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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

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Matthiolus's description the mountain and rosemary leafed Cistus ledon T. Gal. Ladanum is hot fine primi having a little astriction it 's of thin parts and therefore softneth also it digesteth and concocteth V. Ladanum h. the infirmities of the mother and keepeth haires from falling wasting away putrifyed humors Diosc It doth bind heale souple and open m. with wine myrrhe and oile of myrtles ap it keepeth haires from falling or laid on mixed with wine also it makes the scarres of wounds well coloured m. with meade or oile of roses it h. the paines of the cares being dropped in A fume thereof draweth forth the after birth and h. the hardnesse of the matrix it's good to be mixed with mollifying and anodyne plasters d. with wine it stoppeth the laske and provoketh urine It 's very good also put into pomanders c. Note the best is sweet somewhat green fat easily waxeth soft is full of gum not easily broken and without sand Park K. As the sweet mountaine V. as the rest the juice of the dwarse d. and ap h. poison the distilled water is cosmeticke The narrow and broad leafed male V. as the first so the female K. as the annuall c. Gum cistus K. as that of Lob. c. V. h. coughs and is stopping Hone-wort Selinum Sii foliis P. It groweth in clay ground among corne T. It begins to flower in July the seed is ripe in August N. Sium terrestre Goodteri Selinum segetale Park Corne Parsley Hone-wort Ger. T. V. It h. the Hone being aswelling so called take one handfull of the green leaves and stamp them put to them about halfe a pint of beer straine it and drink it so continue to drink the like quantity every morning fasting till the swelling do abate which will be in a week or two Park T. the seed is like parsley in forme and as hot in taste V. It 's neer of the same property with Parsley Hony-wort Cerinthe P. They grow not wild in England T. Fl. from May to August and perish at winter N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theoph. Maru herba Dod. Cerinthe Plinii Hony-wort Ger. J. K. as the great small and rough T. are cold V. and not experimented Park K. as the greater yellow and red greater yellow or purple and lesser yellow or white T. are all of a temperate quality between cold and hot but rather inclining to cold and somewhat astringent V. It stops bleeding at the mouth or nose immoderate fluxes of women and fluxes of the belly the herbe being boiled and d. The juice of the herb with a little saffron dissolved therein h. bleared watering eyes is used in soule ulcers after they are clensed to h. to incarnate them especially such as are in the tender parts of the body some do use it in steed of borage and buglosse as a remedy Plin. Virg. Bees are much delighted with the flowers being very sweet Hops Lupulus P. In fat and fruitfull ground the wild among thornes T. The flowers are gathered in Aug. and Sept. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lupus salictarius reptitius Vitis Septent Lob. Hops Ger. T. the flowers are hot and dry 2° They stuffe the head and hurt it with their strong smell so likewise the leaves which also open and clense V. The buds in spring are used to be eaten in sallads and are of small nourishment yet are good for the intralls procuring urine and keeping the body soluble The leaves tender stalkes and flowers open the liver and spleen clense the bloud and h. long agues Boiled and d. in whay they h. scabs and filth of the skin The juice is stronger purgeth flegme and choller and dropped into the eares h. the corruption thereof The flowers season beere and too many are ill for the head The decoction of the flowers makes bread light The decoction of hops d. openeth the liver spleen and kidnies and purgeth the bloud by urine so the juice purgeth the belly of choller Thus appeareth the wholsomenesse of beere above ale Park the tops roots h. the French disease and breakings out in the body terters ring-wormes and spreading sores the ague itch and morphew The decoction of the flowers tops d. expells poyson drach sem of the seed d. in powder killeth wormes and bringeth down the courses The flowers and heads used in baths h. the swellings of the mother and strangury The juice dropped into the eares h. sores and the stench thereof The syrrup h. the jaundise and head-ach c. by heat of the intralls and agues The decoction h. alopecia's The wild are best Fernel It 's hot 1° dry 2° and operates as Fumitory Riol The syrrup h. the diseases of melancholy Freitag and choller Hore-hound Marrubium P. In untilled places neer old walls paths c. T. Fl. in July and Aug. in the second yeare N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Prasium The wild is called Stachys Hore-hound Ger. K. as the white snow white Spanish and Candy T. Gal. is hot 2° dry 3° and bitter V. common horehound boiled in water and d. openeth the liver and spleen clenseth the breast and lungs h. old coughs paines of the side spitting of bloud ptysicks and ulcerations of the lungs Boiled in wine and d. it provoketh the termes expelleth the secundine and dead child and h. hard labour A syrrup made of the green leaves and sugar h. old coughs wheezings of the lungs and h. their consumption also it h. against poyson the bitings of serpents the leaves ap with hony clense filthy ulcers stop the pearle in the eyes so the juice hardned in the sun m. with wine hony dropped into the eyes it cleareth them Drawn into the nostrils it clenseth the yellownesse of the eyes and stops the watering of them Wild horehound K. as the common wild stinking thorny Portugall Germander and hyssop leafed Ironwort T. are biting and bitter hot 3° The stinking Stachys Fuchsii and Sideritides are hot and dry 1° Johns V. The decoction of the leaves d. draweth down the menses secundine It keeps wounds from inflammation and speedily healeth them also it stops fluxes and defluxions being dry moderately binding sc the stinking hore-hound It h. the bitings of mad dogs Water hore-hound T. Is cold and very astringent yet little used Black or stinking hore-hound K. as the common and long leafed T. is hot and dry of a sharp cleansing faculty V. being stamped with salt and ap it cureth the biting of a mad dog The leaves rosted in hot embers waste hard knots in or about the fundament it also clenseth foule filthy ulcers Borel Cent. 4. Obs 14. The tops of white hore-hound infused in white wine all night and d. for 3. dayes provoke the menses h. cachexies ill colours the stomack and c. appetite Park K. as the black French V. Matth. They h. bad livers the itch and jaundise and kill wormes Marsh hore V. Is traumatick and d. h. agues
infirmities of the liver and chest sores of the bladder and diseases of the kidnies Being melted under the tongue it quencheth thirst h. the stomack and green wounds applyed so the decoction of the roots being fresh The powder of the dryed root ap h. the web in the eye and ulcers of the mouth It h. hoarsnesse difficulty of breathing inflammations of the lungs the pleurifie spitting of bloud consumption and rottennesse of the lungs and all infirmities of the chest it h. inflammations tempereth the sharpnesse of humors concocteth them and c. easy spitting The decoction h. the kidnies bladder exulcerated the strangury all infirmities proceeding of sharp salt and biting humors Theoph. With this and mares milke cheese the Scythians were reported to be able to liue 11. or 12 dayes With hony it h. ulcers Sala The essence h. the diseases of all the cavities of the body c. by sharp and salt humors In a lohoch with rose water and gum-tragacanth it expectorateth flegme and h. thin distillations The English is lesse astringent Col. Liquorice boiled in fair water with some Maidenhaire and figgs makes a good ●rinke for those that have a dry cough to digest flegme and to expectorate it it h. the ptysick consumption and all griefes of the breast and lungs It 's also used against colds in cattell Liver-wort Hepatica P. In shadowie and moist places on rocks c. T. It bringeth forth its stars and leaves in June N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lichen The nouble Herba trinitatis Trifolium nobile Liver-wort Ger. K. as the ground small with starry and round heads and stone Liv. T. Stone liverwort is cold dry somewhat binding V. It h. inflammations of the liver hot and sharpe agues and tertians of choller Diosc ap it stops bleeding h. inflammations tetters and ringwormes It h. the yellow jaundise and inflammations of the tongue Noble Liver-wort K. as the common red and that with double flowers T. are cold and dry with astriction V. They h. the weakenesse of the liver c. by heat cooling and strengthening it Bapt. Sard. A spoonfull of the powder of the root d. certain dayes together with wine or broth h. the enterocele White Liver-wort K. as the common and double flowred grasse of Parnassus T. Is dry and of subtile parts V. The decoction of the leaves d. doth dry and strengthen the moist stomack stoppeth the belly and h. desire to vomit Boiled in wine or water and d. especially the seed provoketh urine and breaketh and expelleth the stone Brunfels It h. all hot impostumes Park The first h. the gonorrhoea and whites the rest are for pleasure Loose-strife Lysimachia P. In moist meadowes and by water sides T. Fl. in June and July often untill Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Salicaria Coroneola Loose-strife Ger. J. K. as the yellow small yellow yellow with branched flowers tree primrose spiked codded rose-bay narrow leafed blew hooded wild and small purple willow herb T. The yellow which is most usefull is cold dry and very astringent V. Diosc The juice d. h. the bloudy flix it h. green wounds and stoppeth bloud so also as an errhine so Fuch The smoke of the burned herb driveth away serpents and killeth gnats Plin. It dyeth the haire yellow d. it h. the dysentery Made into a salve it cooleth and healeth wounds As a pessary it stoppeth the termes The others have not been experimented Park K. as the round headed yellow V. as the first the juice h. sore mouths and the secret parts The small purple fl V. as the first so the codded and is hot and dry 2° The distilled water of the spiked h. hurts of the eyes scars and the quinsey Lovage Levisticum P. In gardens where it groweth very much T. Fl. in July and August and then seedeth N. Ligusticum Siler m●ntanum Lovage Ger. The common T. Is hot and dry 3° V. The roots h. all inward diseases and expell ventosities especially of the stomack the seed warmeth it and h. digestion Ant. Musa The Gennes did formerly use it in their meates as we doe pepper now The distilled water cleareth the sight and taketh away all spots lentills freckles and rednesse of the face if they be often washed therewith Bastard Lovage with the horse fennell T. This plant with his seed is hot and dry 3° V. The seeds of Siler d. with wormwood wine c. the menses h. suffocation of the matrix and cause it to returne to its naturall place The root stamped with hony and ap h. old sores and covereth bare bones with flesh It 's diuretick and h. paines of the intralls of crudity It h. concoction consumeth winde and h. the swelling of the stomack the root is not so effectuall as not being so hot and dry Senn. It c. sweat h. the womb and c. the termes Crescent It 's hot and dry 2° diuretick extenuating and opening and h. the griefes of the stomack Park K. as the Germane V. The first d. h. agues The last h. the quinsey and eyes Penot The salt h. the stone Lung-wort Pulmonaria P. Vpon old trees rocks and shadowie places T. It flourisheth especially in the summer time N. Lichen The golden Corchorus Dalechampii Lung-wort Ger. J. K. as the tree sea with the round leafed oister weed sea thongs sea wracks jagged grasse sea girdle sea ragged staffe and hairy riverweed T. Lung-wort is cold and dry V. The powder d. with water h. inflammations and ulcers of the lungs bloudy and green wounds ulcers in the privities and stoppeth the reds and all fluxes of choller upwards or downewards Fried with eggs as a tansie and eaten it strengtheneth the weaknesse of the back The powder with salt given to cattle h. their cough and broken-windednesse French Lung-w K. As the broad-leafed narrow leafed with the golden mouse-eare T. are temperate and a little astringent V. The decoction or the distilled water of the first d. and ap mundifies and h. green wounds it h. inflammations and hot distempers of the heart stomack and liver The juyce dropped into the eares h. them if troubled with a pricking paine or noise Trag The water operates as that of succory Pen The 2d h. whitelowes and diseases of the lungs Cam The 3d. if the Costa of Camerarius h. the pthisis given in conserve syrupe or powder or used in broths The other Lung-wort or cow-slipps of Jerusalem K. as the spotted and buglosse Cowslipps T. Is of the temperature of great comfrey yet the root is more drying and binding V. The leaves are used among pot-herbes The roots are thought to h. the infirmities of the lungs and ulcers thereof and to be of the like force with the great Comfrey Park Cowslips of Jer. boiled and d. h. the haemoptysis Cam The 1. is binding abstersive and glutinating Lupine Lupinus P. In a sandy and bad soile hardly in tilled places T. They are planted in Aprill and have fruit 2 or 3 times N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
added which may be incorporated with wax storax Indian balsame the mucilage of tragacanth with a little turpentine when need and a little rose water and so made up into small balls 34. Preparations are made by powdering the more hard matter sprinkling thereon some cordiall water sc rose water for the most part and afterwards drying it in the shadow Those things that are more solid are to be calcined 35. Powders and species are made by triture or levigation and the lesse if of a volatile substance and apart if of a diverse hardnesse 36. Fomentatorie little baggs may be made of any in●ided or contused vegetables sowed up in small bagges and are then to be applyed warme either dry or moist 37. Salts are made by incineration maceration transcolation and evaporation or crystallization 38. Wash-balls are made of sope especially that of Venice with which sweet things finely powdered are to be mixed with some fragrant water as of roses c. 39. Spirits if more volatile are made by a more gentle fire as by BM vel cinerum The more fixed by a retort and stronger fire and are made of animals minerals and vegetables and the more volatile of leaves flowers fruits seeds and spices but the more fixed out of woods barks c. The first differ not from distilled waters but that they are lesse flegmatick and separated by rectification after contusion and fermentation 40. Juices are drawn seldome out of animals but chiefly out of vegetables yet not all as those that are oleous and more dry and are made by contusion expression clarification filtration or digestion and the lesse succulent by maceration or elixation first 41. Sinapismes are made of mustard seed cresses nettles sowbread bryony squills garlick euphorbium cantharides c. with the pulp of figgs leaven hony oxymel sope c. And Vesicatories of cantharides prepared sc the heads and wings being cut off 30 being powdered and of sharp leaven 1 ounce with sharp vineger if need 42. Suppositories are used for divers indications but chiefly the dejectory of which 1. the more gentle are made of lard an open figge candle wax meat boiled in water stalkes and roots as of beets cabbage blites mercury c. 2. The meane with a certaine acrimonie are made of hony boiled thick sope and boiled tupentine to which sometimes is added mousedung salt or sugar 3. The morestrong and purging are made of agarick aloes hier● picra hellebore scammonie c. in the powder of which the suppositorie may be rolled Here the proportion of hony is 1 ounce of powder more gently purging 1 dram if more strongly halfe a scruple halfe a dram or 1 dram They are also at last to be annointed with oile or butter Pessaries and nascals are made in the forme of a finger of hysterick remedies which are to be put into a long linnen bag or made up with picked wooll or cotton or incorporated with hony laudanum galbanum wax juices c. they are in figure like suppositories but thicker and longer Roots also may be used in stead thereof as of madder cyperus lillies c. 43. Syrups are made of some medicamentous liquor decoction infusion juice distilled water or vineger which being clarifyed sugar or hony for preservation sapour are to be added then boiled and clarifyed it 's to be inspissated to the consistence of more liquid hony The proportion of liquor to sugar or hony is almost double or treble Hereunto belong physicall honies and syrupized Robs 44. Tinctures of which the more liquid are nothing else than extractions without an abstracted menstruum the more solid are powders without combustion remaining out of the liquid tinctures the menstruum being abstracted and are made after the manner of extracts 45. Trochiskes are made of all kinds of remedies which being powdered are made up in some convenient viscous liquor as in some mucilages with tragacanth juices syrups c. Hereunto belong sumale candles made of odoriferous powders with tragacanth storax c. as also troches for the same not differing in the way of making 46. Inunctory balsames liniments and unguents hardly differ in their preparation but consistence which in the first is more liquid like hony in the second a little harder and scarce fluid the third more hard and lesse fluid and are made of oile butter fats marrow rosins mucilages juices c. as also of powders and things that may be melted To 1. ounce of oile is used of fats almost 1 or 3 drames in liniments 1. dram or a half in balsams 1 dram a half or half an ounce in ointments with 1. dram of powder c. Also balsames are without wax liniments have a little or none as 1. dram to 1 ounce of oile but unguents have more and sometimes gummes and are made by mixture or liquefaction 10. The Dosologie or quantities thereof I. As Ingredients So 1. the doses of Herbs as used 〈…〉 are proportioned by handfulls in clysters and decoctions 1 or 2. for one time so if dry in externall and great remedies but in others as powders for the head and stomack c. from one dram to hafe an ounce or an ounce 2. Flowers if dry are measured by weight and measure if fresh they are proportioned by measure only the dry in antidotes and more noble compositions from a scruple to two drams as in cordiall capitall and stomachick powders and unguents but in syrrups apoz emes and other decoctions from halfe a pugill to 2 3 or more as also in bathes and clysters not being efficacious therein unlesse in a great quantity when fresh they are more effectuall to refrigerate humect or loosen and are therefore used only in syrrups and apozemes and other decoctions of the like nature and that from halfe a pugill to more and are not weighed except for conserves 3. Fruits if great whole and discrete are prescribed by number and not weight except some part thereof only be to be used and in exact compositions And in some the diversification is to be made according to the scope and use as prunes tamarinds c. for if used to refrigerate or alter choller a little number will suffice as two or three couple but tenne or twenty if to purge so of figgs c. in inward remedies for in bathes if to cleanse and relaxare they may be put in in a greater quantity sc 50 couple and loosening detergent and emollient fruits from 10 couple to 20. The refrigerating and lenient in injections agaist the inflammation of the intestines to 10. couple as prunes sebestens and tamarinds so also the sweeter fruits in clysters easing paine lenient loosening detersive and drawing downe wormes so also the astringent in clysters for fluxes but in a lesse quantity in altering decoctions least they should cause obstructions The detergent in loosening remedies from 20 couple to forty and in the altering to 5 or 6 couple but in pectorall decoctions or syrrups in a mean quantity or to
seedeth in June to the end of Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Polyspermon Cassani Bassi All-seed or Arrach wild T. Gal. is moist 2° cold 1° see orach Col. K. as the great common wild narrow leafed and wild Arrach with so much seed that it is called All seed V. The common wild Arraches are neere as cold as the garden sorts but more drying serving chiefly for inflammations being applied outwardly thereunto applied they coole apostumes h. S. Anthonies fire and such like maladies so Park applied they dissolve tumors with vineger nitre ease paine of the Goute and cure scabbed nailes Almond tree Amygdalus P. Hot regions any where if planted T. Fl. with the Peach the fruit is ripe in Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nuces graecae Caton the fruit amygdalum Almonds Ger T. the sweet dried are moderately hot the bitter are hot and drie 2° and fat V. the sweet are nourishing grosse when fresh and bind the belly The milke h. the lask the bloody flixe and plurisie opening concocting and cleansing they h. the chest and lungs and raise up rotten humors taken before meat they stop the belly with barley water h. feavers the oyle of the sweet Almonds h. all aches and plurisies d. after phlebotomy and stone of the kidnies it lubrifies the ureters opens the belly h. collick and womens throwes smoothes the face and clenseth the skin Bitter Almonds attennuate and open the liver and spleen h. pain of the side open the body provoke urine bring downe the menses h. strangury with a looch clense the lungs and with starch stay haemoptysis 5 or 6 taken fasting keep from drunkennesse they mundify the skin ulcers with hony h. the bitings of mad doggs and ap with vineger h. head-ach cough and shortnesse of wind the oile d. is diuretick so ap Diosc the gum healeth bindeth h. haemoptysis paines of the stone sharpnesse of urine decoct with licorish and tetters dissolved in vineger Park V. the oile with powder of sugar candy h dry coughs and women after travel the powder of the cakes smoothes the skin the bitter with amylum and mints h. haemoptysis Aloes Aloe P. India Arabia Aegypt Asia Spaine and nigh the Sea T. It is alwaies green Fl in the summer months N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Amphibion Sempervivum Sedum Aloes Ger J. K. as the common and prickly T. the juyce is hot 2° drie 3° very bitter emplasticke and something binding ap V. it purgeth the belly comforteth the stomack it purgeth more if not washed if so it more strengthneth the stomack and purgeth choller out of the next passages it preserveth from putrefaction killeth wormes h. stinking breath and openeth the piles taken in a small q. it c. monthly courses and openeth obstructions drach 1. taken It helps wounds clenseth ulcers as in the fundament c. it s put into medicines which stanch bleeding h. the eyes troubled with roughnesse and itching with vineger oyle of roses ap it h. the head-ach and with wine the falling of the haire with wine and hony it h. swellings and ulcers of the mouth with hony the spots coming of stripes the juyce aloë succotrina purgeth phlegmatick cold and cholerick humours in plethorick bodies drach 2. taken in a stewed prune expell superfluous humors h. the jaundise and all fluxes of blood so ap Lignum aloes T. is moderately hot and drie of somewhat subtil parts taken it h. moist stomacks and weake livers the dysenterie and plurisies is cordiall chewed it perfumes the breath if burnt the roome Park V. the leaves of the herb h. scalding the juyce ap with oyle of wormewood to the navill kills wormes The American T. is bitter and sharpe the juyce h. wounds and old sores with wormewood the wounds of Serpents the fume taken h. the French disease Anemonie Anemone P. They grow not wild in England or rarely T. Fl in Jan to the end of April N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Herba venti Ranunculus sylvarum Leimonia Th. Anemonie Ger J K. as the purple double scarlet great double of Bythinia and single chesnut broad leaved double yellow storcks-bill Matthiolus's white three leafed poppy wind flower T. are all sharpe and binding V. the juyce snuffed up into the nose mightily purgeth the head the root chewed is an apophlegmatisme In collyries it easeth inflamed eyes the juyce clenseth corrosive ulcers the leaves and stalkes boyled and eaten cause milke provoke termes ease the leprosie in bathes The other Anemonies of Johns K. as the broad leaved skarlet the skarlet with the large flower broad leafed of Const small leaved with the sanguine flowre small leaved skarlet light purple small leaved whitish small leaved striped flesh-coloured small leaved double crimson and double darke purple Anemonie T. are hot and biting the juyce h. scarres of the eyes Trallian the flowers beaten in oyle ap cause haire to grow and agree with the 1. The wilde Ger J. K. as the yellow white double white wood and double purplish wood Anemonie T. V. agree with the garden Anemonies Col. the root chewed purgeth water and phlegme very forcibly therefore h. the Lethargy by spitting Park the leaves are used in the ointment martiatum h. cold distempers Anet Anethum P. Gardens and other places T. Fl and seedeth in Aug N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Anetum Dill So called by all Anet Ger. Gal. T. is hot fine 2di drie 〈…〉 the decoction of the dried tops 〈…〉 causeth milke h. windinesse 〈…〉 rine increaseth sperme and stayeth the hicket so smelled to or ap with wormewood wine Gal. the seed burnt and ap to moist ulcers healeth them as in the secret parts the oyle in which it is boyled is digesting and anodyne causeth sleepe concocteth humors and provoketh lust the fume of dill boyled in wine h. the suffocation of the mother Park T. it 's hot 3° drie 2° green drie 3° digesting V. boyled and d. it h. pains swellings stops the flux vomiting h. windinesse of the mother and much d. h. venery Angelica Angelica P. In gardens sc the 1. the rest in fields c. T. Fl in July and Aug. the roots perish after the seed N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 radix Spiritus S the last archangelica Angelica Ger J K. as the garden wilde and great wilde Ang T. especially that of the garden is hot drie 3° opening attennuating digesting and hydrotick V. the root of the garden Angelica h. poyson plague and all infections by cotrupt aire chewed in the mouth and that by urine and sweat it h. pestilent fevers drach 1 of the powder d. with thin wine the distilled water of card b. or of tormentil vineger or treacle it openeth the liver and spleen draweth down the termes and expelleth the secundine the root d. in wine h. the cold shivering of agues the root green h. the asthma by expectoration it h. surfeting loathing of meat c. concoction
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
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
pestilent severs in Bohemia the infusion is used for a common drinke The smoak of the leaves and wood drives away serpents and all infection of the aire The juyce of the leaves d. and ap with wine h. the bitings of the viper the ashes of the burned barke ap with water h. the scurse and filth of the skinne the pouder of the wood taken inwardly is deadly as some affirme yet is it contradicted by others the fume of the gum stopps flegmatick distillations of the head and rheume and raw humors in the intralls It killeth wormes stopps the menses haemorrhoides and haemoptysis it doth exiccate hollow ulcers and is sarcotick ap m. with oile of roses it h. chapps in the hands or seet m. with oile of line-seed it makes vernix which serveth to beautify pictures and iron Park K. as the great Sclavonian V. The fruit h. the bitings of vipers the strangury and dropsie so the lye d. Matth and h. the mother the berries h. all diseases by cold d. in wine so the oile the salt h. the scurvy Grul The oile of the berries d. from 5 to 10 dropps is diuretick Ivy. Hedera P. About walls and trees untilled and darke places T. It flourisheth in Autumne the berries in winter N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ground Ivy is called Corona terrae Chamaecissus Ivy. Ger. K. as the climbing or berried and barren or creeping T. Gal It hath contrary faculties sc an earthy binding and cold substance and a substance somewhat biring and when green a warme watery substance also V. The green leaves of Ivy boiled in wine h. old ulcers and virulent as also burnings and scaldings boiled in vineger ir h. bad spleenes the fl and fruit more effectually and h. burnings The juyce used as an errhine purgeth the head stopps the running of the eares and healeth their ulcers as also those of the nostrills if too sharpe adde oile of roses or sallad oile The gum of the old stocke killeth lice and is a psilothron being hot and burning Diosc 5 of the berries stamped and made hot in a pomegranat rinde with oile of roses and dropped into the contrary eare h. the toothache The berries make the haire black The leaves are good to be applied to issues attracting the humors and preventing inflammations being green The berries d. are diureticke and lithontriptick The leaves steeped in water 24 houres h. sore smarting and waterish eyes if bathed with the infusion ground Ivy. K. as the common and rocke alehoofe T. Is hot and dry bitter scouring and opening the obstructions of the intralls V. put into the eares it h. the ringing and deafenesse of the same Matth The juyce m. with verdigrease h. fistula's and hollow ulcers Diosc drach sem of the leaves d. in unc 4. sem of faire water for 40 or 50 daies h. the sciatica and in 6 or 7 dayes the yellow jaundise Gal. attributeth all the vertues to the flowers Ground-Ivy stamped with celandine and daisies an and strained adding a little sugar and rose water dropped into the eyes h. all inflammations spotts web itch smarting and any griefe what ever it h. though almost blind The herbs m. with a little ale and hony strained and injected into the eyes with a syringe h. the web in the eyes of beasts It also h. the griefes aforesaid tunned up in ale and h. rheumes The decoction stopps the termes Boiled in mutton broth it h. weake and aking backs Put into ointments it h. burnings and scaldings Park K. The Virginian ivy T. V. Is only for rarity Hieron unc 2. of the decoction of the 1. h. the swellings in the bodies of women Park K. as that of Lob and yellow berried Diosc A pugill of the fl d. in red wine twice a day stopps laskes Plin The berries h. the jaundise and kill wormes sc the white berries thereof Cam. The juice h. old paines of the head Matth. a cap made of the fresh leaves h. the sore heads of infants The lesser is lesse effectuall Ground Ivy is vulnerary The oile of the leaves h. the paines of the intralls K. Kings-speare Asphodelus Luteus P. In moist and marish places T. Fl in May and June the leaves are green in winter N. Hastula Regia Femina Dionysii Ded. KIngs-speare Ger. J. K. as the common Lancashire and true Lancashire T. V. is not used in meat or medicine so Dod. Fum The roots d. provoke urine Bauh The English of Lobel is used by virgins to colour their haire yellow sc the lye of the flowers Knap-weed Jacea P. The 2 first grow in fertile pastures the rest in gardens T. Fl in June and July the last in August N. Materfillon The filver Knap w. Aphyllanthes Dod. Knap-weed Ger. J. K. as the black great yellow mountaine white floured knobbed and rough headed T. are of the nature of scabious whereof they are kindes yet they are not so proper for the use of physick V. They h. swellings of the uvula as divells bit but not so effectually Silver-knapweed K. As the great little narrow leafed and thorny T. V. Are not used for meat or medicine yet the Stoebe of Diosc is usefull T. The seed and leaves are astringent V. The decoction injected h. dysenteries and purulent eares The leaves ap as a pultis h. bruises of the eyes and blacknesse and stop the flowing of bloud Park That of the sea is not used sc the Spanish The common is astringent and drying it h. fluxes and distillations it h. ruptures d. and ap fistula's and running sores and wounds The rest as those with divided leaves c. operate as scabious Knot-grasse Polygonum P. In barren and stony ground almost every where T. They are in flower and seed all the summer long N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Seminalis Sanguinaria Centumnodia Corrigiola Knot-grasse Ger. T. Gal is cold 2° and binding V. The juyce h. the haemoptysis and all issues of bloud as the pissing vomiting of bloud c. It h. the gonorrhoea and weaknesse of the back being fried with eggs like a tansie and eaten So also the decoction d. or the powder taken in a reare egge The herbe boiled in wine and hony h. ulcers and inflammations in the secret parts of both sexes adding a little allom and the parts bathed therewith Diosc It provoketh urine and h. the stillicidium when the urine is hot and sharpe It is with good successe given to swine when they will not eat their meat The other knotgrasses K. As the mountaine that of Valentia the small round leafed parsly-piert with the chick-weed breake-stone and small water saxifrage T. Are cold 2° dry 3° astringent incrassating The three last are hot 2° and of subtill parts but parsly-piert is lesse hot than the other two V. The leaves hereof with mouse eare an unc 1. dried bay herries turmerick cloves the seeds of the great burre the seeds in the berries of heppes or brier-tree fenugreeke an unc 1. the stone in
pestilentiall impostumes and carbuncles ap with rue salt peter and hony and h. cornes being first scarified ap with copperas and verdigrease it h. excrescencies the polypus and manginesse ap with vineger pepper and wine it h. scurfe and the falling of the haire Asa foetida is good for all the purposes aforesaid yet not so good as the Lacer of Cyrene it 's good also to be smelled to and to be applyed to the navells of women troubled with the rising of the mother Park K. as the French that of Alpinus V. That of Diosc boiled with vineger in the rind of a pomegranate h. against poison Gargled it h. the quinsey and draweth out horse-leeches with vineger d. in lye it h. cramps and c. the courses with myrrhe and pepper Lavender Lavendula P. In gardens in these cold countries T. They flower and flourish in June and July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nardus Italica Pseudonardus Lavandula Lavender Ger. K. as the common white flowred and spike T. Is hot and dry 3° of thin substance consisting of many airie and spirituall parts so h. cold diseases of the head that are sine materia V. The distilled water smelt unto or the temples and forehead bathed therewith h. those that have the eatalepsy a light migram the epilepsie and syncope in a body that is not plethorick or feverish The flowers picked from the knops m. with cinnamon nutmegs and cloves powdered and d. in the distilled water thereof h. panting and passions of the heart the vertigo swimming of the brain and members subject to the palsie A conserve of the flowers also h. the diseases aforesaid the quantity of a beane being taken first in a morning Bathing with the distilled water of the flowers h. those that are paralytick so also the oile of the flowers and oile olive made as oile of roses being anointed French lavender or stic kadove K. as the common jagged toothed and naked Staechas T. hath a little cold earthy substance so binding it also opens obstructions extenuateth scoureth and strengtheneth the intrals and whole body V. Diosc The decoction h. the difeases of the chest and is used in antidotes The flowers h. paines of the head and diseases thereof c. by cold as the apoplexie and epilepsie c. The decoction of the heads and fl d. opens the liver lungs milt mother bladder and all the inward parts driving forth corrupt humors and procuring urine Sea lavender K. as the common rock that with the indented lease hollow leased T. The seed is very astringent V. The seed powdered and d. in wine h. the collick strangury dysentery the overmuch flowing of womens termes and all other fluxes of bloud Lavender cotton T. The seed is bitter hot and dry 3° V. Plin. The herbe d. in wine h. the poison of all venemous beasts Given green or dry it killeth wormes so the seed and expelleth them and operates as effectually as worme seed Park V. Oile of spike h. cold and benummed parts and serves for persumes The dryed flowers comfort and dry the moisture of a cold braine Stickadove expells melancholly clenseth and strengt heneth the liver and inward parts Lavender cotton is used in remedies for cold disease Col. Lavender water d. h. lost speech The smell h. the sight it h. gripings c. by cold Laurell Laureola P. In mountaines rough shadowie and wooddy places T. Fl. in winter the fruit is ripe in May and June it 's alwayes green N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chamaedaphne Peplion Laufell Ger. K. as the Spurge Laurel T. It agreeth with the Germane spurge olive throughout the whole substance being biting extreame hot V. Diosc the dry or green leaves purge flegme It provoketh vomit and bringeth down the menses being chewed it draweth water out of the head It causeth sneezing Also 15. gr of the seed d. are a purgation Lugd. The leaves taken h. the dropsie but evert the stomack and inflame the intralls except macerated in vineger with a quince c. Jo. the antidote is milke with butter and bole arm Park The berries are given to h. the collick so the oile ap It h. the piles and urine stopt Lead-wort Plumbago Plinii P. In gardens whon planted there T. Fl. in July and Aug. N. Molybdaena Dentillaria Rondeletii Lead-wort Ger. T. is caustick V. It helpeth the tooth-ach and that as some say if it be held in the hand only Park It h. the sciatica or pain in the joints or any other inveterate griefe the leaves being bruised and ap with axungia as Sciatica Cresses The same also h. markes scabs and deformity of the skin The juice d. in ale c. speedy delivery in travaile Leekes Porrum P. In a meane earth fat well dunged and digged T. It may be sown in March or Aprill remooved in September N 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Porrus Palladii The 1. Capitatum The 2d Sectivum Leeke Ger. J. K. as the headed cut or unset T. Is hot and dry and doth attenuate as the onion V. boiled it is lesse hurtfull and looseth it's sharpnesse yet is cacochymick but better taken with cold herbs Boiled and eaten with ptisana it concocteth and expectorateth raw humors lying in the breast in a lohoch it clenseth the lungs The juice d. with hony h. bitings of venemous beasts so also the leaves stamped and ap The same juyce with vineger frankincense and milk or oile of roses dropped into the eares h. their pain and noise drach 2. of the seed with the like weight of myrtle berries d. stoppe the haemoptysis of long continuance the same ingredients put into wine keep it from scouring and if soure amend the same It cutteth tough humors Lobel The following lohoch h. flegmatick squinancies and other cold catarrhes that suffocate take blanched almonds unc 3. 4 figgs soft bdellium unc sem juice of lyquorice unc 2. of sugar candy dissolved in a s q. of the juice of leekes and boiled in B. to a syrrup as much as may serve to make the rest into the forme of an eclegma H. It heateth the body c. ill bloud and terrible dreames dulleth the sight is noysome to the stomack breedeth winde and offendeth hot and chollerick bodies Wild leekes K. as the common French and cives T. Cives are hot and dry like the leck The vine leek is more hot than the rest V. Cives attenuate open and are diuretick and c. hot and grosse vapors c. as the leek The vine leek or Ampeloprason provoketh urine and the flowers and h. bitings of venemous beasts Cives are called Schoenoprason Park Leeks eaten h. hoarsnesse and baked in hot embers the surfeit of mushromes The green blades boiled and applyed warme h. the piles Fum. The juice d. with parsley extracts the foetus Park Theat Leeks are much about the same property that onions are yet not altogether so effectuall Lentils Lens P. In gardens and fields sown T. They flower and wax ripe in July and Aug. N. 〈◊〉
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