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A53916 The London dispensatory, reduced to the practice of the London physicians wherein are contain'd the medicines, both Galenical and chymical, that are now in use ... / by John Pechey ... Pechey, John, 1655-1716. 1694 (1694) Wing P1025; ESTC R1661 99,592 218

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quantity of water to a quart strain it a● add four ounces of good White-wine of clarifie● Hony and white Sugar Candy each a pound Virtues This is of excellent use for healing wound ulcers and fistulas both inward and outward it also good to stop spitting of blood a gonorrhea and th● whites Dose Four ounces of it may be taken twice o● thrice a day Decoction of the Woods in Latin Decoctu● Ex Lignis Take of the roots of Sarsa-Parrilla four ounce● of Gujacum three ounces of the bark of the sam● two ounces of Sassafras one ounce and an half o● the roots of Burdock and butterbur each two ou●ces and an half of Rhodium wood and yello● Sanders each one ounce of Carduus seeds an● fresh Juniper Berries each six drams of the ou●er bark of dryed Citron two drams infuse them ● who le night in six quarts of Fountain water the● boil half away Virtues This diet drink is good for the Frenc● Pox Kings-evil for Rheums and Coughs D●se Half a pint of it may be taken four times ● day for the space of a month but the sick must ●urge once a week The white decoction In Latin decoctum album Take of calcined Hartshorn powdered two oun●es of fountain water two quarts boil it till half ●s consumed strain it gently through a Linnen rag ●nd add to it three ounces of Syrup of Oranges Virtues It 's an excellent drink against the worms ●n children for a loosness and for feavers Syrups Syrup of Rubarb in Latin syrupus Rhabarbaro Take of the best Rhubarb of the leaves of Sen●a each two ounces and an half of the flowers of ●iolets one handful of Cinnamon a dram and an ●alf of Ginger half a dram of the waters of Bet●ny Succory and Bugloss each a pint and an half ●t them be mixed together warm all night and in ●e morning strained and boyled to a Syrup with ●o pound of fine Sugar add at last four ounces 〈◊〉 Syrup of Roses Solutive Virtues It is a very gentle purge proper for chil●en and weakly people Dose One ounce or an ounce and an half may ●e taken at a time Syrup of Succory with Rhubarb in Latin Syrupus e Cichoreo cum Rhabarbaro Take of whole Barly of the roots of Smalage ●nnel and Asparagus each two ounces of the herbs Succory Dandelyon Endive smooth sow Thistles each two handfuls Garden Lettice Liverwort Fumitory of the tops of Hops each one handful of Maidenhair white and black Ceterach Liquorice of the seeds of Winter Cherries and Dodder each six drams boyl them in six quarts of Fountain water till two quarts is consumed in the strained liquor dilute and boyl six pound of white Sugar add towards the end six ounces of Rhubarb and six drams of Spicknard tyed together in a rag which must be infused in hot liquor and often pressed out and so make a Syrup Virtues It is a good cooling gentle Purge a●● chiefly used for children Dose Dose an ounce or an ounce and an hal● or two ounces may be given at a time Syrup of Dodder in Latin Syrupus de Ep●thimo Take of Dodder of Thym twenty drams of Myrobalans Citron and Indian each fifteen drams Embelick and Bellerick Mirobalans of the Roots Polypody Liquorish Agarick of the Herbs Thy● Calamint Bugloss Stechas each six drams Dodder Fumitory each ten drams of Red Ro● sweet Fennel seeds and Anise seeds each two dra● and an half of sweet pruns ten pair Raisins of 〈◊〉 Sun stoned four ounces of Tamarinds two oun●● and an half after having infused them twenty fo●● hours in ten pints of fountain water boyl to 〈◊〉 consumption of four pints then take it from 〈◊〉 fire and strain it add to it five pound of fine sug● and make a Syrup Vertues It is a proper purge for Melancholy 〈◊〉 ple. Dose An ounce and an half or two ounces of it may be taken at a time Magisterial Syrup of Apples in Latin Syrupus de Pomis Magistralis Take of the juice and water of fragrant apples each one pint and an half of the juice and water of Borrage and Bugloss each nine ounces of the leaves of oriental senna cleansed half a pound of the ●eeds of Anise and sweet Fennel each three drams of Dodder of Thym of Creet two ounces of the whitest Agarick and of the best Rhubarb each half an ounce of Ginger and Mace each four scruples of Cinnamon two scruples of Saffron half a dram infuse the Rhubarb and Cinnamon apart by themselves in white wine and the juice of Apples each two ounces infuse the rest except the Saffron in the waters above mentioned the day after pour on the juices which being boyled scummed and strained boyl it to a Syrup with four pound of white Sugar dipping now and then the Saffron in it being tyed up in a rag and pressing it out again Lastly add ●he iufusion of Rhubarb and let it boil gently again to make a syrup Virtues It is a proper purging syrup for melancholly people Dose An ounce or two of it may be taken at a ●ime in some proper purging decoction Syrup of Buckthorn In Latin Syrupus de Rhamno Cathartico Take of the juice of ripe and fresh Buckthorn ●erries gathered in September a quart let it be cla●ified by standing then add of Cinnamon and Nut●egs each three drams infuse them in hot water for the space of a day then press out hard and with a pound and an half of white Sugar make a Syrup Virtues This Syrup purges strongly watry humours and therefore is good for dropsies and the like Dose An ounce an ounce and an half or two ounces may be taken at a time but it is most commonly mixed with some purging potion and then it works most kindly Syrup of Peach flowers in Latin Syrupus florum mali persici Take of fresh peach flowers one pound infuse them a whole day in three pints of warm water then press them out add fresh flowers to the same liquor and proceed as before five times then strain it and add two pound and an half of the best Sugar and boyl it to a Syrup in hot water Virtues It is a gentle purge for children Dose An ounce or an ounce and an half may be taken at a time Syrup of Roses solutive in Latin Syrupus Rosarum solutivus Take of boyling fountain water two quarts pu● into it as many fresh Damask Roses as it will contain let them infuse twelve hours in a close vessel then press them out hard and in the liquor heate● as before infuse the same quantity of fresh flowers do so three or four times increasing the quantity o● the fresh Roses according to the increase of the Liquor which is every time a third part more than ● was before then add four parts of white Sugar ● six parts of this liquor and make a Syrup in h● water Virtues It is a gentle cooling and purging Syrup and is commonly used with purging potions Dose An ounce
and an half or two ounces may be taken at a time Altering Syrups Syrup of Ammoniacum Take of Maudlin and Ceterach each four handfuls of common wormwood one ounce of the roots of Succory and Asparagus and of the bark of roots of Cappers each two ounces make an infusion of them for twenty four hours in three ounces of white wine and of simple Radish water and fumitory water each a quart boyl them to a pint and an half let the strained liquor stand until it clears dissolve a part in four ounces of the strained liquor warm two ounces of Gumm Ammoniacum dissolved first in the sharpest white wine vinegar boil the rest to a Syrup with a pound and an half of fine Sugar adding the dissolution of the Gumm towards the end Virtues This Syrup opens obstructions and is good for diseases of the Skin Dose An ounce of it or somewhat more may be taken at a time Balsamick Syrup in Latin syrupus Balsamicus Take of Balsam of Tolu two ounces Barly water a pint boil them over a gentle fire till the Barly water smells strong of the Balsam then add a pound of fine Sugar and make a Syrup Virtues This is good for Coughs hectick Feavers and Consumptions Dose A spoonful or two may be taken of it morning and evening Simple Byzantin Syrup in Latin Syrupus Byzantinus simplex Take of the juice of the leaves of Endive and Smallage each a quart of Hops and Bugloss each one pint let them boil together take off the froth and clarifie them with the white of an Egg add two pounds and an half of white Sugar to two quarts of the liquor make a Syrup by boiling i● gently Virtues It opens Obstructions and is good for the Dropsy and Green-sickness Dose An ounce or an ounce and an half may be taken at a time Syrup of the juice of Citrons in Latin Syrupus e succo Citri Take of the juice of Citrons strained and clarified by standing one pint white Sugar clarified and boiled to the consistence of Tablets two pound make a Syrup by boiling it up once or twice Thi● way are made other acid Syrups as of Oranges Barberies Quinces Lemons and Wood Sorre● Mulberries and the like Virtues It expels Malignity is good in Feave●● and strengthens the Stomach Dose An ounce of it may be taken at a time Syrup of Citron peel in Latin Syrupus Co●ticum Citriorum Take of yellow ripe and fresh Citron Pee● five ounces of Chermes berries or their juice brougt over to us two drams of fountain water thr● pints infuse them a night in a Bath strain them and with two pound and an half of white Suga● boil them to a Syrup in a Bath keep the one half without Musk persume the other half with three grains of Musk tied up in a rag Virtues It resists poyson is cordial and good for the head and Stomach Dose One ounce or an ounce and an half may be taken at a time Simple Syrup of Coral in Latin Syrupus e Coraliis Simplex Take of the reddest Coral finely powdred four ounces dissolve it with the heat of a bath in a pint of the juice of Barberries clarified it must be put into a matrass well stopped and having digested it three or four days pour off that which is dissolved and pour on more juice as before and so proceed till all the Coral is dissolved add a pound and an half of Sugar to one pint of this juice and boil it gently to a Syrup Virtues It cools and refreshes the Spirits and is good in hectick Feavers and for all sorts of fluxes Dose Half an ounce of it may be taken at a time Syrup of Cup moss in Latin Syrupus Musci pyxidati Take of Cup moss one ounce boil it in a quart of Hysop water till half is consumed then strain it and make a Syrup with a pound of Sugar Candy Virtue This is reckoned a specifick for the hooping or chincough Dose A spoonful of it may be taken twice or thrice a day Diac●dium Take fourteen ounces of the heads of white poppeys well dryed in●u●e them twenty four hours i● eight pin●s of fountain water boil them well th●● press them out and put a pound and an half of Sugar to the liquor then boil it to a Sy●up Virtues This Syrup eases pain stops tickling cough● and is in general a good anodyn medicine and much i● use Dose Half an ounce an ounce and an ounc● and an half may be given at a time in some prope● liquor Note That such medicines as are of an opiat nature ought not to be given to such as are weak o● whose Lungs are much obstructed or at the beginnin● of Feavers or Plurisies or the like they succeed bes● when evacuation by vomiting or purging hath wen● before Women that are subject to vapours or me● that are hypcchondriack must be sure to lye long i● bed the next day after taking an opiat for otherwise their heads will be much disturbed when the● rise Compound syrup of Elder berries in Latin Syrupus Sambucinus Compositus Take of ripe Elder-berries freed from the stalk● two pound of Corinthian Currants cleansed and cu● one pound of the dryed flowers of Borrage Bugloss Violets and red Roses each half an ounce Red wine a quart bake them in an Oven and to the clear liquor strained add as much fine Sugar as will equal it in weight and boil it to a Syrup Virtues This Syrup is Alexipharmick and Sudorifick is good in Dropsies for the Scurvy and heat of Vrine Dose A spoonful of it may be taken in ale or beer ●r any other proper liquor every morning for the ●pace of one month Syrup of Groundpine in Latin Syrupus Chamaepityos Take of the Herbs Groundpine two handfuls Marjoram Sage Rosmary Poly-mountain wild Marjoram Calaminth Hors-mint Penny-royal Hysop Thym of garden and wild Rue of Bet●ony wild Thym each one handful of the roots of ●weet smelling Flag Birthwort long and round Bryony white Dittany Gentian Hogs-fennel Va●erian each half an ounce of Smallage Asparagus Fennel Parsly Butchers Broom each one ounce pellitory of Spain half an ounce of Ste●has of the seeds of Anise Bishops weed Carrawa●s Fennel Lovage Sesely each three drams of Raisins of the Sun stoned two ounces after their ●eing digested twenty four hours in five quarts of ●ountain water warm distil off five pints then ●ressing out the feces hard let a sufficient quantity of the clear liquor be boiled with two pound of the best Honey and two pound of fine Sugar to the consistence of tablets then adding the distilled water make a Syrup in a Bath and arromatize it with half a scruple of Oyl of Cinnamon and of Nu●megs Virtues This Syrup is used for the Gout and dis●ases of the Nerves Dose Half an ounce or an ounce of it may be taken in some proper liquor Syrup of white Horehound in Latin Syrupus de Prasio Take of the fresh leaves of white Horehound two
ounces of the roots of Liquorice Polypod of the oak Smalage and Fennel each half an oun● of the leaves of white Maidenhair wild Marjora● Hyssop Calaminth Thyme Scabious Savory Colt● foot each six drams of Anise-seeds and Quint seeds t●ed up in a rag each three drams of Raisins of the Su● stoned two ounces of fat figs number ten havin● digested them a whole day in four quarts of ho● small Mead boil them in a Bath press them o●● hard and to five pints of the clear liquor add ● clarified honey and white Sugar clarified each tw● pound of the roots of Florentin orris one ounc● boil it to a Syrup in a Bath Virtues It is an excellent medicine for diseases ● the Lungs and helps expectoration Dose A spoonful of it may be taken three o● four times a day Syrup of Gillyflowers in Latin Syrupus florum Tunices Take of fragrant Gillyflowers the white being cut off one pound pour on them a quart of spring water and let them stand all night then strain the liquor and being gently warmed dissolve therein four pounds of the whitest Sugar and make a Syrup without boiling Virtues It is cephalick and Cordial Dose Half a spoonful of it may be taken at ● time in some proper liquor Syrup of Liquorice in Latin Syrupus Glycyrrhizae Take of Green Liquorice cleansed and bruised two ounces of white Maidenhair one ounce of Hyssop half an ounce pour on them three pints of hot Fountain water let them stand in infusion twenty four hours strain it and clarify it and with the best Honey and fine Sugar each ten ounces make a Syrup Virtues It is used for diseases of the lungs and helps expectoration Dose A spoonful of it may be taken twice or thrice a day Syrup of Maidenhair in Latin Syrupus Capillorum Veneris Take of Maidenhair five ounces of Liquorice two ounces infuse them a natural day in three quarts of warm Fountain water then boil them gently in a Bath press them out to two quarts of the strained liquor add three pound of clarified Sugar Virtues It opens obstructions of the Lungs and is good for pains in the side or in the Kidneys or bladder it gently provokes Vrine and expels stones and gravel Dose An ounce of it may be taken at a time in some proper liquor Syrup of Marsh-mallows in Latin Syrupus dialthaeae Take of the roots of Marsh-mallows two ounces of Meadow grass Asparagus Liquorice Rasins of the Sun red chich pease each half an ounce tops of Marsh-mallows Mallows Pellitory of the wall Burnet Saxifrage Plantain white and black Maiden hair of each one handful of the four lesser and greater cold seeds each three drams wash and cleanse the roots from their dirt pith and string● and slice them and having boiled the grass roots ● quarter of an hour first in eight pints of Fountai● water put into the Decoction the roots of Marsh-mallows and Asparagus and let them boil well for half an hour then add the Rasins cut and the Chich pease whole when they have boiled a little while put in the tops of the Mallows and Marsh-mallows Pellitory and shred and boil them abou● a quarter of an hour among the rest after that add the Liquorice sliced and the maidenhair cut and when they begin to boil put in the cold seeds thrust them down into the Docoction and take the whole off the fire and strain them a quarter of an hour after then clarifie the liquor with the white of an Egg add four pound of Sugar and boil it on a moderate fire to the consistence of a Syrup Virtues It eases pain and corrects sharp humors it is chiefly used for diseases of the Blade● and stone in the Kidneys Dose An ounce of it may be taken at a time in some convenient liquor Syrup of Mint in Latin Syrupus Menthae Take of the juice of sweet Quinces and o● those that are sowrith of the juice of sweet Pomgranats and of those that are sowrish each a pint and an half of dried Mint half a pound of Red Roses two ounces let them infuse a day then boil them half away in a Bath strain it and with four pound of Sugar make a Syrup Virtues It strengthens the stomach helps concoction and stops vomiting Dose A spoonful of it may be taken at a time Syrup of Mouse-ear in Latin Syrupus de pilosella Take of Mouse-ear three handfuls of the roots of Ladies-mantle an ounce and an half of the greater Comfry Madder White Dittany Tormentile Bistort each one ounce of the Herbs wintergreen Horsetail Ground-ivy Plantain Adders-tongue Strawberries St. John's wort with the flowers Golden rod Agrimony Bettony Burnet Avens of the greater Cinquefoyl red Colworts Balaustines red Roses each one handful boil them in six pints of Plantain water gently till half is consumed then press it out hard when it is clear by standing add of the mucilage of Gum Tragacanth of the seeds of Psyllium Marsh-mallows Quinces extracted a part in three ounces of Strawberry water and as much Bettony water boil it to the consistence of honey with two pound of the whitest Sugar Virtues It is healing and astringent and good for spitting of blood and the like Dose Half an ounce of it may be taken at a time Syrup of Mugwort in Latin Syrupus de Artemisia Take of Mugwort two handfuls of Pennyroyal Calaminth wild Marjoram Balm unspotted Arsmart Dittany of Creet Savin Marjoram Ground pine St. John's-wort Germander Feverfew with the flowers lesser Centaury Rue Bettony Vipers Bugloss each one handful of the roots of Fennel Smalage Parsly Asparagus Kneeholm Sagifrage Elecampane Cyperus Madder Orris Peony each one ounce of Juniper berries the seeds of Lovage Parsly Smalage Anise Nigella Cubebs true Costu● woody Cassia Cardamoms sweet smelling Flag of the roots of Asarabacca Pellitory of Spain and Valerian each half an ounce having cleansed cu● and beat these things infuse them twenty four hour● in six quarts of clear water and draw off eigh● pints of water put what remains in the still into a press and strain it boil six pounds of white Sugar in a sufficient quantity of the strained liquor clarified with the white of an egg to the consistence of tablets then add the water before distilled and make a Syrup aromatize it with Cinamon and Spiknard each three drams Virtues It opens obstructions forces the child bed purgations and strengthens the nerves Dose A spoonful of it may be taken at a time Syrup of Mirtles in Latin Syrupus Myttinus Take of Myrtle berries two ounces and an half of white and red Sanders Sumach Balaustins barberries red Roses each an ounce and an half o● Medlars sliced half a pound beat and boil them i● four quarts of clear water to two strain them the● add four pound of Sugar and boil it to a Syrup put to it towards the end of the juice of Quince● and acid pomgranats each six ounces Virtues This is an excellent astringent Syrup good for spitting
of blood and all other fluxes Dose An ounce of it may be taken at a time i● any proper liquor Syrup of the five opening roots in Latin Syrupus de quinque Radicibus Take of the roots of Kneeholm Fennel Asparagus Parsly and Smalage each two ounces of Fountain water three quarts digest them hot then boil them in a bath to two quarts of the liquor pressed hard out add eight ounces of Vinegar and five pound and an half of white Sugar make a Syrup in a bath Virtues It opens obstructions and forces urine Dose An ounce of it may be taken at a time Syrup of the oak of Jerusalem in Latin Syrupus Botryos Take of the Herbs oak of Jerusalem Hedge mustard Nettles each two handfuls Coltsfoot one handful and a half boil them in a sufficient quantity of Fountain water in a bath to a quart of the clear liquor strained add the juice of Turneps paired and boiled in Fountain water change the water twice and when they are soft press out the juice gently add of this juice having cleared it self by standing one pint fine Sugar three pound boil it to a Syrup in a bath when there is occasion to use it Virtues It is a good pectoral Syrup and cures ulcers of the lungs Dose An ounce of it may be taken at a time Compound Syrup of Peony in Latin syrupus Paeoniae Compositus Take of the fresh roots of both the Peonies gathered at full moon sliced and insused a day in fragrant white Wine each an ounce and an half of Contrayerva half an ounce Syler Mountain si● drams of Elk's hoof one ounce of the herbs 〈◊〉 Rosmary with the flowers one handful of Bettony Hyssop wild Marjoram ground pine Rue each three drams of the wood Aloes cloves the seeds o● the lesser Cardamon each two drams of Ginge● and Spicknard each one dram of Stechas and Nu●megs each two drams and an half after a warm digestion for a day in three quarts of the distille● water of the roots of Peony boil them to two in ● bath strain it and with four pound and an half o● white Sugar boil it to a Syrup in a bath Virtues It is excellent for diseases of the head an● nerves Dose One ounce of it may be taken at a time Syrups of Pomgranats in Latin Syrupu● Granatorum Take of white Sugar a pound and an half o● the juice of Pomgranats clarified one pint make a Syrup in a bath Virtues It strengthens the stomach and is astringent and quenches thirst and is used for ulcers of th● mouth Dose An ounce of it may be taken at a time Syrup of red Poppies in Latin Syrupus de Papavere erratico Take of the fresh flowers of red Poppies two pounds pour upon them two quarts of hot fountain water after they have stood a day make a new infusion of fresh flowers strain it clear and boil i● to a Syrup in a bath with an equal weight of Sugar Virtues It is an excellent Syrup for plurisies ●nd inflamations of the Lungs and is somewhat aodyn Dose Half an ounce or an ounce of it may be ●ken at a time Syrup of Quinces in Latin Syrupus Cydoniorum Take of the clear juice of Quinces three quarts oil it gently till half is consumed take off the ●um as it rises and add to it three pints of red aringent wine with four pound of white Sugar nd boil it to a Syrup add to it a dram and an half f Cinnamon of Cloves and Ginger two Scruples Virtues It is an excellent Syrup for the Stomach nd stops vomiting and fluxes of the belly Dose An ounce of it may be taken at a time Syrup of dryed Roses in Latin Syrupus de Rosis Siccis Take of Fountain water two quarts make it ery ho● and infuse in it by degrees half a pound ● red Roses dryed in the Sun strain it the next ●y and with two pound of Sugar make a Syrup Virtues It is an astringent Syrup and good in ●xes and strengthens the stomach and stops vomi●g Dose An ounce of it may be taken at a time Compound Syrup of Scabious in Latin Syrupus scabiosae Compositus Take of the roots of Elecampane Polypody of e oak each two ounces of Raisins of the Sun ●ned one ounce of Sebestens twenty of the leaves Coltsfoot Lungwort Savory Calaminth each an handful and an half of Liquorice cleansed h●● an ounce of the best Spanish Tobacco and of th● seeds of stinging Nettles each three drams bo them all in a bath the first two roots being infus● the day before in a sufficient quantity of White-wi● diluted with warm water strain out hard two quar● clarifie it and add of the juice of Scabious cla●fied four ounces and an half of white Sugar fi● pound make a Syrup in a Bath add to it twen● drops of spirit of Sulphur by the bell Virtues It is a good Syrup for the Lungs wh● they are obstructed and it is also reckoned good in t● itch Dose A spoonful of it may be taken at a time Syrup of Stechas in Latin Syrupus de St●chade Take of the flowers of Stechas four ounces ● Rosmary half an ounce of the herbs Thym Cal●minth wild Marjoram each an ounce and an ha● of Sage and Bettony each half an ounce of t● seeds of Rue Peony and Fennel each three dra● having digested them a day or two with a suffici● quantity of warm Fountain water boil it i● Bath strain it and to five pints of the clear liq● add five pound and an half of Sugar make a 〈◊〉 in a Bath add to it a few drops of the oyl Cinnamon Virtues It is good for the head and nerves Dose An ounce of it may be taken at a tim● Syrup of Turnep In Latin Syrupus Ra● Take of sliced Turneps and white Sugar ●● half a pound put them an earthen pot mak● a lay of one and a lay of one another cove● ●ith paper and bake it with bread when it is drawn ●ess out the juice which will be of the consistence ● a Syrup Virtues It is good for Coughs and at the begin●ng of Consumptions Dose Take a spoonful of it morning and even●g Syrup of Steel in Latin Syrupus Chalybis Take of the filings of Steel or Iron one ounce of ●ace two drams of White-wine a pint mingle ●em and shake them every day for the space of a ●onth with a pound of white Sugar make a Sy●up Virtues It opens Womens obstructions is good for ●ypochondriack Melancholly the Scurvy Dropsy and 〈◊〉 like Dose A spoonful of it may be taken night and ●orning for the space of a Month two or three Syrup of Violets in Latin Syrupus Violarum Take of fresh flowers of Violets cleansed one ●ound of hot clear water two pints and an half ●eep it close stopped in a new glass pot a day ●hen press it out in a quart of the liquor dissolve in ● bath four pound of fine Sugar take off the scum ●s it rises and
make a Syrup without boyling Virtues It is a good cooling Syrup and is pecto●al and is used in fevers and sometimes mixed with ●lysters Dose Half an ounce of it may be taken inward●y at a time Simple Syrup of wormwood in Latin Sy●pus absynthii simplex Take of the juice of common wormwood ● rified of Sugar clarified each four pound make Syrup the same way are prepared the simple ●rups of the juice of Bettony Borrage Bug●● Carduus Benedictus Camomel Succory End●● Hedge Mustard Strawberries Fumitory Grou● ivy St. John's-wort Hops Mercury of the f●● tops of Mousear Plantain Apples purslain Ra● berries Sage Scabious Scordium Housleek Co● foot Speedwel and of other juices that are not ●cid Virtues Syrup of wormwood is good to strength the Stomach to stop vomiting and for a dropsy Dose Half an ounce of it may be taken a● time Honey Medicines and Medicines ma● of Honey and Vinegar in Lati● Melita Oxymelita Mercurial Honey in Latin Mel Merc●riale Take of the juice of Mercury three pints of H●ney two pound clarifie and boil them to the co●sistence of Honey Virtues It is used in Glisters Honey of Mulberries in Latin Diamoro● Take of the juice of Mulberries of the Tree a● Shrub gathered before they are ripe and before● Sun is up and cleared by standing each a pint a● an half of strained Honey clarified two pou● ● them to a due thickness in a Bath Virtues It is commonly used for inflamations and ● mouths Honey of Roses in Latin Mel Rosarum Take of Red Roses not full blown two pound the best Honey six pound set them in the Sun ac●ding to art Virtues It is used to heal ulcers of the mouth and ●at Simple Oxymel in Latin Oxymel simplex Take of the best Honey two pound of the clear● water three pints and an half boil the Honey ●d Water in a glazed earthen po● scuming of it ●tinually with a spoon that hath holes add by ●rees one pint of White Wine Vinegar boil i●●r a gentle fire to the consistence of a liquid Sy● Virtue It cleanses ulcers of the Lungs it may taken with a Liquorice stick Simple oxymel of Squills in Latin oxymel Scilliticum Simplex Take of clarified Honey three pound of Vine● of Squills a quart boil them according to art Virtues It is very cleansing and healing to the ●ngs and helps expectoration it is a gentle vomit ● is most commonly given with other things Dose When you design to vomit with it you ●y give two ounces of it at a time when it is u● for obstructions of the Lungs it is best to mix ●f an ounce of it with two ounces of some pect●l Syrup as with Syrup of Liquorice Maiden hair ●he like Oxymel Julianizans Take of the bark of Capper roots of the ro● of Orris Fennel Parsly Kneeholm Succory ● paragus Cyperus each half an ounce of ● Herbs Harts-tongue Tamarisk Schenanth ●● half an handful of the seeds of sweet Fennel ● an ounce infuse them in Vinegar and water ● each a pint and an half afterwards boil away ●● strain it and with clarified Honey and Sugar ● half a pound make a Syrup of the thickness Honey Virtues This opens obstructions is good for ● eases of the Lungs and Hypocondriack Melanc●● and for the Rickets it also forces Vrin Dose Two or three ounces of it may be ta● at a time Rob or Sapa Rob of Berberries in Latin Rob de B●beris Take of the juice of Barberries strained one p● of white Sugar half a pound with the gentle ● of a Bath boil them to a due thickness Virtues It quencheth thirst cools and strength the stomach and procures appetite Juice of Liquorice in Latin Succus G●cyrrhizae Simplex Take of Liquorice Roots well cleansed and g●ly bruised as much as you please infuse them t● days in Fountain water so much as may rise t● fingers breadth above them then boil it a little ● press it out afterwards boil it with a gentle hea● the due consistence of a juice Virtues It is good for coughs and for diseases of ● Lungs Lohoch's Lohoch of the Pine in Latin Lohoch e pino Take of pine nuts fresh and cleansed fifteen ●ams of sweet Almonds Blanched of Hazel nuts ●ntly tosted of Gum Tragacanth Arabick of the ●wder of Liquorice and juice of the same of white ●rch Maiden hair and the roots of Orris each ●o drams of the the pulp of yellow Dates two ●nces of bitter Almonds a dram and an half Honey of Raisins and of white Sugar each ●r ounces of oyl of sweet Almonds to be added the time it is used if there be occasion half an ●nce of the best Hony a pound and an half dis●ve the Gums in four times their weight of Maiden●ir water till they are quite soft pulp them through Hair sive and mingle with them two pounds of ●e best Honey over a gentle fire stirring it a long ●ile with a wooden Spatula afterwards sprinkle the fine powders of Orris Maidenhair Liquorice gar Starch then the Dates Pin nuts Almonds ●d Hazelnuts which must be cut small and beat ●e apart in a marble morter and mix them well ●n add the Gums mixed with the Honey of Rasins herein the juice of Liquorice is first to be dis●ved and take the vessel from the fire and stir the things a little while that they may be well ●xed add the fresh oyl if you are to use it pre●tly and make a Lohoch Virtues It is good for Coughs and Heat of Vrine is to be taken with a Liquorice stick Lohoch of Purslain in Latin Lohoch ● Portulaca Take of the juice of Purslain strained a qua● of the Troches of the Lemnian Earth two dra● of the Troches of Ambar of Gum Arabick of Dr●gons blood each one dram of the blood stone ● Hairs down burnt each two scruples of white S●gar one pound mix them and make a Lohoch Virtues This is an astringent Medicine and good for Fluxes Ruptures and the running of ● Reins Dose Two or three drams of it may be take at a time Lohoch of the Lungs of a Fox in Latin L●hoch e pulmone vulpis Take of the Lungs of a Fox rightly prepared the juice of Liquorice Maidenhair the seeds of nise and Fennel each equal parts of Sugar boil● to a Syrup in Coltsfoot and Scabious water th● times as much as all the rest add the other thi● finely powdred and mix them very well togeth and make a Lohoch Virtues It is excellent for ulcers of the Lung● The Healing Lohoch in Latin Lohoch S●nans Take of the leaves of Garden Hyssop and Calaminth each half an ounce of Jujubes and ● bestines the stones being taken out each fifteen p● of Raisins of the Sun stoned and of fat Figs of fr● Dates each two ounces of Linseed and Fenugre seeds each five drams of Maiden-hair one ha●ful of the Seeds of Anise and Fennel and the Ro ●f Orris cut of Liquorish bruised and Cinnamon ach half an ounce
for Catarrhs and Pleurisy Dose A dram of it may be taken at a time Species of the three Sanders in Latin Sp●cus diatrion Santalon Take of all the Sanders sprinkled in beating with few drops of rose water of red Roses each three dram● of Rhaponticum Ivory juice of Liquorice seeds ● Purslain each two drams and fifteen grains of Gum ●rabick Tragacanth the seeds of Mellons Cucumbe● Citruls Gourds Succory each one dram and an ha● of Camphor one scruple make a powder Virtues It is good for ulcers in the Lungs running the Reins and for heat of urine Dose A dram of it may be taken at a time Pulvis Haly. Take of the seeds of white Poppy ten drams of ●hite Starch of Gum Arabick and Tragacanth ach three drams of the seeds of Purslain Marsh●allows Mallows each five drams of Cucumbers Mellons Gourds Citruls and Quinces cleansed each seven drams of Ivory and Liquorice each three ●rams of white Ambar two drams Penidiat Sugar the weight of all make a powder Virtues It is good for heat of Vrine a Pleurisy Vlcers of the Lungs and is excellent for Coughs and Catarrhs Dose A dram of it may be taken at a time Species L●etificans Take of the flowers or seeds of sweet Basil of Saffron Zedoary yellow Sanders Cloves barks of Citron Galingal Mace Nutmegs Storax Calamit each two drams and an half of Ivory Rasped of the seeds of Anise Thyme Dodder of Thyme each one dram of the bone of a Stags heart of Pearls Camphor Ambergrease and Musk each half a dram of the leaves of Gold and Silver each half a Scruple make a powder Virtue It is counted good for Melancholy Dose Half a dram of it may be taken at a time Species Confectionis Liberantis Take of the roots of Tormentil of the seeds of Sorrel Endive Coriander and Citron each one dram and an half of all the Sanders of the roots of white Dittany each one dram of Bole armoniack and Lemnian Earth each three drams of Pearls of both the Corals of white Ambar of Ivory and of the bone of a Stags Heart of the roots of Virginnian Snake-weed of Avens Angelica Cardamoms Cinnamon of each a dram of Mace wood of Aloes wood of Cassia Saffron Zedoary each half a dram of Penidiat Sugar Fragments o● Emeraulds Jacynth's Granats flowers of water Lillys Bugloss red Roses each a scruple Campho● seven grains Musk Ambergrease each three grains make a powder Virtues It is counted good against malignant diseases and to prevent infection Dose A scruple or half a dram of it may be taken at a time Powder called Thuraloes Take of Franckincense one dram of Aloes half a dram make a powder when you use it mix it with the white of an egg and bring it to the consistence of Honey mixing with it Hares down Virtues It is good to be used in wounds to stop blood it must be applied over all the wound and bound well on Compound powder of Senna in Latin Pulvis Sennae Compositus Major Take of the seeds of Anise Carraways Fennel Cumin Spicknard Cinnamon Galingal each half an ounce Liquorice Gromwel each an ounce of Senna the weight of all make a powder Virtues It is a gentle purge and expels wind Dose Two or three drams of it may be taken at a time The Earl of Warwick's Powder in Latin pulvis Comitis Warvicencis Take of Scamony Sulphurated two ounces of Diaphoretick Antimony one ounce of Crystals of Tartar half an ounce mingle them and make a powder Virtues It purges watry humors and is good for Rhumatisms Dropsies and Pox. Dose A scruple or half a dram of it may be taken at a time Electuaries Confection of Alkermes in Latin Confectio Alkermes Take of the juice of fragrant Apples of rose-Rose-water each a pint and an half Syrup of the grains of Kermes a quart of Sugar a pound boil them to the consistence of Honey take it from the fire and while it is hot add two drams of Ambergrease dissolved in a few drops of oyl of Cinnamon having well mixed them add the following powders of choice Cinnamon of the best wood of Aloes each six drams of clear Pearls prepared two drams of ●eaf-gold one dram of the best Musk half a scruple mingle them Virtues It is reckoned Cordial and good in Pe●tilential Feavers Dose A dram of it may be taken at a time Electuary of Sassafras in Latin Electuarium e Sassafras Take of the fragrant wood of Sassafras two ounces of common water three pints boil it to the consumption of a third part adding towards the ●nd half an ounce of Cinnamon bruised strain ●he liquor and with two pound of white Sugar ●oil it to a thick syrup adding to it two drams of Cinnamon powdered of Nutmegs powdred half a ●cruple of Ambergrease xxxij gr Musk gr iij. of the leaves of Gold number ten of spirit of Vitriol four drops make an Electuary Virtues It is a good drying Medicine and is proper for tickling Coughs and Consumptions Dose A dram of it may be taken at a time Electuary of Lawrel berries in Latin Electuarium e Baccis Lauri Take of the leaves of Rue dried ten drams of the seeds of Bishop-weed Cumin Lovage wild Marram Nigella Carraways wild Carrots Parsly Bitte● Almonds black and long Pepper Horse-mint sweet smelling Flag Lawrel berries Castor each two drams Sagapenum half an ounce Opoponax three drams clarified Honey a pound and an half the things to be beaten being beaten towards the end add the Gums dissolved in White-wine and make an Electuary Virtues It is good for the Cholick strengthen the stomach and expels wind Dose A dram of it may be taken at a time half an ounce of it is commonly given in Glister● for the same purposes Confectio De Hyacintho Take of the fragments of Jacynth of red Coral of Bole Armonick of sealed earth each ha● an ounce of the grains of Kermes of the roots● Tormentile and Dittany of the seeds of Citro cleansed of Sorrel of Pu●slain of Saffron ● Myrrh of red Roses the whites cut off of all th Sanders of the bone of a Stag's heart of Hart● horn of the Raspings of Ivory each four scrupl● of Saphyrs Emeraulds Topaz Pearls Leaves ● Gold and Silver each two scruples of Campho Musk and Ambargrease each five grains with Syrup of Lemons make a Confection Virtues It 's Cordial and good in the Plague it revives the Spirits and is good in Hectick Fevers Dose A seruple or half a dram may be taken at a time Diatsayrion Take of the roots of fresh Satyrion three ounces of the Pulp of Dates sweet Almonds of Pine Apples Pistaches and of Ginger Candied and of Eringo roots Candied each one ounce of Cloves Galingal long and black Pepper each three drams of Ambargrease one scruple of Musk two scruples of penides four ounces of Cinnamon and Saffron each half an ounce of Malago Sack three ounces of Nutmegs Mace and Grains of Paradise each two drams of the seeds of
Sulphur 166 Magistery of Sulphur ib. Syrups of Ammoniacum 29 Apples 27 Balsamick 29 Bizantine simple 30 Buckthorn 27 Of the juice of Citron 30 Citron peel ibid. Coral 31 Cupmoss ibid. Diacodium 32 Dodder 26 Syrup of elder berries 32 Gilly-flowers 34 Ground pine 33 White Horehound 34 Liquorice 35 Maidenhair ibid. Marsh-mallows ibid. Mint 36 Mouseear 37 Mugwort ibid. Myrtles 38 Oak of Jerusalem 39 The five opening roots ib. Peach flowers 28 Peony 39 Pomgranats 40 Poppies red ibid. Quinces 41 Roses solutive 28 Roses dryed 41 Rhubarb 25 Scabious comp 41 Stechas 42 Steel 43 Succory with Rhubarb 25 Turneps 42 Violets 43 Wormwood 44 T Tartar Vitriolated 163 Tartar creame 162 Tinctures of Ambar 13 Antimony 14 Benzoin 168 Castor 14 Roses ibid. Sacra 15 Saffron ibid. Salt of Tartar 16 Sulphur 15 Troches of Agarick 83 Alhandal 84 Ambar 87 Camphir 86 Capers ibid. Cherries Winter 85 Cypheos 87 Dr. Gordms 89 Hedichroy ibid. Lemnian earth 92 Lozenges pectoral black 86 Lozenges pectoral White 85 Maudlin 88 Myrrh p. 90 Polyidae ibid. Rhubarb 90 Spodium 91 Squills ibid. Vipers 92 White of Rhasis 84 Turbith Mineral 152 Turpentine boiled 183 Tutty prepared ibid. U Medicated Vinegars Destilled Vinegar 20 Rose Vinegar ibid. Treacle Vinegar 21 W Compound Waters of Angelica 1 Alum ibid. Bezoartick 2 Briony 3 Cinnamon 5 Cinnamon hord ibid. Epidemick ibid. Gentian 6 Heavenly 4 Lavender Comp. 186 Peony 7 Queen of Hungaries 8 Horse Radish ibid. Saxony 9 Scordium ibid. Snaile-water 10 Stephans ibid. Treacle 11 Walnut ibid. Worms 12 Wormwood ibid. Medicated Wines Blessed 17 Squills 18 Steel ibid. Wormwood 19 An INDEX of the Diseases Aches p. 102 103 122 124 140. Agues Tertian 184 Apoplexy 8 13 104 Appetite to procure 19 46 74 Asthma 15 167 B. Back pains 120 186 Biting of Venomous creatures 65 101 116 129 Bladder the pain of it 35 Bladder diseases 36 89 Blisters to dress 138 Blood to purifie p. 6 22 65 Blood spitting 24 37 38 92 Blood to stop 60 110 158 Bowels to empty 21 120 Breast to purge 75 81 Breast crude humours of it to concoct 15 Breast obstructed 124 Breast pains 128 Breast swelled ibid. Bruises 8 102 116 124 142 Burns 8 112 C. Catarrh 58 59 Chanchre 1 Chaps 117 Child bed purgations to force 38 90 Cold diseases 100 Collick 5 62 67 107 120 124 161 Concoction to help 13 37 Consumption 10 12 16 29 43 62 Convulsions 95 96 100 103 104 120 124 Coughs 16 24 29 43 47 49 54 56 57 86 92 102 Cough hooping 31 Coughs tickling 32 62 76 89 Cramp 96 120 D Deafness 14 19 55 96 Digestion to help 75 81 95 100 108 Dropsy 6 13 14 15 19 28 30 32 43 61 75 91 153 155 E. Epilepsy 13 148 156 Expectoration to help 10 23 34 35 58 86 Eyes inflamed 84 117 F. Fevers 5 9 17 25 30 36 61 125 135 156 Fevers Hectick 29 31 63 Fistula's to hèal 24 94 Flesh proud to eat down 1 112 152 Fluxes of all sorts to stop 31 38 41 48 55 64 65 92 98 117 121 126 Fluxes of blood 89 Flux to raise 123 151 Fluxes immoderate of the Hemorrhoids and Courses 155 French Pox 24 61 77 148 151 153 Fundament fallen 121 G. Gall bladder obstructed 55 Galls to cure 112 Giddiness p. 8 Gonorrhea to stop 24 Gout 33 67 69 78 113 142 Gravel to expel 53 157 186 Green sickness 14 88 154 Gripes in children 93 Gripes 5 67 H. Ill habit of body 15 84 88 91 Head ach 8 118 131 Head diseases 14 40 42 57 74 75 77 80 95 122 187 Head to strengthen 123 Heart to chear 3 15 Hemorrhagies to stop 20 Hickops 94 Hoarsness 54 93 99 Humors sharp to correct 36 Hysterick diseases 8 13 19 137 154 I. Jaundice 6 12 14 15 55 84 91 105 117 Infection to prevent 7 64 65 67 Inflamations to asswage 20 99 101 122 Joint diseases 115 Joints stiff 120 Joints to strengthen 122 130 139 Joint pains 142 Itch 42 79 166 Itching to take off 112 114 116 K. Kidney Diseases 36 Kidneys the pain of 35 Kings evil 24 101 L. Lameness 102 Letharge 8 96 Limbs to comfort 140 Liver hard 125 Liver inflamed 127 Liver obstructed 14 42 55 Liver swelled 88 Loosness 5 25 155 Lungs inflamed 41 Lungs obstructed 35 Lungs to purge 73 M. Mad People to purge 22 79 Malignity to expel 7 10 11 30 53 54 55 60 64 65 Melancholly Hypochondriack 9 43 46 53 55 59 154 Melancholly to purge 22 26 27 83 Milk to drive away 132 Miscarriage 121 126 137 Mother fits 3 14 67 90 104 126 ●nflamation of the mouth 45 N. Nerve diseases 14 33 95 98 115 Nerves to purge 85 Nerves to strengthen 38 96 108 122 123 139 Nipples chap'd 94 O. Obstructions to open 15 19 29 30 38 39 46 69 73 87 88 110 154 Oyntment for childrens breast 108 P. Pains cold 8 110 111 Pains to ease 32 36 65 83 94 96 97 113 125 Pains of the joints 78 95 103 Pain of the Limbs 69 Palsy 8 13 96 100 103 104 120 124 156 Piles 122 Pimples 117 150 Plague 2 6 15 21 63 66 67 107 144 156 Pleurisy 41 58 59 93 96 113 Poison to resist 31 Small Pox 15 17 Pulse to heighten 165 Putrefaction to resist 31 Q. Quinsy 169 R. Reins ulcerated 89 Rest to procure 64 Rheums 24 76 117 Rheumatism 15 61 Rickets 46 87 96 98 125 169 Ringworms 94 114 116 Rottenness of the bones 106 Running of the Reins 58 69 77 86 89 92 158 Ruptures 48 121 131 137 S. Scabs 114 116 Scabs pocky 114 Scaby heads of children 100 Sciatica 103 108 Schirrous 153 Scurvy 9 12 32 43 54 1●5 Shortness of breath 54 Side pains 35 Skin diseases 29 79 83 99 101 115 116 Skin rough 117 sleep to promote 65 76 100 Sores to skin 117 Sores old p. 1 90 153 Spleen hard 125 Spleen swelled 88 108 Spleen obstructed 14 55 Spirits to refresh 31 53 55 57 Spots in the face 168 Strains 135 Stomach 5 11 13 56 127 15 19 22 30 31 37 40 56 62 75 Stone 65 69 93 101 107 Swellings cold 122 140 Swelling to ripen 111 134 Swellings 8 97 108 110 111 Swellings hard 128 131 133 134 141 T. Teeth to cleanse 157 Tettars 94 114 116 Thirst to quench 40 46 Throat ulcered 45 Tooth-ach 106 U. Vapours 165 Venery to provoke 63 Ulcers Sinnuous 119 Ulcers old 149 Ulcers to heal 24 94 100 102 106 112 113 Ulcers of the lungs 39 45 48 58 59 89 16● U. Ulcers of the mouth 40 Ulcers of the yard 48 Ulcers of the guts 89 Ulcers in the bladder 105 171 186 Ulcers to dry 112 114 Ulcers to cleanse 112 Ulcers to ease 112 114 Ulcers of the head 112 Ulcers to digest 113 Ulcers pocky 114 Vomiting to provoke 11 17 18 45 145 153 Vomiting to stop 5 37 41 79 98 99 100 108 W. A wash for the face 8 Water to purge 28 72
such a reluctancy in nature though most at take them find at first some disorder in their Boes Before any one enters upon a Steel course ●ey must be well purged but whilst he is in the ●urse purging is not allowed only care must be ken that the body be not too much bound up Wormwood wine in Latin vinum Absynthites Take of dryed Wormwood one handful to each ●llon of wine stop it well up in a vessel and let remain in infusion the same way Rosmary flow● wine and eyebright wine may be made Virtues Wormwood wine is used to strengthen the ●mach to procure an appetite and for a dropsy Note This Wine and Wormwood beer are better the cases above mentioned then any other prepara●on of Wormwood Medicated Vinegars in Latin aceta M●dicata Distilled Vinegar in Latin acetum Dist●latum Put six quarts of strong vinegar into an earth● pan evaporate about a quart in a bath which is th phlegmatick part and pour that which remains i● to a glass or earthen Cucurbit and distil it in a stron sand heat until there remains nothing at botto● but a substance like honey keep this vinegar w● stopt some call it spirit of Vinegar Virtues Its principal use is to dissolve or precipitate bodies it is sometimes mixed in cordial potion to resist putrefaction it is mixed with water this ● called oxycrate which is used to stop Hemorrhagies a● being outwardly applyed it asswages inflamations Dose Half a spoonful of it may be taken at ● time in some proper liquor Rose Vinegar in Latin Acetum Rosaceum Take of red Roses before they are full blow● the white being cut off one pound they must b● dryed in the Sun add to them six quarts of Vinegar set them in the Sun for the space of forty days the● strain the Vinegar repeat the infusion with fresh Roses after the same manner is made Vinegar of E●derflowers Rosmary flowers and clove Gilly Flowers Note That these Vinegars are prescribed fo● sauces according to the various diseases of the sick as vinegar of Rosmary flowers for instance in diseases of the head and the like Treacle Vinegar in Latin Acetum Theriacale Norimberg Take of the roots of the greater Celandine one nce and an half of the roots of Angelica Masterort Gentian Bistort Valerian Burnet White Dit●y Elecampane Zedoary each one dram of the ot of the greater Plantain one dram and an half the leaves of Mousear Sage Scabious Scordium ittany of Creet of Blessed Thistle each half an ndful of the bark and seeds of Citron each one am and an half of Bole armonick one dram of ●ffron three drams of Hartshorn one dram and an ●if of these let the Saffron Hartshorn Dittany ●d Bole be tyed up in a rag and infused with the her ingredients for many days in five pints of the arpest vinegar you must infuse them in a glass ell stopped in a moderate heat strain out the viegar and dissolve in it six drams of the best Treae shake it often and keep it for use Virtues This is proper to be used in the Plague me and against Malignity and to prevent infection Dose Half a spoonful of it may be taken at a ●ne in some proper liquor Decoctions Common Decoction for a Glyster in Latin Decoctum commune pro Clystere Take of the leaves of Mallows Violets Pellito● Beet Mercury each one handful of the flow●s of Camomel two Pugils of sweet Fennel seeds alf an ounce of Linseed two drams boil them in sufficient quantity of water to a pint Virtues This is used in general to empty the Bowels but it will not work well unless you add to it quarter of a pound of brown Sugar Decoction of Dodder in Latin Decoct● Epithymi Take of Myrobalans called Chebulae and In of each half an ounce of Arabian Staechas Raisins of the Sun stoned of Dodder of Thy● and Senna each an ounce of Fumitory half ounce of hemp Agrimony five drams of the ro● of Polypody of the oak six drams of turbith h● an ounce of whey made of Goats or Cows M● two quarts boyl all but the Dodder to a quart the add the Dodder and make it just ready to bo● after then take it from the fire and add of the roo of black Hellebore a dram and an half of Agari● half a dram of sal Gemma a dram and an half i● fuse them ten hours and press it out strongly Virtues This is a proper purge for mad or mela●cholly people Dose Four ounces of it may be taken at a tim Bitter Decoction in Latin Decoctum ● marum Take of the tops of the lesser Centaury of th flowers of Camomel each one pugil of the roo of Gentian half a scruple of the leaves of Sen● cleansed and of Carduus Benedictus seeds each o● dram boyl them in a sufficient quantity of fountai water to four ounces Virtues This is much used to strengthen the St●mach and to purifie the blood Dose Four ounces of it may be taken for sever mornings together Note Ten grains of salt of Wormwood is comonly added to this decoction and thereby it s made ear and more agreeable to the Stomach Decoctum sennae Gereonis Take of the leaves of Senna two ounces of the oots of Polypody of the oak half an ounce of inger one dram of Raisins of the Sun stoned two ●nces of Sebestens and Damask Pruns each num●r twelve of the flowers of Borrage Violets red oses Rosmary each two drams boil them in two ●arts of Fountain water till half is consumed Virtues This is used as a common decoction for ●rging potions Dose Four ounces of it may be taken at a time ut to make it work well you must add some purg●g syrup viz. an ounce of syrup of Roses soluve Buckthorn or the like The pectoral Decoction in Latin decoctum Pectorale Take of Raisins of the Sun stoned one ounce f Sebestins and Jujubes each number fifteen of ●ates number six of fat figs number eight of barly ●eansed one ounce of Liquorice half an ounce of ●e leaves of Maidenhair Hysop Scabious Colts●ot each one handful boil them in three pints of ountain water to the consumption of a third part Virtues This is good for diseases of the breast and elps expectoration Dose A quarter of a pint of it may be taken ●orning and evening The wound decoction in Latin Decoctum Traumaticum Take of white and pithy Sarsaparilla an ounce and a half of the roots of China one ounce of th● roots of Fennel of the tender roots of Burdock ne● tles Rhapontick Comfry Liquorice Avens ea● six drams of long Birthwort half an ounce o● white Dittany two drams of the leaves of Bettony St. John's wort Agrimony Rib'd Plantai● Ground Ivy Bugles Wintergreen Sanicle each ha● a handful of raisins of the Sun stoned one ounc● of the seeds of Anise Coriander and Nettles ea● two drams of Juniper berries one dram of Har● horn and Ivory Rasped five drams boil them in sufficient
ounce of Scordium and Coralin ea● six drams of the roots of Angelica Tormentil● Peony of the leaves of Dittany Lawrel and J●niper berries each half an ounce of the flowers 〈◊〉 Marygolds Gillyflowers Rosmary flowers of t● tops of St. John's-wort Nutmegs and Saffron ea● three drams of the roots of Gentian Zedoary Gi●ger Mace Myrrh of the leaves of Scabious D●vils bit Carduus Benedictus each two drams 〈◊〉 Cloves and Opium each one dram good Cana●● Wine a sufficient quantity of Clarified Hon●● thrice the weight of all make an Electuary Virtues It is much of the same virtue with the former Dose A dram of it may be taken at a time Diacrocuma Take of Saffron of the roots of Asarabacca o● the seeds of Parsly Daucus Anise Smalage eac● half an ounce of Rhubarb of the roots of Athamantick Spicknard and Indian Spike each six drams of true wood of Cassia Costus Myrrh Scenanth Cubebs of the roots of Madder of the juice o● Wormwood and Maudlin thickned of Opobalsam or of oyl of Nutmeg each two drams of Cinnamon and sweet smelling Flag each one dram an half of Scordium Ceterach and juice of Liquorice each two drams and an half of Tragacanth one dram of white Sugar eight times the weight of all dissolved in Endive water and clarified make an Electuary Virtues It opens Obstructions it is good in the ●one and expels Malignity Dose A dram or a dram and an half of it ●ay be taken at a time Purging Electuaries Caryocostinum Take of Cloves of Candied Costus or of Ze●ary of Ginger and Cumin each two drams of ●ermodactiles cleansed from the bark of Diagry●um each half an ounce of Honey of Roses rice the weight of all powder all except the Di●rydium and mix them well with the Honey then ●d the Diagrydium powdred apart make an E●ctuary Virtues It is chiefly used for pains of the Limbs ●d Gout Dose Two or three drams of it may be taken 〈◊〉 a time Extract of Cassia for Glysters in Latin Cassia extracta pro Clysteribus Take of the leaves of Violets Mallows Mer●ry Beets Pellitory of the wall ●lowers of Vio●s each one handful make a decoction in a suf●ient quantity of water adding at the end the ●wers of Violets whereby the Cassia may be ex●cted and the canes washed within then take ● the Cassia extracted by this Decoction and boil● to a consistence one pound of brown Sugar ●e pound and an half make an Electuary by boil●g it Virtues It is used in cooling Glisters for the Stone ●nd running of the Reins Dose Two ounces of it may be given at a ti● Diaphaenicon Take of the pulp of Dates cleansed and boil● in Hydromel half a pound 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Penids thre● ounces of sweet Almonds blanched 〈◊〉 ounces a● an half all being beat and m●xed add a pou● of clarified Honey boil them a little then sprin●● into them of Ginger long Pepper and Mace C●namon of the leaves of Rue dryed of the seeds ● Fennel and Daucus each two drams of Turb● finely powdred four ounces of Diagrydium ● ounce and an half make an Electuary Virtues It is used in Glisters to expel wind Dose H●lf an ounce or six drams may be gi●en at a time Catholicon Take of the Pulp of Cassia and Tamarinds a● of the leaves of Senna each two ounces of t● roots of Polypody Violets Rhubarb each 〈◊〉 ounce of the seeds of Anise Penid's Sugar-Ca●dy Liquorice of the seeds of Gourds Citru● Cucumbers Melons each two drams powder th● things that are to be powdred and take of fresh P●lypody bruised three ounces of the seeds of Fen● six drams make a decoction in two quarts of Fou●tain water boil it till the third part is consume● to the strained liquor add two pound of the b● Sugar boil them again to the thickness of a Syr● then to the pulps of Cassia and Tamarinds dissol●ed in part of the Decoction and put over the f●● pour by degrees the syrup and add the powde● and make an Electuary Virtues It is most commonly used in Glisters to ●l and loosen Dose Two ounces may be given at a time Lenctive Electuary in Latin Electuarium Lenitivum Take of Raisins of the Sun stoned of fresh Poly●dy of the oak of Oriental Senna each two ●nces of Mercury one handful and an half of ●jubes and Sebestens each number twenty of Mai●nhair Violets cleansed Barly each one handful ● Damask prun's and Tamarinds each six drams ● Liquorice half an ounce boil them in five quarts ● water to the consumption of a third part then ●ain them out hard in one part of the Liquor dis●lve of the pulp of Cassia and Tamarinds and of esh prunes and Violet Sugar each six ounces in ●e other part of the Liquor dissolve two pounds of ●e Sugar Lastly add an ounce and an half of the ●wder of Senna and two drams of the powder ● Anise-seeds for every pound of the Electuary ●d so make an Electuary Virtues It cools and purges gently Dose An ounce or an ounce and an half of it ●ay be taken at a time two ounces of it may be ●ed in a Glister with Milk and Sugar The following Composition is an excellent cooling Purge Take of Lenitive Electuary two drams of Cream ● Tartar half a dram of powder of Jalap two ●uples make a Bolus with a sufficient quantity of ●rup of Buckthorn add to it three drops of oyl of ●niper this cools and purges watry humors strongly for weakly people use the following Medicin Take of Lenitive Electuary one dram of Cream● Tartar half a dram of powder of Jalap one s●●ple of Rhubarb powdred ten grains with a su●cient quantity of Syrup of Roses solutive and th● drops of Oyl of Juniper make a Bolus Electuary of the juice of Roses in Latin E●ctuarium e succo Rosarum Take of Sugar and juice of Red Roses clarif● in the Sun each one pound and four ounces of ● three Sanders each half an ounce of Mastich th● drams of Dragridium twelve drams of Camp● one scruple the Sanders must be Rasped and th finely powdred and sifted through a fine sive a● the Diagrydium powdred apart with a drop of ● oyl of sweet Almonds then add the Camph● likewise powdred the Mastick finely powdred la with the juice of Roses boyled to a Syrup w● the Sugar and while it is hot make an Elect●ry Virtues This purges strengly watry humors Dose Two three or four drams may be ta● at a time The following potion will purge w● scarce any thing else will take of Tamarinds● an ounce of the leaves of Senna two drams Rhubarb one dram and an half boyl them i● sufficient quantity of Fountain water to three o●ces to the strained liquor add of Manna and ●rup of Roses solutive each one ounce of Syrup Buckthorn half an ounce of the Electuary of juice of Roses two drams mingle them and m● a potion but it must be given only to strong pple Hiera picra simplex Take of
Cinnamon Mace Roo●s of Asarabacca ●piknard Mastich and of Saffron of each six drams of Aloes not washed twelve ounces and an half of Clarified Honey one pound and three ounces make ●n Electuary Virtues It opens obstructions and purges gently ●nd strengthens and cleanses the stomach Dose Two or three drams of it may be taken ●t a time Pills Pills of Agarick in Latin pilulae de agarico Take of Agarick Trochiscated three drams of ●e roots of our Orris with the sky coloured flowrs of Mastich and Horehound each one dram f Turbith five drams of the species of Hiera pi●a half an ounce of the Troches of Alhandal of Sa●ocol each two drams of Myrrh one dram of ●pa a sufficient quantity make a Mass for Pills Virtues It is good for purging the Breast and ●ungs Dose Half a dram or a dram may be taken t a time Aggregative Pills or Pills that have many Virtues in Latin pillulae aggrega●ivae five polychrestae Take of Citron Myrobalans and Rhubarb ach half an ounce of the thickned juice of Hemp ●grimony Maudlin and Wormwood each two rams of Diagridium five drams of Agarick Troches of Alhandal and of fresh Polypody eac● two drams of the best Turbith and Aloes each si● drams of Mastich red Roses Sal Gemma Dodd● of Thyme Anise and of Ginger each one dram with the Syrup of pale Roses make a Mass 〈◊〉 Pills Virtue It is a general purging Pill Dose A dram or four scruples of it may be ta●en at a time Pilulae Aloephanginae Take of Cinnamon Cloves the lesser Cardamoms Nutmeg Mace sweet smelling Flag Carp● balsam or berries of Juniper Scenanth yello● Sanders Goats Rue red Roses each half an ounce powder these grosly and draw a Tincture wi● Spirit of Wine in a glass Vessel well stopt in thr● pints of the strained liquor infuse a pound of p● Aloes to which when it is dissolved add of Mstich and Myrrh powdred each half an oun● of Saffron two drams of peruvian Balsam one dr● then evaporate the superfluous humour over a●● or in a bath and make a mass for Pills Virtues It purges the Head and cleanses the Smach and procures an appetite Dose A dram or a dram and an half may taken at a time Aloes Rosat in Latin Aloe Rosata Take of clear succotrine Aloes powdred four o●ces of the juice of Damask Roses clarified one pi● mingle them digest them in the Sun or in a B●●ill the superflous moisture is evaporated repeat ●gestion and evaporation four times and make a ●ass for Pills Virtues It cleanses and strengthens the head and ●mach and helps digestion Dose Half a dram or a dram of it may be tak● at a time Take of Aloes Rosat half a scruple of the ice of Liquorice eight grains of the Pills of Sto●x and Hounds-tongue each three grains make ●ree pills to be taken at bed time These Pills do ●od in a Catarrh Golden Pills in Latin Pilulae Aureae Take of Aloes Diagrydium each five drams red Roses and the seeds of Smalage each two ams and an half of Fennel and Anis● each one ●am and an half of Mastich Saffron Troches of ●handal each one dram powder them and make ●m up into a Mass with Honey of Roses strain● Virtues They purge the head expel wind and ● good in the dropsy Dose Half a dram or a dram of them may be ●en at a time Pilulae Cochiae Majores Take of the species of Hiera picra ten drams ●oches of Alhandal three drams and an half of agrydium two drams and an half of Gummy ●rbith of the flowers of Arabian Stechas each e drams with a sufficient quantity of the Syrup Stechas make a Mass Virtues It purges the head breast and Sto●ch Dose A dram of it may be taken at a time Pilulae Cochiae Minores Take of clear Alces of fine Scammony and 〈◊〉 the pulp of Coloquintida each one ounce powder them and mix them with a sufficient quanti●● of Sy●up of Wormwood and Buckthorn of ea●● equal parts make a Mass add to it of oyl 〈◊〉 Cloves two scruples Virtues They purge water powerfully Dose A scruple or half a dram may be take at a time Pills of Hounds-tongue in Latin Pilulae D● Cynoglosso Take of the roots of Hounds-tongue dryed 〈◊〉 the seeds of white Henbane of prepared Opi●● each half an ounce of Myrrh six drams of O● banum five drams of Saffron Castor and Sto● Calamit each one dram and an half the roots Hounds-tongue the seeds of Henbane and 〈◊〉 Castor must be powdred together but the My● Saffron and Olibanum by themselves the Op● cut small must be dissolved in Rose water a● wards add the powders and with Syrup of Ste● make a Mass Virtues It is good for Rheums and tickling Cou● and causes sleep Dose Ten or fifteen grains of it may be ta● at a time Pills of two in Latin Pilulae ex duobus Take of Coloqintida and Scammony each one ●unce of oyl of Cloves a sufficient quantity to moi●en them then with Syrup of Buckthorn make a ●ass Virtues It is a very strong purge and therefore to be used only in strong bodies unless it be mixed ●ith some gentler pill it purges the head and is good 〈◊〉 the pox and running of the reins Dose Fifteen grains a scruple or half a dram ●ay be taken at a time Fetid Pills in Latin Pilulae saetidae Take of Aloes Troches of Alhandal Opopanax ●mmoniacum Sagapenum Myrrh the seeds of Rue ●pithimum each five drams of Scammony three ●ams of the roots of Turbith half an ounce ●nd of the lesser Spurg prepared and of Hermo●ctiles each two drams of Ginger one dram and ● half of Spicknard Cinnamon Saffron Castor ●ch one dram of Euphorbium prepared one scru●e of oyl of Ambar rectified half a dram the ●ums must be dissolved in juice of Leeks strain ●em and boil them then add the powders and ●ix them well make a Mass with syrup made of ●e juice of Leeks and Sugar Virtues They are peculiarly proper for Womens ●structions Dose Two scruples or a dram of them may be ●ken at a time Pills of Hermodactiles in Latin Pilulae d● Hermodactilis Take of Sagapenum six drams of Opoponax thr●● drams dissolve them in a sufficient quantity of 〈◊〉 juice of Colworts and strain them through a Linn● rag then boil them to a moderate consistence and tak● of Hermodactiles Aloes Citron Myrobalans Tu●bith Troches of Alhandal and of soft and fresh B●dellium each six drams of prepared Euphorbiu● a dram of the seeds of Rue Smalage Casto● and Sarcocol each three drams of Saffron o●● dram and an half make a Mass with the Syrup mad● of the juice of Colworts and Honey Virtues They are a proper purge for the Gout a● pains of the joints Dose Two scruples or a dram of them may b● taken at a time Pills of Hiera with Agarick in Latin P●lulae de Hiera cum Agarico Take of Hiera Picra of Agarick each half ● ounce of the best
at last ●u must put in four ounces of the juice of Worm●ood which must be evaporated by gentle boyl●g Virtues It strengthens the stomach and helps ●gestion the stomach being bathed with it Oyl of Dill in Latin Oleum Anethinum It is made of ripe Oyl one pint of the flowers ●d leaves of Dill four ounces thrice repeated Virtues It discusses and strengthens the stomach ●d is good for convulsions and eases pains of the head ●rves and joynts Oyl of Camomel in Latin Oleum Cam● melinum It is made of ripe Oyl and fresh Camomel fle●ers the white leaves being taken away being ● and bruised and covered with a single linnen clo● set in the Sun and pressed out and thrice repeat as before Virtues It is Anodyn gives each in the ●ho● and plurisie by bathing the affected part or it given in Clysters for the same purpose Oyl of Wall-flowers in Latun Oleum Chrinum It is made of Wall-flowers and ripe Oyl as ● of Dill. Virtues It is good in the palsie cramp and stre● thens the nerves and joynts Oyl of Caster in Latin Oleum de ●storeo Take of Castor one ouhce of Oyl one p● of generous Wine two ounces powder the ● stor and infuse it two days then add the ● and boyl it to the Consumption of the Wine Virtues It is good in cold diseases of the br● back and nerves and of any other part of the 〈◊〉 being dropt into the ears it cures deafness and n●● it is good for the rickets convulsions palsie and ● thargy Oyl of Orris in Latin Oleum I●inum Take of the roots of Florentine Orris a pound ● the Flowers of purple Orris two pound of the ●ater wherein other roots of Orris were boyl● a sufficient quantity of sweet Oyl washed six ●nts boyl them in a double vessel put in fresh ●ots and flowers as in Oyl of Roses Virtues It digests crude humours dissolves hard ●ellings mollifies discusses digests and eases ●in Oyl of Euphorbium in Latin Oleum Euphorbii Take of Euphorbium six drams of Oyl of all-flowers five ounces of fragrant Wine three ●ces boyl them together in a double vessel till Wine is evaporated Virtues It is much of the same virtue with Oyl Castor Oyl of Lillies is made in the same manner as Oyl of ●s Oyl of Worms in Latin Oleum Lumbricorum Take of Earth-worms half a pound first was● worms in water often changed then with White●e wherein infuse them an hour then pour off wine and put the worms into a double vessel pour upon them a quart of Oyl of Olives ●hite-wine half a Pound boyl them till the Wine is evaporated then strain it through a linnen cloth and keep it for use Virtues It gives ease and is good in all cold diseases of the joynts and nerves for bruises and wound● and the rickets Oyl of Marjoram in Latin Oleum Majoranae Take of the Herb bruised four ounces of goo● Whitewine six ounces of ripe Oyl one pi● mingle them set them in the Sun put in fr● herbs thrice press out the herbs and boyl them i a bath to the consumption of the wine Virtues It is good for the head and the cold d●eases of it for the stomach and diseases of ● nerves Mastich Oyl in Latin Oleum Masti●inum Take of Rose Omphacin Oyl one pint of ● stich three ounces of fragrant Wine four ounce mix them and boyl them in a double vessel ● all the Wine is consumed strain it and keep for use Virtues It stops vomiting and fluxes and i●● ful in diseases of the head and nerves Oyl of Melilot in Latin Oleum Meliloti made of the tops of the Herb after the same ●ner of Oyl of Cammomi●e Virtues It eases pain Oyl of Myrrh in Latin Oleum Myrrhae Boyl Eggs until they be hard then cutting them ●n two separate the yolks and fill the white with Myrrh powdred set them on little sticks placed conveniently on purpose in a Plate or earthen Pan ● a Cellar or some such moist place and there ●ill distil a liquor to the bottom of the vessel Virtues It cleanses the skin from spots and half ●ounce taken inwardly with sugar-candy is good for ●●rsness and a cough Oyl of Mint is made of the Herb and Om●acin Oyl as Oyl of Roses is Virtues It stops vomiting and strengthens the ●mach it being anointed therewith Oyl of Myrtles in Latin Oleum Mirtinum is ade of one part of Myrtle Berries bruised and ●inkled with rough Wine and of three parts of yl of Roses Omphacin set them in the Sun ●enty four days during which time let the Bers be thrice renewed boyled and strained Virtues It is very astringent it stops vomiting d fluxes hinders the falling of the hair and strengns the limbs Oyl of Water-lillies in Latin Oleum Nenupharinum Take of the fresh Flowers of Water-lillies the ow and green leaf in the middle being taken part one of Omphacin Oyl parts three re● the Flowers thrice as in Oyl of Roses Virtues It is very cooling and cures inflammations it procures sleep the forehead and ●emples being anointed with it Nard Oyle in Latin Oleum Nardinum Take of Spiknard three ounces of sweet Oyl a pound and an half of fragrant White wine and pure Water each two ounces and an half boyl them in a double vessel over a gentle fire stirring them frequently to consume the watry humor Virtues It heats and strengthens it is good fo● cold diseases and strengthens the head and is good for convulsions palsies sleeping diseases it stops vomiting and helps digestion Oyl of Rue in Latin Oleum Rutaceum It is made of the bruised Herb and ripe Oy● as the Oyl of Roses is Virtues It warms and strengthens the joynts 〈◊〉 nerves and is good for convulsions and palsies Oyl of Savin in Latin Oleum Sabinae It is made as the former is made Virtues It cures and cleanses ulcers and childre● s●abby heads Oyl of Elder-flowers in Latin Oleum Sa● bucinum It is made of the Flowers and Oyl as Oyl Roses is Virtues It discusses mollifies and resolves Oyl of Scorpions in Latin Oleum Scorpionum Take of live Scorpions of a middle size catched while the Sun enters Leo number thirty of Oyl of bitter Almonds a quart set them in the Sun forty days strain the Oyl and keep it for use Virtues It is good for the Kings-evil cancers old sores cures inflammations and vices of the skin it gives ease in the stone the reins being anointed with it and cures the bitings of poysonous Beasts Oyl of Violets in Latin Oleum Violaceum It is made of Omphacin Oyl and Flowers of Violets as Oyl of Roses is Virtues It moistens cools and mollifies Compound OYLS by Infusion and Decoction Oyl of Swallowes in Latin Oleum Hirundinum Take of whole Swallows number sixteen of Cammomile Rue Plantain the greater and lesser the leaves of Bays Penny-royal Dill Hyssop Rosemary Sage St. John's wort Cost-mary each one ●andful of common Oyl two quarts
keep the water for a new distillation Virtues It digests discusses and ripens tumors The same way is made the Oyl of the seeds of nise Caraways Cummin Daucus Fennel Parsly ●xifrage and the like the same way are also pre●red the oyls of Spices as of Cinnamon Cloves ●ace Nutmegs Pepper and the like which ●ust not be powdred but broken and beaten a ttle Simple Oyntments White Oyntment in Latin Unguentum Album Take unripe oyl of Roses nine ounces of Ceass washed in Rose water and well rubbed three unces of white Wax two ounces having melted the Wax in the Oyl add the Ceruss after it 〈◊〉 been frequently washed in Fountain water and ●terwards in Rose water being dried and sifted m●● an Oyntment add of Camphor rub'd with a 〈◊〉 drops of the Oyl of Almonds two drams and th● it is Camphorized Virtues It is an excellent cooling and drying oy●ment and is g●od for burns and inflammations ●dries ulcers cures galls and takes off itching Unguentum Aegyptiacum Take of Verdegrease finely powdred parts 〈◊〉 of Honey fourteen parts of sharp Vinegar sev● parts boil them all with a gentle fire to a due co●sistence and redish colour Virtues It 's an excellent oyntment to cleanse s● did ulcers and to eat down proud flesh Oyntment or Liniment of Gum Elemi ● Latin Unguentum sive Linimen●●● Gummi Elemi Take of Gum Elemi and of Turpentine of 〈◊〉 Firr each an ounce and an half of old Sheeps S● cleansed two ounces of old Hogs grease o● ounce mix them and make a Liniment Virtues It eases pain in sores it heal ulcers many parts of the body but is chiefly used for wo●● and ulcers in the head Basilicon Take of yellow Wax of Rosin of the pine Beef Suer Greek or Ship Pitch Turpentine O● banum Myrrh each one ounce Oyl five ounces owder the Olib●num and Myrrh and with the ●●st being melted make an Oyntment Virtues It is esteemed a good digestive it asswa●s all manner of pains it in●●rns and heals it al● gives ●ase in the Gout Oyntment of Marshmallows in Latin Unguentum di●l●heae Take of th● fresh roots of Marsh-mallows bruis● two pound of Linseed and Fenugreek seed ●ch one pound infuse them three days in four quarts ● water then boil them gently and press out the ●ucilage whereof take two pound common Oyl ●o quarts boil them together till the wa●ry part ● the Mucilage is consumed then add of Wax ●e pound of Rosin half a pound of Turpentine ●o ounces boil it to the consi●tence of an Oynt●nt Virtues It softens discusses digests eases the ●ns of the breast and sides and of a pleurisy the ●ts affected being anointed with it Unguentum Diapompholigos Take of Oyl of Roses twelve ounces of the ●e of the berries of Garden Night-shade six oun● of white Wax and of Ceruss washt each four ●ces of Lead infused in the sharpest Vinegar ● dried and beaten of Pompholix prepared ● two ounces of pure Franckincense one ounce ● the oyl and juice gently till the juice is consud then add the Wax then the Powders made fine stir them continually till they are cold then mak● an Oyntment Virtues It cools dries and gives ease and i● e●cellent for curing ulcers Oyntment of Elecampane in Latin Ungu●●tum Enulatum Take of the roots of Elecampane boiled in V●negar that is not very sharp bruised and p●lp● one pound of Turpentine washed in the same ●coction two ounces of yellow Wax one ounce ● old Hogs Lard salted and of old Oyl each ●o● ounces of common Salt half an ounce to the L●● Wax and Oyl melted add the Turpentine ● pulp of Elecampane and the Salt finely powder● make an Oyntment Virtues It cures scabs itch tetters ring-w●● Oyntment of Elecampane with Mercury Latin Unguentum Enulatum cum M●curio It is made of the foregoing Oyntment with● ounces of quicksilver added to it extingui●● not only with the spittle or the juice of Lem● but also with the Oyl of Turpentine kept a ● for this purpose and with part of the lard they ● be well mixed by continual stirring in a ● Mortar Virtues It is more powerful then the for● it is used for pains and nod●s in the skin ● seabs and ulcers Note Purging must be used often when this ●yntment is ordered for otherwise there will be ●nger of its fluxing Oyntment of Bays in Latin Unguentum Laurinum Take of Bay leaves bruised one pound berries the same bruised half a pound Colewort leaves ●r ounces Ox-feet Oyl ●ive pounds beef Suet two ●unds boil them and strain them make an Oynt●ent Virtues It is good to be used in all cold distempers ●ich affect the nerves and joynts it expels wind ●en in glysters Unguentum Nutritum Take of Litharge of Gold finely powdred half ●ound Wine Vinegar five ounces Oyl of Roses ●ound grind the Litharge in a Mortar pouring ●on it by turns sometimes the Oyl sometimes the ●negar stir it till the Vinegar does not appear ●d till the Oyntment is white Virtues It is cooling and drying and gives ease cures diseases of the skin Oyntment of Tobacco in Latin Unguentum è Nicotiana Take of the leaves of Tobacco two pounds of ●sh Hogs grease well washed one pound beat it a Marble Mortar add three ounces of red Wine ●u●e them all night then boil them over a gentle ●e to evaporate the Wine strain it and put it upon the fire again and add to it of the juice Tobacco a pint of Venice Turpentine four ounc● boil it again to evaporate the juices Lastly A● of the roots of round Birthwort powdered t● ounces of yellow Wax a sufficient quantity m● an Oyntment Virtues It 's an excellent Oyntment to ease p●i● it is good for bruises and wounds for the biting● venomous Beasts for old scabs itch tetters ri●●orms Oyn●ment of sharp pointed Dock in La●i● Unguentum ex Oxylap●tho Take of the roots of sharp pointed Dock bo●ed in Vinegar till they are sof● pulp them of S●phur washed in the juice of Lemons each an ou● and an half of Hogs grease washed often in 〈◊〉 juice of Scabious half a pound of Popul●● Oyntment moistned with the juice of Elecamp●● half an ounce add a few drops of Oyl of R●o●um and mingle them all in a Mortar and so m● an Oyntment Virtues It is chiefly used for the Itch and 〈◊〉 Cu●aneous diseases O●ntment for the eyes in Latin Unguetum Ophthalmicum Take of Sheeps Suet well washed in Plan●● and Rose water one ounce of Lapis Calam●ris and prepared Tutty each two scruples white Lead washed two drams mingle them ● and make an Oyntment Virtues It is good for inflam●ation of the eyes to ●e pains and to dry up rheums Pomatum Take of fresh Hogs Lard three pounds of fresh eeps Suet nine ounces of Apples called Pom-wa●s paired and sliced one pound nine ounces of ●grant Rose water six ounces of the roots of Flo●tine Orris grosly powdred six drams boil them gether in a Bath till the Apples
cool add the Ammoniacum dissolved in Vinegar then the Bdellium powdred with the other powders and so make a Plaster Virtues It dissolves hard swellings eases the pain of the breasts and dissolves the swellings of them Plaster of Bayberries in Latin Emplastrum è baccis Lauri Take of Bay-berries skinned two ounces of Franckincense Mastich and Myrrh each half an ounce of Cyperus Costus yellow Wax Turpen●ine and oyl of Bays each one ounce of Honey just heated four ounces let the Cyperus Costus and Bay-berries be finely powdred together and mixed with the hot Honey the Frankincense Mastich and Myrrh must be powdred apart and added to the Honey then add the Oyl of Bay-berries the Turpentine and the Wax melted together and make a Plaster Virtues It expels wind and strengthens the stomach and ●ases pain proceeding from cold or wind Emplastrum Barbarum magnum Take of dry Pitch eight pound of yellow Wax ●ix pound eight ounces of Rosin of the Pine five pound four ounces of Judaick Bitumen or of Mummy four pound of oyl one pint and an half of Verdegrease Litharge and Ceruss each three ounces of Frankincense half a pound of liquid Alum or of Roch Alum not burnt an ounce and an half of Roch Alum burnt four ounces of Opoponax Scales of Brass Galbanum each twelve drams of Aloes Opium and Myrrh each half an ounce of Turpentine two pounds of the juice of Mandrakes or of the bark of the roots dryed six drams of Vinegar five pints the Litharge Ceruss and Oyl must be boiled to the consistence of Honey the Pitch being melted and incorporated with the powder of the Bitumen then add and boil the other things till the Vinegar is consumed at last add the Turpentine Virtues It is reckoned good for the biting of venomous creatures to take off inflamations and for pains and weakness of the joints Plaster of Bettony in Latin Emplastrum de Betonica Take of green Bettony Burnet Agrimony Sage Penny Royal Mille-foyl the lesser Centaury the greater Comfry Clary each six ounces Frankincense Mastich each three drams of Orris round B●rthwort each six drams of white Wax and Turpentine each eight ounces of Rosin of the Pine six ounces of Gum Elemy and Oyl of Firr each two ounces of white Wine three pints beat the herbs well in a Morter and infuse them a whole week in the white Wine stir them and boil them having strained out the Wine hard and boiled with ● gentle fire to the Consumption of a third part add the oyl of Firr then the Wax melted presently after the Rosin and the Gum then the Turpentine having boiled them a little and removed them from the fire and cool them by degrees add the powders of Orris and of Birthwort stir them well and make a Plaster Virtues It is used for diseases of the head an● joints and for Cementing broken bones Emplastrum Caesaris Take of red Roses an ounce and an half of the roots of Bistort Cyperuss-nuts all the Sanders Mint Coriander seeds each three drams Mastich hal an ounce Hypocistis Acacia Dragons blood seal'd Earth true Bole red Coral each two drams of Turpentine washed in Plantain water four ounces of oyl of Roses three ounces of white Wax twelve ounces Rosin of the Pine ten ounces of Pitch si● ounces of the juices of Plantain Housleek and Orpin each one ounce to the Wax Rosin and Pitch melted together add the Turpentine and Oy● Then the Hypocistis and Acacia dissolved in the ●oresaid juices lastly the powders and so make ● Plaster Virtues it is very astringent it strengthens th● back and takes off the pains of it and is good for th● weakness of the joints A Plaster for the head in Latin Emplastrum Cephalicum Take of clear Rosin two ounces of black Pitc one ounce of Labdanum Turpentine the flower of Be●ns and Orobus and Pidgeons dung eac● half an ounce of Gum of Juniper and Nut●megs each two drams dissolve the Myrrh with th● Labdanum in a hot Morter and mingle the res● and so make a Plaster if you desire to have i stronger add of the powder of Euphorbium of Pellitory of Spain and of black Pepper each two scruples Virtues It strengthens the head and eases the head-ach being applied to the Crown of the head shaved and to the temples but is commonly applied to the soles of the feet to draw humors from the head The Plaster of Hemlock with Ammoniacum in Latin Emplastrum de Cicuta cum Ammoniaco Take of the juice of the leaves of Hemlock four ounces of Vinegar of Squills and Gum Ammoniacum each eight ounces dissolve the Gum in the juice and vinegar after due infusion strain them and boil them to a Plaster Virtues It is good to soften hard swellings and to take off inflamations Plaster of Cummin in Latin Emplastrum è Cymino Take of the seeds of Cummin Bay berries and yellow Wax each one pound of Rosin of the Pine two pound of common Rosin three pound of oyl of Dill half a pound mingle them and make a Plaster Virtues This is good for windy ruptures and to expel wind Plaster called Diachalcitis in Latin Emplastrum Diachaciteos Take of old fresh Hogs Lard cleansed from the skins two pound of old oyl of Olives Litharge of Gold powdred and sifted each three pound white Vitriol burnt and powdred four ounces the Litharge Lard and Oyl must be boiled together over a gentle fire with a little Plantain water to the consistence of a Plaster take it from the fire and add the Vitriol make a Mass Virtues It is cooling drying and binding it is commonly used to drive away Milk This was formerly called Diapalma Simyle Diachylon in Latin Diachylon Simplex Take of the Mucilages of Fenugreek and Linseed and of the roots of Marshmallows each one pound of old clear oyl three pound of Litharge of Gold a pound and an half that you may have a sufficient quantity of the Mucilage take of the seeds of Fenugreek and Flax seed and of the roots of Marsh-mallows each three ounces of common water three quarts the Litharge must be finely powdred and being well mixed with the oyl must boil over a gentle fire to the consistence of Honey take it from the fire and let it cool then add the Mucilages and boil them with a gentle fire till the watry part of them is evaporated and make a Plaster Virtues It mollifies discusses and heals Diachylon with Orris in Latin Diachylon Ireatum It 's made of the foregoing Plaster an ounce of powdred Orris being added to every pound of the Plaster Great Diachylon in Latin Diachylon magnum Take of the Mucilages of Raisins of the Sun of fat Figs of the roots of Marsh-mallows of Linseeds and Fenugreek-seeds and of Bird ●ime the juice of Orris Squills Oesypus or of the Oyl of Sheeps feet each one ounce and an half of Oyl of Orris Camomel and Dill each eight ounces of Litharge of Gold finely powdred one pound of Turpentine three
Lapis Medicamentosus Powder and mix together Colcothar or red Vitriol that remains in the Retort after the Spirit is drawn out or for want of it Vitriol calcined to a redness two ounces of Litharge Alom and Bole Armonick each four ounces pu● this mixture into a glazed pot and pour upon it good Vinegar enough to cover the matter two fingers high cover the pot and leave it two days in digestion then add to it eight ounces of Nitre two ounces of Sal Armonick set the pot over the fire and evaporate all the moisture Calcine the Mass that remains about half an hour in a strong fire and keep it for use Virtues It is a good remedy to stop the running of the reins a dram of it being dissolved in eight ounces of Plantain water or Smiths water to make an injection into the yard It is also good to cleanse the ●yes in the small Pox seven or eight grains of it must be dissolved in four ounces of Plantain water or Eye-bright water it 's also good to stop blood being outwardly applied to wounds Styptic water in Latin Aqua Styptica Take Colcothar or red Vitriol that remains in the Retort after the Spirit is drawn out burnt Alum and Sugar Candy each half a dram the urine of some young person and rose water each half an ounce Plantain water two ounces stir them altogether a good while in a Mortar then pour the mixture into a viol and when you use it separate it by inclination Virtues If you apply a bolster dipt in this water to an opened artery and hold your hand a while upon it it stops the blood In like manner you may wet a pledget in it and thrust it into the nose when an hemorrhage continues too long taken inwardly it cures spitting of blood the bloody flux and the immoderate flux of the Hemorrhoids and Courses Dose When 't is taken inwardly half a dram or a dram may be given at a time in Knotgrass water Spirit of Vitriol in Latin Spiritus Vitrioli Fill two thirds of a large earthen Retort or glass one luted with Vitriol calcined to whiteness place it in a close reverberatory Furnace and fitting to it a great Receiver give a very small fire to warm the Retort to make the water come for● that may still remain in the Vitriol and when there will distil no more pour the water out of the Receiver into a bottle this is called Flegm of Vitriol it 's used in inflamations of the eyes to wash them with Refit the Receiver to the neck of the Retort and luting the Junctures exactly increase the fire by degrees and when you perceive clouds to come forth into the Receiver continue it in the same condition till the Receiver grows cold then strengthen the fire with wood to an extream violence until the flame rises through the tunnel of the reverberatory as big as ones arm the Receiver will fill again with white clouds continue the fire after this manner three days and so many nights then put it out unlute the Junctures when the vessels are cold and pour the Spirit into a glass body set it in sand and fit to it quickly a head with its Receiver lute the junctures close with a wet bladder and distil with a very gentle fire about four ounces of it this is the Sulphureous Spirit of Vitriol keep it in a viol well stopt Virtues It s good for an Asthma Palsy and diseases of the lungs D●se Six or ten drops of it may be taken at a time in some convenient liquor Change the receiver and augmenting the fire distil about half the liquor that remains in the body this is called the acid spirit of Vitriol Virtues It 's mixed with juleps to give an agreeable acidity That which remains in the body is the most acid part of the Vitriol and is improperly called oyl Virtues It may be used like the acid Spirit for continual Fevers and other difeases that are accompanied with violent heat Salt of Vitriol in Latin Sal Vitrioli Take two or three pounds of Colcothar that remains in the Retort after distillation of the Vitriol ●et it infuse in eight or ten pints of warm water ●or ten or twelve hours boil it a little while and ●hen let it settle separate the water by inclination ●nd pour new water upon the matter proceed as ●efore and mixing your impregnations evaporate ●ll the moisture in a sand heat in a glass or earthen ●essel there will remain a Salt at bottom Virtues It 's used to vomit it works gently saf●y and quickly Dose Half a dram or a dram of it may be ●iven at a time dissolved in Posset drink Spirit of Nitre dulcified in Latin Spiritus Nitri dulcis Put into a large bolt head eight ounces of good Spi●it of Nitre and so much Spirit of Wine well de●egmated set you bolt head in the Chimney upon ● round of Straw the liquor will grow hot with●ut coming near the fire and half an hour afterwards or an hour it will boil very much have a ●are of the red vapours that come out a pace at ●he neck of the bolt head and when the ebulition s over you 'll find your liquor clear at the bottom 〈◊〉 to have lost half what it was put it into a glass Retort and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●●●eiver distil it off till it is dry Cohobat it twice put it into a viol and keep it for use Virtues It is good to expel wind for the Cholick and Nephritick pains Hysterick diseases and all ●structions and being added to cordials it gives ●em a fragrant smell and revives the Spirits Dose Eight or ten drops of it may be taken at a ●e in some proper liquor Spirit of Wine rectified in Latin Spiritu● Vini rectificatus Take four Gallons of Brandy put it into a● Alembick with half a peck of ordinary Salt or bay Salt well dryed lute on the head and make a gentle fire draw off as long as you find it will burn all away which you may know by trying a little now and then in a spoon if it be good Brandy half of it will burn away this is rectified Spirit of Wine that which distills after and will not burn all away must be kept for other uses Virtues It is used in Chymistry to draw Tinctures and the like outwardly applied it discusses tumors and cures burns if it be presently used Cream of Tartar in Latin Cremor Tartari Boil in a great deal of water what quantity of white Tartar you please until it be all dissolved pass the liquor hot through Hippocrates's sleeve into an earthen ves●●● and evaporate about half of it set the vessel in a cool 〈…〉 three days and you 'll 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●ri●tals on the sides which you are to separate evaporate again half the liquor that remains and remit the vessel to the Cellar as before there will shoot out new Cristals continue doing thus till you have gotten all your Tartar Virtues Crystal
It cleanses old sores eats down proud esh it dries and is astringent the part affected ●ing washed with it Note When it is used to Ulcers in the throat it ●ust be mixed with water and the Patient must ●resently after gargle his mouth and throat with ●me cooling gargarism this water cures Chancres ● admiration Compound Spirit and Water of Angelica in atin Spiritus Aqua angelicae magis Comosita Take of the Roots of Angelica of the Leaves Carduus Benedictus each six ounces of Balm ●d Sage each four ounces of the Seeds of Ange●a six ounces of sweet fennel seeds nine ounces the dryed herbs and seeds gros●y poudred add of the species called Aromatick Rosat and sweet Diamosch each an ounce and one half infuse them two days in sixteen quarts of Spanish Wine and then distill them with a gentle fire add to every pint two ounces of Sugar dissolved in Rose-water the first three pints are called Spirits the rest is the Compound water Virtues It is Cordial and Alexipharmick and good in the Plague it provokes sweat and is good in malignant diseases Dose One ounce or two ounces may be taken at a time Note Once for all that Compound waters ar● generally taken mixed with simple waters and Syrups proper for the disease Bezoartick water in Latin aqua Bezoartica Take of the leaves of Celendine the greater with the Roots three handfuls of Rue one handful of Scordium two handfuls of Dittany of Cree● and of Carduus benedictus each one handful and an half of the Roots of Zedoary and Angelica each three drams of the outward peel of Citro● and Lemon each five drams of July Flowers on● ounce and an half of Red Roses and of the flowers of the lesser Centaury each two drams c● those things that are to be cut and infuse them thre● days in Spirit of Wine and Malago Sack each thre● pints and an half of vinegar of july flowers and th● juice of Lemons each one pint distil them in a bath i● a glass vess●l to the distilled liquor add cinamon thre drams cloves two drams and an half mithridate a● ounce and an half venice treacle three ounces camphor two scruples troches of vipers half an ounce mao two drams wood of aloes one dram yellow Sande● one dram and an half of the seeds of carduus benedictus one ounce of the seeds of citron three drams infnse them two days and distil them with a gentle fire twice or thrice and draw half Virtues This water isused to the same purposes as the former but is undoubtedly more effectual it also clears the heart and is good in melancholly Dose An ounce of it may be taken at a time Compound Briony water in Latin aqua Brioniae Composita Take of the juice of the r●ot of Briony two quarts of the leaves of Rue and Mugwort each two pound of Savin three handfuls of Fever-few catmint and penny Royal each two handfuls of Garden Basil and dittany of Creet each an handful and an half of the yellow peel of fresh Oranges four ounces of Myrth two ounces of Castor an ounce good Canary six quarts digest them four days and then distil them in hot water when you have drawn off half strain what remains and evaporate it to the consistence of an extract Virtues It is frequently used for mother fits and diseases of the womb the extract is much better than the water and Doctor Gideon Harvey 's Tincture of the Ingredients is much more powerful then either it is made in the following manner Take of dryed Briony roots beaten to a gross powder two ounces of the leaves of Rue and dryed Mugwort each half a pound of Savin dryed three quarters of an handful of f●verfew catmint and penny royal dryed each half an ●andful of the fresh yellow pee● of an orange of myrrh each half an ounce of Castor two drams of the ●est Nants brandy one quart put th●m into a glass and let them infuse six days in warm ashes then strain ●he liquor off and keep it in a glass bottle well stopped Dose An ounce or two of the water may be taken at a time the extract is best taken in Pills or made up in a Bolus with some proper conserve that will make it more palatable ten grains of the extract may be taken at a time a quarter of a spoonf●l of the tincture may be taken morning and evening in Penny royal water sweetned with Sugar when it is used for womens obstructions bleeding and purging must go before The Heavenly water in Latin aqua Caelestis Take of the best Cinnamon one ounce of Ginge● half an ounce of all the Sanders each six drams of Cloves Galingal and Nutmegs each three drams and an half of Mace and Cubebs one Dram of both the Cardamoms each three drams Zedoary half an ounce of the Seeds of Pepperwort three drams of anise sweet fennel and wild Carrot and of garden Basil each one dram and an half of the roots of Angelica Avens Liquorice lesser Valerian sweet smelling Flag of the leaves of Cla●y Thyme Calamint Penny royal Mint wild Thyme Marjoram each two drams of the flowers of red Roses Sage Rosmary Betony Stechas Bugloss and Borrage each one dram and an half of Citron peel three drams beat those things that are to be beaten and infuse them fifteen days in six quarts of Spirit of Wine in a glass well stopt the● distill them in hot water then to the distilled wate● add of the species Diambra Aromatick Rosat sweet Diamosch Diamargarit frigid Diarrhodon a● batis of the Electuary of Gems each three dram● of yellow Sanders bruised two drams of Mosc● and Ambergrease tyed up in a fine rag eac● one scruple of the clear julep of Roses one pint shake them well together that the julep may be well mixed with the water then put them up into a vessel close stopped with wax and parchment untill the water be clear Virtues It is a good water for the head and Stomach Dose Half an ounce may be taken at a time Cinnamon water in Latin aqua Cinnamomi Take of Cinnamon bruised two ounces of rectified Spirit of wine a quart infuse them four days in a large vessel stopped with a cork and bladder shake it twice or thrice a day and dissolve a part half a pound of sugar candy in a quart of Rose water mingle both the liquors and put to them half a scruple of Ambergrease and four grains of Musk. Virtues It is an excellent S●omach water it is ●cordial and is very proper to stop Vomiting and is good for the Colick Gripes and Loosness Dose A spoonful of it may be taken at a time Cinnamon water hordeated in Latin aqua Cinnamomi hordeata Take of pure barly water eight pints of the best Cinnamon twelve ounces infuse and distil them in hot water Virtues This water is used for the same intentions with the former and is more proper than that when the patient is weak or an
space of a week shaking the glass twice or thrice a day then let it stand until it is clear Virtues It cleanses and strengthens the Stomach opens obstructions of the liver and spleen it is good for the jaundice dropsy an ill habit of body and for obstructions of the courses and an asthma Dose Three or four spoonfuls more or less according to the age and constitution of the Patient may be taken at a time in a morning fasting Tincture of Saffron in Latin Tinctura Croci Take of Saffron two drams of Treacle water eight ounces digest them six days and strain out the Tincture and keep it close stopped for use Virtues It chears the heart concocts crude humours of the breast it is good for the jaundice for the plague and other Malignant diseases it is much used to drive out the small Pox but undoubtedly it does many times much hurt by inflaming the blood and occasioning frensies and making them flux Dose Half an ounce of this Tincture may be taken at a time in any proper liquor Tincture of Sulphur in Latin Tinctura Sulphuris Take four ounces of flowers of Sulphur put them into an earthen pan melt them gently when they are melted add four ounces of Salt of Tartar stir it about till it is very red then let it cool powder it and put upon it a quart of water let it stand over a very gentle heat to extract the Salt of Tartar from the Sulphur then decant the water and put the Sulphur into a bolt head pour upon it a pint of Canary Sack place it upon a gentle heat for the space of twenty four hours this is Doctor Willis's Tincture of Sulphur whereof his Syrup is made in the following manner pour the Tincture above-mentioned into an earthen pan and with a pound of white Sugar boil it to the consistence of a Syrup Virtues This is an excellent Medicine for coughs that forerun a Consumption and for Consumptions too if no feaver accompanies them Dose A spoonful of this Syrup may be taken twice or thrice a day either by it self or mixed with any proper liquor Tincture of Salt of Tartar in Latin Tinctura salis Tartari Take of fine Salt of Tartar twenty ounces melt it in a Crucible in a great fire and when it is in fusion cover it with a tyle and put coals round it blow about it so as to raise a greater heat than if you were melting gold continue this degree of fire about six hours or until the Salt of Tartar is of a red marble colour which you may know by thrusting the end of a Spatula into the Crucible for when it is drawn out you may look upon a little matter that is stuck to it then take out the Crucible with a pair of tongs and turn it upside-down into a warm morter the matter will coagulate in a little time powder it presently and put it into a Matrass warmed before hand pour upon it Spirit of wine tartarized ●til it swims four fingers above the matter stop ●e matrass with another to make a double vessel ●te the junctures close with wet blader set your ●atrass in sand and heat it with a gradual fire to ●ake the spirit of Wine boyl seven or eight hours ●uring which time it will assume a red colour af●r that let the vessels cool and unlute them sepa●te by inclination this most fragrant Tincture and ●eep it in a viol well stopped you may pour more ●irit of wine on the remaining salt of Tartar and ●roceed as before as long as it will draw out any ●incture Virtues It opens obstructions purifies the blood ●nd resists malignity and is used in the scurvy Dose It may be taken from ten to thirty drops ● some convenient liquor Medicated Wines Blessed Wine in Latin vinum benedictum Take of Crocus Metallorum powdered one ounce ●f Mace one dram of Spanish wine a pint and an half ●fuse them Virtues This is an excellent vomit and more ●requently used then any other This and some other ●omits are used with great success in curing the drop●e the jaundice the pthisick and diseases of the head ●hey are often used at the beginning of feavers and ●efore the small Pox come out and certainly do a great ●eal of good by evacuating part of the peccant humour Dose Half an ounce an ounce an ounce and an ●alf may be given at a time according to the age and rength of the patient Note Vomits are not to be given to those that ●ave a weakness or defluctions on the eyes to such ●s are long necked to ancient People or such as have Ruptures or to Women that are subject to v●pours They are best taken in an afternoon abo● four hours after a light dinner the Patient must dri● large draughts of posset drink every time they wor● if bleeding be thought necessary or if blood aboun● it will be convenient to bleed before giving a vom● if it works beyond measure the Patient must b● put to bed and two scruples of Venice Treac● must be given him or the following mixture tak● of Mint water one ounce of strong Cinnamon w●ter two drams of Liquid Laudanum sixteen drop● Syrup of Quinces half an ounce mingle them but when there is an inclination to vomiting whe● no vomit hath been used the following mixtu● generally takes it off Take salt of Wormwoo● one scr●ple in a spoonful of fresh juice of Lemo● add to it twenty drops of T●●cture of Cinn●mo● this must be taken every third hour till the vomi●ing ceases Wine of Squils in Latin vinum Scilliticum Take of the roots of white Mountain Squills gathered about the rising of the Dog Star slice them and lay them a drying for a month put a pound o● them into a glass and pour on them four quarts o● old French white-wine infuse them forty days an● then take out the Squills Virtues It is a gentle vomit but is rarely used b● it self but most commonly with the above mentione● blessed wine Dose An ounce of it may be taken with half a● ounce of the wine above Steel Wine in Latin vinum Chalybeatum Take of prepared Steel one ounce of Saffro● powdered and tyed up in a rag eight grains of white ●ne a quart infuse them in the cold three or four ●ys shake the vessel often strain it and keep it for ●e Virtues This steel wine and steel medicines in ●neral are used in Cachexies or ill habits of body ● Dropsies Obstructions Scurvy Hypochondraick Me●cholly and all Histerick diseases and in many other ●ses Dose Two or three ounces of this wine may be ●ken morning and evening Note Steel medicines must be taken constantly ●r a long while and in most cases the Patient must ●ercise himself often The learned Doctor Lower ●equently prescribed steel courses for six or nine ●onths but there are some sort of constitutions at can by no means bear Steel Medicines there●re they must not be obstinately insisted upon where ere is
boyl all in two quarts of clear ●ater until half is consumed then add Penidiat ugar two pound of Gum Tragacanth and Gum ●rabick dissolved in the Decoction above mentio●ed each three drams boil it to a Syrup afterwards cut small and bruise five drams of Pine ●uts sweet Almonds blanched Liquorice and Starch 〈◊〉 three drams of roots of Orris two drams sprin●le these into the Syrup taken off the fire and stir t well about with a wooden Spatula till it is white Virtues It is very good for Coughs and diseases of he Lungs Conserves of Roots Stalks Flowers Fruits Barks Pulps Take of Eringo roots as much as you please ●leanse them within and without and take out the ●ith infuse them one or two days in clear water ●hange it some times and dry them with a cloath hen take an equal weight of white Sugar put it nto as much rose water as is sufficient to dissolve it ●move it from the fire and take off the scum aferwards boil it up almost to the consistence of a Syrup add the roots which are also to be boiled a ●ttle till the superflous moisture is consumed and it ●as obtained the consistence of a Syrup much in ●he same manner are preserved the roots of sweet meiling flag Angelica Borrage Bugloss Succory Ele●ampan Burne● Satyrion Comfry Ginger Zedoary Take of the Stalks of Artichoaks not too ripe as ●ahy as you please of which take only the pith ●oil them with an equal quantity of Sugar as before till they are preserved so are preserved the talks of Angelica Burdock and Lettice gathered before they are too ripe Take of the bark of fresh Oranges as much ● you please take off the outward yellow peel i● fuse it three days in Fountain water change the water often then put them into Sugar boiled as before and preserve them in like manner are prese●ed the peels of Citrons Lemons and the like Take of the flowers of Citron as many as y● please and preserve them in Sugar the same wa● are preserved the flowers of Oranges Borrage Pri● roses and the like Take Apricocks as many as you please peel ● the outward skin and take out the stones and min● them with an equal weight of white Sugar then●ter four hours take them out and boil the Sug● without any other Liquor then put them in aga● and boil them according to art Other Fruits a● preserved much in the same manner as whole B● berries Cherries Cornels Quinces Peaches Co●mon Apples the five species of Myrobalans Haz● nuts Walnuts Nutmegs Raisins Peper in the bran●es from India Garden and wild Pruns Pears and Grapes Pul● are also preserved as of Barberries Cassia Citro● Hips Quinces wild Pruns and the like Take of Barberries as many as you please b● them in a sufficient quantity of Fountain water ● they are soft then pulp them through a five th they may be cleared of their stones afterwa● boil them in an earthen vessel over a gentle fire f● them often least they should burn till the watry h●mor is consumed then to six pound of the pulp a● ten pound of Sugar and boil them to a due cosisten● Broom-buds Capers Olives and the like a preserved in pickle lastly among Barks Cin●mon among Flowers Roses and Marygold flowers among Fruits Almonds Cloves Pine-apples ●istaches and the like are said to be preserved so al● Seeds and Twigs but with this difference that ●r the most part they are crusted with Sugar and ●erefore are more properly called Confections Conserves and Sugars Conserves Of the Herbs Wormwood and wood Sorrel of ●e flowers of Bettony Borrage Bugloss Marygolds Gillyflowers and Succory of the leaves of curvy-grass of Hipes of the Roots of Elecampane ● the tops of Fumitory of Broom-buds of red Ro●s Flowers of Rosemary Peony Violets Lilly of ●e Valleys of all these are made Conserves with ●rice their weight of fine Sugar But it is to be no●d that they are not all to be mingled alike for ●me are to be first cut bruised and gently boyled ●hers are to be neither cut bruised nor boyled and ●me lastly require only one of these and others all ●e but one of these But any Artist may easily a●id Mistakes by this one premonition Sugars Pearled Sugar Is made with Sugar boyled in half the weight of ●ose-water towards the end add to each pound ● Sugar half an ounce of prepared Pearl and eight ● ten leaves of Gold Penidiat Sugar in Latin Saccharum Penidium It is made with Sugar dissolved in barly water ●er a gentle fire and well beat with whites of eggs ●d twice clarified As it boyls strain it through a cloath and boyl it again gently until it risein bubbles and being chewed does not stick to your teeth then pour it upon a marble besmeared with oyl of Almonds letting first the bubbles sink after it is removed from the fire bring back the outsides of it to the middle till it looks like larch Rosin then your hands being rubed with white starch you may draw it into threads either short or long thick or thin as you please Sugar of Roses in Latin Sacharum Rosatum Tabulatum Take of the flowers of Red Roses the whites cu● off and dryed quickly in the Sun one ounce of fine Sugar one pound dissolve the Sugar over the fire in four ounces of red Rose water and in four ounces of the juice of the same which being evaporated by degrees add the Roses powdred mingle them and pour them on a stone and so make Tablets Species or Powders Aromatick Rosat in Latin Aromaticum Rosatum Take of red Roses the white being cut off fifteen drams of Liquorice Rasped seven drams o● the wood of Aloes and of yellow Sanders each three drams choice Cinnamon five drams of Clove and Mace each two drams and an half of Gum Arabick and Tragacanth each eight scruples o● Nutmegs the greater Cardamoms and Galinga● each one dram of Spick Indian and Nard and of Ambergrease each two scruples of Musk one scruple make a powder to be kept in a glass or glazed pot Virtues It is cordial strengthens the stomach an● expels wind Dose Half a dram or a dram of it may be ●aken at a time Compound power of Crabs claws in Latin pulvis e chelis Cancrorum Compositus Take of prepared pearl of Crabs eyes red Co●al white Amber Har●s Horn prepared Philosophi●ally oriental Bezoar stone each half an ounce ●owder of the black tops of Crabs claws the weight ●f all make a powder which with the gelly of ●nglish vipers skins may be made into small balls 〈◊〉 be dryed carefully and to be kept for use Virtues This is commonly called Gascoigns Pow●er and is reckoned good to expel malignity and to ●vive the Spirits Dose Twenty grains or half a scruple of it may ●e taken at a time The Temperate Cordial species in Latin species cordiales Temperatae Take of the wood of Aloes of the spodium of ●ory each one dram of
Aloes one ounce of Hone● of Roses a●ufficient quantity make a Mass Virtues It is much of the same nature with H●era Picra Dose Two scruples or a dram of it may be ta●en at a time Imperial Pills in Latin pilulae Imperi●les Take of Aloes two ounces of Rhubarb one ounc● ●nd an half of Agarick of the leaves of Senna ●eansed each an ounce of Cinnamon three drams ●f Ginger two drams of Nutmegs and Cloves ●f Spicknard and Mastich each one dram mix ●em with Syrup of Violets and work them to a Mass with the hands besmeared with oyl Virtues They purge gently and bind after they ●urge and cleanse the Stomach and stop Vomiting Dose A dram or a dram and an half may be ●aken at a time Pilulae de Lapide Lazuli Take of the Azure stone powdered and often ●ashed five drams of Dodder of Thyme Polypo●y Agarick each one ounce of Scammony and the ●oots of black Hellebore of Sal Gemma each two ●rams and an half of Cloves and the seeds of A●ise each half an ounce of Hiera picra fifteen ●rams with syrup of the juice of Fumitory make mass Virtues They are peculiarly proper for mad and ●elancholy people and are good for diseases of the ●kin as Itch Leprosie and the like Dose Half a dram a dram or a dram and an ●alf may be taken at a time Pilulae Macri. Take of the best Aloes two ounces of Mastich ●alf an ounce of the leaves of Marjoram dryed ●wo drams of Salt of Wormwood one dram ●owder them all together and with the juice of Colworts and Sugar make a mass Virtues They are good for the stomach and head Dose Half a dram or a dram may be taken at a time Pills of Mastich in Latin Pilulae Mastichinae Take of Mastich two ounces of Aloes four ounces of Agarick trochiscated and of species Hi●ra Picra each one ounce and an half make a mass with syrup of Wormwood Virtues They strengthen the head and strengthen and cleanse the stomach Dose Two scruples or a dram of them may be taken at a time Pilulae Rudii Take of Coloquintida six drams of Agarick Scammony the roots of black Hellebore and Turbith each half an ounce of Succotrine Aloes one ounce of Cinnamon Mace and Cloves each two scruples the Coloquintida must be cleared from the seeds and cut small the Agarick rasped the Hellebore Turbith and spices powdred gros●y then pour on so much spirit of Wine as will rise six fingers breadth above the matter infuse them four days in a gentle heat then strain it hard and dissolve in it the Scammony and Aloes well cleansed then put the liquor into a glass alembick and distil it till what remains becomes of the consistence of honey of which make a mass Virtues It is an excellent general purging Pill Dose A scruple or two scruples may be taken at a time Pilulae Ruffi Take of fine Aloes two ounces of choice ●yrrh one ounce of Saffron half an ounce with e Syrup of Wormwood make a mass Virtues They help digestion are good in surfeits engthen the head cleanse the breast and strengen and cleanse the stomach and force the courses Dose Half a dram or a dram of them may be ●en at a time The stomach Pill with Gums in Latin Pilulae stomachicae cum gummi Take of fine Aloes one ounce of the leaves of nna five drams of Gum Ammoniack dissolved in ●er Vinegar half an ounce of Mastich and ●yrrh each one dram and an half of Saffron and ●t of Wormwood each half a dram with Syp of Buckthorn make a mass Virtues They open obstructions strengthen the ●d cleanse the lungs cleanse and strengthen the sto●ch and are good in surfeits Dose A dram of them may be taken at a time Pills of Storax in Latin Pilulae e Styrace Take of storax Calamit of Olibanum Myrrh d the juice of Liquorish thickned and of Opium ●h half an ounce of Saffron one dram with up of white Poppies make a mass Virtues These Pills are used for Cough● and ●arrhs Dose Ten or sixteen grains may be taken at time Pills of Amber in Latin Pilulae de Succino Take of white Amber and Mastich each tw drams of the best Aloes five drams of Agari● trochiscated one dram and an half of long bir● wort and of Hartshorn burnt each half a dra● of Nutmegs half a scruple with syrup of Wo● wood make a mass Virtues They purge the head and womb Dose A dram or a dram and an half may ● taken at a time Pills of Tartar in Latin Pilulae Tartariae Take of Chrystals of Tartar three ounces Polypody of the Oak two ounces of Corinthi● Currants an ounce and an half of the flowers Bugloss Borrage water Lillies each one pug● boyl them in a sufficient quantity of Fumitory a● Harts tongue water till half is consumed Take of this Decoction clarified two pints the juice of fragrant Apples one pint add to the three ounces of Senna cleansed of Turbith the roots of true black Hellebore each an ou● and an half of choice Myrrh an ounce of Ma● Cloves Cinnamon and dodder of Thyme e● half an ounce infuse them in a glass stopt f● days then press them out and dissolve in the ● quor four ounces of prepared Aloes and set it ver a gentle fire and reduce it to a due consisten● when it is almost cold add of the species Laetifins and Dialacca each a dram of salt of Worm●od and of the Ash each two drams of the ●ence of Saffron two scruples of Oyl of Anise few drops make a mass for Pills Virtues They are good in melancholy and for ●eases of the skin Dose Half a dram may be taken at a time Laudanum Take of Thebaick Opium extracted in spirit of ●ine one ounce of Saffron extracted the same ay a dram and an half Castor one dram ake them up with a Tincture made of half an ●nce of the fresh species of Diambra in spirit of ●ine then add presently of Ambergrease and Musk ch six grains oyl of Nutmegs ten drops evapote it in a bath to a due consistence Virtues It is used to ease pain in general and to ●p fluxes and is much better then Liquid Laudanum ● all Tinctures loose of their virtue by standing and they cannot be so easily dosed Dose One two or three grains may be taken ● a time Troches in Latin Trochisci Troches of Agarick in Latin Agaricus Trochiscatus Take of white and light Agarick rasped small and ●ted three ounces infuse it in a sufficient quantity ● white Wine wherein two drams of Ginger ath been infused make Troches Virtues They are good for an ill habit of body and the jaundice provoke urine and the courses they purge gently Dose A dram or a dram and an half may be taken at a time Trochisci albi Rhasis Take of Ceruss washed in Rose water ten drams of Sarcocol three drams of white Starch two drams of Gum Arabick and Tragacanth each
Spanish Wine a pint If you take so much May butter as ●ou do of Oyl and boyl the ingredients above mentioned in it it will have the name and consistence of an Oyntment Virtues It is good for lameness and old aches and for pains and weakness of the joynts Oyl of St. John's-wort in Latin Oleum Hyperici Take of fragrant White-wine one pint of the tops of St. John's-wort with the Flowers and Seeds four ounces infuse them three days in a glass well stopt in a pint of old Oyl of Olives in the Sun or in a Bath in the same manner repeat the infusion of St. Johns-wort after the third infusion boy● away almost all the Wine and strain it and ad● three ounces of Turpentine and one Scruple 〈◊〉 Saffron boyl it again a little and put it up for use Virtues It is an excellent cleansing and heali●● Oyl and comforts the limbs and joynts it is good fo● bruises and old aches Lucatellus Balsam in Latin Balsamum L●catelli Take of the best yellow Wax one pound m● it over a gentle fire in a pint of Canary-wine then add of the best Oyl of Olives and of Veni● Turpentine washed till it is white in Rose-wate● each a pound and an half boyl them gently till th● Wine is evaporated then take it from the fire 〈◊〉 sprinkle into it two ounces of red Sanders fin● powdred continue stirring of it till it is cold Virtues This is an excellent Balsam cures ulcers either within or without the body is good 〈◊〉 bruises and old aches and is good for coughs and 〈◊〉 beginning of consumptions but of it self it is a nau●eous medicine and offends the stomach The following Composition makes it more agreable to the stomach Take of Conserve of Hips and of this Balsam each equal parts Dose The quantity of a nutmeg may be taken morning and evening Oyl of Foxes in Latin Oleum Vulp●num Take a Fox as fat as you can get him of middle age catched by hunting in the Autumn kill him and take out his guts flea him and cut his flesh in pieces break his bones boyl him in White-wine and fountain-Fountain-water each three quarts add three ounces of Salt the tops of Dill Thyme ground Pine each one handful boyl half the Liquor away strain it and add to it two quarts of the best old Oyl of the Flowers of Sage and Rosemary each one handful then evaporate by boyling the watry humor and the wine strain it again hard and separate in a tunnel the Water from the Oyl which keep for use Virtues It is good for pains of the joynts sciatica and aches and is good for convulsions and palsies Chymical Oyls in Latin Olea Chymica Oyl of Ambar in Latin Oleum S●c●i●● Fill with Ambar grosly beaten two thirds of a● earthen Retort or gla●s one luted place it in ● Furnace on two iron bars sit to it a large Receiver and luting the juncture close give under it a small fire to warm the Retort and to drive out the 〈◊〉 afterwards augment it by little and little there well come forth a Spirit and an Oyl continue the fire until there comes no more then let the V●ssel cool and ●nl●te them pour about a pint of warm Water i●to the Receiver stir it well dissolve some volat●● Salts that often stick to the sides of the Receiver pour all the Liquor into a glass Alembick fit to it a Receiver a●d luting well the junctures make a small fire to heat the Vessel then augment it a little the Water and Spirit will rise and carry with them a little white Oyl continue the fire until there rises no more and the thick Oyl remains at the bottom of the Cucurbit without boyling separate the white Oyl that swims above the Spirit and Flegm and keep it in a Viol well stopt Virtues It is used inwardly for the falling sickne● apoplexy and palsie and for hysterick diseases Dose Two three or four drops of it may be taken at a time in some proper Liquor The black Oyl which remains in the Cucurbit is good to anoint the Nostrils and Wrists in Hysterick Discases Note The water and spirit being evaporated over a gentle fire to the consumption of two thirds is an excellent Aperitive and is used for the Jaundice Stopage of Vrine Vlcers of the neck of the Bladder and the Scurvy Dose Ten or twenty drops of this spirit may be taken at a time in some convenient liquor Some think that the oyl of Petre in Latin Paetroleum is a liquor drawn from Ambar by means of Subterranean fires Oyl of Cinnamon in Latin Oleum Cinnamomi Bruise four pounds of good Cinnamon and infuse it in six quarts of hot water leave it in digestion in an earthen vessel well stopt two days pour the infusion into a large Copper Limbeck and fitting a Receiver to it and luting the Junctures with a wet bladder distil with a pretty good fire three pints of the liquor then unlute the Limbeck and pour into it by inclination the distilled water you 'll find at bottom a little oyl which you must put in●o a viol close stopt distil the liquor as before then ●eturning the water into the Limbeck take the ●yl you find at the bottom of the receiver and mix ● with the first Repeat this Cohobation untill there ●ises no more Oyl Virtues The oyl of Cinnamon is an admirable Cor●oborative and strengthens the stomach it eases womens ●elivery forces the co●●ses and encreases seed Dose A drop of it is commonly mixed with a ittle Sugar Candy to make the El●osacharum which is easily dissolved in Cordial or Hysterick waters Oyl of Gujacum in Latin Oleum Guajaci Take the shavings of Guajacum fill a large Retort with them three quarters full pláce it in a reverberatory Furnace and join to it a great capacious receiver begin the distillation with a fire of the first degree to warm the retort gently continue it in this condition until there comes no more drops which is a sign that all the flegm is distilled throw away that you find in the receiver and fitting it again to the neck of the Retort lute well the junctures you must afterwards increase the fire by degrees and the Spirit and Oyl will come forth in white clouds continue the fire untill there comes no more let the Vessels cool and unlute them pour that which is in the receiver into a tunnel lined with brown paper set in a bottle or some other vessel the spirit will pass through and leave the thick and very fetid Oyl in the tunnel pour it into a viol and keep it for use Virtues It is an excellent remedy for rottenness of the bones for the tooth-ach and it will cleanse old ulcers Oyl of Juniper-berries in Latin oleum ● baccis Juniperi Take of fresh berries of Juniper fifty pounds bruise them and put them into a wooden vesse● with ten quarts of Fountain water and one poun● of sharp leaven keep them in a
ju●ctures increase the ●●re by little and little till yo● make the Retort red hot continue it so three 〈◊〉 four hours then let the Retort cool and break 〈◊〉 you 'll find a Cinnabar Sublimed and adhering 〈◊〉 the neck separate it and keep it Virtues It is a good Remedy for the Pox and f●ling sickness it forces sweat Dose It may be given from six to fifteen grai● Note The Butter of Antimony distilled in t● first part of this Operation is Caustick like the ●th● before described Mercury C●rr●sive in Latin Mercurius sublimatus Corrosivus Put a pound of Mercury revived from Cinnabar 〈◊〉 a Matrass pour upon it eighteen ounces of ●e spirit of Nitre ●et your Matrass in sand a lit●e warm and leave it there till it be all dissolved ●our your dissolution which will be clear as water 〈◊〉 a glass or ●arthen pan and evaporate the li●or gently in sand until there remains a white ●lass which you must powder in a glass Mortar ●●d mix with a pound of Vitriol calcined white and ● much salt decrepitated put this mixture into a ●atrass two thirds whereof must at least remain ●pty Place your Matrass in sand and begin with ●v●ng a small fire which you must continue so for ●ree hours then increase it with Coals to a pretty ●od strength there will rise a sublimat to the top ● the Matrass the operation must be ended in six ● seven hours let the Matrass cool then break it ●oiding a kind of light powder that flies in the air ●●en the matter is stirred you 'll have a pound of ●ry good sublimat keep it for use the red Sco●● that are found at the bottom must be flung a●y as useless Virtues This sublimat is a powerful Escharotick ●eats proud flesh and cleanses old ulcers very well half a dram of it be dissolved in a pint of Lime ●er it turns yellow and makes that which is called 〈◊〉 Phagedenick water which is used for she same pur●●s but is more gentle Mercury Water Take of the roots of white Lillies two dram● boil them in a sufficient quantity of Fountain wate● to a pint strain it and add to it two drams of bi●ter Almonds blanched dissolve in it in a glass Mo●tar two drams of Mercury sublimat make a whi● water Virtues This is good to take off spots or pimpl● from the face and to beautisie it Sweet Sublimat in Latin Mercurius ducis Powder sixteen ounces of Sublimat Corrosive 〈◊〉 a Marble or glass Mortar mix with it by little an● little twelve ounces of Mercury revived from Ci●nabar stir this mixture with a wooden pestle u●til all the quicksilver becomes imperceptible the● put this gray powder into several Viols or into Matrass two thirds whereof remain empty pla● your vessel in sand and give a little fire at firs● then augment to the third degree continue it 〈◊〉 this condition until your Sublimat is made whi● usually happens in four or five hours break your v●ols and fling away a little light earth that is fou● at bottom separate also that which sticks to t● neck of the Viols or Matrass and keep it for Oyn● ments against the itch but gather up carefully a● that is in the middle which is very white and ha●ing powdred it resublime it in Viols or a Matra● as before separate once more the matter that is 〈◊〉 the middle and resublime it in other viols as befor● Lastly separate the earthy matter at the botto● ●nd the fuliginous that lies in the neck of the Viols ●nd keep the sublimat that is in the middle for it 〈◊〉 sufficiently dulcified Virtues It is used for all sorts of venerial diseas●s it opens obstructions and kills worms it purges ●ently by stool Dose It may be given from six to thirty grains ●in Pills or the like White precipitat in Latin Mercurius praecipitatus albus Dissolve in a glass Cucurbit sixteen ounces of Mercury revived from Cinnabar with eighteen or twenty ounces of Spirit of Nitre when the dissolution is made pour upon it salt water filtrated made of ten ounces of Sea salt in two quarts of water add to this about half an ounce of the volatile Spirit of Sal Armoniack there will precipitate 〈◊〉 very white powder that you must leave for a sufficient time to settle then having poured off the water by inclination wash i● several times with Fountain water and dry it in the shade 〈◊〉 It is used to raise a flux with and to ●ure tettars and the itch Dose It may be given inwardly from four to fifteen grains in Pills when it is used outwardly a dram or two drms of it may be mixed with an ounce of Pomatum Red Precipitat in Latin Mercurius praecipitatus Ruber Take eight ounces of Mercury revived from Cinnabar dissolve it in eight or nine ounces of Spirit of Nitre pour the dissolution into a Viol o● Matrass with a short neck set it in sand and evaporate all the moisture with a gentle heat until there remains a white Mass then quicken the fire by little and little to the third degree and keep it in this condition till all your matter is turned red the● take it off the fire let the Viol cool and break it to obtain your Precipitat which weighs nine ounces Virtues It is a good Escharotick it eats proud fiesh and is used for laying open of Chancres mixed with burnt Alum Aegyptiacum and the common Suppuratives some give four grains of ●it inwardly to raise a flux but unless rectified spirit of wine be burnt upon it two or three times it is dangerous to be given inwardly Turbith Mineral in Latin Turpethum Minerale Put four ounces of quicksilver revived from Cinna●ar into a glass Retor● and pour upon it sixteen ounces of oyl of Vitriol set your Retort in sand and when the Mercury is dissolve● 〈◊〉 fire ●nderneath it and distil the humidity make the fire strong enough towards the end to drive out some of the last Spirit of all afterwards break the Retort and powder in a glass Mortar a white Mass you 'll find within it which weighs five ounces and an half pour warm water upon it and the matter will presently change into a yellow powder which you must dulcifie by a great many repeated lotions then dry it in the shade You 'll have three ounces and two drams of it Virtues It purges strongly both by vomit and stools it is given in Venerial diseases Dose Six or nine grains of it may be given at a time in Pills Aethiops Mineralis Take of the flowers of Sulphur two parts of crude Mercury one part mingle them well together in a glass Mortar then fire it and so make a black Powder Virtues It is used in the French Pox for a dropsy and for old sores Dose Half a dram of it may be taken night ●nd morning mixed with a little syrup of Gilly●owers or made into a Bolus with Conserve of Ro●s for the space of three weeks or a
month but ● will be convenient to purge once a week although ●here is no fear of its fluxing Arcanum Corallinum Put red Pr●cipirat into an earthen pot and pour ●pon it Spirit of Wine well rectified then fire it ●●d when the Spirit is consumed add more do so ●x times Virtues It purg●s and sometimes procures a vo●it it opens obstructions and dissolv●s a Schirrou● ●nd cures the pox Dose Three or six grains may be given at a ●●me Steel prepared in Latin Chalybs praeparatus Take of the filings of Steel separated from the filth by a Loadstone as much as you please moisten them twelve times with sharpe white Wine Vinegar and dry them in the sun or in a dry or warm air then grind them upon a Porphyry stone pouring upon them a little Cinnamon water and le● them be reduced to a very fine powder and kep● for use It may be also prepared by thrusting role● of Brimstone upon red hot Steel for then it wil● melt by drops into a Bucket of water placed unde● it dry it and powder it and keep it for use Virtues It is good to open obstructions an● sweeten the blood and for Hysterick and Hypochondriack difeases Dose Eight or ten grains of it may be taken i● a morning mixed with Conserve of Roman Wormwood for the space of a month drinking upon i● a good draught of Wormwood Wine or Beer Opening Saffron of Mars in Latin Crocus Martis Aperitivus Wash well several Iron Plates and expose then to the dew for a good while they will rust and yo● must gather up this rust set the same Plates again t● receive the dew and gather the rust as before continue to do so till you have gotten enough th● rust is really better then all the preparations of Iron that is called Crocus Virtues It is excellent for obstructions of th● Liver Pancreas Spleen and Mesentery it is use very succesfully for the Green Sickness stopping 〈◊〉 the Courses Dropsies and other diseases that proceed from obstructions Dose The same with the former in Lozenges or Pills Astringent Saffron of Mars in Latin Crocus Martis Astringens Take equal quantities of filings of Steel and Sulphur powdred mix them together and make them ●nto a Paste with water put this past into an earthen ●pan and leave it a fermenting four or five hours ●fter which put the Pan over a good fire and stir ●he matter with an Iron Spatula it will flame and when the Sulphur is burnt it will appear black but ●ontinuing a good strong fire and stirring it about ●wo hours it will be of a very red colour then wash it five or six times in strong Vinegar leaving 〈◊〉 to steep an hour at a time then Calcine it in a ●ot or upon a tyle in a great fire five or six hours ●fter that let it cool and keep it for use Virtues It stops a loosness the immoderate fluxes 〈◊〉 the Hemorrhoids and Courses Dose A scruple or a dram may be t●ken a time 〈◊〉 Lozenges or Pills Salt or Vitriol of Mars in Latin Sal Martis Take a clean frying pa● and pour into it an e●●al weight of Spirit of Wine and oyl of Vitriol ●t it for some time in the Sun and then in the Shade ●ithout stirring it you will find all the liquor in●rporated with the Mars and turned into a Salt that you must dry and then separate from the pan keep it in a viol well stopt Virtues It is an admirable remedy for all diseases that proceed from Obstructions Dose Six or twelve grains may be taken at a time in broath or some proper liquor Note Syrup of Steel may be made presently of it in the following manner Take of salt of Mars two drams of compound Gentian water one ounce of altering syrup of Apples nine ounces mingle them Volatile Spirit of Sal Armoniac in Latin Spiritus Salis Armoniaci Take eight ounces of Sal Armoniack and twenty four ounces of Quicklime powder them apart and when you have mixed them in a Mortar pour on them four ounces of water and put it quickly into a Retort half whereof must remain empty set your Retort in a sand Furnace and fitting to it a great Receiver and luting the Junctures exactly begin the distillation without fire for a quarter of an hour afterwards increase it by little and little unto the second degree continue it till nothing more comes forth take off your Receiver and pour out the Spirit immediately into a Viol turning away your head as much as may be to avoid a very subtle vapour that continually ri●es from it stop the bottle close with Wax to keep the Spirit in you will have of it five ounces and six drams Virtues It is an excellent remedy for all diseases that proceed from obstructions and corruption of humors as malignant Fevers the falling Sickness Palsy Plague and the like it drives by perspiration or by urine Dose It may be taken from six drops to twenty in a glass of Balm or Carduus water Spirit of Salt in Latin Spiritus Salis. Dry Salt over a little fire or else in the Sun then powder finely two pounds of it mix it well with six pounds of Potters earth powdred make up a hard past of this mixture with as much rain water as is necessary form it into little pellets of the bigness of a nut and set them in the Sun a good while a drying when they are perfectly dry put them into a large earthen pot or glass one luted whereof a third part must remain empty place this Retort in a reverberatory Furnace and fit to it a large capacious Receiver without luting the junctures give a very moderate heat a● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Retort and make an insipid water come forth drop by drop when you perceive some white clouds succeed these drops pour out that which is in the Receiver and having refitted it lute the junctures close increase the fire by degrees to the last degree of all and continue it in this condition twelve or fifteen hours all this while the Receiver will be hot and full of white clouds but when it grows cold and the clouds disappear the operation is at an end unlute the Junctures and you will find the Spirit of Salt in the Receiver pour it into an earthen of glass bottle and stop it well with Wax Virtues It is an aperitive and is used in juleps to an agreeable acidity for such as are subject to the gravel it is also used to cleanse the teeth being tempered with a little water and to consume the rottenness of the bones Sweet Spirit of Salt in Latin Spiritus Salis dulcis Mix equal parts of Spirit of Salt and Spirit of Wine set them in digestion two or three days in a double vessel in a gentle sand heat Virtues It 's esteemed better than the other to be taken inwardly because it 's less corrosive Dose It may be given from four to twelve drops in some proper liquor
you have gotten all you● Salt dry it in the Sun and keep it in a glass Virtues It is commonly used in Pomatums fo●tettars and inflamations and dissolved in water is goo● for dis●ases of the skin taken inwardly in is re● koned good for Quinsies for the fluxes of the Hemorr●oids and Courses and for the Bloody Flux Dose It may be given from two grains to four in Knotgrass or Plantain water or mixed with Gargles The general way of making extracts They may be prepared of any thing almost that belongs to the Materia Medica or of any Medicine whether it be simple as Herbs Flowers Seeds and the like or compound as Species Pills and the like which is wont to communicate a Tincture to the Menstruum wherein it is infused wherefore take as much as you please of any thing of the Materia Medica cut it bruise it or otherwise prepare it as is necessary for the infusion pour upon it a sufficient quantity of Spirit of Wine or any distilled Water that is agreeable to the Phyficians intention let them remain in infusion in a Bath or some other gentle heat two days more or less as the density or the tenuity of the matter requires until the liquor has a sufficient Tincture then separate the Tincture by inclination put in more liquor as before and after infusion separate it as before mix the Tinctures and fi●ter them through paper and then evaporate the moisture till the matter at the bottom of the vessel be reduced to the consistence of Honey Keep it for use whereunto may be added two scruples or half a dram of some proper Salt to every ounce of the extract to keep it from drying The way of making SALTS The way of making Volatile or Essential SALTS Take a sufficient quantity of any fresh succulent Plant beat it in a wooden or Stone Mortar then pour a large quantity of clear fountain water upon it boil it till half is consumed strain it hard and boil it again to the consistence of Honey put it into a glass vessel or glazed Pot and set it in a cold place for eight days at least and a Crystal Salt will grow together in the manner of Sal Gemma which by pouring out the decoction may be collected it must be washt in its own water and dryed for use This way is made the Salt of Wormwood Carduus Benedictus Mugwort and of other bitter Herbs easily but of others very difficultly The way of making fixed or Elementary Salts The Method of preparing consists in these four things Calcination Solution Filtration and Coagulation first the Medical matter must be reduced into ashes by Calcination but care must be taken that the ashes be not turned into glass by too great a fire then by pouring clear hot water upon the ashes to extract all the Salts make a Lie filtrate and boil it in an earthen vessel over a gentle fire till all the water is evaporated and only Salt remains which must be dissolved filtered and coagulated once and again till it is free from all its impurities and becomes white and so are made Salts from Plants parts of Animals calcined and the like of these the following are best Salts of Wormwood Thyme Rosmary the lesser Centaury Mugwort Carduus Benedictus Masterwort Parsly Rest-harrow Ash Dwarf Elder Gujacum Box Cammomile St. John's-wort Succory Celandine Scurvy-grass Bettony Hemp Agrimony Baulm Ceterach and the like The preparation of some simple Medicines The way of preparing Fat 's Fresh Fat the little veins fibres and skins being taken out must be washed in fair water till it is freed from blood afterwards being well bruised it must be melted in a double vessel then strain it into water and there let it remain till it is cold then drain the water from it and keep it in an earthen pot in some cool place it will keep a year The same way is prepared Marrow taken out of the bones in the Autumn chiefly The burning of Brass Make a lay of small Brass plates in an earthen ●pot and a lay of common Salt or Sulphur powdred which is called Stratum super Stratum burn then sufficiently and dulcify the ashes with hot water by pouring hot water often on them The way of purifying Aloes Take what quantity you please of Aloes finely powdred put it into a glazed pot and pour as much Spirit of Wine on as will rise three fingers breadth above the matter stir it with a Spatula till the purer part of the Aloes is dissolved by the Spirit of Wine then pour it off and pour on more as before and having stirred it about pour it off that the impure parts may be separated reduce it to a Mass by evaporating the moisture and so keep it for use The burning of Alum Take what quantity you please of Alum put it into a new earthen pot and burn it so long till it has done bubling and does no longer emit froth cool it and keep it for use The way of preparing Anacardiums Powder them and infuse them in a moderate quantity of Vinegar and when they have sufficiently imbibed it dry them by gently evaporating the Vinegar The preparation of Bole Armonick Grind the Bole Armonick and moisten it with May dew and dry it in the shade The Lees of Bryony in Latin Feculae Bryoniae Take of the roots of Bryony what quantity you please scrape them with a Knife and strai● out the juice in a Press put them in a vessel and do not move it after a few hours it will put off a white Lee like Starch which must be dryed in a glass having first poured out the water In the same manner is made the Lees of Wake-Robin Horse-radish of our Orris and the like May Butter in Latin Butyrum Majale Take fresh Butter unsalted made about the middle or end of May put it into a large glazed por and place it in the Sun Beams that it may be ●ll melted and when the Sun shines hottest strain it without pressing through a thick linnen cloath and expose it to the Sun again and when it is white strain it again and keep it a year The preparation of Lapis Calaminaris Take of Lapis Calaminaris what quantity you please make it red hot twice or thrice and quench it as often in Plantain and Rose water then grind it upon a stone and with the same water make i● into balls The Infernal Stone in Latin Lapis Infernalis Take the Lee of black Soap boil it to a Stone in a frying pan yet take care that all the moisture be not evaporated when it is cold cut it into small pieces and keep it in a glass well stopt This is a Caustick and is used to open tumors The way of preparing Coral Pearls Grab● eyes and of precious stones Take of these any quantity you please grind them to a very fine powder in a Steel or Porphyry Mortar dropping upon them now and then a little Rose
water and then form them into Balls The burning of Harts-born Ivory and other bones Take of Hartshorn Ivory or of any Bone wha● quantity you please burn them in a Crucible til● they are quite white then powder or grind them very fine and make them into Troches with Ros● water The way of making Elaterium Take wild Cucumbers almost ripe cut then and press out the juice gently with your formof fingers strain it through a fine Sive into a clean glazed vessel and let it settle till it has put off its grosser parts pour off by inclination the thin juice that swims on the●rop what remains filter dry the sediment in the Sun and keep it for use The thinner part may be reserved if you please for making the Oyntment de Arthanita The preparation of the Bark of Spurge roots Infuse the Barks well cleansed for three days in sharp Vinegar then dry them and keep them for use The same way may be prepared the leaves of Spurge Lawrel Mezereon and the like The preparation of Euphorbium Put Euphorbium cleansed and powdred into a glass vessel and pour upon it so much juice of Lemons clarified as will rise four fingers above the matter then place them in a hot Bath till the Euphorbium is dissolved by the juices then strain it through a clean cloath and evaporate all the moisture of the juice in a Bath and keep the Euphorbium for use The preparation of the roots of black Hellebore Infuse the roots of black Hel●ebore that we have three days in the juice of Quinces in a moderate heat then day them and keep them for use The preparation of Goa●● Blood Put the blood of a middle aged Goat into an earthen pot and having covered it with a cloath expose it to the Sun that it may coagulate throw away the watry p●rt dry the thicker part powder it keep it in a glass for use The preparation of Lac. Take of Lac not cleansed broken a little not reduced to powder boil it in water that it may be cleansed from its impurities dry what is pure and keep it for use Preparation of Lapis Lazuls Grind the Sky coloured Stone wash it with water dry it and keep it for use The preparation of Litbarge Grind the Litharge to a fine powder pour on it clear water and stir it till its thick then pour it off into another vessel and put in fresh water stir it as before then pour off this water to the other continue to do so till the feces sink to the bottom of the Mortar and the thinner part is carried off wit● the water let it stand without being moved that the pure Litharge may settle to the bottom then pour out the water and gather the Litharge and grin● it so 〈◊〉 upon a stone that no roughness of it may be perceived by the tongue Preparation of Earth-worms Slit the Worms in the middle and wash them clean in Wine then dry them and keep them for use The preparation of Millepedes Put Millepedes cleansed into a new earthen pot place them in a warm Oven after the bread is drawn that by the moderate hea● they may be dryed and reduced to powder The way of preparing Oesypus Take of wool uncleansed sheared from the neck huckle bone and shoulder pits of tired Sheep pour upon it hot water often and wash it well till all the fat swims upon the water afterwards press out the Wooll and the far and filthy water must be poured high from one vess●l to another til● it becomes frothy then you must let it stand till the froth goes off then take off the fat that swims upon the water then pour the water from one vessel to another as before till it froth then take off the fat as before continue to do so till no more s●● not froth appea●s then wash all ●he f●ts with the froth in clean w●ter sti●ring i● about with your hand and change the water osten till the fil●h is washed away and ●ill the 〈◊〉 does not ●ite the to●gue keep it in a clean thick earthen Vessel in a cold place Preparation of Opium Dissolve Opium in Spirit of Wine strain it and evaporate it to a due consistence The preparation of the Lungs of a Fox Wash the fresh Lungs of a Fox well in white Wine wherein Hyssop and Scabious have been first boiled but you must take out the wind pipe put them into an earthen pot and dry them in a gentle heat take care they are not burnt keep them in a glass stopt with Wax Preparation of Scammony Put the powder of Scammony into a Quince made hollow covered with past bake it in an Oven or rost ●it under the ashes take out the Scammony and keep it for●se This is called Diagrydium Another way of preparing Scammony with Sulphur Take of Scammony powdred as much as you please put it upon a paper hold the paper over live coals whereupon Brimstone is c●st till the Scammony melts or grows white this is called Scammony Sulphurated but you must be sure to sti● it all the time it is over the fire Pr●paration of Squills Take a large fresh Squill pull off the outward dry tunicks wrap it up in bread past and bake it in an Oven with bread till it is tender which you may know by thrusting a Bodkine into it then take it out of the Oven and pull off one by one the Coats casting away the middle which is hard run a thread through them and hang them in a dry place till they are dry but you must take ca●e they do not touch one another whilst they are drying and in this business you must use a Woodden or Ivory knife for cutting or piercing them Boiled Turpentine Take of Venice Turpentine one pound pour upon it twelve quarts of water wherein boil it till it is so thick that it will break like Rosin or glass when it is cold Preparation of Tutty Tutty being prepared the same way as Lapis Calaminaris is tie it up in a clean rag which is to be stirred about in a vessel full of clean water that the fine and useful parts may come through into the water the gross and impure remaining in the rag then let it settle and pour off the water continue to do so till all that is good is washed out of the rag Sprinkle this powder with a litte rose water and make it into balls to be kept for use ADDENDA Elixir Propietatis Take of Myrrh Aloes and Saffron each half an ounce of Spirit of Wine rectified ten ounces of Spirit of Sulphur by the Bell half an ounce first draw a Tincture from the Saffron in the Spirit of Wine by digesting of it six or eight days then add the Myrrh and Aloes grosly beaten and the Spirit of Sulphur digest them in a long viol well stopt for the space of a Month shake it often pour off the black Tincture from the feces let it stand quiet a night then pour it out
THE London Dispensatory Reduced to the PRACTICE OF THE LONDON Physicians Wherein are Contain'd The MEDICINES BOTH Galenical and Chymical That are now in Use Those that are out of Use are Omitted And such as are in Use and not in the Latin Copy are Added with Vertues and Doses By JOHN PECHEY of the College of Physicians in London LONDON Printed by F. Collins for J. Lawrence at the Angel in the Poultrey 1694. THE PREFACE HAving for several years endeavoured to render the Art of Physick as plain and easie as the nature of it would allow by separating practice and experience from the vain fictions of a sort of men whose business it is to make every part of it obscure and misterious I thought among other things the reducing the London Dispensatory to the practice of the present times and the adding to it such medicines as are frequently used would be a work very acceptable to those that have not time or opportunity to peruse the prescriptions of the London Physicians To which end I carefully viewed the files of some London Apothecaries and the bills of the most eminent Physicians and reviewed the best modern Authors Now by this Treatise young Phisicians may know what Medicines are used and so prescribe accordingly whereas before the Apothecaries were w●nt to discover and ridicule raw Practitioners for their obsolete and unfashionable Prescriptions and commonly upon reading such bills would say This or that Doctor was a Novice in Practice And Apothecaries in the Country may by this Dispensatory provide Medicines that are agreeable to the present practice and so save the patient the trouble besides the loss of time in sending to London for some Medicines prescribed by London Physicians as oft as they are called into the Countrey or advised with by letter in extraordinary cases Tho I know some of them in great Towns especially are well furnished with all things necessary But which is most considerable t is probable that many of the Simples and Compounds that are rejected and out of use either never had really the virtues assigned them or by a long tract of time the diseases for which they were used are now altered and some of them worn out and that others succeed which require other Medicines and Methods of cure As to the virtues of each Composition I have set down briefly those that I thought did peculiarly belong to the Medicine Lastly I have added a Table of diseases Reader Farewel From the Angel and Crown in Basing-Lane London John Pechy The INDEX of the Medicines A A Ethiops Minoralis 153 Aloes to purifie 176 Alum to burn ibid. Ambar Volatile Salt 170 Anacardiums to prepare 176 Antimony Diaphoretick 144 Antimony its Cinnabar 148 Antimony its glass 145 Antimony its Liver 144 Antimony its common regulus 147 Aq. Lact alexit 6 Aq. Mirabilis 7 Arcanum Corallinum 153 B Balsam of Sulphur 165 Benzoin flowers 168 Bezoarric 183 Bole armonick to prepare 177 Brass to burn 175 Briony lees 177 Butter May ibid. C Cerecloth of Galbanum 126 Cerecloth of Sanders 127 Conserves 49 Coral prepared 178 Crabs eyes prepared ibid. D Decoctions bitter 22 Of Dodder ibid. For a glister 21 Pectoral 23 Sennae Gerionis ibid. White 2● Of the Woods 24 Wound 23 E Earthworms 181 Electuaries Confection of Alkermes 61 Confection of Hyacinth 62 Caryocostinum 69 Catholicon 70 Diacrocuma 68 Diaphaenicon 70 Diasatyrion 63 Diascordium ibid. Of the egg 65 Extract of Cassia for glisters 69 Hiera Picra simple 73 Lawrel berries 62 Lenitive 71 Mithridat 64 Philonium Romanum 65 Of the juice of Roses p. 72 Sassafras 61 Treacle Venice 66 Treacle London 68 Elixir proprietatis 154 Elixir Salutis ibid. Extracts 173 F Fat 's to prepare 175 G Goats blood to prepare 180 H Hartshorn burnt 178 Hellebore roots to prepare 179 I Jalap rofin 171 L Lac to prepare 180 Lapis Calamminaris to prepare 177 Lapis Lazuli to prepare 180 Lapis Medicamentosus 158 Lapis prunellae 169 Laudanum 83 Liquid Laudanum 185 Litharge to prepare 180 Lucatellus Balsam 102 Lungs of a Fox to prepare 182 M Mars its opening Saffron Mars its astringent Saffron 155 Mars its Salt ibid. Mercurius vitae 146 Mercury water 150 Mercury corrosive 149 Mercurius dulcis 150 Mercury precipitat red 151 Merc precipitat white ib. Millepedes prepared 181 O Oesypus to prepare 181 Opium to prepare 182 Oyls simple by expression Of sweet Almonds 93 Of bitter Almonds ibid. Of the yolks of eggs 94 Simple oyls by infusion or decoction Of Cammomile 96 Of Castor ibid. Of Dill 95 Of Elder flowers 100 Of Euphorbium 97 Of water Lillies 99 Of Marjoram 98 Of Mastich ibid. Of Mint 99 Of Myrrh ibid. Nard 100 Of Orris 97 Of Roses compleat 95 Of Roses Omphacin 94 Of Rue p. 100 Of Savin ibid. Of Scorpions 101 Violet ibid. Of wall flowers 96 Worms 97 Wormwood 95 Compound oyls by infusion Oyl of Foxes 103 Of St. John's wort 102 Of swallows 101 Chymical oyls Of Ambar 104 Of Bricks 108 Of Cinnamon 105 Of Dill 111 Of Guajacum 106 Of Juniper berries ibid. Of Nutmegs 107 Of Sulphur by the Bell 109 Of Turpentine ibid. Of Wax 110 Of Wormwood 108 Simple Oyntments Aegyptiacum 112 Bayes 115 Basilicon ibid. Diapompholigos 113 Sharp pointed dock 116 Elecampane 114 Elecampane with Mercury ibid. For the eyes 116 Gum Elemi 112 Marsh-mallows 113 Nutritum 115 Pomatum 117 Red drying ibid. Tobacco 115 White 111 Oyntments more compound Of Alablaster 118 Apostles ibid. Aregon 119 Of the Countess 121 Martiatum 122 Mastich ibid. Naples 123 Nerve ibid. Pectoral 124 Piles 122 Poplar 124 Sowbread 120 Splanchnick 125 Sumach 126 P Pearls to prepare 178 Pills of Agarick 72 Agregative ibid. Aleophang 74 Aloes Rosat 8● Ambar 82 Coch. major 75 Coch. minor 76 Faetid 77 Golden 75 Hermodactiles 78 Hiera with Agarick ibid. Hounds tongue 76 Imperial p. 78 Lapid Lazuli 79 Macri ibid. Mastich 80 Matthews 185 Rudii 80 Ruffi 81 Stomach with Gums 81 Storax ibid. Tartar 82 Two 77 Plaisters Ammoniacum 127 Barbarum magnum 128 Bayberries ibid. Bettony 129 Blistering 135 Caesaris 130 Cummin 131 Diachalcitis ibid. Diachylon Simple 132 Diachylon with Orris ib. Diachylon the great 133 Diachylon the great with Gums 134 Frogs 140 Head 130 Hemlock with Ammoniacum 131 Hermodactiles 136 Hysterick 137 Lapid Calamminaris 135 Red Lead 138 Ma●●ich ibid. Melilot simple ibid. Mucilages 134 Nerve 139 Flower of Oyntments 135 Oxycroceum 140 Ruptures 136 De Sandice 141 Soap ibid. Sticticum 142 Stomach ibid. R Robor Sapa Of Barberries 46 Juice of Liquorice ibid. S Salts fixed 174 Sacharum Saturni 172 Salt of Vitirol 160 Salts Volatile 174 Scammony prepared 182 Spirit of Sal Armonia●k 156 Spirit of salt 157 Sweet spirit of salt 158 Spirit of Vitriol 159 Spirit of Nitre dulcified 161 Spirit of Wine rectified 162 Spirit of Hartshorn 163 Spurge roots to prepare 179 Squills to prepare 183 Steel prepared 154 Infernal stone 178 Styptick water 159 Sugars p. 51 Flowers of
are soft then strain without pressing then heat it again a little and ash it with fresh Rose water and add to every ●und of the Oyntment twelve drops of Oyl of ●odium Virtues It is cooling and eases pain it takes off ● roughness of the skin and pimples and heals chaps the hands and lips and the like The red drying Oyntment in Latin Unguentum Rubrum desiccativum Take of Oyl of Roses Omphacin one pound ● white Wax five ounces melt them and sprinkle ●o them of Lemnian Earth Bole Armonick ● Lapis Calamminaris finely powdred each four ●nces of Litharge of Gold and Ceruss each ree ounces of Camphir one dram make an yntment Virtues It dries heals and skins sores and stops ●xes of humours Oyntments more Compound Alabastrin Oyntment in Latin Ungu●●tum de Alabastro Take of the juice of Cammomile four ounces red Roses and the roots of Marsh-mallows ea● two ounces of fresh Rue and Bettony each ● ounce and an half of Oyl of Roses Omphac● one pint and an half of pure Alabaster finely po●dred three ounces mingle them and let the● stand till the next day then boil them till the juic● are evaporated then with six ounces of white W●● make an Oyntment Virtues It is good for head-aches the fore●●●● and temples being anointed with it The Apostles Oyntment in Latin Ungu●●tum Apostolorum Take of Turpentine Rosin yellow Wax A●moniacum each fourteen drams of the roots ● long Birthwort Male Franckincense Bdellium e●● six drams of Myrrh Galbanum each half ● ounce of Opoponax three drams of Verdegre●● two drams of Litharge nine drams Oyl a qu●●● of Vinegar a sufficient quantity to dissolve the A●moniacum the Opoponax and Galbanum the Bdellium Galbanum Ammoniacum and Opop●nax must be infused twelve hours in Vinegar up● hot ashes then boil them and when they are melte● strain them and with a gentle heat reduce them ● the thickness of Honey put in the Turpentine whil● ●y are hot mix the Litharge finely powdered with ●rt of the Oyl over a gentle fire then add by ●grees the rest of the Oyl and then melt the Wax the same and the Rosin grosly powdred then ke it from the fire and mix first the Gums then e Birthwort Myrrh and lastly the Franckincense ●d Verdegrease powdered stir it well and make ● Oyntment Virtues It cleanses old and sinuous ulcers and eats ●n proud flesh Unguentum Aregon Take of the flowers and tops of Rosemary Mar●am wild Thyme and Rue of the roots ● Wake-robin and wild Cucumber each ●r ounces and an half of the leaves of Bays ●ge Savin and of the roots of Briony each three ●nces of Flea bane Spurge Lawrel each nine ●nces the leaves of wild Cucumber and of Calaint each half a pound they must be all gathered ●sh in May cleansed and bruised and infused se●n whole days in five pints of the best Oyl and in ●e pint of Spirit of Wine boil them gently till e watry humor is evaporated strain out the Oyl ●d melt in it fifteen ounces of yellow Wax of ●ars Grease and Oyl of Bays each three ounces ● Moscheleum half an ounce of Petroleum one ●nce of Butter four ounces stir them and sprine in the following powders of Mastich and Oli●num each six drams of Pellitory of Spain Eu●orbium Ginger and Pepper each one ounce ●ke an Oyntment Virtues It is good for all cold diseases for Palsies Convulsions Cramps Stifness of the joints it ' good for the Colick pains of the Back and Reins Oyntment of Sow-bread in Latin Unguentum de Arthanita Take of the juice of Sow-bread or for wanto● it a strong decoction of the roots three pints o● the juice of wild Cucumbers and Cows Butt●● each one pound of Oyl of Orris a quart of th● pulp of Coloquintida four ounces of Poly pod● six ounces of Euphorbium half an ounce powde● finely the Poly pody and Euphorbium and cut smal● the Coloquin●ida infuse them in a glazed pot eigh● days afterwards boil them in a double vessel ti●● the juices are almost evaporated strain it and dissolve in the liquor five ounces of yellow Wax an● while it is yet hot mingle with it Sagapenum dissolved in Vinegar and Bulls Gall boiled to the consistence of Honey in a Bath each one ounce the● sprinkle in the following things powdred of Sc●mony Turbith Coloquintida the berries or leave● of Mezereon and of Aloes each seven drams ● Sal Gemma half an ounce of Euphorbium lo● Pepper Myrrh Ginger and the flowers of Camm●mile each three drams make an Oyntment Virtues It purges the Belly being anointed wi●● it below the Navel but anointed above the Navel ● the Stomach it occasions Vomiting The Countesses Oyntment in Latin Unguentum Comitissae Take of the middle bark of Acorns Chesnuts ●●d of Oak of small black Beans Myrtle berries ●orse-tail of green Galls without holes of Grape●nes and unripe Services dryed unripe Medlars ●e leaves of wild prunes the roots of Bistort and ●ormentile each an ounce and an half powder ● grosly and boil them in five quarts of Plantain ●ater till half is consumed then take of new yel●w Wax eight ounces and an half of simple Oyl of ●yrtles two pound and an half of the juice of ●ypocistis half an ounce melt all these and wash ●m nine times in the decoction above mentioned ●ided into so many parts when they are washand dissolved sprinkle into them the fine powders the middle barks of the Acorns Chesnuts and Oak of the Galls without holes of the ashes of the ●es of Ox legs of Myrtle berries of Grape●es unripe of unripe Services dryed each half ounce of the Troches of Ambar two ounces ●gle them and with a sufficient quantity of ●l of Mastich unwashed make an Oynt●t Virtues It is very astringent and strengthengood for Luxations Ruptures and prevents the ●ng of the fundament and miscarriage the Belly Reins being anointed with it it also stops all ● of Fluxes Oyntment for the Piles in Latin Unguentum Hemorrhoi●●le Take of the Mucilage of the seeds of Psyllium of the seeds of Quinces extracted in the water of Night-shade each half an ounce Oyl of Roses compleat one ounce the yolk of one Egg of Hens fat two drams let them be mixed together in a leaden Mortar with a leaden Pestle by adding a little yellow Wax make an Oyntment Virtues It is peculiarly proper for the Piles the fundament being anointed with it Unguentum Martiatum Take of fresh leaves of Bays three pounds o● Garden Rue two pounds and an half of Marjora● two pound of Mint one pound of Sage Wormwood Costmary Garden Basil each half a poun● of Oyl of Olives ten quarts of yellow Wax fo● pound Malago Wine a quart bruise them infu● them boil them and press them out and so ma● an Oyntment Virtues It discusses cold swellings strength●● the nerves and joints and takes away aches and good for the head Oyntment of Mastich in Latin Ungue●tum Mastichinum Take of the Oyls of