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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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5. parts of some emollient decoction and 1 or 2. of oile and some purging and stimulating electuaries or species c. in a double quantity to what is taken downwards Note oile is to be added when there is need of emollition and not when of purgation or revulsion Hereto belong Metrenchytes made of some distilled water decoction or juice c. to which way be added powders electuaries oiles c. as also other injections to be used with a syringe 7. Conditures are made of roots barkes stalkes fruits nuts and flowers of which the more grosse are to be mollifyed and dissected and then edulcorated or sweetened with purifyed and dissolved sugar and sometimes with clarifyed hony c. 8. Confections with sugar are made by dropping dissolved sugar by degrees on things to be prepared as seeds kernells spices roots barks as also flowers and tops of plants and they are canded with more grosse liquor 9. Conserves are made by stamping the matter in a stone morter and mixing the sugar therewith in a double proportion in things more humid and treble if more dry with a little distilled water thus are prepared flowers for the most part seldome herbs lesse often roots and fruits almost never and are then to be filtrated 10. Decoctions are made of all things that may communicate their vertue unto liquors as mineralls vegetables and animals or living creatures but Apozems chiefly of vegetables sc roots barkes herbes flowers berries fruits and woods with spring water whay hydromel or wine from a foure fold proportion of the liquor to twelve with a due preparation decoction and clarification with the white of an egge 11. Lambatives and ●ohochs are made of pectoralls sc powders conserves mucilages syrups decoctions honey pulps c. mixed to the consistence of honey note the proportion of powder is halfe an ounce to 2 of syrup 12. Electuaries sc the common or opiats are made of fine powders with warme clarified hony being set to ferment in some warme place after the mixture of the dissolved solubles but mixtures are made of powders electuaries conserves extracts and dissected confections with some convenient liquor or so much syrup as may suffice 13. Elixyrs are spirituous liquors of excellent faculties impregnated by infusion and agree for the most part with liquid tinctures 14. Emplaisters and cerots are made of fat things as oiles rosins grease marrow wax gums and sometimes powders to the wax melted are last added the proportion of oile fat or hony is three ounces to one of dry things of wax 1 pound of rosins 8 ounces thus are Cerotes made yet softer hereto belong Dropaces made of pitch a little oile other materialls as pepper pellitory rosemary euphorbium castor bitumen brimstone salts c. 15. Emulsions are made of the inward parts of fruits and milkie seeds as almonds the 4 greater cold seeds seeds of purslain lettuce pine apple kernells c. with spring or distilled water the decoction of barley liquorice raisins or jujubes being pounded strained and then sweetened avoiding things acid 16. Errhines are made of extracts liniments or powders 17. Epithemes are made of distilled waters juices decoctions emulsions c. alone or mixed with powders species electuaries c. and some wine vineger or spirits for penetration and so applyed with a spunge or linnen cloth c. the proportion is halfe a pound of liquors of powders from 1 dram to half an ounce of wine or spirits 1 ounce 18. Extracts are drawn out of mineralls vegetables and animalls by preparing them for infusion and then pouring the menstruum thereon to a convenient height sc the spirit of wine c. after which set it in a warme place and then extract it according to art 19. Faecula's are made of roots sometimes of leaves by pounding them in a morter and pouring on water till like a pulpe which is then to be pressed and set to settle 20. Flowers are made by chymicall separation by sublimation 21. Gargarismes and dentisrices are made for the most part of waters juices or convenient decoctions to which way be added of syrups or hony 2 3 or 4 ounces to 1 pound of water with a little vineger c. 22. Gellies are made of succulent fruits of hornes tender bones by decoction and filtration edulcoration and coagulation to which also may be added powders and extracts c. 23. Infusions are made of minerals and animals but chiefly of vegetables and such as are purging with their corrigents together with some distilled or spring water whay muscadell mede or wine c. to cover the matter 1 2 or 3. fingers which after steeping is to be pressed 24. Juleps are made of some potulent liquor as distilled or spring water corrected by a toste or some decoction as of harts horne liquorice or barley c. in which juyces and spirits may be dissolved and of syrrups 1 or 2 ounces may be added to a pint of liquor Hereunto belong morets made of spices and other confortatives with sugar or syrrups 25. Stones are made by digestion extraction and coagulation 26. Liquors are made by deliquium c. 27. Magisteries are made of animals vegetables and minerals prepared by solution in some convenient or acid liquor precipitation ablution in common water and gentle exiccation 28. Masticatories are usually made of mastick raisins bastard pellitory cubebs sage leaves agarick c. made into powder balls or troches with wax figgs turpentine or hony c. and so are to be chewed 29. Morsells and rolls may be made of all kinds of remedies as powders seeds conserves oiles extracts with sugar dissolved over the fire putting them in by degrees and stirring them after which it 's to be poured forth upon some plain thing and cut into tablets In those that are purging manna may be put in stead of hony things condited are to be first cut in pieces distilled oiles are last to be dropped in or used outwardly so muske and amber being dissolved in rose water Rolls also are thus made but the powders must be finer and in a lesse quantity and if there are acid juices they must be made only by mixture 30. Oiles as first the destilled are made of animals vegetables and minerals 2. Those by expression of seeds and certaine oleous kernells 3. By decoction the simples being cut and boiled in oile mixt with water wine or some convenient liquor untill the aqueous humidity be exhaled or by maceration in oile as that of olives or the omphacine if the simples are more dry 31. Pills may be made of any dry thing incorporated by some viscid and glutinous liquor as syrrups mucilages inspissate or thickened juices extracts c. or they may be made only of juices and inspissate extractions 32. Potions are made of syrrups electuaries extracts manna powders c. with decoctions infusions and chiefly distilled waters usually only by mixture 33. Pomanders are made of sweet powders to which oiles may be
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
c. to an ounce or an ounce half c. according to the strength of the patient and vehemency of the disease of oiles 3 ounces of sats hony and sugar c. halfe an ounce or an ounce of the yelks of eggs 2 or 3 of common salt a dram and halfe more or lesse according to the intended p●oritation of the expulsive faculty 3. In Gargarismes a triple weight of liquor to that of physicall juices and syrups sc 6 ounces to two hereof and of dry medicines 2 or 3 drams to halfe a pound of a decoction 4. In Errhines of the leaves of cephalick purgers being incided and contused 4 handfulls to 4 ounces of white wine c. in soft ●●●hines to two ounces of the juice aforesaid an ounce and a halfe of wine and of hony as much as may serve to make it into the forme of an opiat being boiled of sharp or purging powders 1 scruple in the solid to a sufficient quantity of turpentine and wax 2 drams of powders 5. In Epithemes to 1 pound of liquors a dram and halfe or two drams of the species or 1 ounce of wine and a few graines of saffron as in cordiall epithemes but in the hepatick and splenetick halfe an ounce of vineger to one of the waters 6. In Fomentations to each 1 or 2 handfulls of herbes one pint of liquor 7. In Embrocations for the most part 1 pint of liquors to 2 handfulls of herbes which are then to be boiled to a medietie 8. In Insessions of herbes from 5 handfulls to 8 or 10. of roots from 2 ounces to 4 of seeds from 6 drams to 6 ounces and of water as much as may serve thereunto which are to be put into a bagge and boiled to a third part 9. In Baths of liquids as much as may rise to the mouth of the stomack of herbs from five handfulls to fifteen more or lesse according to the nature of the disease and strength of the patient of flowers from one pugill to 12 of roots from three ounces to five pound of seeds to an ounce of pulses from 6 ounces to two pound of mineralls from three ounces to three pound c. which are to be boiled to a third part 10. In Lotions of herbs from 4 handfulls to 10. with a convenient quantity of liquids 12. In Tragaea's of sugar one ounce to every dram of species especially if bitter and lesse pleasant 13. In Aromaticall electuaries of hony or sugar a threefold or sixfold quantity to that of the species 14. In Cathartick or purging electuaries of the species one part to three of hony or sugar being well mixed with their correctives and the dirigents So also in Opiats or narcotick and stupefactive antidotes which are to be compounded with great care 15. In Conserves for the most part to one part of the herbs shred or flowers 3 of powdered sugar 16. In Conditures the proportion of sugar is according to the nature and temper of the matter 17. In Lohochs the proportion of the recipient matter is fourefold to the ingredient powders so that to 4 ounces thereof there is one of the powder usually 18. In Liniments to one ounce of oile 2 drams of butter fats and creams 19. In Unguents to one ounce of oiles one dram of species and two of wax 20. In Plaisters to one ounce of dry things 3 of oyle and to 3 ounces hereof one pound of wax of rosin 8 ounces that they may be more tenacious 21. In Cataplasmes to each handfull of the leaves or other things of oile or fats an ounce or an ounce and halfe 22. In Cerots to one ounce of oile a dram or a dram and halfe of the species of hard wax halfe an ounce with a little rosin 23. In Sinapismes to two parts of contused mustard seed one of figgs in those that are more weake the contrary 24. In Tablets Troches and Morsells 4 ounces of sugar to 2 drams of the species in tablets that are purging to one pound of sugar 8 drams of species or 12 thereof 25. In Collyries a little of the white of an egge to a convenient quantity of depurate or purified juyce 26. In Suppositories to one dram of the species and salt one ounce of hony 27. In Juleps of dulcorants or sweetening things from an ounce to an ounce and halfe of clarified juyces orliquors if more strong as the acid to halfe an ounce else an ounce of confections from one scruple to two and lesse if more pretious as bezar stone to foure or six grains of Vnicornes horne halfe a scruple and of pearles one scruple for one dose 28. In Physicall wines to one pint of wine cathartick three or foure ounces of sugar and of cinamon two drams 29. In Emulsions of dulcorants or sweetening things for one dose an ounce or an ounce and halfe of fruits an ounce and halfe or an ounce or two so of seeds and of rose water of manus Christi one dram of liquors s q 30. In Amygdalates or Almond milke of blanched almonds two ounces of warme water halfe a pint of sugar one ounce or two 31. In Ptisans of cleansed barley two ounces of sugar one or two ounces of water s q. or twenty parts 32. In Hydromel or Metheglin to one part of hony eight or twelve of water of cinamon two drams or halfe an ounce and it 's then to be boiled to the consumption of a 4th part 33. In Diet drinks to a pint and halfe of water one ounce of ingredients which are then to be boiled to a third part for sweating and for ordinary drinking to two ounces of ingredients twelve pints of water of sugar halfe a pound of cinamon three drams or halfe an ounce boiled to the consumption of a fourth part 34. In Hydrosaccharates of spring water depurate or purified by boyling twelve parts to one of white sugar and of cinamon or sanders in fevers from three drams to halfe an ounce 35. In Broths analeptick or restaurative to each pint of white wine of cordiall juyces or convenient liquors three ounces of sugar two of cinamon and of the confection of alkermes one dram in restaurative distillations to three or foure pints of the liquor of cordiall waters eight or twelve ounces of conserves and conditures three or six of the confection of alkermes c. three drammes or halfe an ounce 36. In Boles of conserves three drams or halfe an ounce of powders one scruple of confections a scruple or halfe a dram 37. In Pandaleons of fruits two drams of seeds an ounce of powders three drams of sugar s q. of conserves three drams or halfe an ounce 38. Of the Basis for Pills according to the strength thereof with convenient syrups 39. In Dropaces to an ounce or an ounce and halfe of pitch halfe an ounce or six drams of oile or so much of hot powders 40. In Vesicatories to two ounces of old leven as much of cantharides which are then to be
diureticall and h. those that are hydropick nephritick troubled with the strangury or bruised it moves the courses d. or ap the fume taken by the mouth with dried turpentine h. the cough it s used also in perfumes Park Acorus taken with wormwood wine h. cold stomacks ap h. tumors Arrow-head Sagittaria P. In the ditches as neere Oxford c. T. Fl in May and June N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Magopistana Lingua serpentis Arrow-head Ger K. as the great small narrow-leaved T. are cold and drie V. like plantaine in faculty and temper Lugd. cold and moist but they are rather cold and dry and astringent like plantain so the seed given in wine h. fluxes spitting of bloud the fretting in the gutts distillations bloudy urine and consumptions the seed d. h. the dropsie and falling sicknesse the powder of the leaves kills wormes and ap h. sores inflamed Arsmart Persicaria P. Moist plashes almost every where T. Fl. from June to Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hydropiper the 2d plumbago the 4th noli me tangere Arsmart Ger. J. K. as the common dead or spotted small creeping and codded Ar. T. Gal. it is hot and drie yet not so hot as pepper the dead is cold and something drie V. the leaves and seed wast all cold swellings it dissolves the congealed bloud of bruises bruised and ap to a fellon for an houre it h. the paine and laid under the saddle refresheth the tired horse The dead Ar. ap h. inflammations green wounds boyled with oyle olive wax and turpentine The 4th Lob. is venemous Trag. a vomitorie yet doubtfull Park V. the milde h. putrid ulcers ap and killeth worms The root ap h. the tooth-ach the juyce dropped into the eares killeth wormes therein and fleas Col. the water ap with aqua vitae h. goutes and aches Artichocke Cinara P. A fat ground set with ashes T. 'T is planted in Novemb. the slips in Aprill N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Scolymus Diosc Cactos Theoph. Artichocke Ger K. as the great red great white and wild Art T. is cacochymick and of cholerick juyce V. the nailes and middle pulpe with pepper and salt boyled with fat flesh c. lust so the ribbs are windy It stayeth the gonorroeha the budds steeped in wine and eaten provoke urine and lust the root h. the smell of the armeholes decoct in wine and d. the pith being taken out for it expells stinking urine The Jerusalem Art T. are windy V. and become meate yet of evill juyce boyled and stewed with sack and butter with a little ginger or baked in pies with marrow dates ginger raisins of the sun sack c they cure torments of the belly And as Artichocks are thought to be hot and dry 2° the infusion of the budds provokes urine Asarabacca Asarum P. In shadowie places and Gardens T. It 's alwaies green Fl in the spring N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nardus rustica Perpensa Asarabacca Ger K as the common and Italian T. the leaves are hot and drie purging with astriction the roots are more hot and drie of subtil parts they procure urine the menses are stronger then the roots of Acorus V. the leaves by vomit bring out phlegme and choler and move the belly more forcibly then the roots the roots h. stopping of the liver gall and spleen wens hard swellings and long agues and in a greater q. operate as the leaves drach 1. of the root poudered d. in ale or wine if grosse c. vomit if fine it's diuretick or drach 3. or 4 if infused in whay or honied water or 9 leaves stamped it also h. the sciatica dropsie and quartan agues given as a vomit Pem d. it h. the green-sicknesse and asthma ap it h. wounds cold headaches and drieth up milke it 's not to be given to weake bodies or women with child Park K. as the Virginian and bastard V this attennuats and clenseth Ash-tree Fraxinus P. Moist as about meadowes the 2d on mountains T. Leaves and keyes in Ap and May. the 2d Fl in May berries in Sep. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ornus orneoglossum sc the wilde the seed lingua avis Ash-tree Ger T. the leaves and barke are drie and moderately hot the seed hot drie 2° V the leaves d. and ap h. bitings of vipers and stop the belly so the barke boiled in water and vineger they stay vomiting ap to the stomack boiled in wine and d. they open the liver and spleen and corroborate them 3 leaves d. in wine every morning make leane the keyes provoke urine increase sperm and cause lust poudered with nutmeggs and d. the shavings of the wood d. are deadly lee made of the ashes of the barke h. the scurse and rough skin The wild ash V. the leaves boiled in wine h. pain in the side stoppings of the liver dropsie and tympany Park the oile of the wood m. with water of violet fl h. pimples Aspen-tree or Poplar Populus P. Meadowes ditches and by water sides T. The buds in March and beginning of Apr then to be gathered N. The 1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 farfarus the 2d 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the 3d 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lybica Plinii Aspen-tree or poplar Ger J K. as the white black aspen Indian lesser leav'd white Poplar T. Gal. the white clenseth and is of a waterie warme and thin earthy substance V. Diosc drach 1. of the barke d. h. the sciatica and strangury the leaves d. c. women to be barren the juyce dropped into the eares h. their paine the rosin of the black poplar budds is hot and drie of thin parts attenuating mollifying and anodyne so the leaves yet more weake and with the young buds h. paines of the gout ap with May butter as an ointment the ointment of the budds h. all inflammations bruises and falls Park V. the water dropping from the black poplar h. warts and pushes the seed d. h. the falling sicknesse Asphodill Asphodelus P. In France Italy Spaine naturally and in gardens here T. Fl in May and June beginning below N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Albucum that of the water is called Pseudoasphod Asphodill Ger J K. as the white branched red yellow dwarfe Asph T. are hot and dry ferè 3° V. Diosc Aet the roots eaten provoke urine and the termes especially being stamped and strained with wine and d. drach 1. d. in wine h. paines in the sides ruptures convulsions and old coughs the roots boyled in dreggs of wine h. phagedens all inflammations of the duggs or secret parts and ease the fellon ap as a pultis the juyce of the root boyled in old sweet wine with a little myrrh and saffron makes an excellent collyrie for the eyes Gal the ashes of the rootes m. with ducks grease h. the alopecia and c. haire drach 1. taken in wine h. burstings in broth the biting of venemous beasts and c. vomiting The juyce of
by some to be a good substitute when water-cresses are wanting and h. the scurvy Those of the mountaine K. as the three leafed and small T. are sharpe and reduced to the first Bauh That which is called Odontis is commended against poyson Cucumber Cucumis P. In gardens in horsedung T. They are to be set in Aprill N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The wild is called Asininus cucumis and Anguinus Cucumbers Ger. K. as the common adders and Spanish T. are all cold and moist 2° of little and bad nourishment quickly putrifie The seed is not so cold clensing and opening V. the seed openeth the liver and bladder and helps the chest and lungs inflamed ap it smootheth the skin and maketh it faire The Cucumber eaten h. hot stomacks The seed strained with milke or sweet wine and d. looseth the belly and h. exulcerations of the bladder The fruit sliced and boiled with mutton and oatemeale and eaten thrice a day for three weeks h. sauce flegme copper faces and fiery noses with pimples and rubies washing the face with the following liquor Take a pint of strong white wine vineger of Orrice roots powdered drach 3. Brimstone finely powdered unc sem Camphire drach 2. stamped with 2. blanched Almonds 4. Oke apples cut and the juice of 4. Limmons shake them together and set them in the sunne 10. dayes use it daily without wiping the face It also cureth all deformities of the skin Wild cucumbers T. the leaves roots and rinds are bitter hot and clensing The juice is hot 2° of thin parts V. the juice elaterium purgeth choller flegme and water by stoole and vomit the dose is from 5 gr to 10. of the dryed juice scr sem it h. the dropsie shortnesse of winde so the juice of the root as an errhine it h. red eyes with milke Park It h. cold diseases d. and ap Cudweed Gnaphalium P. Mountaines hills and barren places T. Fl. from June to September N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Centunculus Tomentitia Cottonaria Herba impia Camaexylon Cud-weed Ger. J. K. as the English common sea white and purple mountaine bright red mountaine rocke live for ever small wicked lions small lions long leafed and small broad leafed T. are astringent and drying V. boiled in strong lee it clenseth the haire from nits and lice in ward-robes it keepeth from moths Boiled in wine and d. it killeth the wormes and h. the bitings of Venemous beasts Dryed and the fume taken by a funnell as tobacco it h. coughs of the lungs paine of the head and clenseth the inward parts Golden Cudweed Elyochryson T. Gal. Cutteth and attenuateth V. Diosc The tops d. in wine h. the dysury stingings of serpents sciatica and d. in sweet wine dissolve congealed bloud Laid among cloths it prevents moths Park K. as the greater Germane and small leaning V. as the rest h. all fluxes dranke in red wine and bruises the leaves ap h. the tenesmus and ulcers The herb impious d. in wine and milke h. the mumps So that of the mountaine Cullions Testiculus Odoratus P. In dry pastures or heaths T. Fl. from August to September N. Orchis Triorchis Tetrorchis Cullions Ger. The sweet K. as the common triple Frizland and liege ladie traces T. are of the nature of dogstones V. the sappy roots of Lady-traces eaten or boiled with milk and d. cause venery strengthen the body h. consumptions and hectick fevers Park K. as the greater and lesser yellow with smooth eaves and small creeping V. the roots of these Orchides are effectuall above all other to c. venery Recch Lady-traces of Mexico T. the root is sweet and a little bitter V. it c. venery and discusseth hot tumours d. and ap And h. the heat of the blood Bauh the root of the first boyled with wine and hony h. putrid ulcers of the mouth So Dod. Cumfrey Consolida major P. Watery ditches and fruitfull meadows T. They Fl. in June and July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Solidago Symphytum Pecton Alum Osteocollon Cumfrey Ger. J. K. as the purple flowred with the knobbed root and borrage flowred T. the root is cold and clammy and infipid V. the roots stamped and the juiced with wine h. spitting of bloud and inward wounds and burstings so applyed The roots boiled and d. cleanse the brest from flegme and h. the lungs with sugar The slime of the root d. with a posset h. wrenchings of the back and gonorrhoea's Four of the rootes stamped with knot-grasse and the leaves of Clar●y of each an handfull strained adding a quart of muskadell the yelks of three eggs and powder of three nutmegs d. first and last h. the gonorrhoea and all pains and consumptions of the back The syrrup stops bloud h. the heat of agues sharpnesse of humours ulcers of the lungs and cough also ulcers of the kidnies flux of the matrix inward hurts and ruptures is thus made take unc 2. of the roots of great comf unc 1. of Lycorise 2 handfull of Folefoot roots and all unc 1. sem of Pine-apple kernels 20 jujubes unc 2. of Mallow seed unc 1. of the heads of poppy boile all in a s q. of water to a pint to the liquor strained adde unc 6. of white sugar as much of hony boyle it to a syrrup The root stamped and ap h. inflammations of the sundament and flowing of hemorrhoides Park unc 2. of the juice d. h. the lethargy ap it represseth the growing of the duggs h. gangreens and pains of the joynts Pem. The distilled water h. outward sores It hurts those that are bound in the body Cumin Cuminum P. It groweth in putrified and hot soiles T. It 's to be sown in the midst of spring N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyminum Carnabadium Cassi Bassi Bauhini Cumin Ger. T. Gal. The seed of the garden Cumin is hot and dry 3° and binding Diosc V. the seed h. windinesse of the stomack belly guts and matrix it helpeth frettings of the belly d. used in clysters or applyed with wine and barley meale as a pultis pultis so also boiled with wine it h. blastings swellings of the genitors and consumeth windie swellings in the joynts Taken in broth it h. cold lungs and such as are oppressed with raw humours it stoppeth bleeding at the nose with vineger being smelt unto Made into a sacculus with bay salt heated and ap warme being sprinkled with wine vineger it h. stitches and the plurisie Wild Cumm K. as the common codded and horned T. V. are to be referred to the first yet not used in physick Park It h. the collick boiled in wine d. and h. those that are bitten with serpents the seed taken in broth h. short windednesse and old coughs the seed bruised fried with a hard egge and ap to the nap of the neck h. the old headach and stops rheume The powder ap warme to the eyes with wax h. the rheume and rednesse of the eyes ap it c.
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
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lenticula Lentils Ger. K. as the great and little T. Gal. They are in a meane between hot and cold yet dry 2° Their skin is astringent the substance of an earthy juice somewhat harsh V. The first decoction d. with salt and pickle doth loosen the belly The second bindeth and h. laskes especially if boiled with red beets myrtles the pills of pomegranats dryed roses medlars service berries unripe peares quinces plantain leaves galls or the berries of sumach The meale of lentils mixt with hony doth mundifie ulcers and rotten sores it c. flesh and is good to put to digestives for green wounds The skins being taken off they are more nourishing and lesse binding They are of thick and bad juice stop the belly cause melancholly and if much eaten c. the leprosie They li. the dropsie H. They hurt the sight stop the menses c. sad dreames hurt the head sinews and lungs 30. of them shelled and swallowed h. the overcasting of the stomack Boiled with parched barley meale and ap they h. the gout with hony fill sores breake aschares clense ulcers and boiled in wine wast wens hard swellings of the throat with a quince melilot and oile of roses they h. the inflammation of the eyes and fundament which if great they must be boiled with the rinde of a pomegranate dry rose leaves and hony If sea water be added they h. eating sores that are mortifyed also pushes shingles S. Anthonies fire and kibes ap and also womens breasts in which the milke is curdled Sea Lentill Johns K. as the narrow and cut leased T. V. May be eaten as Sampire 'T is thought to be diureticall Park They hurt dry constitutions those that have the courses stopped The decoction with rose leaves and quinces h. ulcers Leopards-bane Doronicum P. In gardens and wild on high mountaines T. They flower in June and July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Myophonon Thora Leopards-bane Ger. J. K. as the small and great with the cray-fish winged narrow leased large flowred and the greatest woolfes-bane T. are cold V. They are mixed with compound medicines that h. paines of the eyes and being green h. their inflammation It killeth all fouresooted beasts in the compasse of one day yet the root h. stingings of scorpions Gesn drach 2. of the powder being taken h. the vertigo and epilepsie or mixed with gentian the powder of misle-toe and astrantia Schwenck The root is sweet and temperate Senn. The antidote is milke and mithridate c. Park K. as the fained of Matth. V. Theoph. Plin. It 's good against scorpions taken in warmed wine resisting the poyson Lettuce Lactuca P. In manured fat moist and dunged ground T. It 's to be sown at the first spring and that very thin N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pythagoreorum Chas Arab. Lettuce Ger. K. as the garden curled cabbage small curled Savoy and Lumbard lettuce T. Is moderately cold and moist V. It cooleth the heate of the stomack h. the heart burning and choller quencheth thirst and c. sleep and milke in dry bodies tempering the heat and drynesse and hindereth in cold bodies It maketh a pleasant sallad being eaten raw with vineger oile and a little salt if boiled it is of easier digestion and more nourishment Taken before meat it whetteth the appetite taken after it preventeth drunkennesse staying the vapors Gal. It neither bindeth nor looseth the belly yet the contrary is sound true by experience Being ap outwardly it h. all inflammations burnings and scaldings ap with salt before the blisters appeare The juyce too much used quencheth the naturall sperme but procureth sleep Wild lettuce K. as the greatest smelling of opium the wild with the divided lease T. are cold fine 3tii V. Diosc Some mix the juyce thereof with opium The juyce d. in oxycrate q. ob 2. or scr 1. purgeth watrie humors and clenseth the ulcer in the eye argemon and h. the darkenesse of sight Stamped ap with womens milk it h. burnes and scalds it 's hypnotick and anodyne moves the courses and h. the stingings of scorpions and the bitings of spiders The seed d. like the garden lettuce h. venery Lambs lettuce or corne sallad T. Is cold and something moist like the common and in stead thereof in winter and the first spring it servely for a sallad herbe used as the rest Park The juice ap with oile of roses to the fore head h. the paines of the head ap to the testicles it h. the colts-evill and with camphire it restraineth lust H. but it 's hurtfull to those that are asthmaticall Mac. It tempereth adust humors Pem. The first is cold and moist 1° or 2° ap it h. lust Park K. as the sharpe pointed garden lettuce Gal. Serap It yeildeth good nourishment The juice with oile of roses ap c. sleep and h. the head-ach c. of heat as also the colts-evill and heate of urine The wild K. as the purple fl T. V. as the rest Lillie Lilium P. In gardens planted naturally in Italy Persia c. T. Fl. from May to July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rosa Junonis Lillies Ger. The white lillies K. as the common and that of Constantinople T. is hot and partly of a subtile substance The root is dry 1° and hot 2° V. The root of the garden lilly stamped with hony conglutinateth the sinewes cut in sunder and consumeth achores and the scurfinesse of the beard and face Stamped with vineger the leaves of henbane or the meale of barley it h. the tumors of the privities It c. haire in burned and scalded places m. with oile or grease and ap Rosted in the embers and stamped with some leaven of rie bread and hogs grease it breaketh pestilentiall botches and ripeneth buboes coming of venery The flowers steeped in oile olive and shifted two or three times during summer and set in the sun h. the sinues and hardnesse of the matrix Jul. Alex. The distilled water thereof d. c. speedy deliverance and expelleth the secundine The leaves boiled in red wine and ap h. old wounds and ulcers The root stamped strained with wine and d. for two or three dayes together expelleth the pestilence The juice m. with barley meale and baked in ●akes and eaten for a moneth h. the dropsie Florent The root being curiously opened and any colour that is not caustick being put in causeth the flower to be of the same colour Red lillies K. as the common gold red fiery red bulbe hearing that with bulbs growing along the stalkes and small red T. Gal. The flower is partly of thin partly of an earthy essence The roots and leaves dry and clense and moderately digest and wast V. The leaves of the herbe ap h. the stingings of serpents The same boiled and mixed with vineger h. burnings green wounds and ulcers The roots rosted in the embers and stamped with oile of roses h. burnings and hardnesse of the matrix Stamped with hony it cures
are an excellent prophylactick remedy The Indian nut Cocus T. Is in a mean between hot and cold V. The branches being cut in the evening send forth water which is pleasant to drinke from which is drawn a strong a qua vitae helping against all manner of sicknesses The milke in the kernells cooleth and refresheth the spirits The kernell serves for meat out of which is pressed an oile good for meate and medicine wherewith the Indians anoint their feeble limbs it helping lassitude paines and other infirmities Of the branches they make their houses of the trunke their shipps of the hempe on the outside their cables and of the finer stuffe sailes for their shipps Likewise of the shell they make cupps to drinke in The vomiting and purging nutts T. Are poysonous cold 4° and narcotick or causing deadly sleepe V. The vomiting nut is not to be given inwardly but in other compositions The powder given with flesh unto fowles doth presently stupisy them if not kill them Park Horse-chesnut V. Stopps all manner of fluxes and spitting of bloud being eaten rosted In Turkey they are given to horses in their provender to h. the cough and brokenwindednesse Borell Cent 1. Obs 50. An unguent made of the oile of nuts with the yelks of egges p. aeq m. h. burnings ap twice a day Recch The pulpe of the nut cocus h. against poyson and being infused in water in cups made of the shells thereof and d. it h. the collick palsie epilepsie and other diseases of the nerves yet by some it's thought little effectuall Park V. Fistick nuts h. against the stingings and bitings of serpents and other venemous creatures The discoloured small Indian nut Faufel V. h. in all hot diseases it h. the tooth-ache and fasteneth loose teeth The Indians use it to stupifie Gare The distilled water h. all hot fluxes of the belly The white nuts curcus habacoulcoul Serap c. sperme and the collick Bezoar nut Lobus echinatus T. V. causeth vomiting Ginny nuts T. V. serve to make bread with The liquor of the leaves serveth for drink O. Oake Quercus P. It groweth in a dry and barren ground T. It casts the leaves about the end of Autumne N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jovis arbor Robur The fruit Glans The cup Capula OAke Ger. K. as the common and dwarfe T. The leaves barke acorne cupps and acornes binde and dry 3° are also somewhat cold V. The thin skinne under the barke and that which is next to the acorne poudered h. the whites reds spitting of bloud and laskes The acornes eaten are hardly concocted and of grosse raw and cold nourishment they provoke urine h. poyson and are lesse binding than the leaves or barke The apples h. all fluxes of bloud and laskes boiled in red wine they also h. excessive moisture and swellings of the jawes and almonds of the throat The decoction thereof stopps womens diseases and the fume taken c. the mother to returne to its place the same steeped in strong white wine vineger with the powder of brim-stone and root of ireos m. and set in the sun 30 dayes maketh the haire black wasts proud flesh and h. sunburning and all deformities of the face being washed therewith Matth. The oake apples before they have a hole in them containe a flie a spider or a worme if a fly then warre ensueth if a creeping worme scarcity of victualls if a running spider it prognosticateth great sicknesse or mortality The oake of Jerusalem Botrys and that of Capadocia Ambrosia T. Are hot and dry 2° and of subtile parts V. The decoction h. the stoppings of the breast and asthma cutting and wasting grosse humors so the conserve of the leaves It giveth a pleasant tast to flesh that is sodden with it and is eaten with the broth Dried and laid among garments it c. them to smell sweet and preserveth them from vermin The scarlet oake Ilex coccigera the grain is called Kermes and Coccus baphicus the maggot within is named Cutchonele T. This grain is astringent and somewhat bitter and dry without sharpnesse V. Gal It h. great wounds and sinews that be cut ap with oxymel It stopps the menses and is cordiall and purgeth melancholy The confection hereof h. the trembling of the heart and swounings and exhilerates the lapis cyaneus being left out the berries of the cochenele must be taken by themselves which alone are sufficient to die the juyces and to impart unto them their vertue The great scarlet oake Ilex major glandifera T. The leaves coole and repell as those of the mast trees V. Stamped and ap they h. soft swellings and strengthen weak members The barke of the root boiled in water untill it be dissolved and ap all night maketh the haire black being first scoured with cimolia Clus The acorne is esteemed of and usually eaten The great Holme Oake K. As that with greater lesser acornes Cerr●s T. V. are uselesse The Corke oake K. as with broad and narrow leaves Suber T. The barke doth manifestly drie and binde V. The powder taken in water stoppeth bloud Paul The corkes which are taken out of wine vessells being burnt mightily drie and are m. with compositions against the bloudy flixe The corke also is of known use and serveth to put into the shoes for warmenesse Park The ever green oake is lesse binding it strengtheneth weak members The young tops and leaves thereof are used in gargles for the mouth and throat Croll The liquor of the apples that grow on oake leaves ap h. the rupture Park K. As the sweet male and female bitter V. Acornes h. the virulency of cantharides Hip. The fume of the leaves h. the mother Gal ap it h. wounds the water h. all heat and fluxes The Laurell is binding The leaves of Botrys ap h. the mother Oates Avena P. Almost every where in cold moist ground T. They are sowen in spring and mowen in Autumne N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vena Italica Chartall Arab. Oates Ger. K. as the common and naked T. Gal Are dry and somewhat cold V. Common oates put into a linnen bag with a little bay salt made hot in a frying pan and ap very hot h. the stitch in the side or collick in the belly Such parts as are troubled with the serpigo being first anointed with that unction usually ap against the French disease and held over the fume of the decoction of oates with sweating will in 5 or 6 times using hereof be perfectly cured Wild oates K. As the common and small T. are drying V. Being boiled in water with the roots to a third part then strained adding hony and the powder of aloes and so boiled again to the thicknesse of thin hony and ap with a linnen cloth they h. the ozaena and the filthy ulcers of the nose Johns Being boiled in wine with dried rose-leaves they h. a stinking breath The bearded wilde oates T. V. Are uselesse Senn Oates are hot of meane
exposed to the sun and winds except some few as Germander Ground-pine which are more odoriferous and frequent in hills but those that grow only in plain places are to be gathered in more dry places and more remote from lakes and rivers except they delight in more moisture as water caltrops water lillie c. 2. Flowers are to be gathered in the same places in which there are the best plants 3. So Fruits 4. And Seeds 5. So Roots also 6. Woods are to be taken from trees where they are well grown 7. Barkes where there plants are best 8. Juices are to be taken from the best herbes chiefly the well grown and greater as being lesse excrementitious that before they grow wo●ddy or rotten 9. Liquors and Gums c. are to be taken from mature stalkes which are the best in their kind as the rest 2. The Chronologie or time Thus 1. Herbs are to be gathered in the time of their flourishing and beginning to goe to seed which is for the most part in June the beginning of July if they are to be kept and that at noone in a cleare day being some considerable time or certain dayes before freed from showers and not too dewy or scorched by too much heat of the Sun which is chiefly in the Spring or beginning of Summer But those which grow green all the yeare in gardens may be gathered at any time and those that have neither stalk flower nor seed as maiden haire spleenwort c. are to be gathered in the vigour of the leaves sc when they are most green and greatest yet some because while they flower or beare seed they are wooddy and dry are to be gathered before that time as succory beete c. 2. Flowers in the vigour of their maturitie when opened except the rose at noon in faire weather after the Sunne hath taken off the dew and before they wither or fall off which for the most part is in Spring 3. Fruits when they are ripe and before they wither 4. Seeds out of fruits thorough ripe when they begin to be dry and before they fall off and out of plants when dry and are no longer green as in the Summer sc June or July 5. The Juice of plants is to be pressed out whilest they are green and their leaves yet tender and especially out of the well grown and greater 6. The Earkes of fruits are to be taken when the fruits are full ripe and those of roots when the herbs have lost their leaves but those of trees when they are in their vigour 7. Woods when the trees are full grown 8. Liquors and gumms c. are taken by opening the stalke in the vigour thereof and gumms when congealed and mature 9. Roots when the fruit is fallen off and the leaves also begin which for the most part is in Autumne and are to be digged up in faire weather which is necessary alwaies to be observed as also according to some the decreasing of the moone the day of decreasing and the morning that time being halsamicall as also the fortitude of the planet familiar to the thing to be gathered and the signe of the zodiack 3. The Dropologie or manner of gathering them as some affirme some plants having diverse faculties according to the diverse manner of gathering them as upwards or downewards so hellebore the leaves drawing the humours upwards or downewards accordingly so the root of elder also and the budds which being gathered upwards cause vomiting and purge if downewards also some observe the site of the regent planets as whether they are orientall or occidentall c. 4. The Parasceuologie or the manner of preparing them for asservation Thus 1. Flowers are kept for the most part separated from the stalkes and leaves 2. Herbs or leaves if they are greater and having more thick stalkes they are kept apart from them but if more slender they are kept together sometimes with the flowers 3. Fruits as apples c. are to be placed with their stalkes downewards and last longer if laied on a heape of barley 4. Roots some are kept whole as those of birth-wort gentian hermodactils satyrion c. others are dissected as those of bryonie elecampane flower deluce c. also some have the wooddy matter taken away as those of fennell stone parsley c. As for the parts of living creatures 1. The fleshy parts are first to be washed with wine or some other convenient decoction and are then to be dried in an oven so kept in leaves convenient or wrapped up in wormewood to present putrefaction so also the lungs the trachea or rough arterie being first taken away and thus are prepared the liver spleen c. 2. Things that are Fat and oilie are to be washed often in water untill they become pure after which they are to be melted by a gentle fire strained and pured out upon cold water and are then to he kept in a cold place thus is hoggs grease prepared lard marrow c. and are best kept if a little salted 3. Skinny parts as the intestines are to be dissected longwaies and to be washed in wine or some convenient decoction after which being cut into pieces they are to be dried in an oven and kept in leaves as aforesaid 4. Bloud is to be separated from the serous humour and to be dried in an oven 5. Galls are to be separated from the liver then tied with a thred after which they are to be hung up in a chimney to dry 6. Curds are to be dried in the smoke or sun and so kept 5. The Phylacologie or way place of keeping them which in generall ought to be pure convenient high dry open of a North or South situation where they may not be burnt by the Sun or moistened by the walls c. more particularly 1. Vegetables as 1. Flowers are to be dried in the shade and then they especially those of good odour are to be kept in teile caskets 2. Herbs are to be dried in the shadow except those that have thicker stalkes and moister leaves and so subject to putrefaction which must therefore be dryed by the more intense heat of the sun or some other way and when they are well dried they are to be kept in linnen baggs or which is better in woodden caskets that they may be defended from dust 3. Seeds are to be kept in a dry place and in woodden or glazed vessells being wrapped up in papers that they may last the longer and without impurity 4. Fruits in boxes panniers or scuttles 5. Gums and dry rosins in a dry place and in woodden vessells but the more liquid in pitchers 6. Barkes in woodden coffers and a dry place 7. Roots in a dry aire and the lesser and more thin whose vertues may be easily dissipated by the heat of fire or the sun are to be dried in the shadow and wind as those of parsley fennell c. but the more grosse
the root h. the white morphew ap after rubification Onion asphodill T. Gal. operates as Aron and hath an abstersive quality the root doth attenuate and open V. the young springs h. the yellow jaundise Gal the ashes of the bulbe h. the scalld head Bauh the root and fl of the first ap with wine h. the bitings of serpents the joyce of the root put into the opposite eare h. the tooth-ache Oile being heated at the fire in the excavated root thereof h. burnings and kibes and paine of the ears Avens Caryophyllata P. High mountains thick woods shadowy places T. Fl. in May till Aug the seed is ripe in July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sylvat Sanamunda Herba benedicta Nardus rustica Avens Ger J K. as the common mountaine fine leaved red fl mountaine and dwa 〈◊〉 T. the root and leaves are manifestly d●y something hot and scouring V. decoct in wine and d they h. crude stomacks the collick bitings of venemous beasts stitches and pains of the sides stoppings of the liver and scoure the intralls and with wine h. the wind the leaves and roots d. h. clotted bloud the roots in Autumne dried kill moths are odoriserous and operate as Cinquefoile Park the root thereof d. h inward wounds fluxes and ruptures The infusion of the root d. in the morning prevents the plague or any poyson Matth the mountaine Avens operate as the first and more speedily Schrod it 's hot and drie 2° a little astringent discutient cephalick and cardiack B Balme-Aple Balsamina P. Hot Regions Gardens Italy T. It 's to be sowen in April in horse-dung N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pomum Hierosol Viticella Caranza BAlsame-apple Ger T. the apples and leaves are much drying moderately cooling or hot 1° drie 2° V. the leaves h. green wounds bruised and ap d. with wine they h. the collick burstings and convulsions The leaves of the male poudered and d. in wine h. those that are deeply wounded and the collick the oile of the fruit h. green wounds cramps and shrunk sinnes ap and pains of child-birth the hemorrhoides and all other pains of the fundament The leaves d. in wine h. ruptures The female is neer the first in temperature the oyle of the fruit h. inflamed wounds and consolidateth it h. ulcers of the duggs and privities with a pessarie The apple ap h. wounded and pricked sinews scalding and scarres ap and d. and barrennesse bathed and ap Park The oile h. scarres proceeding of wounds pains of the stinging of bees and consumes moisture Balsam-tree Balsamum * P. In Egypt and the Indies T. It 's green all the yeare N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The liquor opobalsamum the fr. carpobalsamum the wood xylobalsamum Balsam-tree Ger. T. balsam is hot and drie 2° with astriction V. naturall balsam taken fasting in the morning with rose-water or wine the q. of 5 or 6 drops h. rhose that are asthmatick it h. paines of the bladder and stomack and comforteth the same it h. stinking breath and the shaking fits of the quotidian ague also it cureth consumptions and clenseth the wombe being used as a pessarie the stomack being annoinred therewith it h. digestion preventeth obstruction and windinesse it h. hardnesse of the spleene pains of the reines and belly c. of cold and all aches ap with a linnen cloth also it dissolveth oedematous tumors and strengthneth the members it comforteth the braine h. palsies convulsions and all griefes of the sinews ap and speedily cureth green wounds Balsam-tree of Hispaniola yeeldeth a ●uyce which being boyled in water to the thicknesse of hony h. wounds and ulcers stops bleeding and is more effectuall then the true balsam the water which issueth out of the branches being cutt off is vulnetary and h. all cold diseases being drunk some few daies together The balsametree of Clusius called Molle by the Indians T. is astringent hot and compounded of diverse faculties V. the berries sod in water make a most wholsome drink vineger and hony The leaves boyled and the decoction d. h. all cold diseases the white gum being dissolved in milke ap h. the web of the eyes and cleareth the sight the decoction of the barke used as a bath h. the paine and swellings of the leggs This tree is of such estimation among the Indians that they worship it as a God according to their savage rites and ceremonies Park V. the liquor of the first h. all poysons and infections all agues arising from obstructions and all diseases of cold and wind and the cough The Indian is as the first Barbery-bush Berberis P. Deserts Woods borders of fields T. It hath leaves in Aprill Fl and Fr in Sept N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Crespinus oxyacantha uva crespina Barbery bush Ger T. the leaves and berries are cold and drie 2° Gal of thin parts cutting V. the leaves season meat as sorrell The decoction h. cholerick agues heat of the bloud and liver so the berries h. hot laskes bloody flix and bleeding The green leaves made into a sauce as sorrell h. hot stomacks burning agues and appetite lost the conserve of the fruit more effectually The roots steeped certain daies in strong lie of the ashes of ash-tree colour the haire yellow Johns the bark of the roots h. the jaundise Park the juyce stopps womens courses taken with Southernwood water and sugar it killeth wormes it h. haemoptysis fastneth the teeth stopps rheumes gleweth wounds the inner bark d. h. the jaundise Barley Hordeum P. Loose and drie ground almost every where T. It is to be sowen in March it 's ripe in Aug N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 these barleyes are called distichon and polystichon Barley Ger K. as the common and beare Barley T. is cold and drie 1° abstersive and drying more then bean meale V. Diose it cleanseth provoketh urine c. windinesse and hurteth the stomack the meale boyled in hydromel with figgs h. inflammations with pitch rofin and pigeons dung it softneth and ripeneth hard swellings with melilot and poppy seeds it h. pain in the sides ap with line-seed senugreek and rue it h. winde in the gutts with tar wax oile and the urine of a boy it doth digest soften and ripen hard swellings in the throat as the Kings evill boiled with wine myrtles the barke of the pome-granate wilde pears and the leaves of brambles it h. the laske the ale or beere made of it boyled to a salve and ap h. pains of the sinews and joynts or for old and new sores take strong ale lib. 2. one oxe gall boyle them gently with stirring adde vineger lib. 1. olibanum unc 1. fl of camomill and melilot an unc 1. rue finely poudered unc sem a litle hony and a small q. of the pouder of cominseed boyle them to an unguent and ap it h. old and new sores also the meale boyled in water with garden night-shade the leaves of garden poppy the pouder of senugreeke lineseed and
prickly Cedar K. as the Cyprus like V. the berries with hony h. the cough and the mother d. in wine stopps fluxes h. cramps and is little inferiour to the first Celandine Chelidonium P. In untilled places among brambles in the shade T. Fl from Aprill to a good part of Summer N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hirundinaria Scrophularia Ficaria Celandine Ger J K. as the great and great with more cut leaves T. the great is manifestly hot and dry 3° and clensing V. the juyce of the herbe doth sharpen the sight especially if boyled with hony The root h. the yellow jaundise without agues opening the liver and gall The root chewed h. the tooth-ache boyled with anise-feed in white wine it openeth the stoppings of the liver and h. the jaundise Cut in pieces and given to hawkes it cureth their wormes Clus the juyce of the great Celandine dropped into small green wounds presently cureth them Small Celandine T. is hot and dry more biting than the greater nigh to the crow-foot V. it blistereth the skin and drawes off corrupt nailes the juyce of the roots m. with hony ap As an errhine it purgeth the head of filthy humors The root and graines h. the piles the juyce with wine bathed Park the greater h. the dropsie itch● and sores in the leggs d. and the plague ap it h. creeping sores with oile of Cammomill the pains of the belly ap it h. spotts the lesser h. the Kings evill and wennes Centorie Centaurium P. A fat soile and sunny bankes pastures and fields T. Fl in summer the roots are to be gathered in Autumne N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The lesser is called Fel terrae Multi-radix Centorie Ger J K. as the common great and whole leafed T. is hot and dry 3° of a mixt taste V. drach 2. of the root taken h. burstings spitting of bloud cramps shrinking of sinews dyspnoea's and gripings of the belly The herbe mightily gleweth wounds Diosc The root in the fore mentioned cases if no fever is to be given with wine else with water Gal the juyce of the leaves operates as the root and is used in stead of Lycium Small centorie K. as the common and yellow T. is hot and dry 2° and bitter the yellow is hot and dry 3° V. decoct in water and d. it openeth the liver gall and spleen it h. the yellow jaundise and long agues it killeth wormes clenseth scoureth and attenuateth it purgeth choller and thick humors and h. the Sciatica Stamped green ap it h. wounds old ulcers The juyce in collyries h. the eyes m. with hony clenseth them d. it h. the infirmities of the sinews drach 1. of the pouder of the leaves of the yellow centorie d. once in 3 daies with auniseed or carraway seeds in wine h. the dropsie and green sicknesse The juyce of the red floured is bitter purgeth choller and h. the liver Park K. as the Pyrenean great great of Portugal and great yellow V. d. it h. the dropsie sc the root and pleurisies coughs and strangury and eyes ap the lesser d. h. the green sicknesse and collick provokes the courses and birth Charlocke Rapistrum P. Follow fields ditch bankes among corne T. Fl from March till summer N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lampsana Matth Chadlock Charlocke Ger J K. as the wild chadlock and water chadl T. the seed of these wilde turneps and water chadlock are hot and drie as mustard-seed Gal these being eaten c. evill bloud Diosc they warme the stomack and nourish somewhat Park K as the white wilde one grained and Spanish one grained V. not used Gal the seed is abstersive and somewhat digesting Chaste-tree Agnus castus P. It groweth naturally in Italy and hot regions T. It putteth forth leaves in May fl in Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Salix marina Vitex Chaste-tree Ger J K. as the common and that with cut leaves T. the leaves and fruit are hot and dry 3° of thin parts and wasting winde V. it c. chastity by exiccation of the sperme used any way The seed d. h. windinesse of the stomack openeth the liver and spleen drach 1. d. in wine h. dropsies the leaves stamped with butter ap dissolve the swellings of the genitors The decoction of the herbe seed h. the pain inflammation of the matrice used as a bath The seed d. with penniroyall bringeth down the menses so also in a pessarie or sume In a pultis it h. the head-ache phrensie and lethargie with oile and vineger being bathed The sume thereof chaseth away serpents and ap h. their bitings The seed ap with water h. the rifts of the fundament with the leaves it h. luxations and wounds Park the seed d. h. the bitings of venimous beasts causeth milke in womens breasts and provoketh urine Made into a pultise with vine leaves and oile ap it h. agues and wearinesse the seed with barley meale mollifieth with hony h. sore mouthes Cherry-tree Cerasus P. Gardens old broken walls shadowie places and fields T. Bloomes in Aprill the winter ch Fl in Aug and hath fruit N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That of the winter is called Solanum halicacabum Cherry-tree Ger K. as the common English Spanish late ripe cluster double fl bearing fruit double fl barren birds red grape common black and dwarfe ch T. those that are somewhat sowre are the best the wild little sweet ones the worst they soon putrifie and are of evill juyce and c. wormes agues and feavers they are all cold and moist V. the Spanish cherries are like to these in faculty yet putrifie not so soone The Flanders or Kentish when ripe are better yet watery cold and moist and quench thirst h. hot stomacks and agues loosen the body and nourish nothing at all The late ripe or morell ●h are drie being dryed and binding they h. the stomack and stop the belly All are cold and moist and eaten before meat loosen the belly hurt rheumatick bodies and cold stomacks The black strengthen the stomack are better than the red and dried stop the laske The distilled water of cherries h. hot stomacks and the falling sicknesse d. with wine The gumme of the cherry-tree d. in wine and water h. the stone lubrifying the passages and h. the sharpnesse of humors also it h. old coughs the sight and appetite and causeth a good colour Winter cherries K. as the red and black T. the 1. is cold drie and of subtile parts the leaves are of the temperature of garden night-shade V. the fruit bruised and infused in white wine 2 or three houres then boiled and strained and d. with sugar and cinnamon h. the stopping of the urine stone and gravell dysury and sharpnesse of water c. h. the yellow jaundise If old d. a greater q. Cherry bay T. V. the fruit is good to be eaten the rest not used Recch the barke of the sweet cherry tree of India d. h. the dysentery the
unc 1. of French barley unc 2. and a small handfull of marsh mallow rootes wash cut and boyle them in the broth of a chicken of which take fasting in the morning unc 4. and fast two houres after so the white and h. barrennesse in those that are too hot The wilde K. as the three leafed V. are stronger then the first and cut open and digest Cinque-soile Pentaphyllon P. Low and moist meadowes upon bankes c. T. Fl from the beginning of May to Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Quinque-folium Five finger grasse Cincke-field Cinke-foile Ger. J. K. as the common great upright purple marsh stone silverweed wall hoarie small hoary creeping wood with white fl small white floured wood small golden floured and straw-berry Cinke-foile T. the roots especially of the first are drie 3° without apparent heate or sharpnesse V. the decoction of the roots d. h. all sluxes The juyce of the young roots d. h. diseases of the liver lungs all poyson and d. with meade or wine and pepper it h. tertian and quartan agues and fevers and the falling sicknesse d. 30 daies together The leaves with appropriate herbes h. ruptures and burstings their juyce d. h. the jaundise and comforteth the sromack and liver the decoction of the root held in the mouth h. the tooth-ache stayeth putrefaction and ulcers of the mouth h. inflammation of the almonds of the throat and stayeth laskes The root boyled in vineger h. shingles fretting sores and cankerous ulcers The leaves boiled in water with lignum vitae h. the falling sicknesse with sweating The extraction of the roots h. bloudy flixe Park K. as the great yellow and white codded and low with wild tansie leaves V. the wilde creeping upright and white are the best and operate as Tormentill it cooleth d. and ap it h. the quinsy coughs all nodes and paines Cinnamon-tree Canella * P. In Zealand and Malabar c. T. It is green all the yeare N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cinnamomum Cassia Cinnamon-tree Ger T. Diosc it is warming and of thin parts dry and astringent it 's diuretick oxydorkicke and persumeth the breath V. the decoction bringeth downe the menses h. bitings of venimons beasts the inflammations of the intestines and reines The distilled water comforteth the weake and cold stomack h. paine of the intestines c. by cold it h. the colour of the face used in meats they become more wholsome for all bodies the chymicall oyle h. paines of the breast comforteth the stomack breaketh winde h. digestion and m. with hony h. spotts in the face Garcias the distilled water of the fl operates as the barke The oile of the berries h. coldnesse of the sinews paines of the joynts stomack and breast the cassia lignea in a greater q. serveth in stead of Cinnamon Johns Park T. Cinnamon is hot and dry 2° aromaticall and very cordiall V. the distilled water h. the wind-collick the stopping of the urine and the courses it sweetneth the breath and resisteth poyson and stopps laskes Col the distilled water hastneth the birth stoppeth vomiting h. the sainting of the spirits and trembling of the heart it strengthneth the retentive faculty of the parts and h. cold and moist bodies Cassia lignea opens dissolves and dries Citrulls Citrullus P. In hot regions as in Syria c. T. The seeds are to be sowen as those of Cucumbers N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Anguria Citrulus Citrulls Ger K. as the common and small T. the pulpe is of little and cold nourishment the seeds are of like faculty with those of Cucumbers V. it engendreth a waterish bloud h. the heat of the inward parts and tempereth the sharpnesse of choler being raw and held in the mouth it h. roughnesse of the tongue in agues and quencheth thirst Wilde citrull Colocynthis T. Coloquintida is bitter in all its parts hot and dry fine 2di so it purgeth clenseth openeth and operates as most bitter things doe but chiefely by the stoole V. it violently purgeth flegme and choller therefore it is carefully to be used being mixed with mastick or gum tragacanth that it fret not the intestines or with gum arabick and bdellium its good to be used in the scotoma vertigo megrim continuall head-ache apoplexie epilepsie stuffing of the lungs gripings of the intralls and other dangerous diseases Common oile wherein it is boyled h. singing in the eares and deafenesse ap also it killeth wormes and looseth the belly the navill being annoinred therewith Mes decoct in vineger and the teeth being washed therewith it h. the too thache the seed with myrrhe and aloes preserveth dead bodies scr 1. of the pulpe taken mightily openeth the belly and purgeth grosse flegme and choller so also the infusion and h. the diseases aforesaid and collick loosenesse of the sinews luxations and all diseases of cold So also used in clysters boyled in oyle and ap with wooll it h. paine of the hemorrhoides The decoction used as a somentation provoketh the termes Park K. as the Turkie V. the seed h. the heat and sharpnesse of urine and macilent bodies grown feeble by chronicall diseases all its parts are used for the same diseases that gourds are Coloquintida h. the jaundise and putrid fevers ap it killeth the foetus and clenseth the skin the oile of sweet almonds stops its working Clarie Horminum P. In moist Gardens the wild in barren places T. They Fl. in June July and August N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gallitricum Sclarea Geminalis Centrum galli Clarie Ger. J. K. as the common small Fuchsius his wild and Jupiters Distaffe T. is hot and dry 3° V. the seed powdered and m. with hony taken cleareth the sight It s mucilage ap draweth out what is fixed in the body and scattereth swellings especially in the joynts The seed powdered and d. with wine c. lust The leaves taken h. the weaknesse of the back caused by too much flowing of the whites but more effectually fryed with egges like a tansie Wild Clarie K. as the common with purple leaves broad leafed wild white floured wild and red fl wild T. in temperature and faculties are referred to the garden Claries Aeginet it is hot moderately drie and clensing The feed d. with wine c. lust with hony clenseth the eyes so also put whole into the eyes and h. waterish humors rednesse inflammations c. And easeth paine The leaves in pottage scatter congealed blood warme the stomack and helpe dimnesse of the eyes Park K. as the garden low Germane Italian wild spike floured sage leafed and plaine Aethiopian V. This d. h. coughs the plurisie and sciatica The yellow h. ulcers the pouder of the first h. barennesse and c. sneezing Claver Medica P. The first in Italy the rest in France Spaine and fields T. It s sown in Aprill Fl. in June and July the fruit is ripe in Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Trifolium cochleatum Claver Ger. J. K. as the medick fodder prickly snaile and
the evill of surfeiting The juice h. the voice It 's hot and drye 1° Coltsfoot Bechium P. It groweth neere springs and in moist places T. Fl. in March and Aprill and the flowers quickly fade N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Farfara Vngula caballina Populago Farrugium Tussilago Coltsfoot Ger. J. K. as the common and mountaine T. the leaves green are something cold and drying and h. ulcers and inflammations dryed are hot and dry and somewhat biting V. A decoction of the green leaves and roots or a syrrup of them h. coughs of a thin rheume The green leaves stamped with hony h. all inflammations The fume of the dryed leaves taken through a sunnel h. shortnesse of breath and the impostumes of the brest so also taken as tobacco Park The distilled water with Elder fl and Nightshade d. the q. of unc 2. h. agues and applyed h. all heate burnings and pushes The wooll of the root boiled with Niter makes tinder The root of the hoary and American d. h. coughs and lenifies ap The mountaine Coltsfoot is uselesse Columbine Aquilegia P. Gardens being planted there T. They fl in May June and July N. Aquileia Aquilina Leo herba Dod. Pothos Theoph. Columbine Ger. J. K. as the blew red double variegated with the inverted red fl inverted with the white fl rose and degenerate Col. T. they are thought to be temperate between heate and moisture V. Trag. drach 1. of the seed with scr sem of Saffron d. in Wine opens the liver and h. the yellow ja●ndise with sweating The leaves boiled in milke h. sore throats and the uvula fallen The flowers open the liver Clus the powder of the seed d. in wine doth facilitate womens labour Park K. as the single and white Spanish V. the root eaten h. the stone d. it h. swounings The tufted h. ulcers and plague and swounings with amber greise Consound Solidago Saracenica P. In Gardens and by wood sides T. It flowreth in July the seed is ripe in Aug. N. Consolida aurea Tab. Consolida Saracen Herbafortis Consound Ger. K. as the Saracens T. is drie 3° with manifest heat V. d. and ap it 's not inferiour to any traumatick herbe It h. the wounds of the lungs The leaves boiled in water and d. stay the wasting of the liver and h. the oppilation of the same also it cureth the yellow jaundise and chronicall agues and feavers The decoction of the leaves made in water h. the sorenesse of the throat being used as a gargarisme it increaseth also the virtue of lotions appropriate for privy maimes sore mouths and m. therewith Park K. as the Germane small codded V. as the rest helpe the dropsie and all inward ulcers wounds and bruises The distilled water h. all paine in the body and all wounds Trag. the water h. the fretting of the genitors ulcers of the mouth Corall-worts Dentaria P. On shadowie and darke hills T. Fl. in Aprill and May the seed is ripe in Aug. N. Dentillaria Viola dentaria Coralloides Corall-worts Ger. J. K. as the ●oothed violet corall toothed seven leased and first and second five leased T●is vulnerary V. Matth. the decoction of the r●ot h. the enterocele inward wounds especially those that have entered into the carity of the brest Park K. as the bulbed Cinquesoile and Tresoile Setfoile and bulbed narrow leafed with the least V. the root is drying binding and strenthning it expells urine and gravell h. paines of the sides and bowells and inward wounds drach 1. of the powder of the root d. in red wine for a certaine time and d. with horsetaile water h. ruptures and cold fluxes and ap the decoction h. green wounds Coriander Coriandrum P. In fertile fields and Gardens T. They fl in June and July and seed in Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Corianon Coriannum Coliandrum Coriander Ger. K. as the common and bastard T. the green and stinking leaves are cold dry and very hurtfull to the body The seed dry is warme and usefull V. comfits of the seed prepared taken after meate close the mouth of the stomack stay vomiting h. digestion The seed dryed in an oven and d. with wine killeth wormes and stoppeth all fluxes The seeds are prepared by drying then steep them 24. houres in Wine and Vineger and dry them againe for use The green leaves boiled with the crums of bread or barley meale h. all hot swellings and inflammations and with beane meale dissolve the Kings evill wens and hard lumpes The juice of the leaves m. with ceruse litharge of silver Vineger and oile of roses h. S. Anthonies fire and all inflammations drach 4. of the juice of the green leaves taken poyson the body The seed prepared with sugar taken first and last helps the gout c. digestion shuts the stomack represseth fumes h. noise in the eares dryeth up rheumes and h. the quinsey Park the dryed seeds d. in wine help urine and cause coiture and encrease bloud and sperme The Indian Coriander like seed decoct h. agues husked and boiled like Rice taking it and abstaining from other food it 's called Mungo Bauh Gal. Coriander hath contrary faculties having much of a bitter essence which consisteth of thin and terrene parts with an aqueous tepid humidity and a little astriction Mac. The antidote is swallow-wort Corne. Far. P. It groweth in fat and fertile moist grounds T. It 's sown in Sept. or October and is ripe in July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the first Zea. Spelta Zea Diecccos Matth. Corne. Ger. K. as the spelt corne zea or spelta T. Diosc It nourisheth more then barly Gal. It 's in a mean between wheat barley and may be referred to them V. The meale boyled in water with the powder of Saunders and a little oile of Roses and Lillies unto the forme of a pultis and applyed hot h. swelling of the leggs gotten by cold and long standing Starch-corne Triticum amylcum T. Is somewhat like to Wheat or Barley V. it serveth to feed Cattle and to make starch of S. Peters corne Briza monococcos with the Haver grasse Festuca Italica T. are somewhat sharp and digesting V. the juice of the last m. with barley meale dryed and when used moystned with rose water and ap plaisterwise h. the Aegilops or fistula in the corner of the eye it mollifieth and disperseth nodes aswageth the swellings of the joynts Burnt Corne ustilago K. as of Barley Oats and Rie T. V. are not used in physicke They cause bread to look black and to be of an evill taste Lonic the bran of spelt is used in clysters it is a little drying decoct in wine and vineger it h. the eyes So Trag. Bauh the bread thereof is black and unpleasant Cornell-tree Cornus P. In Gardens the second in hedges almost every where T. Fl. in Aprill the berries are ripe in August N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the female is called virga sanguinea Cornell tree Ger. T. the
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
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
inflammations of the mouth and almonds of the throat and uvula gargarized The tender leaves of the tree with parched barley meale h. hot swellings scaldings bitings of a mad dog and glew ulcers The pith dryed is good to put into issues to keep them open See Blochwit Water Elder K. as the common and rose T. V. are not discovered Park As the first Pem. The flowers c. sweat their water opens the liver spleen and reines and h. tertian agues and melancholy unc 3. taken fasting The Jewes eares with columbine leaves boiled in ale h. sore throats and steeped in plantaine water ap h. inflamed eyes The water cleareth the skin and h. the paine of the sides The oile h. paines of the joynts Park K. as the red berryed V. the decoction of the berries coloureth haires black The juice of the leaves is an apophlegmatisme and with hony h. the paine of the eares The flowers in clysters h. the winde and collick Elecampane Helenium P. In fruitfull meadowes and shadowie places T. Fl. in June and July the roots are gathered in Autumne N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Inula Enula Campana Scabwort Elecampane Ger. T. is hot and dry 3° when green it 's full of superfluous moisture V. It h. short breath old coughs and orthopnoea's given in a lohoc The root preserved taken after supper h. digestion and keepeth the belly soluble The juice boiled killeth wormes and chewed fasteneth the teeth The root h. poyson bitings of serpents ruptures cramps and convulsions An ointment of the decoction or powder with hony h. old ulcers It h. the sciatica The decoction d. provoketh urine h. burstings and luxations The root taken with hony clenseth the breast ripeneth tough flegme c. expectoration h. coughs and shortnesse of breath comforteth the stomack and h. digestion so the roots condited Boiled soft and mixed with fresh butter and powder of ginger ap it h. the itch scabs and manginesse Pem. the canded roots h. the winde of the stomack and stitches in the sides caused by the spleen wheesing in the lungs mother plague and putrifyed fevers d. in ale it cleareth the sight Note it must not be given to hot and dry bodyes The dose of the root powdered is from 20. graines to 30. The decoction ap h. sores and cankers Park The roots condited h. melancholy The decoction of the root killeth all wormes whatsoever The distilled water cleareth the skin Fuch Plin. Eaten fasting it fastens the teeth Elme-tree Vlmus P. Almost every where T. The seed falleth in Aprill N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The seed is called Samarra Elme-tree Ger. J. K. as the common narrow leafed witch-hasell or the broadest leafed and smooth leafed elme T. The leaves and bark are moderately hot and clensing with clamminesse V. the leaves h. green wounds and the barke ap The leaves stamped with vineger take away scurfe Vnc. 1. of the thicker barke d. in wine or water purgeth flegme The decoction of the leaves barke or root h. broken bones bathed The liquor in the blisters ap h. pimples spots freckles and beautifyeth the face It healeth green wounds and cureth ruptures newly made being laid on with spleen wort using a trusse Park K. as the lesser V. it operates as the rest the leaves d. in malmsie with pepper h. old coughs The decoction of the barke or root h. shrunk sinewes the scum c. haire The barke applyed with brine h. the gout Endive Endivia P. Gardens the wild in barren grounds T. It 's sown in spring it seedeth in harvest N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Intybus Scariola Seriola Lob. Park Endive Ger. J. K. as the garden succory and endive with the thornie T. are cold and dry 2° somewhat binding something bitter clensing and opening Garden endive is colder and not so dry or clensing V. the herbs green cool hot livers h. the stopping of the gall yellow jaundise lack of sleep stopping of urine hot burning feavers so the syrrup the distilled water is used in potions cooling and purging and with that of plantain and roses injected with a syringe h. excoriations in the passages of the urine The herb eaten in sallads especially the white comforteth the weake and cooleth the hot stomack The leaves of succory bruised and ap h. inflamed eyes Pem. The distilled water h. sharpnesse of urine so the seed and h. the syncope it hurteth the palsie cold stomacks The dose is drach 1. Ap. it h. the gout fretting ulcers and hot tumours Wild succory K. as the common yellow and wild endive T. agree with the garden sorts V. the leaves boiled in broth h. weake and hot stomacks and operate as the first Gum succorie chondrilla K. as the blew that of Robinus yellow Spanish rushy sea swines male swines and wart succory T. are like the common but dryer V. the roots with hony and nitre made into trochisks clense the morphew sun-burnings spots in the face The gum smootheth the haires of the eye-browes and is used in stead of mastick Powdered with myrhre made into a pessarie it brings down the termes The leaves of wart succorie powdered and d. to the quantity of a spoonfull take away warts and such excrescencies Park K. as the small garden endive and succory with red fl c. V. the last boiled and d. purgeth forth flegme and choller The distilled water h. cachexies ap it h. inflammations Gum succory h. laskes The bulbed h. the Kings evill Eye-bright Eufragia P. In dry medowes grassie waies and pastures T. Fl. in Aug till Sept. and must then be gathered N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ophthalmica Ocularia Eufrasia Luminella Eye-bright T. is more hot than dry V. taken alone or with other things it preserveth and restoreth the sight the powder being taken with fennell seed mace and sugar Stamped and ap to the eyes or the juice with white wine dropped in or the distilled water cleareth the sight Three parts of the powder with one of mace m. h. all hurts of the eyes and comforte the memory halfe a spoonefull being taken every morning in whitewine Pem. To cleare the sight take rose water and celandine an unc 1. of tutty powdered drach 1. m. and wash the eyes Park K. as the great red wooddy greater purple broad leafed and yellow with the lesser V. being infused in wine or beere it h. the eyes effectually Bauh It h. the inflammation of the eyes and grief thereof e. by crude humors Trag. decoct in wine it h. the jaundise F Fellwort Gentiana P. In shadowie woods and mountaines T. Fl. in August the seed is ripe in Sept. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Basilica Serap Ciminalis centauria radix Aloe Gall. FEllwort Ger. J. K. as the great great purple blew flowred crosse wort and spotted of Dr Pennie T. the root is hot and clensing bitter attenuating purging and opening V. it h. cramps and convulsions ruptures bad livers and stomacks and h. against poison and broken windednesse Drach 1. of the root
powdered with a little pepper and herbe of grace h. against the stingings of venemous beasts bitings of mad doggs or any poison The decoction d. h. stoppings of the liver crudity of the stomack and digestion it scattereth congealed blood and h. all cold diseases of the inward parts Park or outward English felwort or hollow T. V. is not discovered but may be referred to the first Bastard Fellwort K. as the spring large floured Alpish of the spring time and the bastard T. are in tast and forme like the greater gentians V. they operate as the rest but lesse effectually Park Hollow root ap clenseth purgeth and dryeth Park K. as the smaller vernall autumne and centory like leafed V. the roots d. in wine h. lamenesse The water h. agues killeth wormes and c. courses the juice h. ulcers and heat of the eies Fennell Foeniculum P. Gardens and hot countries T. Fl. in June and July the seed is ripe in Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Marathrum The gyant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Fennell Ger. K. as the common and sweet T. the seed is hot and dry 3° V. the powder of the seed d. for certain daies fasting preserveth the sight The green leaves eaten or seed d. in a ptisan c. milke in womens breasts so the roots and h. the dropsie boiled in wine and d. The seed d. h. the pain of the stomack desire to vomit and breaketh wind The herbe seed and root h. the lungs liver and kidnies opening and corroborating The seed and herbe of the sweet fennell operate as the anise-seed Pem. The herbe is not so hot as the seed It provoketh urine h. the stone and hicket swelling of the spleen jaundise gout cramps and shortnesse of breath it causeth a good colour and attenuateth fat bodies Note ithurts hot bodies Hoggs fennell K. as the common sulphurwort dwarfe and great peucedanum T. these especially the yellow sap of the root is hot 2° dry initio 3ii V. the juice of the root taken alone or with bitter almonds rue h. shortwindednesse paines of the belly winde of the stomacke wasteth the spleen and purgeth flegme and choller it expelleth urine the birth and secundine and h. paines of the kidnies and bladder Mixed with oile of roses or vineger ap it h. the palsie cramp sciatica and cold diseases It helpet● ruptures and exomphalos The decoction of the root operates as the juice but not so effectually The powder of it clenseth and healeth old sores and ulcers and extracts things fixed in the flesh mixed with oile of roses it causeth sweat being annointed therefore it h. the French pox The congealed liquor with oile of roses ap h. the lethargy frensie dizinesse falling sicknesse palsie cramps and all infirmities of the sinewes with vineger and oile Smelt to it reviveth those that are strangled with the mother Taken in a reare egge i th coughs dyspnoe●'s and gripings c. by grosse humors It wasts the spleen cutting digesting and attenuating it opens the matrix and facilitates the birth Held in the mouth it h. the mother Fennell gyant K. as the common small and Aesculapius his alheale T. these with their gums are hot 3° and dry 2° V. the pith Gal. is astringent and h. the haemoptysis and flix As an errhine it stops bleeding d. in wine h. bitings of vipers and rosted with pepper and salt eaten c. lust The seed is hot and attenuating and h. agues mixt with oile and the body anointed therewith Drach 1. of the juice of ferula bearing sagapenum purgeth grosse flegme and choler h. old and cold diseases as the epilepsie apoplexy c. cramps palsies and shrunk sinews short breath long cough and paine of the side brest Sagapenum steeped in vineger ap wasteth mollifyeth all hard swellings The juice of ferula g●lbanifera galbanum d. in wine with myrrhe h. all poyson The q. of a beane taken in wine h. womens travell The perfume h. risings of the mother and falling sicknesse It mollifieth attracteth splinters wasts cold humors and operates as Sagapenum Park The seed of the common boiled in wine and d. h. the bitings of serpents and poison The juice cleareth the eyes so the distilled water The juice dropped into the eares killeth the wormes thereof The wild is stronger and h. the stone The decoction of the seed of the round-headed coloureth the haire yellow Hoggs fennell K. as the Italian V. as the rest the juice in wine ap h. paine of the eares and tooth-ach Scorching fennell K. as the true Spanish and carrot leafed V. scr 2. of the barke of the root or scr sem of the juice d. with meade strongly purgeth choller upwards and downwards It h. asthm●'s Ap. it digesteth and draweth and h. blemishes of the skin and paines of the joynts Fenugreek Foenum graecum P. Gardens it 's sown in fields beyond the sea T. It may be sown untill Aprill N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Carphos Plin. Si liqua Columel Silicula Varronis Fenugreek Ger. J. K. as the common and wild T. it doth manifestly heat it is hot 2° dry 1° The meale mollifyeth and wasteth V. the juice of the herb boiled and taken with hony purges all corrupt humors in the intestines and easeth paine being slimy and warme It clenseth and raiseth humours out of the chest with a little hony with more in old diseases without a fever boyling it with fatdates using it long before meat It h. inflammations that are lesse hot by wasting them the meale boiled with mead ap h. all inflammations and kneaded with niter and vineger h. hard spleens The bath of it h. impostumes ulcers or stoppings of the matrix the juice of the decoction clenseth the haire h. dandriffe and achores as a pessarie with goose grease it openeth the mother The green herb stamped with vineger h. feeble parts without skin and ulcerated The decoction h. ulcers in the low gut and bloudy flix The oile scoureth haires and the scars of the privities The seed decoct in wine and d. with vineger expells all evill humors Boiled in wine with dates and hony unto a syrrup it clenseth and h. paines of the breast The meale boiled in mead dissolveth all hard swellings so also m. with the roots of marsh mallows and line-seed The decoction used as a bath with wine h. griefs in the lower parts of women or the fume taken The decoction of the seed h. scurfe Pem. Its mucilage ap h. paines of the eyes Park The seeds buried till they sprout eaten c. to grow sat Aeg. It is hot loosens the belly taken before meate Week The oile with that of myrtles ap h. the cicatrices of the genitors Fenny-stones Orchis palmata P. In fenny grounds and moist shadowie woods T. They flower and flourish about May and June N. The 1. is Cynosorchis Dracuntias Lob. The three last Palma Christi Fenny-stones Ger. J. K. as the marsh dragon marsh handed handed marsh creeping greatest handed satyrion T.
V. are of little use in physick and are referred to the handed satyrions whereof they are kinds Dal. The marsh orchis is more strong in procuring lust than any of the dogs stones Park K. as the female handed small with red fl sweet smelling like cloves frogg-like gelded spotted marsh great mountain handed and spotted white V. the roots boiled in red wine and d. stop fluxes the powder being taken The marsh as Serapias stones Ferne. Filix P. In dry and barren ground in shadowie places T. Fl. in summer the seed is ripe at midsummer N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pteris Of the female Thelypteris Nymphaeopteris Ferne. Ger. K. as the male and female T. are hot bitter dry and something binding V. unc sem of the root of the male ferne kills long flat wormes d. in mede and more effectually with scr 2. of scammony first eating garlick It also expelleth the child in the wombe h. the spleen Stamped with axungia it h. the prickings of the reed The female operates as the male Diosc It c. barrennesse and abortion The powder ap h. ulcers and gallings The root of the 1. sodden in wine opens the spleen in water h. lasks in children the fume of the decoction taken Water ferne T. the root is lesse hot and dry than they of the former ones V. the heart of the root d. h wounds bruises and dissolveth clotted bloud so the tender sprigs and are good to be put into unguents appropriate to wounds and punctures Wallferne or Polypodie K as of the wall of the oake Indian T. doth dry without biting V. Diosc it purgeth choller and flegme Actuar And melancholy boyled in broth with beets or mallows Mes It dryeth and attenuateth h. aches in the joynts taken in a decoction for some space with phlebotomy cathartick and hydroticke remedies It h. luxations unc 1. boiled with hony water and pepper d. purgeth flegme and choller or unc 3. in water and wine Oake ferne K. as the true white and tree-f T. is sweet biting and bitter V. it is a psilothron ap The black operates as maidenhaire The small fernes K. as the male fountaine male and female dwarfe stone-ferne T. V. are referred to the black o●e-ferne Park K. as the great strange and diverse leafed mules ferne V. h. the spleen The berrie bearing of America sea and naked stone-ferne V. are referred to the former Polypody h. all ill affects of the lungs sc the water with sugar-candy Feverfew Febrifuga P. In hedges and about rubbish T. Fl for the most part all the summer N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Matricaria Amarella Tagetes Feverfew Ger J K. as the common double and mountain T. is hot 3° dry 2° it clenseth purgeth openeth and operates as other bitter things V. it h. the diseases of the matrix provokes the termes and expells the dead child d. ap or used in a bath Diosc it h. S. Anthonies fire the leaves and fl being applied and all hot swellings The powder d. with oxymel syrup of vineger or wine evacuates flegme melancholy h. pursinesse stuffings of the lungs as also the stone drach 2. of the powder taken with hony or sweet wine purge flegme and melancholy so h. those that are vertiginous melancholicke and penfive The herbe h. the suffocation of the mother hardnesse and stopping of the same being boyled in wine and ap so the decoction sate over d. and ap with bay salt to the wrists with powder of glasse it h. the ague Park The double la. those that have taken opium so the rest and also all pains in the head c. by cold d. it h. agues the distilled water h. freckles and collick ap Figge-tree Ficus P. Spain Italy gardens under a hot wall T. They beare ripe fruit in the spring August and September N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The unripe fruit is called Grossus and Olynthus Figge-tree Ger J K. as the common and dwarfe T. The dry figgs nourish better than the green which are somewhat warme and moist The dry and ripe are hot almost 3° sharpe and biting the leaves are somewhat sharpe opening but not so strong as the juyce V. dry figgs are not of very good juyce they h. the throat and lungs the cough and short windednesse Decoct with hysope and d. they expectorate flegme Stamped with salt rue and nut kernells they h. poyson and prevent infection stamped with wheat meale powder of fenugreeke lineseed and the roots of marsh mallows ap warme they ripen impostumes and phlegmons and all hot tumors behind the eares and the roots of lillies added h. bubo's boiled in wormewood wine with barley meale ap to the belly they h. dropsies Drie figgs soften and wast both inwardly and outwardly the leaves wast the Kings evill and all tumors ap with the roots of marsh mallowes The milke h. rough skinnes sores spotts and deformity ap with barley meale and h. warts ap with fat things it also h. the tooth-ache ap and openeth the hemorrhoids with fenugreek and vineger they h. goutes the milke ap h. wounds of venemous beasts green figgs h. the stone the dry h. all diseases of the chest paine of the bladder and child-birth the juyce of the leaves dissolveth milke clotted in the stomack ap with the yelke of an egge c. the menses The prickly Indian fig-tree T. V. eaten coloureth the bloud red the juyce h. old ulcers Cochenele is given in maligne diseases as in pestilent diseases c. The arched Indian figtree T.V. The fruit is usually eaten and of good nourishment Pem Figgs h. the falling sicknesse quinsie and infirmities of the womb they also expell venemous matter to the skinne toasted they facilitate the birth ap with leaven and salt they breake plague sores and with copporas h. running ulcers with salt ap they h. kibes and tosted paine of the teeth They are best for phlegmatick persons Col 2 or 3 eaten in the morning steeped in aquavitae h. pursinesse Park The Indian figgs loosen the belly refresh the spirits h. coughs hot urine and c. lust The juyce of the leaves h. burnings common figgs boiled with hysop and lycorice h. the chest Figge-wort Scrophularia P. In shadowie woods and moist meadowes T. They floure in June and July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Millemorbia Castrangula Ficaria Ferraria Figge-wott Ger. J. K. as the great Indian and yellow floured T. Col it 's thought to be hot and dry fine 3 tii V. It h. the Kings evill piles and hemorrhoides the root boiled with butter ap It h. wenns and hard knotts d. and ap it dissolveth clotted bloud the roots boiled with oile and wax h. all scabbs and lepry so the distilled water d. ap and h. the virulency of corroding ulcers spots freckles scurf and deformity of the skin Park K. as the great without knobbed roots great leafed of Candy strange and elder like V. The roots with butter set 15 daies in a
moist place then boiled and strained make an excellent ointment for scabbs c. so Bauh Matth Solenand and Dod drach 1. of the root d. killes wormes Filbeard-tree Avellana P. In orchards gardens and hedges T. The catkins fall off in March the fruit is ripe in August N. Corylus Nux Prenestina Heracleotica Filbeard-tree Ger J K. as the common that of Constantinople with the wild hedge-nut T. Dod The filbeard nuts green are drier than wallnuts when dry they are colder Ger the catkins are cold dry and binding and h. the fluxe V Col the skins that cover the nut kernells taken in wine to the q. of drach 1. stay womens courses especially those of the red filbeard so drach 2. of the shells d. in red wine stop laskes with the milke of the kernells and catkins an electuary of the parched kernells h. old coughs and d. with pepper h. catarrh●● a decoction of the inner rinde made in small ale d. first and last 9 dayes h. the strangury too many eaten cause head-ache except eaten with raisins Park being parched they are lesse hurtfull to the stomack being lesse oilie and windie Firre-tree Abies P. High mountains in Italy France c. T. The time of the Firre-tree agreeth with the Pine N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It s rosin is called Lachryma abietis Terebinthina Veneta Firre-tree Ger J K. as the male and female T. The barke fruit and gum are of the nature of the pitch-tree and his gumms V. its rosin sc the turpentine looseth the belly expelleth choller clenseth the kidnies expelleth urine and the stone taken with sugar and the powder of nutmeggs it h. the strangury gonorrhoea and the whites It healeth green wounds being washed in plantaine and rose water with the yelke of an egge the powder of olibanum and mastick with saffron Park T. the cleer turpentine is hot and dry 2° and very clensing V. It is excellent in salves for green wounds clensing and sodering them together Recch The Firre of Mexico T. is hot and dry 3° the rosin is hot 4° discussing and corroborating Flag Gladiolus P. In meadows and watery places T. Fl from May to July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ensis The corne Flag Segetalis Victorialis rotundus Flag Ger J K. as the French corne-flag Italian and water sword fl T. the root of corne flag doth draw wast consume and dry and is of a subtile digesting quality V. The root stamped with the powder of frankincense ap draweth out splinters stamped with the meale of darnell and meade ap it h. hard swelings Some affirme that the upper root causeth lust and the lower barrennesse the upper root d. in water h. the enterocele in children stamped with hoggs grease and wheaten meale they h. the scrophula the seed d. in goats or asses milke h. paines of the collick Ordinary flagge T. the roots are hot and dry 2° V. It bindes strengthens and condenses it h. fluxes and stops the courses Park The distilled water of the yellow water-flag h. watering eyes being dropped thereinto and ap h. blemishes in the body it h. inflammations and cancers and foule ulcers in the privities Lonic T. It 's of the same faculty with acorus Lugd. Ap. it draweth out the menses the upper root c. venery Dorst The water h. burning fevers the root d. h. coughs and poyson Flax. Linum P. In fruitfull and moist soiles the wild in gravelly places T. Fl in June and July the seed ripens in the mean time N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Linum sativum the wilde Sylvestre Flaxe Ger. K. as the garden T. The seed is hot 1° in a mean between moist and dry as others of superfluous moisture and windie though parched V. It hurteth the stomack is of hard digestion of little nourishment provokes urine loosens the belly and if parched stoppeth it Diosc Line-seed operates as fenugreeke wasteth and mollifieth hot swellings d. and ap Boiled with hony oyle and water it h. spots and blemishes and foule skinnes with salt-peter and figgs with hony and water cresses it brings off ill favoured nailes with hony it expectorates flegme and h. coughs Baked with pepper and hony it causeth lust the oile mollifieth hard swellings ap extendeth shrunk sinews and easeth paine d. it h. paine in the side and collicke with aniseed and line-seed boiled in water ap it h. the angina Line-seed boiled in vineger ap h. the dysentery and pains of the belly stamped with the roots of wild cucumbers it draweth out things fixed in the body the bath h. inflammations of the matrix poudered with fenugreeke and boiled with mallowes violet leaves smallage and chickweed untill the herbs be soft then stamped with axungia to the forme of a pultis ap h. all paine softneth cold tumors suppurateth apostumes and prevents ranklings applied warme evening and morning Wild flaxe K. as the wilde white thin leafed wilde broad leafed dwarfe millmountaine the third broad leaved and yellow floured T. V. are referred to the garden flaxe and are seldome used in physicke or surgerie Toad-flaxe K. as the great sweet purple variable of Valentia white purple creeping yellow soure-leaved creeping golden star-fashioned golden bushie sparrowes sparrowtongue and bastard toad-flaxe T. They are of the temper of the wilde snap-dragons whereof they are kindes V. the decoction h. the jaundise and deformity of the skinne being bathed therewith d. it openeth the liver spleen and h. the jaundise and the dysurie openeth the passages Col Park Lineseed taken with raisins opens the liver with water myrrh olibanū wine it h. wateringeyes the oyle with rose water h. burnings The wild resolves and lenifieth Common toad flax V. h. the dropsie and stone and d. looseth the belly h. the jaundise expells poyson the menses and dead child ap it h. red eyes the juyce h. ulcers and spots of the skin Park K. As the broad leased blew and narrow leased with yellow fl V. the wild in most things is like that of the garden and in many things more effectuall by reason of its bitternesse the decoction with the fl resolveth tumors lenifyes inflammations stiffe arteries and swellings in the groin The last is used to loosen the body Toad-flax K. as the greater of Hungary base white mountaine Spanish upright and bastard V. as the rest Schenck pag. 738. The distilled water of the fl of flax taken with sugar expelleth the pox so Holler Mac the oile is emetick Flea-bane Conyza P. In Spain Italy France Germany England c. T. Fl in July and August N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The blew fl is called Amellus montanus Columnae Dentelaringes Flea-bane Ger. J. K. as the great small middle dwarfe great jagged-leaved watersnipt Austrian hoary hairy of the Alpes and blew flowred T. is hot and dry 3° V. The leaves and flowers h. the strangury jaundise and griping of the belly taken with vineger they h. the epilepsie the fume of the decoction h. paines
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
pox and measels The water distilled with wine till red h. old coughs ulcers inflammations drynesse of the lungs Park K. as the greater spiked fl and germander like V. the male h. infectious diseases d. in wine paines of the head jaundise stone fluxes of bloud The female h. fluxes cankers d. and ap The juice h. the polypus Bor. The water h. the dropsie Fooles-stones Orchis morio P. In pastures and fields seldome manured T. Fl. in May and June the stones are to be gathered in Sept. N. The last is called Orchis Anthropophora Oreades Fooles-stones Ger. J. K. as the male female and lesser spotted T. are hot moist V. these are thought to have the vertues of dog-stones whereunto they are referred Park K. as the male Neopolitan V. this with the rest operates as dog-stones Fox-gloves Digitalis P. In barren sandy grounds almost every where T. They flower and flourish in June and July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Alisma Damasonium Caesalp Viola calathiana Plin. Fox-gloves Ger. J. K. as the purple red white yellow and dusky T. Col. Are bitter hot dry and clensing V. boiled in water and d. they cut thick flegme and naughty humours opening the liver spleen and inward parts and d. with meade clense the breast ripen clammy flegme they may be used in stead of gentian Park The leaves ap h. green wounds the juice clenseth and dryeth old sores and h. the Kings evill or the herb ap Two handfulls of the herb taken with unc 4. of polypody of the oake bruised and d. in ale effectually h. the epilepsie Fox-stones Testiculus Vulpinus P. In moist meadowes woods and fertile pastures T. Fl. from May to the end of Aug. N. Orchis Serapias The birds Ornithophora Fox-stones Ger. J. K. as the butterfly satyrion gnat humble bee waspe bee fly yellow small yellow birds spotted birds souldiers souldiers cullions spider small gnat narrow leased satyrion T. V. are referred unto the dog-stones yet they are not of any great use in physick Park K. as the greater gnat and purple birds flowered V. These with the rest are not so effectuall for venery but serve to discuss swellings and clense foule ulcers and fistula's and h. inflammations of the mouth phagedens and lasks Fox-taile grasse Alopecuros P. In moist furrowes of fertile fields T. Towards the latter end of summer N. The first is called Gramen Phalaroides The rest Alopecuroides Fox-taile-grasse Ger. J. K. as the great small great bastard and small bastard T. V. are not yet discovered or the nature or vertues of the Foxetaile so Turn Park It is not used in medicine but serveth only to be worne as a toy in the hat Frankincense tree Arbor Thurifera * P. It groweth in Arabia T. It is gathered in the dog dayes N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thus sc the rosin and Olibanum Frankincense-tree Ger. T. Gal. Thus is hot 2° dry 1° with some small astriction the white is manifestly astringent so the rind and dryeth exceedingly being of more grosse parts than Frankincense and not so sharp so h. the spitting of bloud swellings in the mouth collick flux arising from the stomack and bloudy flixes The fume is dry 3° it doth also clense and fill up the ulcers of the eyes like unto myrrhe Diosc saith if it be drank by one in health it puts him into a frensie yet few consent hereunto Avic it strengtheneth the wit and understanding but taken often it c. headach and if too much be taken with wine it killeth Park it h. the gonorrhoea and melancholy It h. the cough and thin rheumes and the Pleurisie taken with the conserve of roses The sume h. the piles tenesmus and cough With mirrhe and the white of an egge ap it h. paines of the head and in salves it incarnates Friers cowle Arisarum P. In Italy and Tuscany T. They flowre with the Dragons N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aris Plinti Aron parvum Cornarii Friers cowle Ger. J. K. as the broad and narrow leafed T. it agreeth with wake-Robin yet is more biting V. It is not much used in Physick but it 's reported that it stayes phagedens and that being put into collyries it h. fistula's Diosc Being put into the secret part of any creature it rotteth the same so Cam. Park It 's milder than arum It h. hollow ulcers clensing and healing them Bauh It h. burnings Amat The Germanes use it against the plague yet it 's not acknowledged by Clus Fritillarie Fritillaria P. It groweth in gardens and meadowes T. It flowreth in March and Aprill N. Lilium variegatum Flos meleagris Dod. Fritillarie Ger. J. K. as the lesser darke yellow and early white with the checquered and changeable checquered daffodill T. V. serve onely to adorne and beautify the garden and are not yet used in medicine Bauh The smell of the black Fritillarie is unpleasant and stinking and neere unto that of stinking Gladdon The white is not yet written of as to any physicall use so Clusius and Bauhinus Frog-bit Morsus Ranae P. It floateth in ditches and standing waters T. It flowreth and flourisheth most part of the yeare N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nymphaea parva alba minima Park Frog-bit Ger. T. V. It 's thought to be a kind of pond-weed or rather of water Lilly and to have the same faculties that belong unto it Park As the lesser sorts of water lillies it cooleth yet lesse than the greater sorts Schwenckf It hath the taste of ducks meate and the same vertues Fumitorie Fumaria P. In corne fields vineyards and manured places T. It flourisheth from May to the end of summer N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Fumus Terrae Offic. Capnos Plin-Calchocrum Fumitorie Ger. J. K. as the common white broad leafed fine leafed and yellow T. is cold and something dry opening and clensing by urine V. it h. those that have filth growing on the skin or have the French disease It opens the liver and spleen purifieth the bloud and h. quartane agues either the syrrup decoction or distilled water thereof taken Boiled in whay it h. in the end of the spring and in summer time those that are scabbed It provoketh urine opens the liver strengtheneth the stomack and looseneth the belly Diosc The juice with Gum Arabick h. the eies troubled with haires they being first plucked up The decoction d. expelleth by urine and siege all hot and hurtfull humors and digesteth the salt and pituitous Bulbous Fumitorie K. as the great purple great white Bunnikens and small Bunnikens holwort T. hallow root is hot 2° and dry 3° binding clensing and somewhat wasting V. it h. long swellings of the almonds in the throat and haemorroides m. with unguentum populeum drach 1. d. purgeth forth flegme Park K. as the climbing round rooted with with green fl and green fl hollow root with the Indian and knobbed Indian fum V. Trag. The juice d. with the powder of the root of esula
and h. scabbs and manginesse the foule parts being bathed with the water in which it is boiled Park K. as the great small white and joynted T. All clense without manifest heat V. The juyce opens the liver and spleen and h. the hardnesse thereof The sope hereof ap to the feet h. those that are speechlesse The powder of the rest K. As the prickly Columna's Neapolitan Egyptian and Arabian V. Alpin Purgeth choller Goats-beard Tragopogon P. The 1 in gardens the other in fertile pastures T. They fl and flourish from May to Septemb. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Barba hirci Coma. Goats-beard Ger. K. as the purple and yellow T. Are temperate between heat and moisture V. The roots boiled in wine and d. h. pains and pricking stitches of the sides Boiled in water till tender buttered and eaten they h. the appetite warme the stomack h. consumptions and strengthen those that have been sick of chronicall diseases Park The distilled water of the 1. and blew h. old sores and wounds ap The root is more bitter and binding than that of the yellow The other K. as the summer and the greater with jagged leaves V. Trag. The distilled water h. impostumes plurisies griefes of the stomack and liver and h. the stone Goats-rue Galega P. In Italy and gardens planted T. Fl in July and August N. Ruta capraria Herba Gallic a Fracastorii Goats-rue Ger. T. it is in a meane between hot and cold V. It h. poyson d. and killeth wormes so ap fried with lineseed oile and ap to the navill A spoonefull d. in the morning with milke h. the epilepsie Boiled in vineger and d. with treacle it prevents the plague eaten in sallads with oile vineger and pepper it preventeth venemous infirmities and c. sweat Ap. it h. the bitings or stingings of venemous beasts unc sem of the juyce d. h. cramps convulsions and the diseases aforesaid The seeds feed fowle exceedingly The leaves boiled and ap h. the stinging of waspes and bees Park The juyce taken with treacle the powder of the roots of tormentill with carduus b. water and bole Arm prevents infection it 's cordiall ap it h. the collick and gangrenes Goats-stones Tragorchis P. In fat clay ground T. They flower in May and June N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Testiculus hircinus Goats-stones Ger J K. as the greatest the male female and small goats-stones of Holland T. V. They are referred to the Fooles stones yet they are seldome or never used in Physick Park K. as the ordinary and lesser truer V. Lugd Dod The roots of these with the rest are better than the other orchies for the purposes aforesaid Goats-thorne Tragacantha * P. In Candy Arcadia Achaia c. T. It flowreth and flourisheth in the summer N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Spina hirci The last Poterion Goats-thorne Ger J K. as the common small and the burnet g. T The plant is dry without biting it conglutinateth the sinews especially the roots being boiled in wine and d. The gum dragagant is emplastick some what dry and allayeth the sharpnesse of humors V. The gum in a lohoch h. the cough roughnesse of the throat hoarsenesse and all sharp and thin rheumes and distillations being laid under the tongue it h. the roughnesse thereof d. with cute or the decoction of licorice it h. the heat of urine it is also used in medicines for the eyes The gum steeped in rose water untill it be soft m. with other things serveth to make the usuall artificiall beades Diosc The best gum is that which is diaphanous thin smooth unmixt and sweet of smell and taste Park The gum dissolved in sweet wine and d. h. the gnawings of the bowells and frettings of the urine especially with burnt harts-horne m. with milke it h. spots in the eyes and itching and scabbs of the eye lidds It stops the flux used in clysters so the thorny Burnet Goldilocks Adiantum aureum P. In moist places in rotten trees and crannies T. They flourish especially in the summer time N. Muscus capillaris Polytrichum aureum Goldilocks Ger. T. are temperate in heat and cold Park Yet they dry rarifie and digest V. Golden maiden-haire h. to expectorate tough flegme from the chest and lungs like the rest being boiled and d. It also provoketh urine and h. to expell the stone it 's profitable for those that are splenetick and epileptick The lye thereof bathed h. the haire c. as the rest Gold of pleasure Myagrum P. In sundry places of England T. Fl in May and June the seed is ripe in September N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pseudomyagrum Matth. Sesamum Tragi Gold of pleasure Ger. T. is hot and dry 3° V. Diosc The oilie fatnesse of the seed polisheth the skinne and maketh it smooth Ruell The juyce h. ulcers of the mouth Park K. as the wilde round podded like and the greater one grained T. Gal. The seed is emplasticke V. The oile is hot and c. thirst d. It serveth in Germany for poor mens tables and rich mens lamps and with the lye of ashes to make sope The wild is like the first Golden-rod Virga aurea P. In Woods frequently T. They flower and flourish in the end of Aug. N. It 's thought to be Leucographis Plinii Golden-rod Ger. K. as the common and Arnold's T. is hot and dry 2° and clenseth with a certaine astriction V. it provoketh urine wasteth the stone so Fum. in the kidnies and expells them and purgeth raw humors out of the ureters It 's vulnerary and operates as Saracens consound The distilled water d. for some dayes together worketh the same effect It excells for stopping of bloud in sanguinolent ulcers and wounds Park K. as that with dented leaves V. Golden rod decoct and d. h. inward bruises so ap it stops bleedings fluxes and the courses and h. ruptures and fastens the teeth also it 's used in lotions for ulcers in the mouth or privities Gondell of Italy Cymbalaria Italica P. In gardens and other shadowie places on thatch c. T. Fl. in the beginning of summer N. Vmbilicus Veneris offic Lonic Linaria hed fol. Columnae Gondeli of Italy Johns T. is cold and moist repelling scouring and wasting Park V. it's thought to be a fit substitute for umbilicus Veneris and hath some astriction Matth. It stops the whites being eaten often in sallads after the manner of the Italians A conserve of the leaves or a syrrup of the juice may serve instead thereof also it cureth wounds and stops bloud the juice being ap and also ripens apostumes Goose berry bush Grossularia P. In gardens and diverse places T. The leaves appeare in Aprill the fruit is ripe in June and July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theoph. Vva crispa Spina Spinella Goose-berry bush Ger. T. the berries before they be ripe are cold and dry fine 2di and also binding V. the fruit is used in stead of sauce and in broths in stead of varjuice
the tormina and dysury The knots d. h. the strangury Sea dogs-grasse and sea couch grasse T. V. operate as the Dogs-grasse so the upright Dogs-grasse and Lady-lace Dew grasse cocks-foot common and with creeping roots T. are astringent drying in taste like the Dogs-grasse V. Apul. A plaister made hereof with hogs grease and the leaven of houshold bread h. the bitings of madde doggs The eare being ap diverteth the defluxions or flowing of humors Manna-grasse or rice-grasse V. In pultises it discusseth the hard tnmors or swellings in womens breasts Cocks-foot doggs-grasse operates as the other doggs-grasses The other Cyperus grasses K. as the great narrow leafed bastard long bastard round bastard and millet cyperus T. In taste seem to be cold and astringent V. as yet they are not used in physick Mountaine haver and capon-taile grasse T. V. are not discovered Cotton-grasse T. V. d. sodden in wine h. the tormina of childing women Water gladiol T. V. is not used Park K. as the corne grasses sc the close eared rush leafed white wheate grasse c. the darnell field oaten wood and Mountaine oaten millet quakers Fox-taile bastard-fox taile cats-taile cyperus kneed reed smooth wood hairywood prickly headed and rush grasses are not of any known use in physick Pem. Couch-grasse h. the haemoptysis or spitting of blood Medow grasse V. the seed thereof ap discusseth flatulent swellings and obdurate tumors in the body The panick grasse hurteth sheep The curled panick grasse is said to operate as quich-grasse Crested and spiked grasse come neer the temper of the other field grasses The variable spiked causeth milke in beasts The Canary grasse T. is drying and repressing V. it stops the fluxibility of humors The seed makes bread of little nourishment The juice h. diseases of the bladder and is the substiture for millet in somentations and plaisters The bastard doth not much differ from the true The knobbed couch-grasse V. is better than the common It h. inflammations the seed h. laskes and vomitings The root is cold and dry with a little mordacity and tenuity of parts the seed is colder and dryer and somewhat harsh The herbe is cold 1° moderate in moisture and in drynesse The distilled water d. killeth wormes Cocks-foot grasse V. bruised and ap it stayes bleeding the spike being put into the nose causeth it Aegyptian cocks-foot grasse V. ap h. wounds The root and seeds d. provoke urine expell the pox c. h. fevers and cause sweate Haver grasse V. it dryeth without sharpnesse V. it h. the aegilops The seeds d. inebriate The ashes of the stalkes h. the gout Decoct and ap it h. nodes joynt swellings The herb boiled in wine with dryed roses h. a stinking breath in water with the root of wild oats hony aloes h. the polypus The cyperus grasses with the rush-like grasses of the marshes waters c. and the marsh reed grasses T. V. are not of any known use Common cotton grasse V. Cord. decoct in wine and taken warme h. the griping paines of the belly Their woolly heads serve for the stuffing of beds The water grasses V. serve only for the food of beasts The roots of the sea quich grasse operate as the ordinary sort All the sorts of unsavory Cyperus T. are defective in heat and drynesse V. and not used for any purpose in physicke so also water gladioll The fresh water excrescencies or water weeds Plin. bound to the body and kept moist h. the bruises ruptures and contusions thereof Silkegrasse Smith V. The Virginians use the roots thereof being bruised and ap to cure wounds Lob. The root of grasse is sweet and subacerbe of a meane slender and somewhat inciding substance which without heat openeth the intralls expells impurities and detergeth Apul. The root conglutinateth ulcers Gromell Lithospermum P. The two first grow in untilled places the rest on sands T. Fl. from the 12. day of June untill Autumne N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gorgonium Aegonychon Leontion Diosporon Gromell Ger. J. K. as the great and small purple flowred and bastard T. the seed is hot and dry 2° V. The seed concused and d. in white wine breaketh the stone and expelleth urine Park K. as the greater creeping small wild small with tufted tops small corne and Germane grom T. the two first are hot and dry 2° V. these are most used the rest are lesse effectuall They h. the strangury The seeds boiled in barley water with the foure greater cold seeds and d. in the morning h. the stone Matth. drach 1. sem of the greater and lesser drach sem of spleen wort drach 2. of white amber powdered and d. for diverse dayes together in the juice of plantaine purslain and lettuce h. the gonorrhoea drach 2. of the seed d. h. the delivery of women Ground-pine Chamaepitys P. They grow in Kent very plentifully and in gardens T. They flower in June and often in Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ibiga Ajuga Iva arthritica Moschata Ground-pine Ger. J. K. as the male and small French bastard Austrian T. are hot 2° dry 3° V. The leaves tunned up in ale infused in wine or sodden in hony and d. for 8. or 1° dayes h. the jaundise sciatica stoppings of the liver and difficulty of making water it opens the spleen and expells the menses Stamped green with hony it h. wounds and malignant ulcers dissolveth the hardnesse of womens breasts and h. poison and bitings of venemous beasts The decoction d. dissolveth congealed bloud and with vineger expelleth the dead child it clenseth the intralls h. the infirmities of the liver and kidnies and yellow jaundise d. in wine it provoketh the menses and urine boiled in meade and d. it h. the sciatica in 40. dayes It is an antidote against Wolfes-bane The powder taken in pills with a fig mollifyeth the belly wasteth the tumors of the paps h wounds and putrified ulcers ap with hony sc the 1. the other two operate not so effectually The Austrian is thought to be much better Many flowred Ground-pine and stinking Anthyllis l. with the sea pimpernell T. are in a meane between hot and cold V. halfe an ounce of the dryed leaves d. h. hot urine the strangury and purgeth the reines Taken with oxymel it h. the falling sicknessed first and last Park The first clense impure bloud and open the belly and h. all diseases of the mother d. and ap it h. all diseases of the joynts and cold griefes of the braine so the pills thereof and h. the dropsie The stinking d. and ap stops desluxions Ground-sell Senecio P. It groweth almost every where T. Fl almost every month in the yeare N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Erigerum Herbutum Ground-sell Ger. J. K. as the common and 1 and 2d Cotton gr T. It hath mixt faculties it cooleth and withall digesteth V. The leaves boiled in wine or water and d. h. the pain of the stomack of choller The leaves and fl
last V. The fl decoct h. paines in the body stone sight and goute The white berries h. agues and thirst Hellebor Helleborus P. On mountains where Gentian growes T. Fl in May and June the black sooner N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Veratrum album Sanguis Herculeus Hellebor Ger. K. as the white and timely white T. the root is hot and dry 3° V. the root of the white c. vomit and expelleth superfluous humors h. the epilepsie phrensies sciatica dropsies poyson and all cold diseases of hard curation and is to be used only in hard and strong bodies The root cut small and put into ●istula's doth mundisie them and remove callous matter hindering curation that so it may be healed by sarcotick remedies sc the black The powder c. sneezing and purgeth slimie humors The root d. in the weight of two pence h. agues It killeth mice and rats made up with hony wheat flower Plin. It h. the lowsie evill The wild Hellebore K. as the white and narrow leafed wild T. are thought to be hot and dry V. Their faculties are referred to the first whereof they are kinds The decoction d. opens the liver and h. the imperfections thereof The black hellebore of Diosc T. V. is referred to the black which is of greater force Black hellebore K. as the true wild great oxe-heele and setterwort T. is hot and dry 3° hotter than the white V. It purgeth phlegme choller and melancholly it helpeth those that are furious pensive leprous melanchollick epileptick or are sick of a quartan ague The dose is s●r 3. it is given with wine of raisins or oxymel with aromaticall seeds and is made stronger by adding gr 1. or 2. of scammonie The first of these kinds is best then the second The rest are of lesse efficacy The roots h. the morphew spots tetters ●ing-wormes leprofie and scabs The roots sodden in pottage with flesh open and h. the dropsie The root of the bastard hellebore or beares-foot d. in wine operates as the true black hellebore and killeth wormes powdered and drach 1. d. in wine Boiled in water with rue and agrimonie it h. the jaundise and purgeth forth yellow superfluities The leaves of bastard hellebore dryed and the powder taken in a figge or raisin or strewed upon bread spread with hony and eaten killeth wormes Hart. The essence of black hellebor h. the goute Park K. as the fennell leafed bastard that of Matth and sanicle-like black Hel. V. It h. the liver old pains of the head consumptions aches and paines of the teeth and deasnesse ulcers ap it 's corrected by quinces sc the white The black put into the eares of beasts h. their poysonous diseases Helmet-flower Napellus P. In gardens the wild almost every where T. Fl. from May to September N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Toxicum Napellus verus Helmet-flower Ger. J. K. as the blew violet ooloured purple of Newburg large floured and that with a nodding head T. are all hot and dry 4° and most venimous V. they are deadly both to man and beast being eaten the 〈◊〉 and tongue presently swell the eyes hang out the thighs are stiffe and witts depart The autidote is the flye that feedeth on the leaves or take of torra lemnia unc 2. bay berries and mith idate an unc 2. of the flies that feed on the herbe 24. of hony and oile q. s m. The juyce of it poysoneth arrowes Park The wholsom Helmet fl Anthora is an antidote kills wormes h. the collick and plague and is cordiall Hugo S●ler The quantity of a beane of the root is a hydragogon Hemlock Cicuta P. About walls in shadowie places and fat soiles T. They flourish and seed in September N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The last of Ger. is thought to be Phellandrion Plinii Hemlock Ger. J. K. as the common broad leafed stinking and gyant T. Gal. is cold 4° V. It is not to be used inwardly or outwardly Ap. it causeth the parts to pine away The wild and water hemlocks K. as the thin leafed wild and wild water common hemlock T. V. They are like the common hemlock and not used in physick Lonic The dryed juice is used in collyries to ●ase paine Ap. it h. phagedens and S. Anthonies fire as also all inflammations and h. venery Park K. as the foolish V. ap it represseth the swellings in womens breasts and repells milke the rosted root ap h. the gout Trag. The antidote is vineger d. Hempe Cannabis P. In fat dunged plaine and moist soiles deeply digged the wild in barren hils T. Sown in March and Aprill The first is ripe in August the second in July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Water hemp is called Eupatorium Cannabinum Hempe Ger. J. K. as the male and female T. the seed is dyspeptick and of ill juice hurtfull to the stomack and head V. It consumeth wind if much eaten it dryeth up the sperm The juyce of the herbe dropped into the ears h. their paine proceeding of obstruction The pulp of the seed pressed into liquor and d. h. the yellow jaundise without an ague opening the gall and concocting choller through the whole body Matth. The seed given to hens causeth them to lay eggs more plentifully Wild hemp K. as the common bastard and small bastard T. V. are referred to the manured hemp yet not used in physick where the other may be had Water hemp K. as the common and common Dutch T. The leaves and roots are bitter hot and dry 2° scouring opening and attenuating They expell grosse humors by urine and purifie the bloud V. The decoction of them especially the last d. h. scabbed and filthy skins and opens the liver spleen and gall and h. the jaundise The herb boiled in wine or water h. tertian fevers The leaves ap and the decoction d. h. all wounds both inward and outward The second h. poyson Gesn A pugill of the fibers of the root boiled in wine and d. purgeth and c. vomit It workes like white hellebore but more gently and safely Park T. The manured is thought to be cold and dry so Trag. Lonic others count it hot and dry as Gal. Matth. Ruel Fuch and Lugd. V. The emulsion of the feed h. lasks and the collick The juice d. kills wormes and ap h. the gout burnings Lob. The wild h. nodes Henbane Hyoscyamus P. The black almost every where the white in gardens T. They spring in May st in Aug. the seed is ripe in October N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Apollinaris Faba suilla Jovis The last Nicotiana Petum Henbane Ger. J. K. as the black and white lesser white white of Candy and that with a reddish flower T. are cold 4° V. They cause sleep and are anodyne h. sharpe and hot distillations stop bleeding and ap h all inflammations The leaves stamped with the ointment of populeon ap h. the paine of the gout swellings of the privities and the tumors of womens
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
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
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
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. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
Aurum comicum Plauti Lupine Ger. J. K. as the garden yellow blew and the great blew T. They are bitter and of an earthy substance not easily digested V. Being boiled and seasoned with salt they are eaten with pickle before they be steeped in water and have their bitternesse they clense wast and kill wormes taken with hony water and vineger or ap also ap it h. the morphew sore heads small pox wilde scabbes gangreens venemous ulcers by clensing consuming drying without biting Taken with rue pepper it scoureth the liver and spleene it moveth the courses and expells the dead child ap with myrrhe and hony The meale wasteth without biting h. spotts c. by dry beating chaeradas and phymata boiled in water and vineger or oxymel and operates as the decoction Boiled in raine water till they yeeld a creame they clense and beautify the face The root boiled with water and d. is diureticke Lupines made sweet m. with vineger and d. h. the loathsomenesse of the stomack and c. appetite Boiled in the strong lye which barbers use with wormewood centorie and bay salt they stop gangreenes and h. atrophicke members and stay the ambulative nature of phagedens ap hot with stuphes of cloth The decoction with the root of black chameleon thistle ap cureth the scabs that are in sheep Croll The decoction thereof expells the pox c. Dorst Aeg. Lupine is hot dry abstersive dissipating and drying without biting Taken with fennel seed it h. paines and winde of the intestines the decoction thereof with solatrum in wine h. the shortnesse of breath and heat and mollifyeth the belly ap it h. marisca's Park K. as the great white V. as the rest The juice mixt with the gall of a goat the juice of limmons and a little alumen saccharinum h. nodes impostumes The burning of the husks drives away gnats The wild are stronger for all purposes and more eflectuall M Madder Rubia P. In gardens and clifts of rocks the second in moist meadowes T. Fl. from May to September the roots are gathered in Autumne N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Erythrodanum Rubia tinctorum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nicandri MAdder Ger. J. K. as the red wilde sea small Candy and dwarse T. The root is cold dry somewhat binding and withall having divers thin parts and a little sweetnesse with a subsequent harsh tast yet is it doubted of by some whether it bind or open V. The decoction of the root h. burstings bruises wounds stoppeth bleeding h. inflammations It is used in vulnerary potions and h. wounds of the chest and intralls Jo. Spiring The decoction given with triphera magna stops the reds haemorroides and bloudy flix so it apeareth to be astringent it is also by some used in compositions against untimely birth Diosc thought it diuretick and that it would expell the menses and secundine and cause bloudy urine but this rather ariseth from the colour of it Thus it is evident that it doth not vehemently either bind or open Plin. The stalkes and leaves are used against serpents the root boiled in meade and d. openeth the liver spleen and kidnies and h. the jaundise and provoketh urine It h. the lothsomenesse of the Kings evill ulcers of the mouth there being added to the decoction a little allome and hony of roses The Synanchica Dalechampii dryeth without biting h. the squinancy d. and ap Lonic T. It 's hot 2° dry 3° V. with vineger it h. the itch Ern. The distilled oile h. the epilepsie apoplexie losse of speech 1 or 2 drops being put upon the tongue d. it h. the swelling of the spleen and quartan agues Park K. as the smooth leafed V. It h. the sciatica The seed taken with vineger and hony h. hard spleenes The small K. as the spiked headed and purple flowred T. V. are weaker Madwort Alyssum P. It 's often sowen in gardens the seed comes from Italy T. Fl and flourisheth in May the seed is ripe in August N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lunaria aspera Gesn Lutea vel Graeca Madwort Ger. K. as that of Gal and Diosc T. Gal It 's meanly dry digesting and scouring V. Taken it h. those that are bitten of a mad dogge it h. the morphew and sunburning c. Park K. as that of Columna V. that of Diosc d. stoppeth the hicket if there be no ague so also smelled to They also h. wounds inward outward digest clotted bloud and h. cancers and filthy ulcers Mallow Malva P. In gardens almost all the wild in untild places T. Fl. in July and Aug. the second yeare N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That of the garden is called Rosa ultra marina The marsh Althaea Bismalva Mallow Ger. The hollihocke K. as the single garden jagged strange double purple and double scarlet tree with double flowers T. is moderately hot and moist but not so much as the wild it hath a clammy substance especially the seed and root V. The decoction of the flowers especially those of the red boiled in red wine stops the courses The roots leaves and seeds operate as the wild which are more commonly used Wild Mallowes K. as the field dwarse French curled vervaine and Spanish T. are moderately hot and moist of slimy and glutmating juyce better than those of the garden moderately nourishing causing grosse bloud and loosening the belly V. The leaves h. the stinging of scorpions bees wasps c. Diosc being anointed with oile and the leaves stamped they hurt not at all The decoction with their roots d. h. against poyson it being vomited up again The leaves boiled soft ap mollifie tumors hard swellings of the mother hathed the fume being taken The decoction in clisters h. roughnesse fretting of the guts bladder fundament The roots of the Vervaine Mal. h. the bloudy flix inward burstings being d. with wine and water Note the French Mal. is the wholsomest to be eaten Marsh Mal. K. as the common water tree shrubby and hemp leafed T. is moderately hot but dryer than the rest the roots and seeds are more dry of thinner parts digesting and mollifying V. The leaves digest h. paines and concoct Mixed with fomentations and pultises ap they h. paines of the sides of the stone and bladder and in a bath h. all paines so the decoction of the leaves d. and expelleth the stone as also the roots seeds The decoction of the roots h. the bloudy flix by mitigating the frettings thereof and more effectually there being added the roots of bistort tormentill the flowers and rinds of pomegranats c. The mucilage of the roots is mixed with anodyne remedies Boiled in wine and the decoction d. it h. the stone bloudy flix sciatica cramps and convulsions The roots with the leaves of the common Mallowes and of violets boiled in water till soft then adding a little fennugreek and lineseed in powder the root of black bryony and barows grease
draweth down water and phlegme The herbe strewed on the ground driveth away serpents The decoction looseth the belly and purgeth choller d. with vineger it h. the infirmities of the spleene and in wine all mortall poysons therefore it 's put into treacles c. d. it h. nauseating stomacks and watery as also swounings of the heart Goats marjerome Tragoriganum K. As the common that of Clusius and the Candy T. are hot and dry 3° Gal and binding V. It h. wamblings of the stomack and belchings and stopps vomiting They also operate as the other organies Weck The dry leaves ap with hony h. bruises and in a pessarie draw down the menses and h. the inflammations of the eyes with barley meale Park The common opens the liver and h. the breast c. troubled with cold ap with flower it h. inflammations Organy h. the hicket Marvell of Peru. Mirabile Peruvianum P. It groweth naturally in Peru in gardens planted T. It 's sown in the midst of Aprill Fl in September N. Hachal Indi Solanum odorif Jasminum Mexicanum Admirabile Peruvianum Clusii Marvell of Peru. Ger. K. as with yellow fl and with white T. V. Cortus drach 2. of the root taken inwardly purge waterish humors Recch K. as that of Mexico T. Is sharpe hot and dry with astriction and of crasse parts V. Therefore it h. the diarrhoea strengthneth the stomack discusseth and h. cold griefes Masterwort Imperatoria P. In darke woods and desarts T. Fl from May to August N. Astrantia Ostrutium Magistrantia Cam. Masterwort Ger. T. The herbe especially the root is hot and dry 3° V. d. with wine it h. against all poyson pestilence and corrupt aire The roots and leaves stamped and ap h. pestilentiall botches and such like swellings The root d. in wine h. rigorous cold fitts of agues the dropsie and c. sweat also it corroborateth the stomack h. digestion restoreth appetite and dissolveth all ventosities It h. bruises and dissolveth congealed bloud the root stamped with the leaves and ap h. the bitings of all venemous beasts also it attenuateth digesteth provoketh sweat and urine concocteth cold humours and h. the collick and stone drach 1. of the powder d. diverse daies together h. the dropsie convulsions cramps and epilepsie d. in wine before the fitts it h. quartan agues and pestilent diseases So Vntz. Kunr Crat Kentman Kegl Tabern c. Boiled in sharpe wine and gargled very hot it h. the tooth-ache chewed it is an apophlegmatisme it h. apoplexies drousinesse and other like infirmities As for black Masterwort See Hellebor Begu The salt of master-wort taken from the quantity of 4. gr to 8. in the Rob of elder h. all intermitting feavers Fum. The herb is sharpe and somewhat bitter Park K. as the mountaine mast T. The root is of very subtile parts and h. all cold diseases d. in wine it h. cold rheumes and short-windednesse It h. in womens diseases and cold poysons Trag. The root c. lust Penot The salt h. the dropsie asthma ptifick and ulcers Mastick Marum P. It 's sown in gardens and to be kept from cold T. Fl. about August and later in cold summers N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Helenium odorum Theophr Clinopodium Diosc Dod. Masticke Ger. J. K. as the common Assyrian and creeping T. are hot and dry 3° V. Diosc The herbe d. and the decoction h. against the bitings of venemous beasts cramps convulsions burstings and strangury The decoction boiled in wine till the third part be consumed and d. stoppeth the laske in those that have an ague and in others in water Lugd. ap it h. the nomae and is used in hot ointments Ren. It operates as organie especially Terpsinoe Park K. as that of Candy T. It 's more temperate in heat than marjoram V. it h. against poison and is odoriferous Mastieke-tree Lentiscus * P. It groweth in Syria Candy and Italy c. T. Fl. in spring the berries are ripe in Autumne the rosin is gathered with the grape N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The rosin is called Mastiche Masticke-tree Ger. T. The leaves barke and gum are of a temperate heate dry 2° and somewhat astringent V. The leaves and barke stop the laske bloudy flix haemoptysis or spitting of bloud and bloudy urine and all other fluxes of bloud it also h. the falling sicknesse falling down of the mother and exiture of the fundament The gum mastick hath the same vertue being relented in wine and d. Chewed in the mouth it h. the stomack stops vomiting increaseth appetite comforteth the brain stops the defluxion of rheumes and watery humors and c. a sweet breath The same infused in rose water fastneth loose teeth and comforts the jawes Being spread upon leather or velvet and ap plaisterwise to the temples it stops the rheume from falling to the teeth and h. their paines being put into digestives and healing unguents it h. ulcers and wounds It draweth flegme out of the head It 's used in waters that clense the face The decoction filleth hollow ulcers with flesh ap it knitteth broken bones stayeth eating ulcers and provoketh urine Park K. as the Indian V. The oile of the berries of the first h. the itch and leprosie The powder of mastick with amber and turpentine h. the gonorrhoea and whites and with the conserve of red roses it h. rheumes so the oile and h. the collick Mat-weed Spartum herba * P. In Spaine and the Low Countries T. It beares its heads in summer N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theoph. Spartum Latinorum Juncus Hisp Ibericus Mat-weed Ger. J. K. as Plinies the headed English small English and heath with the feather grasse T. are uselesse in physick and hurtfull to cattell They serve to make mats with and frailes c. The feather grasse serveth for a feather and is worne by sundry ladies and gentle women Park K. as the Spanish rush softer Spanish rush and small French Mat-w T.V. are as uselesse as the first The soft serve to stuff beds with Bauh The rest serve to make shoes with as also ropes c. Maudlin Ageratum P. Every where almost in gardens T. They bring forth their tufts of yellow fl in summer N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eupatorium Mes Costus hortorum min. Maudlin Ger. J. K. as the common that with uncut leaves white flowred with costmarie T. are hot and dry 2° V. They are very effectuall especially Maudlin d. ap to provoke urine so the fume and mollifyeth the obdurate matrix The leaves of Maudlin and Adders-tongue stamped and boiled in oile olive adding a little wax rosin and turpentine make an excellent incarnative salve for a deep ulcer or wound Costmarie steeped in ale is very good for the diseases aforesaid a conserve of the leaves with sugar warmeth and dryeth the brain and openeth its obstructions it stoppeth all catarrhes rheumes and distillations taken in the q. os a beane The leaves boiled in wine and d. h. the tormina
and bloudy flix It h. those that are troubled with the green sicknesse or dropsie in the beginning and h. a weak and cold liver The seed killeth wormes and expelleth them as worme-seed doth Park K. as the small purple sweet and fennell leased V. It h. inflammations it purgeth choller and flegme It h. putrefaction and obstructions day agues and the cachexy Mayden haire Adiantum P. Vpon wals in stony shadowy and moist places T. They are green winter and summer without flowers N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Polytrichum Callitrichum Crinita Capillus Veneris terrae Cincinnalis Maiden-haire Ger. K. as the true Assyrian rue T. the true doth dry attenuate wast and is in a mean between heat and coldnesse Mes It 's of unlike parts some watry earthy and binding others hot and thin so when green it looseth the belly else bindeth it and h. fluxes V. d. it breaketh the stone and expelleth it It raiseth up slimie humors out of the chest and lungs by spitting in a lohoch It wasteth the Kings evill and other hard swellings and c. haire to grow Wall rue Ruta muraria sive salvia vitae is not much unlike to black maiden haire it h. the cough short windednesse and stitches or paines in the sides boiled it concocteth raw humors sticking in the lungs h. paine of the kidnies and bladder gently provoketh urine and expelleth the stone It h. ruptures in children the powder being taken for 40 dayes so Matth. English or common maiden-haire Trichomanes mas T. V. Gal. hath all the faculties belonging to black maiden haire V. decoct in wine and d. it helpeth those that are shortwinded and the cough it ripeneth tough flegme and avoideth it by spitting The lye wherein it hath been sodden or infused in is good to wash the head causing the scurfe and scales to fall off and haire to grow in bare places Brunfels Vigon It h. the spleen the juyce with southernwood and cresses c. h. the alopecia Riol The syrrup of it h. diseases of obstruction Park K. as the forreigne V. It h. the diseases of the spleen and causeth a good colour Col. It h. diseases that breed by the obstruction of the liver or spleen They h. the bitings of venemous creatures The leaves of wall rue m. with a little salt peter and the urine of a young child take away the shriveled wrinklings of womens bellies after their deliverance if washed therewith May-weed Cotula P. In corne fields neer unto pathwaies c. T. Fl. in July and August N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Parthenium Fuch Virginea May-weed Ger. K. as the common and yellow with the wild mountaine Cammomil T. are thought to be hot and dry and like after a sort to Cammomil yet not at all agreeing with mans nature V. It h. the mother and c. blisters Hort. San. The leaves stamped and ap h. the hardnesse of apostumes d. it c. vomiting Avic The smell h. cold windinesse of the head Col. It 's often used with good successe for the same purposes that Cammomil is especially the ordinarie sort and are both put into clisters Park K. As that with a strong and no scent V. It 's used to dissolve wind and tumors and ease paines and aches in the joynts c. especially the stinking sort which is the best Mede-sweet Vlmaria P. It groweth in the brinkes of ditches and meadowes T. Fl. in June July and August N. Barba capri hirci Regina prati Medesusium Cordi Mede-sweet Ger. T. is cold and dry with astriction V. The root boiled or powdered d. h. the bloudy flix and all fluxes of bloud The flowers boiled in wine and d. h. the fits of a quartan ague and exhilerate so the smell and delighteth the senses The distilled water of the flowers dropped into the eyes h. the burning and itching thereof and cleareth the sight Park K. as the common and greater V. They are likely to be of the faculty of Burnet yet Trag. they are more hot and dry it h. the collick ap it h. phagedens and sore mouths Cam. The seed d. c. the head-ach Medlar-tree Mespilus P. In orchards and hedges and are better if grafted T. The fruit is ripe in the end of October N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sicanion Medlar tree Ger. J. K. as the manured the other garden the Neapolitan and dwarfe T. The medlars are cold dry and astringent so the leaves the dwarf medlar is dry sharpe and astringent V. They stop the belly especially when green The fruit of the three grained Medlar is more wholesome for the stomack Being preserved with sugar or hony it 's gratefull to the taste They are good for women with child strengthening the stomack stopping the lothsomnesse thereof The stones of medlars powdered and d. breake the stone expell gravell and provoke urine Senn. They are most fit for bilious stomacks Park they operate as services but more effectually The decoction h. defluxions in the mouth the courses and piles and ap h. the stomack and wounds Melilote Melilotus P. In pastures and among corne T. Fl. in July and August N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Trifolium odoratum equinum ursinum Corona Regia Melilote Ger. K. as the Assyrian Italian Kings and Germane claver T. Gal. is hot and dry 1° and astringent wasting and ripening is also diaphoretick V. Boiled in sweet wine untill it be soft adding the yelk of a rosted egge the meale of fenugreek and lineseed the roots of marsh mallowes and hogs grease stamped together and used as a pultis it doth asswage and soften all manner of swellings especially about the matrix fundament and genitors With the juyce hereof oile wax rosin and turpentine is made a melilote plaister which is healing and drawing The herbe boiled in wine and d. provoketh urine breaketh the stone and asswageth pains of the kidnies bladder and belly ripeneth flegme and c. it to be easily evacuated The juyce dropped into the eyes cleareth the sight consumeth disolveth and h. the web pearle and spots in the eyes Melilote with water h. the melicerides and the running ulcers of the head ap with chalke wine and galls It h. paines of the cares the juyce being dropped in m. with wine and head-ach ap with vineger and oile of roses Pem. ap it h. wens also inflammations and paines in the side Park The flowers with Cammomil in clysters expell winde ap it h. the apoplexy The Egyptian h. the mother The Indian as the first The Italian is the best Melon Melo P. It groweth in hot regions T. It 's sown in Aprill the fr. is ripe in August N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Melopepon Musk Millon Melon Ger. K. as the muske sugar peare-fashioned and Spanish T. The meat of the musk melon is very cold and moist V. It 's harder of digestion than the cucumbers if it remain long in the stomack it putrifyeth and c. pestilent fevers The Spaniards and Italians eate them to
and dry as that of the garden and is of a stronger smell and operation V. ap it h. the stinging of waspes c. The smell exhilerates yet it is not used in physick where the other is to be had Park It 's used in baths with baulme c. to strengthen the sinewes Bor. Cent. 1. Obs 29. Horsemint ap to the womb h. sterility Riol The syrrup of mints h. diseases of phlegme Park K. as the white c. V. The wild h. windinesse and ap h. the Kings evill Mirobalan-tree Myrobalanus * P. In the East Indies wild in Goa c. T. The time is the same with that of other fruits there N. The first are called Arare The black Rezenvale The third Gotini The fourth Amuale The fifth Aretea Mirobalan-tree Ger. K. as the yellow Indicae Bellericae Emblicae and Chebulae T. Are astringent and sharp like service berries so cold and dry V. The Indians use them rather to bind than purge or if so it is only the decoction with sugar especially the Chebulae The yellow and Bellericae taken before meate stop the laske and h. the weake stomack The yellow and black or Indicae Chebulae purge lightly unc 2. or 3. being taken and draw superfluous humors from the head The yellow purge choller Chebulae flegme Indicae melancholly and corroborate the intestines rosted in the embers they dry more than they purge The best Chebulae are somewhat long like a limmon with a hard rinde and black pith and the Bellericae which are round lesser and tenderer Lebel The Emblicae meanly cool some dry 1° They purge rotten flegme out of the stomack comfort the brain sinews heart liver c. appetite stay vomit cool choller h. the understanding quench thirst and h. the heat of the intrals the greatest and heaviest are the best They purge best being soked in water boiled soft and preserved in hony The distilled water h. the French disease c. The Bellericae are mild cold 1° dry 2° and corroborate The rest come neere the Emblicae in operation De Dond. They strengthen the body Park The Bellericks Emblicks and Citrines h. the piles fluxes and ulcers Misseltoe Viscum P. The first groweth upon oakes the other not here T. It is alwaies green the berries are ripe in Autumne N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Renealmi Ixia Viscus Hale Arabum Misseltoe Ger. K. as the common Indian and that of Peru. T. the leaves and berries are hot and dry and of subtile parts the birdlime is hot and biting waterish with some quarthly quality Gal its acrimony overcometh its bitterness V. ap it draweth from the deepest parts of the body dispersing and digesting the humors It ripeneth swellings in the groin and scirrhous swellings behind the cares c. m. with rosin and a little wax with srankincense it mollifyeth old ulcers and malitious impostumes Boiled with unslaked lime it h. hard spleens With orpiment it removes ill favoured nailes and more effectually unslaked lime and wine lees being added The berries strained into oile and d. h. stitches Ren. It 's hot and dry 3° It purgeth viscid humors h. spasms and is hydrotick antepileptick Jo. The antidote is wormewood wine Park It h. the palsey d. Trag. it h. the eares Mock-privet Phillyrea P. In Syria France and other places T. Fl. in May and June the fruit is ripe in Sept. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyprus Alcanna Arabum Mock-privet Ger. J. K. as the narrow leafed broader leased the second toothed of Clus and the first T. The leaves are binding V. Chewed in the mouth they h. the ulcers thereof as also inflammations and heat The decoction h. burnings and scaldings Stamped and steeped in the juice of mullein and ap they make the haire red Bellon So the skin also and is therefore used among the Turkes The fl moistned in vineger and ap h. the head-ach The oile hereof is sweet and doth heate and supple the sinewes Park K. as the prickely V. The leaves operate as those of the wild olive and d. provoke urine and the courses Moluccas-tree Panava * P. In orchards in the Ilands of the Moluccas T. As of other trees N. Lignum Molucense By the Indians Panava Moluccas-tree Park Lignum Molucen e. T. The wood is alexipharmicke V. 10. gr of the powder of the wood taken in broth or water are a remedy against virulent serpents even the Viper Regulus and the Aspis c. Scr 1. of the wood filed with the sea dogs skin taken h. those that are wounded with poisoned arrowes so ap Being taken in the morning fasting it evacuateth all melancholy humors and h. quotidian and quartan agues iliack and collick passions of winde or humors the dropsie stone dysury cholerick passion schirrous scrophulous griefes in the joynts It killeth worms of all sorts h. the appetite If it worke too strongly it is h. by taking half a small cupfull of the decoction of rice It worketh without troubling the stomack or hindering businesse it h. also old griefes of the head as the megrim epilepsie and apoplexy those of the belly and womb as also the shortnesse of breath noise in the eares and gout It may be given in all seasons to all ages and differing dispositions without danger Those that are chollerick may take it in the syrrup of vineger or conserve of roses The seed hereof is used to catch birds being cast to them with rice which being devoured doth inebriate them for a time and if taken too greedily killeth them if they be not h. by cold water put on their heads Bauh It 's to be taken early in the morning after which there must be abstinence from meate and drink untill it hath purged sufficiently then take broth c. Moly Moly P. In gardens when planted there T. It springs in Feb. and hath fl fruit and seed in Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Molyza Myle Galeni Moly Ger. J. K. as that of Diosc the serpent's and Homer's the Indian withering broad leafed with yellow fl and dwarfe white fl T. are very hot coming neere to garlick Diosc They mightily bring down the termes one of them being stamped with oile of Flower-de-luce and used as a pessary The other molyes K. as the first narcisse-leafed 2d and 3d the first broad leafed mountain second third fourth and fifth mountain Moly of Clusius T. V. are not as yet made use of Park K. as the bulbed of Hungary purplish of Naples the three cornered the Spanish of Diosc late pine apple and sweet smelling of Mompelier V. Are not so good as garlick yet hotter than onions or leeks Mony-flower Bulbonach P. It groweth in woods and gardens T. Fl in Aprill the next year after sowen N. Lunaria Viola lunaris latifolia Dod. Mony-flower Ger. K. as the white and long codded white sattin flower T. The seed is hot and dry of a sharp taste like treacle mustard The roots are not so biting and may be eaten
and provokes the courses unc sem of the powder taken in the morning in a reare egge h. abortion It stops fluxes d. in wine it 's diureticall The powder taken in the conserve of roses h. the cough consumption and gout the oile d. the q. of three drops in muskadine h. the stone c. ap it h. all cephalicall diseases so amber grise it 's hot and dry 2° Motherwort Cardiaca P. In stony barren and rough places T. It flourisheth flowreth and seedeth from June to September N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Marrubium mas Brunf. Licopsis Anguil Motherwort Ger. T. is hot and dry 2° clensing and binding V. It h. the infirmities of the heart also convulsions cramps and palsies so Caesalp It opens the obstructions of the in tralls and kills all kinds of wormes in the belly The powder d. in wine provoketh urine and the courses and h. in travell with child also it is traumatick It is used also for the cough and murren in Cattle c. Myl. yet the smell thereof doth not shew it to be cardiack Park It h. the risings of the mother And clenseth the chest of cold flegme also it warmes and dryes cold humors Mouse-eare Pilosella P. On sandy bankes in open untilled places T. Fl. in May June and July and are green all the winter N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Auricula Muris Myosotis Mouse-eare Ger. K. as the great and creeping T. are hot and dry and astringent with a certaine hot tenuity V. The decoction d. h. all wounds inward and outward hernies or ruptures The powder ap dryeth and h. wounds so Feruel The juice c. steel that is often quenched in it to be so hard that it will cut iron or stone without waxing dull Used as a gargarisme it h. the loosenesse of the uvula d. it h. the fluxes of the womb Avic As a sternutatory it clenseth the braine and h. the epilepsie dysentery and enterocele it gleweth wounds stayeth the swelling of the spleen and bloudy excrements thereby The syrup of its juice h. coughs the consumption and ptisick Fuch The juice h. the shiverings of agues Cam. Matth. The milky juyce thereof is bitter extenuating and abstersive the herbe glutinates cooles and dryes It h. vomiting and the haemoptysis Park K. as the Assyrian blew c. V. d. they h. the jaundise tormina and dropsie Mug-wort Artemisia P. The first groweth in the borders of fields c. T. It flowreth in July and August N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Parthenion Mater herbarum Zona Divi Johannis Mugwort Ger. K. as the common and that of the sea T. It is hot and dry 2° and somewhat astringent Plin. It properly cureth womens diseases Dios It bringeth down the birth and after birth it h. the mother and paine of the matrix used in a bath as a pessary with myrrhe so also the tender tops being boiled and d. and ap as a pultis provoke the termes The herb pounded with oile of sweet almonds and ap to the stomack h. all griefs of the same It also cureth the shakings of the joynts inclining to the palsie and h. convulsions Parac The salt thereof h. the itch Mac. The herb tempereth flegme Scholtz Cons 236. The root used in meate h. the gout Barth Ang. The decoction h. the head-ach Park K. as the small fruitfull and fine mountaine V. ap h. nodes d. h. against opium Mulberry-tree Morus P. In hot regions as in Italy c. T. Fl. in May the berries are ripe in August N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Morus Celsa Mulberry-tree Ger. K. as the common and white T. the fruites before ripe are cold and dry ferè 3° and doe mightily bind V. Being dryed they h. lasks the bloudy flix bleeding and the reds They h. all inflammations and hot swellings in the mouth c. The ripe berries also are cold and full of juyce somewhat drying and binding therefore good against the hot swellings of the mouth and those parts so also the diamoron The berries taken before meat open the belly quench thirst and c. appetite They nourish little being taken in the second place or after meate The bark of the root is bitter hot and dry and of a scouring faculty the decoction openeth the liver and spleen purgeth the belly and driveth forth wormes steeped in vineger it h. the tooth-ach so the decoction of the leaves and barke juice of the root it also h. the phyma and purgeth the body Gal. The first buds have a middle faculty both to bind scoure Park So the Virginian Croll The juice of the fruit in gargarismes h. the quinsie Senn. They are not fit for stomacks replete with vitious humors Park The syrrup h. the uvula the juice of the leaves h. against the phalangium and aconite and with vineger h. burnings and bleeding and depilates with urine Mullein Verbascum P. In the borders of fields and untilled places T. Fl. from July to September N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tapsus barbatus Candela regia Lanaria Mullein Ger. K. as the common and white flowred T. is dry digesting and clensing V. The leaves boiled in water and ap h. hard swellings and inflammations of the eyes and paines thereof The root boiled in red wine and d. stops laskes and the bloudy flix Boiled in water and d. they h. ruptures and old coughs The lease ap with treacle h. the piles and haemorrhoides so also the oyntment made of the leaves with axungia the leaves worne under the feet provoke the termes The leafe ap with the fume of frankincense and mastick h. the piles and diseases of the lower parts being used twice every day so also the flowers set in oile in warme dung till consumed Plin. The leaves preserve from putrefaction Base Mullein K. as the white black candle-wicke and small candle-wick T. are dry without any manifest heate yet hotter and dryer than the first V. the black with his fl boiled in wine and d. h. the diseases of the breast lungs spitting of corrupt matter The leaves boiled in water stamped ap as apultis h. oedemata and ulcers inflammations of the eyes The flowers put into lye make the haire yellow The leaves in cold ointments h. scaldings and burnings Moth mullein K. as Plinie's the purple green that with the greenish purple coloured flower white flowred that with the great flower and the yellow T. V. Johns The decoction of the first opens the bowels and meseraick veines The plan causeth flies to resort to it That of Ethiopia is dry without any manifest heat V. It h. the plurisie or rotten matter in the breast asperity of the throat and sciatica the decoction being d. The root being decoct with hony h. the diseases of the breast and lungs so also the roots condited with sugar The leaves of the common mullein are by the husbandmen of Kent given to their cattle against the cough Wooddy Mullein K. as the French and lesser French
nourishment and stop the belly Trag They are hot as meate and cold and dry as medicine Park The meale h. fluxes with sugar it h. the cough ap with vineger it h. spotts and the itch with the oile of bayes Oily pulse Sesamum * P. It groweth in Egypt and India T. It must be sowen against the Ides of October N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sisamum Sesama Sempsem Aegypt Alpini Oily pulse Ger. T. Is hot and dry 1° Gal The seed is fat nauseous and of slow digestion of thick juyce not easily passing through the veines It c. thirst and is emplastick and softning so also the oile decoction V. Diosc it c. a stinking breath It wasteth the grossenesse of the sinewes h. bruises of the eares inflammations scaldings pains of the joynts and the bitings of Cerastes Mixt with oile of roses it h. the head-ache c. by heate so the herbe boiled in wine but especially it h. the heat and paine of the eyes The oile is good against the sounding and ringing of the eares Schrod The oile is moderately hot mollifying and maturating it h. the cough and asperity of the lungs in pleurisies also it impinguates and c. sperme ap it h. hard tumors and creeping ulcers Dorst It 's hot 1° dry 2° The oile h. warts ap with oile of roses it h. the headache c. by heat Park Alpin The Aegyptians use it against the scirrhus of the liver the decoction with hony c. the courses and h. dandriffe The oile h. the deformity of the skinne Olive-tree Olea P. In Italy France Spaine and other places T. Fl in June the fr is gathered in November or December N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the wilde Oleaster Cotinus Olive-tree Ger. K. as the manured and wilde T. The ripe olives are hot and moist and of little nourishment the unripe are dry and binding Those that are preserved in pickle called colymbades dry up the superfluous moisture of the stomack The branches leaves and tender budds coole dry and bind especially of the wild olive V. The pickled olives c. appetite yet are of little nourishment The branches leaves and budds especially of the wilde h. the eyes S. Anthonies fire the shingles epinyctides so For. night-wheales carbuncles and eating ulcers ap with hony they h. escharres clense filthy ulcers and quench the heat of hot swellings h. kernels in the flanke heale wounds in the head and being chewed cure ulcers in the mouth so the decoction and juyce which also stopps all bleedings and the whites The juyce is to be pressed out with wine and dried into cakes The oile which issueth out of the wood whilest it is burning h. tetters scurses and scabbs ap that which is pressed out of the unripe olives is cold and binding The old oile is hotter and of greater force to digest or wast away and that which is made of unripe olives is partly binding partly digesting The oile of ripe olives mollifieth asswageth paine dissolveth tumors h. stifnesse of the joynts and cramps especially being mixed with hypericon cammomill dill lillies roses c. Oile omphacine or of unripe olives doth stop and represse tumors in the beginning and coole the heate of burning ulcers and exulcerations Bor. Cent. 2. Obs 14. The oile of olives eaten in the morning with a tost looseth the belly Park Pickled olives burnt beaten and ap h. ulcers and fasten loose teeth The oile h. exulcerating poysons The dregs h. the scab with lupines with hony c. it h. the teeth so the gum and is ophthalmick antipsorick and expells the foetus The fl of the wild persume One blade Vnifolium * P. It groweth in Lancashire and neere Bathe T. Fl in May the fruit is ripe in September N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Monophyllon Cotyledon Sylvestris Trag. One blade Ger. T. It is vulnerary V. The leaves are of the same force in wounds with Pyrola especially in wounds among the nerves and sinews also it resists poyson and the pestilence drach 1. of the root being given in vineger m. with wine or water and the sick going to bed and sweating ●n it so Park Lugd. T. It 's hot and dry The leaves prevent inflammations in wounds Onion Cepa P. In a fat ground well digged and dunged T. It 's sowen in March and Aprill or Septemb. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Caepa Caepe Onion Ger. J. K. as the white longish Spanish and scallions T. All onions are sharp and move teares by the smell Gal They are hot and dry 4° yet not so hot as garlick the juice is of a thin watery and airie substance the rest is of thick parts V. Onions doe bite attenuate and cause drinesse being boiled they loose their sharpnesse especially if the water be changed yet they attenuate break winde and provoke urine and are more soluble boiled
stamped with hoggs grease h. the burning heat of the privities and fundament a little saffron or salt being added it h. struma's or the kings evill The leaves stamped strained into milke and d. h. the red gums and frets in children Diosc with the fine powder of frankincense it h. wounds in the sinewes so the downe m. with vineger Boiled in ale with a little hony and vineger it c. vomit especially a few roots of assarabacca being added Park K. as Miconus's Spanish and the stinking T. Trag. It 's cold and moist V. Plin d. in wine it h. the jaundise and epilepsie and pain of the bladder and stone drach 1. d. in oxymel also it h. the sciatica and collick Eaten with vineger in a fallet it h. the sadnesse of the heart and defects of the live●● it provoketh the courses ap it h. hot swellings and pains of womens breasts so the distilled water and h. defluxions to the eyes H Hares-cares Bupleurum * P. Among Oken woods in stony grounds T. Fl. and bring forth seed in July and Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Auricula leporis HAres eares Ger. K. as the narrow and broad leafed T. are temperate in heat drynesse V. It serveth in meats for sallads it is vulnerary also The leaves stamped with salt and wine ap consume drive away the Kings evill and are used against the stone in the bladder Park Plin. The seed or root powdered and decoct in wine and d. so the leaves also h. the bitings and stingings of venemous beasts applyed it provoketh urine and the courses It h. wounds inward or outward cancers and old sores of evill disposition and bad curation Bauh The yellow tufted is somewhat sharp and a little bitter and an apophlegmatisme Dod. The seed is hot and dry 2° Hares-foot Lagopus P. The first groweth in gardens the small among corne c. T. They flower and flourish in June July and Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The first is called Lagopodium Cytisus Trag. The other Pes leporis Hares-foot Ger. J. K. as the great great large headed narrow leased little T. the small hares-foot doth bind and dry V. It stoppeth the lask d. with red wine and with water by those that are severish The temper and faculty of the rest are referred to the other trefoiles wherof they are kinds Park K. as the bright red and common T. all the parts thereof as also of the rest but specially the spiked heads do dry and bind V. Lob. The first especially d. in wine h. fluxes and ap to the share h. the inflammations thereof Matth. also it h. belchings of choller and paine of the belly the seeds being d. in red wine It h. hot urine haemoptysis and gonorrhoea's and cures ruptures Harts-ease Viola tricolor P. In gardens and fields in many places T. Fl. all summer till autumne N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Herba trinitatis Clavellata Viola flamme a. Harts-ease Ger. K. as the common upright wild and stony T. is obseurely cold evidently moist slimy like the Mallow it moisteneth and suppleth yet not so much as the Mallow V. It h. agues convulsions and the falling sicknesse It h. inflammations of the lungs and chest lcabs itchings and ulcers The distilled water of the herbes or flowers d. for 10. dayes unc 8. in the morning and so at night h. the French pox Park K. as the greater lesser and double flowred T they are hotter and dryer than Violets Lugd those of Egypt use it for the cpilepsie Harts-tongue Phyllitis P. By the way sides in shadowie moist stony vallies T. It is green all the yeare long yet lesse in winter N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Radiolus Apuleil Lingua Cervina Foliosa Harts-tongue Ger. J. K. as the common finger moone-ferne small and handed moonferne Hemionitis T. It is of a binding and drying faculty V. The common harts-tongue h. fluxes and d. in wine the bitings of Serpents so Turn It openeth the liver and spleen h. all griefes proceeding of oppilations Park It h. the heat of the liver and stomack it stops the laske and bloudy flixe The distilled water thereof h. the passions of the heart and stayeth the hicket also it h. the falling of the pallate and stoppeth the bleeding of the gums the mouth being gargled therewith Lugd Gal It 's acerbe therefore it h. the diarrhoea c. Col It h. spitting of bloud and other fluxes The posset drinke thereof with white-wine h. the stone It h. the jaundise and Kings evill c. Hart-wort Seseli Aethiopicum P. In gardens planted the last in stony places T. They flower and flourish in September N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sile those of Candy are cal'd Tordy lia Hart-wort Ger. J. K. as the small of Candy and the great the mountaine and that of Marseilles T. It is concocting and diureticall V. It h. the strangury provoketh urine and expelleth the secundine and dead child It h. coughs and shortnesse of breath the suffocation of the mother and falling sicknesse The seed d. with wine concocteth raw humors and h. torments of the belly and agues The juyce of the leaves given to beasts causeth speedy delivery of their young Hart-wort of Aethiopia T. V. Is thought to agree with that of Marseilles Park K. as the true of Diosc the meadow of Mompelier English green Saxisr Milky marsh mountain hemlock-like that of Pelopon V. the English h. the collick and the frets of Children The best is the Aethiopian Hasell-tree Avellana Sylvestris P. In woods and moist untilled places T. The catkins fall away in March the nuts are ripe in August N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Corylus Nux Pontica Tenuis Heracleotica Hasell-tree Ger. K. as the filberd wilde hedge and filberd of Constant T. The nutts newly gathered are superfluously moist and windie so the dry also dyspeptick of an earthy and terrene essence and hard substance flowly passing through the belly so clogge the stomack and cause head-ache much eaten V. The kernells made into milke like almonds mightily bind the belly h. laskes and bloudy flix and coole agues and burning feavers The catkins are cold and dry and stop laskes Johns The kernells of nutts rather cause than cure the laske Park The milke drawn from the nutts with meade h. old coughs parched and d. with pepper they h. rheume drach 2. of the huskes and shells d. in red wine stop laskes and the courses Hawke-weed Hieracium P. In untilled places the borders of fields c. T. Fl all summer long N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Accipitrina Lampuca Porcellia Gazae Hawke-weed Ger. J. K. as the great small hares black succorie endive long rooted sharpe crooked 1 2d broad leafed mountaine and the lesser broad leafed mountaine T. Are cold dry and somewhat binding V. They are in operation like sowthistle the juyce of the yellow dropped into the eyes h. the sight It h. a hot stomack and inflammations ap the herbe