purgeth choller water and flegme and hurteth the stomack and fretteth the intrailes it openeth the vaines hurteth the heart if much taken c. swounings vomiting bloody flix and tenesmus except boyled in a quince with the mucilage of psyllium pulpe of prunes mastick or m. drac 2 of aloes with scr 1. thereof or give the quince in which it was roasted the dose is from gr 5 to 12. Park Great binde-weed K. as the blew with a triparted leafe and red V. the first purgeth phlegme and melancholy killeth flat wormes The small purge and dissolve K. as the mallow leafed purple and Arabian Birch-tree Betula P. Woods fenny grounds in most places T. The catkins 1 thē the leaves in Aprill later N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Betulla Semos Semuda Theoph Birch-tree Ger T.V. is not yet used Park the juyce of the leaves while they are young or the distilled water of them or that which cometh out of the tree being bored with an auger d. for some time together breaketh the stone in the kidnies or bladder and is also good to wash sore mouthes a lie made of the ashes of birch-tree barke is effectuall for the same Col the leaves are cooling the barke and catkins hot the inner barke h. the wombe Birds-eyne Paralysis P. Moist and squalid grounds T. Fl from Aprill to Aug. N. Sanicula angustifolia paralytic a alpina Birds-eyne Ger K. as the red and white T. V. as of other primroses So T. they are drie and astringent and a little hot cephalick and neurotick and h. the palsie the roots decoct h. the stone an oinment of the leaves hoggs grease h. wounds wrinkles
hot and dry fine 2di V. it h. old swellings of the almonds upper parts of the throat It clenseth slimie flegme sticking in the jawes and h. swellings there gargarized with hony of Roses It operateth as Scabious h. stinging of venemous beasts poysons and pestilent diseases so Fuch Morescot Weinrich Erast Gebelk Tabern and wasteth plague sores ap The decoction d. h. paines of the matrix and expelleth wind Park K. as the common and red Hungarian Scabious V. it is bitter and more effectuall than scabious d. or ap It h. fevers bruises dissolveth clotted bloud d. and ap it ki●ls wormes and h. the scurfe and itch Docke Lapathum P. In meadows and by river sides T. Fl. in June and July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rumex Oxylapathum Hippolapathum Lapathion Docks Ger. J. K. as the sharpe pointed small sharp and roundish leafed wild T. are of a mixture betwixt cold and heate dry almost 3° especially the seed which is very astringent V. the powder of any docks d. in wine stoppeth lasks and the bloudy flix and easeth paines of the stomack The roots boiled till soft and stamped with axungia ap h. the itch soabs and manginesse Water dock K. as the great and small T. are cold and dry Park K. as the English mercury and strong scented sea dock V. the seeds of most of them are drying and binding h. all lasks fluxes subversion of the stomack through choller and haemoptysis The sorrell are more cold than the rest the bloud-wort more drying The roots open coole and clense and h. the jaundise English Mercury T. the root is dry clensing and softning Dodder Cuscuta P. It groweth upon sundry kinds of herbs T. It flourisheth chiefly in July and August N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cassitas Plin. Cassutha Dodder Ger T. is of the temper of the herbe on which it groweth it 's dry 2° and hot it clenseth with a certain astriction especially that which groweth upon the bramble it h. the infirmities of the liver and spleen V. Dodder opens the liver and spleen purgeth flegme choller and superfluous humors out of the veins it provoketh urine openeth the kidnies and h. jaundise it h. lingring agues bastard and long tertians and quartans properly in children it also strengthneth the stomack Epithymum or dodder of time is hotter and drier than Epilinum or dodder of flax sc 3° it h. all infirmities of the Milt obstructions and hard swellings old head ache Epilepsie madnesse c. of melancholy and the spleen it also h. the French disease contagious ulcers and scabby evill It purgeth melancholy and flegme that which groweth upon savorie and scabious is more weake Dodder which groweth upon flaxe boyled in wine or water and d. openeth the liver gall milt bladder kidnies and veines and purgeth choller by siege and urine that which groweth on brambles h. old agues and jaundise Epiurtica provoketh urine and opens obstructions c. Park Dodder sympathizeth with the herbe on which it groweth and is more effectuall than the herbe it selfe Pem that of time h. the cramp and quartane agues with lapis lazuli Dodder distilled and the water d. h. the liver and lungs expells the stone and termes and ap h. the eyes Croll The decoction thereof h. the tartar of the stomack Senn. It h. diseases arising of flegme and choller De Dond the juyce with the acerose syrupe h. fevers Heurn It 's corrected with aniseed and d. with wormewood Doggs-bane Apocynum P. Italy Syria and those Easterne countries T. They bud in May fl in September N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cynomoron Cynocrambe Doggs-bane Ger J. K. as the climing and broad leafed T. they are of the poysonous nature of Thora which killeth whatsoever creature eateth it except preserved by the use of Anthora V. the leaves mixed with bread and given to doggs presently take away the use of their limbs and procure sudden death Park K. as the greater and lesser American T. it is not meanely hot V. ap it disperseth tumors and is not inwardly to be used Aeg. It 's hot without drinesse Doggs-stones Cynosorchis P. In moist and fertile meadows T. Fl from Aprill to September N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Testiculus canis Caninus Doggs-stones Ger J. K. As the great white spotted marsh and lesser Austrian T. are hot and moist the greater is windie and causeth lust The second is more hot and dry and h. venery so Serapias stones and are more dry V. Diosc The greater eaten c. generation of males and d. in goates milke c. lust So the rest which are juycie which is every other yeare by course Park K. as the great purple greater pale purple fl and smaller with the greater lesser and Hungarian souldiers Cullious V. the firme roots cause lust Doggs-tooth Dens Caninus P. In green and moist grounds and gardens T. Fl. in Aprill or the midst of March. N. Dentali Satyrium Erythronium quorundam Dogs-tooth Ger. K. as the common and white T. are very hot and excrementitious V. the powder thereof taken in pottage killeth wormes drank with wine it h. the collick So Clus it strengthneth and nourisheth the body and d. with water h. the epilepsie Park the root is thought to be more venereous than the fatyrions Cam. Matth. Some use the roots for all purposes for which the hermodactile serveth which is neither assented to or condemned by the forementioned authors having had no experience thereof Dragons Dracunculus P. In gardens and marsh places T. The berries are ripe in Autumne N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dracontia Serpentaria Colubrina Bisaria Dragons Ger. J. K. as the great small water and spike dr T. is more biting and bitter than Aron hot and of thin parts with some astriction V. the root doth scoure the entr●lles and attenuate It h. malignant ulcers the black and white morphew tempered with vineger The leaves cure ulcers and wounds the fruit is more strong and h. the polypus the iuice clenseth spots in the eyes Gal. The root twice or thrice sodden expels cla●●r●ie humors out of the chest and lungs Diosc The root of the lesser dragon evacuateth humours out of the chest The juice of that of the garden dropped into the eyes h. scoroina's the distilled water h. pestilentiall fevers or poyson d. with treacle or mithridate The smell of the flowers is hurtfull to women newly conceived with child Bauh It doth incide digest and open Matth. It h. cold stomacks c. appetite dissipateth flatulencies roborates the members provoketh urine and the termes and is an apoflegmatisme Dragon tree Draco arbor * P. In the Iland Madera and Insula Portus S. T. It flourisheth all the yeare N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the gum and Sanguis draconis Dragon tree Johns T. the Sanguis draconis which is thought to proceed from this tree is astringent It stops the courses fluxes dysenteries haemoptysis and fasteneth loose teeth smiths use it to varnish over their works to give
of the mother the herbe burned driveth away flies gnats fleas and venimous things Park K. As the great mountaine of Germany and sweet purple V. The leaves h. the hurts of all venimous creatures small swellings and wounds the decoction d. c. the termes opens the liver and h. laskes the last h. the tooth-ache so that of the sea Reech K. As that of Mexico T. is hot and dry 3° and sharpe Fleawort Psyllium P. Gardens the first in fields neare the sea T. Fl in June and July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pulicaria Herba Pulicaris Fleawort Ger. K. as the common and never dying T. Gal Serap the seed is cold 2° temperate in moisture and drinesse V. The decoction of the seed d. purgeth choller cooleth hot diseases and quencheth thirst Stamped boiled in water and ap with vineger and oile of roses it h. all swellings in the joynts S. Anthonies fire and violent impostumes Strewed in chambers it expelleth fleas Pem its mucilage with rose and barley water the syrrup of violets and roses h. hoarsnesse pleurisies and purgeth choller With marmemelade of quinces poppy seeds and sugar candy it h. catarrhes the seed torrified and taken with plantaine water h. fluxes and coughs ap it h. the sciatica and with populeon the piles and tenesmus It h. rough haire so Coles Park ap with oile of roses and vineger it h. sore nipples Jo. The antidote is Andromachus's treacle and vomiting with juniper water Flix-weed Sophia Chirurgorum P. By high wayes in obscure places almost every where T. It floureth and seedeth from June to October N. Pseudonasturtium Sylvestre Sophia Paracelsi Thalictrum Flixweed Ger. T. it drieth without any sharpnesse or heate V. The seed d. with wine or smithes water stoppeth laskes and all issues of bloud The herbe bruised and put into unguents healeth ulcers old sores and wounds Col The herb d. consolidateth bones and killeth wormes so the water and syrupe Park It 's no lesse effectuall than plantaine or comfrey for the purposes aforesaid Floure-gentle Amaranthus P. Gardens the floramore in a bed of horse-dung T. Fl in Aug and flourish till the frosty weather N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The golden is called Cona aurea Chrysocome Stoechas citrina Floure-gentle Ger. K. As the purple scarlet floramore branched and velvet T. are binding cold and dry V. they stop all kinds of bleeding and laskes Park K. as the greater and lesser purple variable carnation golden and candy T. the three first are hot and dry but the other sorts are accounted cold and dry V. they all h. rheumatick bodies the first cause urine and ap comfort cold parts and preyent moths These are called helychrysum and aurelia Golden flower-gentle Ger. J. K. as the common broad leased round headed and wild T. V. d. kill wormes and nits applyed Flower-deluce Iris. P. In gardens moist meadowes by brinks of rivers T. The dwarf fl in Aprill the greater in May the bulbous in June N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Radix marica Of the water flag Pseudoacorus Flower-deluce Ger. K. as the common and water flag T●the green roots of Fl. deluce are hot fere 4° dryed hot and dry 3° and burning the mouth The root of the bastard Fl. deluce is cold and dry 3° and astringent V. the root of the common Fl. deluce stamped with a little rose water ap h. bruises The juice purgeth choller and watery humors d. in whay it h. the dropsie The roots dry attenuate thick humors and in a lohoch h. shortnesse of breath old coughs c. They h. evil spleens cramps convulsions bitings of serpents gonorhoea's d. with vineger with wine provoke the courses The decoction mollifyeth the matrix and openeth it Boiled and ap it mollifies the Kings evill and hard swellings Johns The roots of ordinary flaggs are hot and dry 2° they excell acorus bind strengthen and condense and h. fluxes and the courses Floure-de-luce of Florence K. as the common white great of Dalmatia and small twice flowring violet Austrian and Germane T. the roots are hot and dry fine 2di V. the juice mightily purgeth choller and water and d. in whay h. dropsies evill spleens cramps convulsions bitings of serpents gonorrhoea's d. with vineger and with wine provoke the courses Variable Flowredeluces K. as the common Turkey sea wild Bizantine narrow-leased grasse narrow leafed many flowred white dwarfe red flowred dwrafe yellow dwarfe and variegated dwarfe T. are referred to the other V. the oile of the flowers and roots an q. v. made as oile of roses strengtheneth the sinewes and joynts h. cramps of repletion peripneumonia's The fl of French Fl. deluce distilled with diatrion santalon cinamon and the water d. h. dropsies Bulbed Floure deluce K. as the broad leased onion changeable many branched changeable yellow ash-coloured and whitish T. are referred to the kinds of asphodills V. unc 6. of the herbe with goats suet as much oile of alcanna lib. 1. stamped mixed and ap h. the gout The decoction of the root with meale of lupines h. freckles and the morphew in the face Velvet Fl. deluce T. V. is not discovered Park The root of the greater with the fl is sternutatorie and emetick Spanish nut K. as the common and small Ger. T. V. is eaten in fallads to c. lust Park The bulbous K. as the great of Clus and blew English T. V. are uselesse Flower of Constantinople Lychnis Chalced. P. Almost in all gardens T. It flourisheth in June and July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theoph. Schwenck Flos Constantinop Hierosol Creticus Aldrovandi Flower of Constantinople Ger. T. V. it serveth for ornament and is not used so Park Bauh It s faculty is not found out it having no physicall use but the root which in taste is a little sharp is thought to be hot 1° Park K. as the single and double nonesuch T. V. as the first are not used Lob. It scoureth wooll like sopewort Schwenckf It 's of no savour and neglected as to use Fluellin Veronica P. In corne fields especially amongst Barley T. Fl. in August and September N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the 1. The male Betonica Pauli Fluellin Ger. J. K. as the female and sharp pointed T. Col. is bitter cold and dry V. it is astringent It h. the dysentery and hot swellings spreading cankers and corrosive ulcers d. and ap it h. inflammations of the eyes boiled and applyed as a pultis The leaves sodd in the broth of a hen stay dysenteries Paul The female Fluellin openeth the obstructions of the liver and spleen expelleth urine and the stone and clenseth the kidnies and the bladder Drach 1. of the powder of the herbe with so much treacle h. pestilent severs Male Fluellin K. as the common little smallest shrubby tree upright and leaning T. are in a meane between heat and drynesse V. the decoction d. h. all fresh and old wounds clenseth the bloud h. the kidnies scurvie spreading tetters fretting sores small
c. vomit the hollow rooted h. the plague Pem. The 1. is hot 1° and dry 2° as appeares by its bitternesse Furze-bush Genista spinosa P. In pastures and fields in most places T. Fl from May to October T. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Scorpius Spinosus Theoph. Furze-bush Ger. J. K. as the great small small round codded needle dwarf and scorpion T. is hot and dry V. the seed h. the stone and laske Park The two first open the obstructions of the liver spleen The flowers thereof in a decoction h. the jaundise as also provokes urine and cleanses the kidnies of gravell The others no doubt are participant of the same qualities G Galingale Cyperus P. In fenny grounds naturally gardens T. They flower in August N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Juncus quadratus angulosus Aspalathum GAlingale Ger. J. K. as the English common and round T. the roots are hot and dry 2° V. d. it expells gravell and h. the dropsie Boiled in wine d. it provoketh urine and menses and expells the stone It also h. stingings and bitings of scrpents Fernel The root used in baths h. coldnesse and stopping of the matrix and provoketh termes It causeth blood and digestion and exhilerates causeth a good colour and sweet breath The powder dryeth up all moist ulcers even in the mouth and privities stayeth the humors and healeth them though maligne and virulent Spanish Galingale or Italian Trasi T. the roots are windie V. the milke pressed out of the roots d. h. the breast and lungs and mundifyeth them it h. coughs and c. venery the roots must be beaten and macerated in broth then pressed the same milk or creame d. h. hor and sharpe urine adding seed of pompions gourds and cucumbers The true galingale K. as the greater and the lesse T. are hot and dry 3° and the lesser the hotter V. they h. all cold diseases as collick flatulencies paines of the stomack c. by cold The smell comforts the too cold braine The substance chewed sweetens the breath and h. the beating of the heart They h. flatulency of the womb c. venery and heat the too cold reines Park K. as the lesser Assyrian round rooted sweet and rush nut V. as the rest the roots boiled with bay-berries and d. h. the dropsie so ap with the urine of a boy Alpin The decoction of the roots is used by the Egyptians to warm the stomack Gall-tree Gallae arbor * P. In Italy Spaine and most of the hot regions T. The gall appeareth when the sun entreth Cancer and that in one night N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Quercus Robur Plaecida Gazae Gall-tree Ger. J. K. as the first and second greater and lesser gall-tree T. Gal. The gall called omphacitis is dry 3° cold 2° and a very harsh medicine V. it fasteneth together slack parts it repelleth rheumes and fluxes and dryeth up the same especially those of the gums throat and mouth The other gall is lesse drying and binding being boiled and ap as a plaister it h. the inflammations of the fundament and falling downe thereof It 's boiled in water if there be need of little astriction or binding or otherwise in austere wine if more need require d. in wine or the powder strewed upon meats it h. the dysentery and the coeliack passion They are used in dying and making of inke If burnt they stanch bloud and are of thin parts and drying they must be laid upon burning coales till white and then quenched in vineger and wine Also they are good in laskes d. in wine or water and ap and serve in all cases where there is need of drying and binding Oake apples are much of the same nature yet of lesser force Park The fume of the decoction h. the falling downe of the mother and inflammations Dorst Aeg Galls are dry 3° cold 2° and when unripe repell contract and strengthen Garlick Allium P. It is planted in gardens sc the small cloves T. It is set in Novemb and Decemb or Feb and March N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theriaca rustica Vlpicum Columellae Garlick Ger T. is sharp hot and dry 4° and exulcerateth the skin by raising blisters V. Being eaten it extreamly heateth the body attenuateth thick and clammy humors digesteth and consumeth them It also openeth obstructions h. cold poysons and the bitings of venemous beasts It yeildeth no nourishment and ingendreth sharp and naughty bloud therefore hurteth those that are of a hot complexion but it becometh of good juice boiled till it loose its sharpnesse It h. roughnesse of the throat and old coughs it provoketh urine consumeth wind and h. the dropsie of a cold cause It killeth and expelleth wormes sodden in milke taken by young children It h. cold stomacks and preserveth from contagious aire The fume of the decoction taken brings down the flowers and secundine c. It h. the morphew ring wormes scabbed heads in children dandraf and scurfe mixt with hony and ap With figleaves and cummin ap it h. the bitings of the shrew mouse The wild Garlick K. as the crow and beares gar T. are referred to those of the garden V. the wild is stronger than the garden garlick The leaves of Ramsons stamped are good sauce to eat with fish and with butter in Aprill and May being eaten by labouring men The distilled water d. expelleth the stone and urine The mountain Garlick K. as the great Clusius his great the lesser leek leafed the vipers and broad leafed T. are in a meane between leeks and garlick V. Scorodoprassum attenuates and h. expectoration The last operates as garlick Park K. as the Turkey great Turkey with narrow and bulbed leaves V. Garlick dicusseth the inconveniences c. by minerall vapoures It h. the jaundise cramps piles and cold diseases Gaule tree Myrtus Brabantica P. In fenny countries and many other places T. Fl in May and June the seed is ripe in Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eleagnus Cordi Rhus sylv Plinit Gaule-tree Ger T. the leaves are hot and dry the seed 3° V. the fruit is troublesome to the brain being put into beere whilest it is boiling it maketh it heady The shrub with the fruit laid among clothes keepeth them from moths and wormes Park It 's bitter and harsh drying and discussing and is very effectuall to kill the wormes in the belly and stomack Germander Chamaedrys P. In rocky rough grounds almost every where T. Fl. and flourish from June to August N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Trixago Quercula minor Trissago Teucrium Germander Ger. K. as the great broad leafed small and wild T. that of the garden is hot and dry fere 30. of thin parts and cutting The wild also is hot and dry opening and cleansing the liver and spleen V. boiled in water and d. it delivereth the body from all obstructions and cutteth clammy humors it h. coughs and shortnesse of breath the strangury and dropsie The leaves stamped with hony and strained and
breasts To bathe the feet in the decoction c. sleep so given in clysters or the flowers smelled to The leaves seed and juice d. c. troublesome sleep and deadly The seed of white henbane taken in the weight of 10 gr with meade h. coughs defluxions of humors to the eyes or breast and all issues of bloud The root boiled in vineger and held hot in the mouth h. the toothach The fume taken c. wormes to come out of the teeth Yellow henbane or English Tobacco T. is cold and moist Lobel but rather hot biting and gummie V. it is used by some instead of tobacco it c. spitting stupifieth the senses and c. giddinesse but to little profit The herbe h. all impostumes tumors inveterate ulcers botches burnings green wounds and all hurts in the head made into an oinment thus take of the green leaves thereof lib. 3. sem and stampe them very small in a stone morter of oile olive q. s boile them upon a gentle fire continually stirring it 'till the herbs seem black and will not bubble any more then strain the green oile from the faeces and put it to the fire againe adding thereto of wax lib. sem of rosin unc 4. of good turpentine unc 2. melt them together and keep it in pots for the use aforesaid Croll The decoction of the root of Henbane in vineger with arsmart h. the tooth-ach being used warme Park K. as that of Egypt V. The black and yellow are more dangerous than the white which is cold 3° and h. all paines of a hot cause ap The antidote is Garlick English tobacco d. purgeth slegme kills wormes h. the stone and ap kills lice Holly-tree Agrifolium P. Almost every where in woods and hedges T. It 's green both winter and summer the berries are ripe in September N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theoph. Aquifolium Gazae Paliurus secundus Diosc Lacunae Holly-tree Ger. T. the berries are hot and dry of thin parts and waste away winde V. They h. the collick 10. or 12. taken inwardly purge away thick and phlegmatick humors The birdlime made of the barke gleweth up the intrailes and is lethall Holly powdered and d. h. all fluxes of the belly as dysenteries c. Birdlime is thus made take off the bark and put it in a ditch in boggy ground covering it with boughs of trees and there let it remaine till it be putrifyed which will be done in 12 dayes then beat it in mo●ters to the thicknesse of lime after which wash it very often and putting to it a little oile of nuts keep it in earthen vessels for use Sea Holly K. as the common and Levant Eryngium T. The roots of both of them are moderately hot and a little dry with a thinnesse of substance V. The roots boiled in wine and d. h. the collik breake the stone expell gravell and h. all infirmities of the kidnies provoking urine and opening the passages being d. 15. days together so the roots eaten and h. those that are liver sick and bitten with venimous beasts they h. cramps convulsions and the epilepsie and provoke the termes The roots condited h. those that are withered with old age and want naturall moisture and c. venery Drach 1. d. with carrot seeds h. very many infirmities The juice d. pressed forth with wine h. the gonorrhoea The bastard Sea-holly K. as the blew common dwarf mountaine and small smooth T. Are hot V. They are not used in meate or medicine Park K. as the smooth leased and prickly V. Matth. The decoction of the root or bark thereof fomented on the places that have been put out of joynt mollifyeth and discusseth the tumors and consolidateth broken bones Sea-holly K. as the upland and small bastard sea holly of Spaine with the French thistle of Lobel and Pena and trefoile thistle Eryngium trifolium T. The first is of the temper of the sea-holly and used in stead thereof being not much inferiour V. The decoction of the root in wine d. openeth the liver and spleen h. the jaundice dropsie and paines in the loynes and French disease The roots ap h. the Kings evill so d. ap h. the bitings of serpents with axungia it's magneticall sarcotick The juice of the leaves dropped into the eares h. impostumes The distilled water h. melancholy quotidian quartan agues wry necks The rest are weaker Vntz. The seed of the 1. h. the stone so Lon Moresc Fernel Col a handfull of the berries of common holly boiled in a pint of ale to the one half which being strained and a little butter put thereto is a good remedy for the stone and stoppage of urine 5 or 6 spoonfulls thereof being taken at once The powder of the leaves dryed in an oven and the pricks taken off being d. in ale is commended against the stitches and pricking pains of the side The juice that droppeth out of the wood when laid on the fire being dropped into the eares h. deasnesse The birdlime thereof being applyed with the yelk of an egge draweth out thornes and splinters c. The tender shoots of the Sea holly eaten are aphrodisiastick or c. lust Holly-rose Cistus P. The hotter provinces of Europe and gardens T. They fl from May to September N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rosa sylvatica canina The excrescence or juice Hypocistis Holly-rose Ger. J. K. as the male the male with his excrescence toothed thin leased the female Cistus with leaves like sea purslain lavender leased thin leased low with broad leaves and narrrow low of Austria low with leaves like wild tyme Lobel's strange Dr Penny his cistus that lasting one yeare long leafed yearly spotted annuall and marjoram leafed T. It dryeth fere 2° and is of temperate heate the leaves and first buds being beaten dry bind and glutinate ulcers and green wounds V. The flowers are of most force d. in wine they h. the bloudy flix weake stomacks sluxes and the overflowing of moist humors ap as a pultis they h. putrified ulcers and phagedens and also h. burnings scaldings and old ulcers Hypocistis is more binding h. all infirmities coming of fluxes as the whites laskes bloudy flix and strengtheneth parts debilitated with superfluous moisture It 's excellent to be mixed with somentations for the stomack and liver it 's put into treacle to comfort weake bodies Dwarfe cistus K. as the English yellow or white the yellow dwarf of Germany and white that of Savoy narrow leafed time-leafed Frisian dwarfe cistus T. V. are referred to the kindes of cistus for they heale wounds stop bloud and all issues thereof as the bloudy flix and hamoptysis and boiled in wine h. ulcers in the mouth and secret parts ap for it joyneth and strengtheneth Cistus Ledon K. as the first bringing Ladanum the second gum leafed like poplar the 4th 5th 6th and 7th Cistus ledon of Clusius the 8th with his excrescence the 9th leafed like myrtle the Polonian leafed like r●semary that of
of Constantinople Somers greater starry summer and lesser and that of Peru. T. V. are unknown Clus The lilly leafed eaten by cattle c. their heads to swell and then kill them being of a maligne and poysonsom quality Autumne Jacinth K. as the small and great T. V. are not written of English Jacinth K. as the hare-bells white blew orientall many flowred 1. and second reddish purple and white orientall winter orientall with leaves on the stalke double flowred orientall the greater dusky flowred Spanish and lesser with the tuberous rooted Indian Jacinth T. doe lightly clense and bind The seeds are dry 3° the roots 1° and cold 2° V. the root boiled in wine and d. stoppeth the belly provoketh urine and h. the venemous biting of the field spider so the seed and more effectually stoppeth the laske and bloudy flix d. in wine it h. the falling sicknesse Diosc The roots stamped and ap with white wine hinder the growth of haires The seed d. with southernwood in wine h. the jaundise Faire haired jacinth K. as the common and white that of Constantinople faire curled haired branched blew and great grape-flower T. V. Vhe faire haired operates as the English Musked Grape flower K. as the yellow ash-coloured T. V. They may be referred to the Jacinths whereof they are kinds but as yet are not of any known use The two feigned plants K. as the false bumbast Jacinth and flower of Tigris T. V. are not yet discovered or are rather adulterine and supposititious The woolly bulbus T. V. is of no use Park K. as the Barbary early blew starry Turkey and ash-coloured T. V. The roots and leaves are cold and dry Weck The seed d. in wine h. the Kings evill Col The tuberous root d. h. the jaundise Hyssope Hyssopus P. In gardens the hedge hyssope in moist places T. Fl from June to the end of August N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hyssopum Hedge Hyssope Gratiola Hyssope Ger. J. K. as that with blew flowers and reddish white flowred thinne leafed and dwarfe narrow leafed T. is hot and dry Park 30. V. A decoction made with figgs and gargled in the mouth and throat ripeneth and breaketh the tumors and impostumes of the mouth and throat and h. the difficulty of swallowing c. by cold rheumes the same made with figges water hony and rue and d. h. the inflammation of the lungs old coughs shortnesse of breath and the obstructions of the breast The syrupe or juyce taken with the syrupe of vineger purgeth by stoole clammy flegme and driveth forth wormes if eaten with figgs The distilled water d. operates as the rest but not so speedily Hedge hyssope K. As the common broad leaved and grasse Poley T. Are hot and dry and the 1. only is used in medicine V. scrup 1. taken mightily purgeth waterish grosse and slimie humors and chollerick so eaten in a sallad or the decoction d. Boiled in wine and d. it h. all fevers and dropsies and such like diseases proceeding of cold and watery causes The extraction given with the powder of cinamon and a little of the juyce of calamint h. tertian and quotidian fevers Park Common hyssop in ptysan's expectorates flegme ap with sugar it h. green wounds and with hony salt and cummin-seed it h. the bitings of adders decoct with oile and ap it h. the itching of the head the oile h. numnesse it h. wind and agues K. As the tufted c. The hedge hys kills wormes h. ulcers prevents putrefaction and opens obstructions I. Jacke by the hedge Alliaria P. It groweth by garden hedges by walls c. T. Fl chiefely in June and July it 's used as sauce in Aprill N. Rima Maria. Pes asininus Alliastrum Gesn JAcke by the hedge Ger. T. is hot and dry fine 2 di much lesse than garlick V. The leaves stamped serve for sauce with salt fish The leaves also are boiled in clysters against the paine of the collick and stone they easing paine and wasting the wind Bor Cent 1. Obs 22. Also it 's effectuall against the plague Park It warmeth the stomack and c. digestion the juyce thereof boiled with hony is thought to be as good as Erysimum hedge mustard for the cough to expectorate flegme d. and ap it h. the mother the leaves h. ulcers of the leggs Mac. It h. gangreens and the sphacelus Trag. It h. the sciatica or hip-gout in clysters as an errhine it h. the lethargy S. James's-wort Jacobaea P. Every where in untilled places somewhat moist T. Fl In July and August and are then carried away N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Diosc quorundam Herba S. Jacobi Flos. Cineraria Argentea S. James his wort Ger J. K. as the common narrow leafed broad leafed and sea ragwort T. Is hot and dry 2° bitter and clensing V. It h. green wounds and filthy tetters it clenseth and healeth them the juyce being tempered with hony and may butter and boiled to a salve Boiled in hoggs grease to an ointment it h. old aches and paines in the armes hipps and leggs The decoction gargarized wasteth and healeth inflammations and swellings of the throat the leaves stamped small and boiled with some hoggs grease unto the consumption of the juyce adding some mastick and olibanum then strained and ap h. the sciatica Prosper Alpin The Aegyptians use its decoction against the stone and to helpe old obstructions especially those of the wombe also coldnesse strangulation barrennesse and inflation thereof brings down the courses the bath of the leaves and flowers h. those that are troubled with the mother Park K. as the Hungarian round leafed hoary lesser sea and broad leafed sea rag-wort V. It stops catarrhes and rheumes falling on the eyes nose or lungs The juyce h. fistula's Col It h. the squinancy and Kings evill and the staggers in horses Bauh It operates as Groundsell It h. wounds inflammations and fistula's Jewes-thorne Paliurus * P. It groweth in Lybia c. T. It budds in the spring continues not green N. Rhamnus tertius Diosc Christ's thorne where with he was crowned Jewes-thorne Ger. T. the leaves and root doe evidently binde and cutt V. The seed h. the stone and removeth tough and slimie humors out of the chest and lungs Diosc The decoction of the leaves and roots stops the belly provokes urine and h. the poyson and bitings of serpents The root stamped and ap consumeth the phymata and oedemata The seed is a remedy for the cough Park T. V. It 's like the Bucks-thorne Aet The fruit h. the excretion of the breast and lungs Gal The leaves h. fluxes the fruit incideth so Bauhinus Platerus c. Indian hop-like purger Carlo sancto * P. It groweth in Mexico T. The time is not observed N. It hath not any Synonymous names Indian purger Park T. is hot and dry initio 2 di V. The barke of the root being a little chewed is an apophlegmatisme by which catarrhes and distillations are
the wounded sinews and members out of joynt and h. the morphew wrinkles and deformities of the face Stamped with vineger the leaves of henbane and wheat meale it h. hot swellings of the secret parts The roots boiled in wine ap h. cornes d. with mead they purge out unprofitable bloud Mountain lillies K. as the great and small T. V. are not yet used in physick The other Lillies K. as the red of Constantinople the Byzantine purplish sanguine coloured the light red and vermilion Byzantine many flowred T. V. are of as little use as the former The narrow leafed reflex lillies K. as the red the yellow mountain with the spotted flowers and unspotted T. V. are thought to agree with the other lillies The Persian lilly T. V. serveth for ornament to the garden but is as yet of no known physicall use Lilly in the valley K. as the common and red T. are hot dry ● The flowers distilled with wine and d. the quantity of a spoonfull restore speech unto those that have a dumb palsie h. the apoplexie and gout and comfort the heart strengthen the memory and h. inflammations of the eyes being dropped thereinto The flowers being put into a glasse and set in a hill of ants close stopped for one months space there shall be a liquor that appeaseth the pain of the gout being applyed Water lilly K. as the white yellow small white and dwarfe T. The roots and seed dry and bite V. That with yellow fl stoppeth the laske bloudy flix and gonorrhoea That with white flowers is of greater force and stoppeth the whites d. in red wine they clense the morphew h. the alopecia steeped in tarre and the morphew in water sc the white for the first and the black root for the other Theoph. Stamped and ap they stop bleeding The flowers of the white h. the infirmities of the head c. by heat The root of the yellow h. hot diseases of the kidnies and bladder and the gonorrhoea The root and seed of the great water Lilly d. h. venery or the powder taken in broth drying the sperme The conserve of the flowers operates as the former and h. burning feavers The oile of the flowers refrigerateth causeth sleep and preventeth venereous dreames the temples of the head palmes of the hands the feet and breast being anointed for the one and the genitors for the other The green leaves of the great water Lilly ap to the back h. the gonorrhoea being renewed thrice a day The yellow Lilly with the day Lilly T. Is referred to the Asphodills V. Diosc A pessary of the root with hony brings forth water and bloud S tamp●d with the leaves and ap it h. hot swellings inflammations and burnings Park K. as the water lilly of Aegypt c. T. V. the leaves and flowers are cold and moist Limon-tree Malus Limonia * P. In the sea coasts of Italy and Spain c. T. It 's alwayes green and bearing fruit N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Limas Limera Hisp The first notes the fruit the second the tree Limon tree Ger. T. The pap is soure cold and dry with thinnesse of parts V. The distilled water of the whole fruit drawen out by a glasse still h. tetters and blemishes of the skin and maketh the face faire and smooth d. it provoketh urine dissolveth and expelleth the stone Vnc. 2. of the juice mixt with the spirit of wine or aqua vitae d. in the fit of an ague h. the shaking and h. the ague at thrice using the patient being covered warme to cause sweat so unc 1. sem of the distilled water taken The seed killeth wormes the syrrup h. burning fevers and infectious diseases so Vntz. For. Val. de Tar. Joub Aug. Tab. Pisan Ficin It comforteth the heart cooleth the inward parts cutteth and attenuateth Park The rind and juice come neer unto the property of the Citron but it 's weaker to resist poyson venome or infection yet the juyce being sharper cooleth more The juyce of unripe Limmons d. with malmesy expelleth the stone killeth wormes A peece of gold being steeped 24. houres in the juyce thereof and it d. in wine with the powder of Angelica roots h. those that are infected with the plague The distilled water killeth lice the juice used at sea preventeth the scurvy and h. thirst Riol The syrrup h. putrefactions and distempers of the bloud Col. The juyce taken every morning with white wine sugar strengtheneth the heart stomack and head it h. melancholy The rind h. the stench of the mouth The juice h. staines in linnen Line-tree Tilia P. In gardens and woods T. Fl. in May the fruit is ripe in Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Philyra Teia Hisp Linden-tree Line-tree Ger. K. as the male and female T. The barke and leaves are of a temperate heat somewhat dry and astringent V. The leaves boiled in smiths water with allome and a little hony h. sores in childrens mouths The leaves boiled till tender and stamped very small with hogs grease the powder of fenugreek lineseed h. hot swellings and c. maturation of impostumes ap very hot The flowers h. paines of the head of a cold cause dizzinesse apoplexie epilepsie and not only the flowers but the distilled water also Theoph. The leaves are sweet and are fodder for cattle but the fruit can be eaten of none Park The coales make gun-powder being quenched in vineger they dissolve clotted bloud The juice of the barke steeped ap h. burnings The distilled water of the barke h. against fretting humors that c. the bloudy flux The coales h. the haemoptysis Lions-leafe Leontopetalon * P. Among corne in Italy Candy c. T. It flowreth in winter as affirmeth Pet. Bellon N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pes Leoninus Brumaria Lions-leafe Ger. Gal. It 's hot and dry 3° and digesting V. Diosc The root taken in wine h. the bitings of serpents and easeth the paine It 's used in clisters for them that are troubled with the sciatica so Trag. Plin. Bauh Park The root ap h. the sciatica also it cleanseth and healeth old filthy ulcers Rauwolf The inhabitants of Aleppo use the powder of the old and greater roots thereof to take spots out of their garments by rubbing them therewith Liquorice Glycyrrhiza P. In Germany France Spain and in gardens when planted T. Fl. in July the seed is ripe in September N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dulcis radix Liquiritia Herba Scythica Liquorice Ger. K. as the hedghog and common T. The root is sweet temperate hot somewhat binding and moist the bark is somewhat bitter and hot V. The root h. the hoarsnesse and roughnesse of the throat and breast openeth the lungs ripeneth the cough and expectorateth flegme so the Rob or juice and the ginger bread made of the juice with ginger other spices h. all infirmities of the lungs and breast The juice h. the heat of the stomack and mouth d. with wine and raisins it h. the
sage with the Syrian sage leafed mullein T. are dry and operate as sage V. Diosc The leaves stamped and ap as a pultis h. burnings scaldings Bor. Cent. 1. Obs 27. The leaves of mullein bruised and ap h the stingings of serpents Park K. as the black and jagged V. d. It h. the cramp with sage marjerome and cammomile fl ap The distilled water of the flowers h. hot gouts the powder h. the collick Mustard Sinapi P. It groweth wild in most places T. It may be sown in the spring it 's ripe in July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aristoph Thlaspi Plinii Saurion Mustard Ger J. K. as the garden field white and small wilde T. Gal. The seed is hot and dry 40. it doth attenuate and attract V. the seed pounded with vineger is a good sauce with grosse meats peptick corroborating the stomack and provoking appetite It h. those that are short winded and stuffed in the breast with tough flegme from the braine Chewed in the mouth it h. the tooth-ach A gargarisme made with the seed hony vineger h. the swellings of the uvula and almonds of the throat d. with water and hony it provoketh the termes and urine The seed used as an errhine is ptarmick and h. women sick of the mother Ap. with figgs it h. the epilepsie and lethargy also the sciatica and all paines of a cold cause It is mixt with drawing plaisters and consumeth nodes It h. those that have lost their haire and taketh away spots c. by bruises The seed of the white mustard is used in antidotes as in the Electuary de ovo c. Treacle mustard K. as the common mithridate knaves Bowyers Grecians clownes buckler and small buckler T. The seeds are hot and dry fine tertii V. The seed eaten purgeth choller provoketh the termes and breaketh the inward apostumes In clysters it h. the sciatica and operates as the other mustard feed H. too much taken it c. a hypercatharsis and is hurtfull to women great with child Candy mustard K. as the common and small white flowred T. The seed is hot and dry fine 2di Treacle mustard K. as the round leafed Hungary churles peasants of Narbone yellow white Clusius his small and small rock T. Is hot and dry fine 2di sc the seed V. the seeds are sharpe and biting breake inward impostumes bring down the flowers kill the foetus and h. the sciatica They purge choller upward downward unc 2. sem being taken They are m. in counterpoysons as treacle mithridate c. Wooddy mustard K. as the hoary small thorny bushy and Ivy. T. V. They may be referred to the kindes of thlaspies Toures mustard K. as the common great gold of pleasure and treacle wormseed T. are hot and dry 3° V. Diosc The oilie fatnesse of the seed of the third levigates the skin Ruel The juice h ulcers of the mouth The seed of the last stamped and d. killeth and expelleth wormes Park The common is antepileptick Pem. It h. the malignity of mushromes and venime agues palsie epilepsie and c. lust and concoction ap it h. cold tumors Park The distilled water is cosmeticall The Arabian h. flegme The rest as treacle Mustard Myrtle-tree Myrtus P. It groweth naturally in Italy in fertill places T. Fl. with the rose the fruit is ripe in Autumne N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The berries Myrtilli offic Myrtle-tree Ger. J. K. as the common great Spanish strange white berried little and wild Spanish T. it consisteth of contrary substances having a certaine subtile heate with a predominant earthinesse so dryeth much The leaves fruite buds and juice doe bind both d. and ap V. they stop the haemoptysis and all other issues of bloud The bath hereof h. the reds and whites The fomentation stops the haemorrhoides they h. laskes and the bloudy flix ap with barley meale they quench the fiery heat of the eyes ap they h. all inflammations in the beginning and paines by strokes or straines They are wholesome for watery stomacks The fruit and leaves dryed provoke urine The decoction bathed h. luxations ruptures and the outward parts exulcerated it h. tetters scoureth dandriffe and the sores of the head it maketh the haires black and hindreth their falling d. fasting it prevents drunkennesse and h. the poyson of any venemous beast so the dryed juice of the leaves Lonic T. the berries are cold and earthy V. the syrrup thereof h. old coughs the exulceration of the lungs and strengthens the stomack Lugd. d. in wine it h. the biting of the scorpion the decoction of the leaves h. purulent eares being instilled The leaves stamped and ap with water h. parts ●hat are troubled with fluxions The powder of the dryed leaves sprinkled on the body restraineth sweat h. the falling down of the matrix and diseases of the fundament The oile that is made of the berries by expression is drying and astringent Mac. The berries colour the haire black Riol The oile anointed h. diseases of the rarity of the skin as immoderate sweating with the powder of dryed roses Weck Wild Myrtle h. the strangury head ach and Kings evill Col. The fr. h. the trembling of the heart and stinging of serpents d. it h. a stinking breath and ulcers with wine Aquapend The oile is anodyne and h. luxations Park K. as the greatest open laurell strange broad leased close and double fl V. ap it h. S. Anthonies fire and d. prevents the danger of mushroomes The excrescence is strongest and operates as Acacia N Navell-wort Vmbilicus Veneris P. The first groweth on stone walls the 2d 3d and 4th on the Alpes T. They flourish in winter and fl in the beginning of Spring N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acetabulum Herba coxendicum NAvell-wort Ger. J. K. as the small first and second and the Italian bastard with the wal jagged water penny-wort T. is moist and somewhat cold and binding V. It cooleth and repelleth scoureth and consumeth Water penny-wort is hot and ulcerating like crowfoot The bastard Italian partakes with the true in cold and moisture V. The juice of wall penny wort h. all inflammations and hot tumors as the erysipelas or S. Anthonies fire it h. kibed heeles being bathed therewith and the leaves ap The leaves and root eaten break the stone provoke urine and h. the dropsie The water penny-wort is dangerous and noisome unto sheep and other cattell that feed thereon That of the sea K. as the common and one summers navell-wort T. is diuretick not much hot but exceeding dry V. It provoketh urine and digesteth the sliminesse in the joynts Diosc drach 2. d. in wine expell much urine out of their bodyes that have the dropsie ap h. the gout Park K. as the spotted and small red flowred T. V. are cold and moist like house-leek That of the wall h. hot stomacks and livers The distilled water h. sore kidnies paines of the bowels piles gout sciatica and Kings evill