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A00419 Maison rustique, or The countrey farme· Compyled in the French tongue by Charles Steuens, and Iohn Liebault, Doctors of Physicke. And translated into English by Richard Surflet, practitioner in physicke. Now newly reuiewed, corrected, and augmented, with diuers large additions, out of the works of Serres his Agriculture, Vinet his Maison champestre, French. Albyterio in Spanish, Grilli in Italian; and other authors. And the husbandrie of France, Italie, and Spaine, reconciled and made to agree with ours here in England: by Geruase Markham. The whole contents are in the page following; Agriculture et maison rustique. English Estienne, Charles, 1504-ca. 1564.; Liébault, Jean, ca. 1535-1596. aut; Surflet, Richard, fl. 1600-1616.; Markham, Gervase, 1568?-1637. 1616 (1616) STC 10549; ESTC S121357 1,137,113 746

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make water in Copper Brasse or Latten vessels they swill the vrine round about the Basin and afterward vpon the suddain doe cast it out of the Basin they couer the Basin with a cleane Linnen Cloth and let it stand so couered foure and twentie houres they find rust in the bottome and round about it they gather and dissolue the said rust with Rose water which Rose water they keepe within a Violl well stopped and drop thereof into their eyes euening and morning holding them wide open Many likewise there be which content themselues with Tuthia prepared To take away the filthinesse or gumminesse of the eyes touch them and rub them round about with a Saphire dipt in cold water To preuent that the eye doe not continue blacke or red after a blow there must by and by be dropt into the eye the bloud of the wing of a Pigeon or Turtle doue To take away red spots or blemishes of the eye it is good to vse the like remedie or else to apply to the eye a Cataplasme made of young Wormewood stamped with the milke of a woman and Rose water For an old rednesse in the eye take the bignesse of a small Nut of white Copperas and a scruple of Florence Ireos as much of Roch Allome make a powder which you shall mix with halfe a pint of Fountaine water after the measure of Paris or else boyle them all together vntill the water become cleare and drop into your eye three or foure drops either of the one water or of the other or make a Liniment to apply vpon it with the drosse of oyle of Linseed gumme Arabicke Tragacanth Mastick and Camphire For the inflammation of the Eye it is a singular remedie to apply to the eye the lungs of a Sheepe newly killed or to make a Cataplasme of the pulpe of a sweet apple roasted vnder the embers mingled with Barley meale the milke of a woman Rose water and the white of an egge The water of Marigol●s is also soueraigne good in this case A Wolues eye or the stones that are found in the mawes of Swallowes haue the like vertue hanged about the necke Or take with the point of a needle a piece of Frankincense set it on fire with a waxe Candle after quench it in foure ounces of Rose water goe ouer this course thirtie times and straine the Rose water through a white Linnen Cloth and keepe it to drop in some drops of the same into the corners of your eyes at night when you goe to bed and in case you may feele great paine in your eyes mixe together with this water a little of womans milke To restraine teares and all other humors falling vpon the eyes it is good to take a decoction of the leaues of Betonie the roots of Fennell and a little fine Frankincense and to make an eye-●alue thereof also to wash the weeping eyes oftentimes with the decoction of Che●uile or to drop thereinto sometimes the iuice of Rue mixt with purified Honey Some hold it for a secret remedie to tye behind the head some drops of Amber which also haue the vertue to slay the ●heume falling downe into the throat or else to drop into the eye water distilled of the gall of a man and Celandine or else to annoint the edges of the eye-lids with the soot of Butter burned in a Lampe which is a secret for to drie vp and stay all rheumes of the eyes and to shut vp most speedily all vlcers made in the great corners of the eyes and all rheumes comming of the tendernesse or blearednesse of the eye For the white spots of the Eyes take one or many new egges layd the same day by one or moe blacke Hennes or for want of blacke Hennes by other rost them hard vpon hot embers cut them afterward into equall quarters and take away the yelke and put in place thereof as much Sugar candie made in powder of the whitest you can get strayne all together through a Linnen Cloth verie cleane and doubled that so you may doe it verie strongly the water or liquor that commeth forth is verie good to drop one drop after another into the diseased eye at night when they goe to bed or at any houre of the day There is another water verie good for the same disease which is made of white Copperas Sugar candie Rose water and the hard whites of egges they being all strayned through a Linnen Cloth and of this there must be some put into the eye after dinner and at night going to bed Some doe vse with verie good successe another Water which is this Take of Tuthia prepared and powdered an ounce Mace halfe an ounce infuse them together in Rose water and white Wine of each halfe a pint of Paris measure for the space of sixe weekes in a Glasse well stopped this Glasse you shall set in the Sunne when it shineth and take it in when it shineth not or is Night or Raine stirre the Glasse twice or thrice euerie day These remedies are likewise good for red running and weake eyes For ach in the Eare comming of a hot cause drop thereinto the oyle of Henbane take oyle of Roses and a little Vineger and make thereof an iniection into the eare apply thereto afterward a bag of Camomill Melilote Linseed and Holihocks boyled in milke If the cause be of cold then put therein musked Cotton or a graine of Muske Seribonius doth commend greatly the foot of Pitch dropped warme into the eare which aketh by reason of an inflammation together with a little of the oyle of Roses Against the noyse and sounding of the Eare it is good to drop into the eares of the oyle of Rue or Spike oyle of bitter Almonds or Bayes together with a little Aqua vitae or fat of an E●le or Aqua vitae wherein hath beene steept the seed of Cummin or A●●ise or else take the scrapings of the wood of Cedar tree made verie small and thereof fill a bag of crimson Taffata verie thin of the greatnesse of an Almond dip it in verie good Aqua vitae in such sort as that the said bagge be throughly drencht with the same put the same bagge well and forward and close into the hole of the eare which bloweth and soundeth and afterward lye downe vpon the same eare Against Deafenesse you must drop into your eares the iuice of an Onion or of Brionie mixed with Honey or Oyle wherein haue beene boyled the roots of Daffodill or of the iuice of the ri●des of Radishes mixt with oyle of Roses or the fat of an Eele and the oyle of bitter Almonds For the losse of Smelling or when it is corrupted make a perfume with the seed of Nigella the leaues of Aron Rue and other hearbes which haue a strong fauour also smell oft vpon Mints For tumors vnder the eare you must make a Cataplasme of the flower of Barley
by nature are sowen in March and are planted farre ●ithin the yeare and couet to be oft watered When you see the leaues of Coleworts waxe bleake and pale or yellow it is a ●igne that it needeth water and you must oftentimes take from them their yellow ●●aues as also those which are eaten thorough or rotten or dried for this would make them die If you would haue Coleworts of a good tast and pleasant take away their first ●eaues for those which come after will haue a better tast and more pleasant sauour than the first Red Coleworts grow naturally of the aboundance of dung or for that they are watered with the Lees of Wine or by being planted in a place where they are hea●ed continually with the heat and burning of the Sunne Doe not at any time gather or at the least vse the tops and edges of the curled Romane Colewort neither yet of any other but the rest of the leafe downe toward the stalke All sorts of Coleworts may be planted at any times prouided it be not too hot or too cold and when you plant them breake their root for feare it be not doubled againe or turned vpside-downe in the earth and that you put it not so farre in as 〈◊〉 there be nothing of the top left aboue Some men vse to water Coleworts with Salt-water to make them the more 〈◊〉 and some doe cast and sow Salt-peter amongst them vpon the vpper face of the earth or else small ashes sifted to keepe them from Locusts Palmar-vvo●mes 〈◊〉 and other vermine Aboue all things the Colewort may not be 〈◊〉 neere vnto the V●ne nor the Vine neere vnto the Colewort for there is such 〈…〉 betwixt these two plants that being both of them planted in one ground 〈◊〉 they become to some growth they turne and grow one from another 〈…〉 will they prosper and beare fruit so well And admit it to be true which is 〈◊〉 namely that if a man doe mingle vvine be it neuer so little in the pot where Coleworts are boyling that then the Coleworts will leaue boyling by and by and 〈◊〉 boyle any more but loose their colour Likewise such as are disposed to drink 〈◊〉 wine and not to be drunke with it must eat some raw Coleworts aforehand as 〈◊〉 Alma●gnes are wont to doe when they meane to quaffe you off a whole pot 〈◊〉 and to ouercome ●uch as with whom they striue in drinking The 〈◊〉 also may not be planted neere vnto Organy Rue and Sow-bread for being 〈…〉 sowen neere vnto these hearbes it thriueth not at all and againe it infecteth his neighbours with some of his ill qualities The carefull Gardener must neuer abide to haue in his Garden so much as 〈◊〉 rotten cole not yet water his hearbes with the water wherein Coleworts haue 〈◊〉 steept or boyled for both the one and the other doth cause his neighbour hearbs 〈◊〉 haue an ill tast and sauour A good huswife will haue Coleworts in her garden at all times for the reliefe 〈◊〉 her familie for besides food she may comfort her people with them in the time 〈◊〉 sicknesse As thus the first decoction especially of red Coleworts with Butter of Oyle without Salt doth loosen the bellie ripen the cough and maketh the voice be●●ter and if vnto this broath you put some Sugar it will be singular for such as ar● short winded the juice also of Coleworts is good for these diseases if you put Suga● to it the seed of Coleworts in broath or in powder is good against the Wo●men 〈◊〉 li●●le children Coleworts boyled in two or three waters doe stay the laske Coleworts boyled and sprinkled with Long-pepper and eaten with the broth 〈◊〉 great store of milke in nurses the juice of Coleworts drunke doth expell and kill 〈◊〉 poyson of Toad-stooles the pith of the Colewort boyled with fat and 〈◊〉 honie is singular for such as are short breathed to vse in manner of a lotion To 〈…〉 the Colewort is good for all things whereof the Romans when time was 〈◊〉 such account as that hauing expelled all other physicke out of Rom● for the space 〈◊〉 an hundred and fiftie yeares they vsed no other physicke but Coleworts in all manner of diseases The Lee made with the ashes of Coleworts is good to wash the head The breasts fomented with the decoction of Coleworts increaseth the milke of n●●ses The ashes of Coleworts mixt with the white of an egge doth heale burning● Cataplasines made of boyled Coleworts and mingled with the lees of vinegar 〈◊〉 yolkes of raw egges and a little cleere vinegar of Roses all well beaten and 〈◊〉 together is a singular medicine presently to take away the paines comming 〈◊〉 rheume There is nothing better to make cleane a pot all ouergrowne with 〈◊〉 wherein ●lesh hath been accustomed to be boyled and water to be heated as 〈◊〉 pot brasse pot or such like and which cannot by any other meanes be 〈◊〉 scoured than to boyle Coleworts in it CHAP. XII Of Lettuce SOw your Lettuce as thicke as the Colewort in a moist ground well dunged ●at light and easie to turne ouer it must be specially in March for it cannot well endure much heat or much cold Notwithstanding if you will sow it in September yea at all times make choyce of sun●e 〈◊〉 warme places and such as are well stored of dung well rotted notwithstanding 〈◊〉 it will wax hard with Winter and may continue some time being planted again 〈◊〉 must be watered once in euerie two or three daies if the weather be not dropping 〈◊〉 moist And in the sowing of it you must water it for feare that the heat of the 〈◊〉 should cast out the seed it putteth forth of the earth the fiftieth day after it is 〈◊〉 Being growne aboue the bed the height of foure or fiue leaues you must 〈◊〉 it with your hand but neuer with any rake and set it againe in a fat ground and ●●ood distance one from another and couer the roots and shankes with cows goats 〈◊〉 sheepes dung for so they will be of a better tast and water them at the foot but it 〈◊〉 not be when it is either verie hot or verie cold Some doe nourish foure sorts of Lettuces here vvith vs in France not differing 〈◊〉 from another in vertue but in tast somewhat more or lesse pleasant that is to say 〈◊〉 curled the headed cabbaged or vvhite the common and the little and small 〈◊〉 Men vse not to plant the small or common lettuce but the great one which 〈◊〉 be curled and that which will cabbage otherwise called the Romane Lettuce ●hich hath a vvhite seed and a greater than the other and is of a sweeter relish espe●●ally if his first stalke be cut away which it putteth forth after it hath beene planted 〈◊〉 second time for the first stalke hauing in it verie much milke doth easily become 〈◊〉 by the heat of the
is more apt to sowre if that there be not some sowre ones mingled amongst them because that such sweet Apples haue but a weake heat and easily ouercome and wasted But such sweet Apples as haue a fast flesh and thick iuice stand not in need of hauing any sowre Apples mixt with them to the helping of them to make good Cider It is true that sweet Apples yeeld lesse Cider than sowre ones but yet in as much as the sweet haue the lesse iuice and the thicker therefore their Cider is the better lasteth longer nourisheth the body more and is a longer time in fining But on the contrarie those sweet Apples which haue much iuice doe make much Cider but this Cider is not so good nor making so good nourishment notwithstanding it be sooner fined and readie for drinking Sowrish Apples doe yeeld much iuice that is waterie thinne and soone fined but nourishing verie little The Cider that is all neat and of it selfe without any mixture of water doth fine and become cleare more slowly than that which is made with water In like sort it retaineth his smell and tast a longer time and all other the vertues and qualities of the Apples whereof it was made for water added but in small quantitie after sixe moneths once past or if somewhat longer yet after one yeare it causeth the Cider to sowre and then so much the sooner as there shall be the greater quantitie in the mixture as in the houshold or ordinarie drinke Wherefore such Ciders as you would haue to last long must be made without water and vse rather to mixe your vvater vvith them vvhen they are drawne out of the vessell to drinke if then you find them too strong for you and this also is the same course taken with Wine especially when such a sicknesse hath seised vpon the partie as craueth a thin weake and vvaterish drinke Ciders differ one from another especially in colour and ●auour or relish for as for their colour some represent the scarlet as it were like vnto Claret-wine and such is that vvhich is made of Apples that are red vvithin and without such also will last long and fine not vnder the colour of high Clarets and haue a taste resembling the same somewhat a farre off but afterward comming neere to the resembling of Hyppocras Others are of the colour of Muscadells and resembling the same also in relish The greatest part of the rest draw neere to a yellow colour and some of them cleare as the rocke vvater As concerning their relish and tast all Ciders if they be good should be sweet or a little bitter or sowre whether they be new or old and it is as true that some of them haue no more relish than vvater Some are of an euill taste and that either of themselues or of the ground or of the vessell or of the straw or of some other such strange cause The sweet as well the new as the old and fined are the best of all and nourish most But it is true withall that the new doe swell vp a man and cause obstructions The fined Ciders are good for such as haue weake lungs or those which are subject to the stone or haue vlcers in the reines or bladder Such as are bitter and hold out bitter are naught But such bitter Cider as after becommeth sweet is the best of all and lasteth long Such as are greenish if they continue the same colour alwaies are not of any value but if in time they change this greenenesse into a maner of sweetnesse then they proue good and last long You may also make Cider of vvild Apples but such Cider although that it last longer than that vvhich is made of tame and garden apples yet it is not so pleasant nor profitable for the stomacke Good housholders doe not loose the drosse of their pressings but as we haue said cast them into vessells and vvith a sufficient quantitie of fountaine vvater make Cider for the houshold many make no account of it but cast it out to the dunghill assuring themselues that it drieth and maketh barren the place where it commeth In su●h places as vvhere they haue not the benefit of mill-stones pressers other implements for to make Cider they stampe apples but not of all sorts but onely wild ones with a stamper and afterward put them thus stamped into vessells with a sufficient quantitie of water and this is called Cider-pinet As concerning the faculties and vertues of Cider they must be measured and judged according to their taste age continuance and abilitie to last and the manner of making of them The taste is not to be tried onely by the sauour and relish of the apples vvhereof they vvere made vvhich vvere either sweet or sowre or harsh or of moe tastes than one or vvithout any taste at all but likewise of the age thereof in as much as Cider if it be kept changeth his taste together vvith the time and getteth another relish after that is fined diuers from that vvhich it had vvhiles it was in fining or that it had vvhen it began to fine after the manner of new vvine which when it commeth to be old purchaseth and getteth diuers qualities together with the time Such Cider therefore as is sweet because of the sweetnesse which commeth of temperate heat heateth in a meane and indifferent manner but cooleth least of all and againe it is the most nourishing of all Ciders and the most profitable to be vsed especially of such as haue cold and drie stomackes and on the contrarie but s●●ally profiting them which haue a hot stomacke whether it be more or lesse or stomackes that are full of humiditie verie tender and queasie and subject vnto cholericke vomits so that in such complexions as are hot and cholericke it is needfull as with Wine so vvith Cider to mixe water in a sufficient quantitie vvith sweet Cider vvhen they take it to drinke especially when such persons haue any ague vvithall or and if it be the hot time of Summer foreseene that he that shall then drinke it thus be not subiect to the paines of the bellie or collicke because that sweet Cider pressed new from sweet Apples is windie by nature as are also the sweet Apples themselues This is the cause why Physitians counsell and aduise that sweet Apples should be rosted in the ashes for them which shall eat them that so their great moistnesse and waterishnesse which are the original fountaine of their windinesse may be concocted by the meanes of the heat of the fire Vpon the same occasion it falleth out that neither sweet Apples nor sweet Cider can be good for them that are subiect to distillations and rhewmes because of their windinesse and for that likewise that as the Arabian Physitians doe iudge they breed great store of windinesse in the muscles and sinewes which cannot be discussed but with great paine and continuance of time Amongst the sweet
cause him to be couered if therewith he haue the cough and if in trauaile he haue taken cold by raine or tedious vveather to giue him then to eat some Fenugreeke or Anise-seed amongst his prouender to change him vvhen he is past age and also to take acknowledgement of the loue that one Horse beareth towards another and accordingly to set them one by another in the Stable appointed for them which he must euerie morning may cleane in Sommer carrying out the dung and filth and letting none remaine and at night giue them fresh Litter He must also cast an eye about and see whether his horses doe grow leane or no and then to fat them with Fetches boyled in water and mixed amongst their Oats as also with millet pannicke rice sodden and mingled with meale of Beanes and a little Salt or where these are missing to take good sweet Barley chaffe or Pease pulse well mixt with some drie Beanes and to giue him thereof good store after euerie watering or vvhen he newly commeth from his labour as for sodden Barley or other boyled corne they are onely good to loosen the skinne but the fat which they gather is neuer of any indurance He must be content to take vp his lodging in the stable for feare of their falling sicke intangling themselues in their halters and growing of his beasts and let him be carefull and wise in ordering and placing his light in such sort as that it may be out of daunger and to locke vp and keepe his harnesse well and made readie ouer night 〈◊〉 morning that so when he is to returne to his labour into the field he be 〈…〉 of any thing If he haue any Mules or young Colts he must put them by 〈…〉 and reserue them for some other labour and if any of his Horses fall sicke if it be not of wearinesse dulnesse or chafing he must put him out from among the rest If he haue any Horse that hath ill propertie or fault he shall be carefull how to amend it as if he be fearefull or timerous or if he will not abide while one getteth vpon his backe or if he will not goe by or into any place he shall hang within his 〈◊〉 some prettie little stone and if this doe him no good he shall hoodwinke him or 〈◊〉 behind him at his taile some flame of fire or some sharpe pricking thing if he w●●nie much he shall tie to his head a stone with a hole through it if when a man is vpon his backe he rise and come aloft he shall hit him with his rod vpon the forelegges if he lye downe he must be raised vp againe with rough words and strokes if he goe backward you shall tye a cord to his codds vvhich shall be so long as th●● reaching betwixt his forelegges he which rideth him may hold it in his hand and when as the Horse shall goe backward he shall pull it hard with his hand to make him goe forward for so vvithout all doubt he will goe forthright and amend his fault if the Horse be gelded he must beat his thighs vvith a long staffe taken out of the fire verie hot and burnt at the end or he shall giue him feele of his whisking rodd betwixt his eares if the Horse be hard to shooe and troublesome to handle and dresse in the stable he shall put in one or both of his eares a little round pebble and there make it sure with one or both his hands and keepe them in his eares and thus he shall make him as gentle and meeke as a Lambe It is also the Carters part to gouerne his heard of Mares and Colts carefully th●● no inconuenience may befall them he shall put them to feed and shall send the● to grasse when it shall be due time and that in large and marish grounds Notwithstanding marish ground doth soften their hoofe verie much and maketh them tender sighted and begetteth water in their feet and for this cause I could like the high and hillie grounds better being such as from time to time haue raine or 〈◊〉 dropping downe vpon them and not drie at any time and such as are rather voi● and free than incombred with vvood or other bodies of trees or legges and yet further hauing a soft and sweet grasse rather than a high great and strong grasse And notwithstanding that Mares be not so frolicke nor couragious as Horses be yet they goe beyond them farre in the race and stand it out a great deale longer and againe they are not so chargeable to keepe as Horses are for they are not fed with the best hay they content themselues to run in pastures all the yeare long true it is that in Winter and when the ground is all couered with snow as also in the time of continuall raine they must be put in some one house or other and giue them such Hay as is good to eat and in Sommer to keepe them in some good coole shadow●● place and well growne with good Grasse and serueth vvith cleare vvaters but n●uer vpon the rough and ragged mountaines as vvell for that they doe hardly feed there as also because that such as are with foale can hardly clime without great paine not come downe without endangering themselues to cast their Colts You shall not suffer the Mare to take Horse ofter than euerie two yeare according to the opinio● of the curious Horsemen but yet the better experienced allow the conueying of Mar●s euerie yeare for it keepeth the wombe open and giueth the Foale a large bed to lye in to keepe and breed of the best kind and race and not to bring in a base and degenerate kind againe to see that it be d●ne about mid March to the end that at the same time that the Mares were couered and horsed they may easily feed their Colts hauing tender and soft grasse after Haruest for about the end of the eleuenth or twelfth moneth they foale and so their milke is the faster better conditioned begetteth also and nourisheth fairer Colts and such as thriue euen as we our selues would wish The Stalions also thus attended are the stronger and doe more abound with a well concocted and slimie nature and not with a thinne and waterie and withall they couer them with more courage and beget greater Colts and such as are more hardie and strong He shall know that the Mares are readie to take Horse when they yeeld a whitish humor at the place of generation and that their priuie parts are more swolne than they were wont to be as also more hot than ordinarie and eat not so much as they were wont He shall let her take Horse twice a day euening and morning before he let her drinke and this shall be continued but tenne daies which past if she refuse him he shall put her aside as with foale and shall take away the Horse least with his furious rage he make her
notwithstanding the flowers of Roses and Capers must be gathered to be kept while they be 〈◊〉 likewise the leaues and whole hearbes are gathered when they are growne to the full fruits as Melons Cucumbers Citruls and Gourds when they turne yellow and are growne to their perfection If they be purposed to be made serue for seed then they must be let alone longer and afterward kept in conuenient place 〈◊〉 be time to sow them and they must be gathered in a bright weather and in the ●●crease of the Moone Seeds are gathered when the hearbe is all layd and drie 〈◊〉 it must generally be obserued in all manner of gathering as well of hearbes 〈◊〉 roots as of fruits and seeds that it be done in a faire and cleare weather and in the ●●crase of the Moone Such hearbes as are to be kept must first be made verie cleane and dried 〈◊〉 shadow which is the best meanes to keepe them the strongest in their vertues 〈◊〉 qualities or else in the Sunne and after to put them vp in bagges of Leather vvollen stuffe nor in vvoodden boxes that so they may not loose their 〈…〉 see it put in practise by sine hearbes which are kept to be vsed in Winter 〈◊〉 me thinkes that the Apothecaries faile much in their doings which hang their ph●sicke hearbes in the roofe of their house for by this meanes they doe not onely 〈◊〉 their force but become laden with dust cobwebs the dung of flies and a thousand ●●ther filthie things Flowers must not be dried in the Sunne not in the shadow that is made by 〈◊〉 South-Sunne nor yet in any high roome because of their tendernesse and 〈◊〉 which would cause their force to vanish away either in the burning heat of 〈◊〉 Sunne or in the more moderne heat of the verie ayre If it be not the Prouen●e 〈◊〉 which that it may be kept long requireth to be dried in an high place open to 〈◊〉 South-Sunne where the beames of the Sunne doe enter but touch not the 〈◊〉 The best way to drie flowers will be in a temperate place and to turne them 〈…〉 the end that they may not corrupt hauing also this continuall care that they 〈◊〉 neither loose their colour nor their smell And when they are dried they must 〈◊〉 put into an earthen vessell Seeds must be kept in bagges or vessells of earth which haue narrow mouthe● or in boxes or else in bottles of the rindes of gou●ds well stopt and set in 〈◊〉 drie places and where there is no water shed for seeds doe mightily spoyle 〈◊〉 moisture The seeds of Chibols Onions and Leekes as also of Poppie are kept 〈◊〉 their rindes or heads For to keepe Roots you must obserue two waies for either they are to be 〈◊〉 new and as they are yet greene as Nauets Turneps Carets and such like or 〈◊〉 they are to be kept drie For to keepe them new you must lay them vpon sand 〈◊〉 grauell verie thin in some place vnder the earth and a little couered or else to 〈◊〉 them vnder the earth in the garden as we see it done in Turneps and Nauets to 〈◊〉 them the greatest part of Winter To keepe roots drie after they be gathered 〈◊〉 must wash them diligently with cleare water and after take from them all the 〈◊〉 ●ibres or hairie threeds that hang about them and then to drie them either in 〈◊〉 shadow of the Sunne-rising if they be but small and thin as are the roots of 〈◊〉 Succorie Parsley Sperage and such like or in the South-Sunne if they be 〈◊〉 and thicke at those of Daffodils Gentian Sowbread Water-lilly Brionie and such like After that they are dried and thus prepared you must hang them in some 〈◊〉 and vpper roome open vpon the Sun when it is in the South or else vpon the 〈◊〉 quarter and in which notwithstanding neither the smoake nor dust nor 〈◊〉 beames may any thing hurt them notwithstanding that the counsell of 〈◊〉 the prince of Physitians is that hearbes flowers and roots as well greene as 〈◊〉 should not be put to keepe in any place where the wind should come but rather 〈◊〉 vp in vessells or some other such like meanes of keeping of them to the end that they should not loose their force which indeed they might most easily loose being 〈◊〉 open and subiect to the wind CHAP. XI P●t-hearbes and particularly of Coleworts FIrst of all we are to speake of Coleworts both because they are most common and also most aboundant of all other sorts of hearbs all kinds of Coleworts doe loue a cleane ground fat and well tilled not consisting of clay or sand And although they grow indifferently in any ayre but ●pecially in a temperate yet they become greater and more massie sound and safe 〈◊〉 vermine in cold places as are those in Germanie than in hot places and for 〈◊〉 cause they delight a great deale more in the tops of hills than in plaine grounds 〈◊〉 yet in those plaine grounds more in the raised parts of borders than in the flat 〈◊〉 middle parts thereof and they be more pleasant more wholesome for the 〈◊〉 and better in Autumne Spring-time and during great frosts than they be in ●ommer They craue much dung and that especially which is of Asses as being the 〈◊〉 of all for other men and to be raked in couered ouer with good earth not to 〈◊〉 watered in any case notwithstanding that water doth make them looke faire and ●●ourishing but then not so sweet to the tast nor so wholesome for the stomach When they haue got sixe leaues vpon their stalkes you must remoue them but let it 〈◊〉 in a mild and calme time whether Winter or Sommer And to speake particu●arly the common Coleworts called long or greene Coleworts must be sowen in 〈◊〉 August or September if you desire to haue the leaues in Lent and in Winter Some plant them in October and remoue them in December to haue the leaues in Winter and the seed in Iune and Iulie and that to make them the more tuffed ●hough there may be as much accomplished that way at other times of the yeare ●ut not so commodiously And looke well to it that your seed be not too old for if it be three yeares old it will bring forth Radishes And that is the cause why some say Sow Coleworts and ●here will grow vp Radishes or Nauets notwithstanding it continueth sixe yeares 〈◊〉 his nature if it be well kept Cabage-colewort which are called white or apple Coleworts are sowen vpon 〈◊〉 and remoued to stand a foot one from another well couered at the root with a 〈◊〉 and enriched earth when they begin to rise vp into a great stemme and loue ●●e cold ayre for in a hot aire they cannot liue and you must couer them with straw 〈◊〉 make them cabage the better and become the whiter The curled and Romane Coleworts being more tender
in white wine is verie good for such 〈◊〉 haue a hard Spleene and are subiect to a quartane Ague B●●onie delighteth to be sowne in a moist and cold ground and neere vnto some wall by which it may be shadowed for it is not 〈◊〉 in loue with the Sun-beames The root hath contrarie properties to the leaues and flowers for the root 〈◊〉 the stomacke and is verie vnsauourie vnto the mouth his leaues and flowers and of 〈◊〉 ver●e good smell and a tast correspondent and answerable The decoction of Betonie made in white wine assuageth the paines of the 〈◊〉 breaketh the stone and healeth the Iaundise The leaues stamped and applyed 〈◊〉 forme of a Cataplasme doe quickly ioyne together the wounds of the head A Cataplasme made of the leaues with Porkes grease doth ripen the tumors called C●●haires and all other sorts of Impostumes The leaues stamped with a little salt doe heale hollow and cancrous vlc●rs To be briefe this hearb hath so manie and so gre●● vertues as that the Italian when he would highly commend a man for his gi●● will say that he hath moe vertues than Betonie Bugle would be planted in a stonie drie and hillie ground in respect whereof the Latines call it Casolida petrosa It craueth no great paines to be taken with 〈◊〉 The leaues thereof are good to conglutinate and soulder together both outward and inward wounds it is likewise put in drinkes for wounds and that is the cause why some doe commonly say That he that hath Bugle and Sanicle will scarce vouchs●●● the Chirurgion a Bugle Lions-paw groweth in a clayish ground being withall fat red and somewhat moist commonly in medowes situated in some high place It hath like properties with Bugle and Sanicle but moreouer it taketh away all the paine and heat of inflammations and vlcers The same hearb stamped and applyed vnto the teats of women and young maids maketh them hard and firme Great Comfrey groweth in moist places and hath the same propertie that Bugle hath that is to say to soulder wounds and this is ●o great in both of them as 〈◊〉 that you put Bugle or Comfrey into a pot wherein flesh is boyling the pieces of flesh will become no more manie but one The root of great Comfrey whiles it is yet greene and newly pluckt out of the earth being spread vpon Leather or vpon Linnen and applyed in forme of a Cataplasme vpon goutie or rheumatike places doth presently appease the paine of the gout being a thing often proued and tried The same root dried and made into powder is good to put in children● pappe which haue their rimme broken as also to stay the flux of the bellie A Cataplasme made of the root of great Comfrey with Beane flower and applyed vnto the place where the childs guts fall downe is a soueraigne remedie to cu●● the same Self-heale craueth a fat ground and where the Sunne beateth not much it groweth of se●des and not of rootes and hath like properties that Bugle and Co●frey haue especially to stay the spitting of bloud the bloudie flux and to conglutinate wounds within the bodie where no man can come to apply tent or oyntment if there be made a drinke of the iuice of the rootes and leaues thereof which being chafed in your fingers or put vnder your tongue doth smell and tast like Myrrhe Water Germander called of the Latines Scordium groweth verie easily and without great paine or toile so that it be planted by little slippes taken from the old stalke and set in a moist ground for it specially requireth to grow well to be pl●●ted in a moist ground and to be often watered It hath the like qualities that Angelica hath against Poyson and the Plague and furthermore the decoction thereof taken as a drinke for certaine daies doth heale the tertian Agues and putteth away 〈◊〉 obstructions of the Spleene and prouoketh vrine Fole-foot must be planted in a verie moist place and craueth to be often watered for so it appeareth when as it is seene to flourish and like best in marish grounds and about currents of waters There groweth a whirish moss● about the root of it which if you gather and picke verie cleane and afterward wrap it in a Linnen Cloth with a little Sal nitrum and so boyle it a little in Lee and afterward lay it to drie in the Sunne you shall haue an excellent match to take fire at a flint and fire-steele for it taketh fire so easily that it will light at the first stroke of the 〈◊〉 Amongst other vertues it is singular good to comfort the lungs and parts aboue the breast whether you take it in a decoction or in a syrrup or in manner of a fume at the mouth or otherwise especially if you mingle some slippes of Hysope and some figges or syrrup with the said decoction The great Colts-foot especially the root thereof dried powdred and taken in the weight of two drammes with wine is singular against the Plague if so the partie sweat presently after It is good also to giue vnto Horses which haue the bots or are short-winded The great and small Carline so called as though it were Caroline because this Thistle was in a diuine manner made knowne vnto Charlemaigne by an Angell for the deliuering of his hoast from the Plague which did miserably annoy them doth require to be sowne and planted in a drie ground and stonie and where the Moone and Sunne doth shine pleasantly The root of the great Carline made into powder and taken the weight of a French crowne is singular good against the Plague the feeblenesse and faintnesse of the Heart for the keeping of the Vrine the breaking of the Stone the paines of the Sides and Conuulsions applyed outwardly after it hath beene steept in vineger it helpeth the Sciatica Eringium groweth in an vntilled rough and drie ground The wine wherein the rootes of Eringium haue been boyled prouoketh the Termes and restrained Vrine breaketh the Stone and casteth out it and Grauell It is good for such as haue the falling Sicknesse Dropsie or Iaundise The decoction of the root is singular good to resist Drunkennesse The distilled water of the young buds of the leaues being drunke euerie day and that so oft as one can is maruellous good for them which haue their bodies troubled with vlcers caused of the French Pocks in as much as it comforteth the Liuer The same water is verie profitable for the quartane and quotidian Agues The root thereof taken either in powder or in a decoction with the broth of those Frogges which are vsed to be eaten or for lacke of Frogges in the decoction of a Goslin or green Goose is a preseruatiue against the poyson of the Toad Hedgefrogge and other venimous hearbes It doth good also in the diseases of the heart being drunke with the decoction of Buglosse or Balme Beares-breech
called of the Latines Acanthus groweth in stonie and moist places although it loue to be diligently tended or otherwise not to yeeld anie profit The root and leaues are verie mollifying taken in drinke they prouoke vrine and applyed in forme of a Cataplasme they are good against con●ulsions wrenches and contractions of the ligaments They are to good effect vsed in the Clysters of them which haue the Dropsie Diuels-bit so called because it sheweth as though the middle or the heart of the root were gnawed or bitten by some Diuell so soone as it is planted or hath put vp in anie place as though the Diuell did enuie the good which it bringeth vnto men by the incredible vertues that are therein craueth no great husbandrie neither yet anie fat earth or verie moist for as we see it groweth vpon mountaines in bushes and places altogether barren It is true that it groweth also in medowes but yet such as are not verie moist It is found in great aboundance in the medowes of Verriere a borough neere vnto Paris The root and greene leaues being stamped together and applyed vnto Carbuncles and pestilent Buboes doe heale them The Wine wherein they haue boyled is drunke with good successe against the Plague and against the griefes and suffocation of the Mother The powder of the root thereof is verie good against Wormes Cinquefoile so called because of the fiue leaues which it beareth craueth a low waterish and shadowed ground it groweth also in drie and grauellie places The decoction of the root vsed for a Gargle doth assuage the tooth-ach and heale the vlcers of the mouth in a Clyster it slayeth all manner of flux of the bellie as well the bloudie flux as others taken as a drinke it is singular against the Iaundise the stopping of the Liuer and against a pestilent ayre and poyson Tormentill like in stalke vnto Cinquefoile but vnlike in number of leaues 〈◊〉 much as it hath seuen delighteth in the same ground that Cinquefoile doth 〈…〉 not altogether so waterish and called Tormentill because the powder or 〈◊〉 of the root doth appease the rage and torment of the teeth is ouer and aboue 〈◊〉 ●ther remedies most singular against the Plague and against the furie of all 〈◊〉 and Venimes it stayeth likewise all fluxes of bloud whether it be spitting 〈…〉 struous or of the bellie all vomiting and vntimely birth whether it be taken 〈◊〉 by the mouth or applyed outwardly or whether it be taken in substance 〈◊〉 the distilled water onely Perwincle delighteth in a shadowed and moist place we see it grow likewise 〈◊〉 Willow grounds Hedge-rowes and out-sides of Woods The leaues as well in decoction as otherwise doe stay all manner of flux of the bellie or spitting of bloud or otherwise as the monethly termes and whites 〈◊〉 purging hauing gone before and bleeding at the nose if you brui●e the 〈◊〉 and put them in the nose or if you make a collar thereof to put about your 〈…〉 a garland for your head or if you put them vnder and about the tongue After the same manner you shall stay the monethly termes as also preuent vntimely birth 〈◊〉 you apply them vpon the groines Bistort as well the great as the small doth delight in a moist waterish and sh●dowie place it groweth also in high Mountaines The root thereof doth stay all manner of fluxes as the termes and vnwilling 〈◊〉 away of the vrine if it be drunke with the iuice or distilled water of 〈◊〉 it stayeth the flux of bloud comming of a wound if the powder of it be cast 〈◊〉 the bleeding wound it suppresseth cholericke vomits if is befried with the 〈◊〉 of egges vpon a red hot tyle and be eaten by and by It is singular good as well 〈◊〉 the decoction and substance as in the distilled water against all Venime as also against the Plague against Wormes in little children against the Measels Purple● and small Pocks in young children against the bloudie flux and all manner of falls against the paine and rheumes of the teeth if you put it into the hollow tooth 〈◊〉 little Allome and Pellitorie of Spaine Pionie as well the male as the female craueth to be planted or set in drie ground where the Sunne hath his full force The seed or root gathered in the wane of the Moone and hanged about the neck or applyed vnto the wrists alone or with the Miss●ltoe of the Oake is a verie sing●lar preseruatiue against the Falling sicknesse Whereunto notwithstanding I would not haue thee so much to trust as that thou shouldest not looke after some other ●●medie assure thy selfe rather that it is singular in bitings and stingings that are ●●nimous as well taken inward as applyed outward Thirtie seeds of Pionie 〈◊〉 and brayed and the verie kernell made into powder and drunke with wine doth fetch againe the speech when it is lost Paules Betonie both male and female would be either sowne or planted in th● verie same ground with Pionie This hearbe especially the female is verie much commended for his vertues 〈◊〉 the iuice that is pressed out of his leaues and the water that is distilled thereof 〈◊〉 heale all sorts of wounds as well new as old all sorts of vlcers whether maligne 〈◊〉 cancrous swellings and hot tumors itch and all the diseases of the skin and which is more the often vse as well of the iuice as of the distilled water of Paules 〈◊〉 doth perfectly cure the Leprosie whereof we haue a notable and famous testimo●●● of a French King who thereby was throughly cured thereof And this is the 〈◊〉 why this hearbe is called the Leapers hearbe Some doe make a balme thereof 〈◊〉 we will further speake in the Chapter of Balmes in the third Booke which is sing●lar aboue all others for all sorts of wounds and maligne vlcers as also for the Leprosie and that it is so good is proued for that a certaine person well knowne vnto 〈◊〉 hauing a virulent vlcer in manner of a Polypus in his nosthrils of the cure 〈◊〉 manie as well Physitio●s as Surgions being excellent men and dwelling in 〈◊〉 Towne did altogether despaire was notwithstanding wonderfully cured by the application of this Balme and often vse of potions made of the decoction of the leaues of the female Paules Betonie This hearbe is singular also in Clysters for bloudie Fluxes and in drinkes for pestilent Feauers vlcers of the Lungs and obstructions of the Liuer and Spleene Gromell is the same which we call in Latine Milium solis and it groweth better being sowne than pianted it delighteth in a drie and vntilled ground being withall stonie and hauing a good ayre The iuice of the leaues and powder of the seed being drunke with Wine hath a singular vertue against the Grauell and Stone and procuring of the Vrine to passe away There is nothing more singular for the burning of the Vrine than to drinke manie mornings
that is to say so as that his bones and flesh doe part clea●● asunder strayne all through a strayner and keepe it in a vessell to make 〈◊〉 for ache in the joynts the sciatica diseases of the sinewes and paines of the reynes and backe Take Earth-wormes halfe a pound vvash them throghly in vvith Wine then boyle them in two pound of Oyle oliue and a little red Wine to the consumption of the Wine strayne and presse it out all and keepe the oyle yet further it vvould be good to put into this oyle some other vvormes and leaue them there as long as the oyle lasteth This oyle is singular good to comfort the stiffe sinews and for the 〈◊〉 of the joynts Oyle of Serpents Take whole Serpents put them in an earthen vessell well leaded fill the same with May-butter and couer the same with a couering the joyn● being vvell lu●ed but notwithstanding hauing a small hole aboue set the po● neer● vnto the ●ire that it may boyle halfe a day to the end that all may be throughly boiled the straine it through a linnen cloth afterward pound it vvell in mortar and make an end of strayning that vvhich shall be in the bottome of the linnen cloth mixe together both these expressions letting them coole and reseruing them in a glasse vessell to serue your vse for distillations or rheumes and for pal●ies Some take Vipers and cutting off their heads and tayles as is done in the making of Treacle they boyle them in oyle and vse the oyle for rebellious Ringwormes and first buds of the leprosie CHAP. LV. A reuiew or suruay of Oyles made by distillation BVt the third manner of making of Oyles hath beene said to be by distillation or resolution of which vve vvill speake a●ter vve haue spoken of the distilling of vvaters but besides that there is an other manner of drawing of oyle though in certaine things it be done by expression vvhich commeth verie neere vnto this third kind of making oyles by distillation and it is practised in egges vvheat m●stardseed haye barlie ●arrar brimstone and others Oyle of Egges Take the yolkes of egges roasted hard in water or which is better vnder the hot ashes about thirtie rubbe and chafe them a long time betwixt your hands after frie them in a leaden pan or in an earthen one vvell leaded at a soft fire 〈◊〉 them 〈◊〉 turne them oft with a ladle of vvood vntill such time as they begin to be of a sad red after presse them vvith the backe of the said ladle or which is bet●er put them betwixt two presses to force out their oyle as is done with oyle of Almonds you shall haue great store of oyle to run out vvhich is verie good to take away the spots of the skin to heale ringwormes to cause haire to grow againe to cure ●istulaes and maligne vlcers assuage paines take away the roughnesse of the skin to cure the chaps of the lips hands feet and fundament to take away the scarres left after burnings and principally for the vlcers of the membranes of the braine Some in the making of this Oyle doe not boyle the egges hard but frie them raw and after by pre●●ing them together in a bagge betwixt two presses or vnder a presser they presse out the Oyle Oyle of Wheat Presse Wheat together betwixt two plates of Yron reasonably glowing and fire red or verie hot or betwixt a Marble-stone and a thicke hot pla●e of Yron receiue the Oyle into something vvhich distilleth from it or else take away from Wheat his pill or rinde and distill it after the manner of the Philosophers Oyle this Oyle applied hote taketh away the spots of the skinne healeth ringwormes fistulaes and chops in the skinne and the scall or skurfe in little children the oyles of barlie mustard-seed and other oylie seeds are thus prepared and made Oyle of Haye Set on fire a quantitie of Haye after quench it againe by and by then lay it vpon coales and vvhiles it is smothering and smoaking spread it vpon a plate of yron and there will gather vpon it an oyle liquor vvhich is called oyle of Haye and this is singular good for ringwormes and. Anthonies fire scabbes and r●ughnesse of the skinne Oyle of Tartar Take Tartar that is to say the dried lees of Wine which slicketh vnto the seames or hollow places that are within the Wine vessell not that which is in the bottome because it is verie dreggish and filthie neither yet that which is aloft on the vpper part of the vessell for that is too frothie and scummie but that vvhich cleaueth round about vnto the staues of the vessell wherein there hath beene verie good white vvine rather than red make it into fine powder and make it fast in a linnen cloth infuse it in verie good vvhite Vinegar or not infusing it calcine it and put it in a Hypocras bagge or in an oxes or swines bladder afterward roast it vnder hot embers vntill it become vvhite you shall know if it be sufficiently burned by the growing of it cleare and a little burning of your tongue if you touch it therewith Notwithstanding you may blanch or whiten it if as some hold it for a great secret you boyle it a long time in vvater scumming it often powder it yet once againe or which is better calcine it then put it in the bottome of an hypocras bagge that is to say of a bagge vvhich hath a sharpe and narrow bottome and this you shall hang vp on high at some staffe in a caue or other cold place for the space of eight dayes vntill it be resolued into Oyle and if the Oyle doe not drop of it selfe then graspe it hard and presse it out putting vnderneath some glasse viol● to receiue the liquor that shall distill vvhich is not indeed properly on Oyle but a verie sharpe vvater or a reddish kind of humour This humour is good for all sorts of itchings Ring-wormes Scurfes Scalles and other such diseases of the skinne It maketh the face vvhite cleane and seeming young it taketh away vvrinkles and spots comming of a melancholicke humour It maketh the haire of a straw colour hindereth the falling of the haire and causeth it being falne to grow againe it whiteneth copper and siluer and taketh away the spots of linnens if they be rubd with this oyle hot Oyle of Brimstone hang in some high place vvith a vvire or doues-tayle of yron a glasse vessell in fashion like a Bell or Bason couered aboue with Potters earth of a cubice vvidenesse vnderneath vvhich neere the length of a cubite you shall place another vessell of glasse being broad and verie large able to hold much such like as is the dish or bason vsually serued vvith Ewers in the middest whereof there shall be a little vessell of earth in f●rme of a little pot vvhich shall contayne the Brimstone vvhich must be of that vvhich is
it causeth a good memorie taketh away the paine of the teeth breaketh the stone healeth the dropsie preserueth from venime such as haue swallowed any spider if it be drunke presently after The water of Gentian Take foure pound of the new rootes or rather of the dried rootes of Gentian chop them small infuse them in wine or besprinkle them only then afterward distill them This water is singular against the plague all sorts of venime the stone as well of the reines as of the bladder and to heale inward Apostumes and vlcers The vvater of pellitorie Take the rootes of pellitorie new or old cut them small and infuse them in verie good Wine the water is good for no appease the ach of the teeth to strengthen them and keepe them cleane if the mouth be washed therewith in the morning or else when it seemeth good to doe it To make water of eye-bright Take the leaues and flowers of eye-bright distill them the water thereof doth cleare the sight The vvater of Nicotian is distilled as the other going before but of this vve haue largely discoursed in the second Booke and haue shewed that it hath maruellous effects against the Noli me tangere cankers ringwormes scabs shortnesse of breath and the dropsie In this sort also you must distill Paules betonie the vvater whereof is singular to heale wounds scabbes and other diseases of the skinne The vse of this vvater is ve●●e excellent for the leprosie pestilent feauers obstructions of the liuer and spleene and exulceration of the lungs In this sort also is Mouse-●are distilled whereof vve ●●ue spoken in his place in the second Booke The vvater of hyssope must be distilled vpon hote ashes it is excellent for the paine of the teeth to prouoke vvomens termes for the cough and other diseases of the lungs The water of turneps Take whole turneps with their skins and all or else the skin alone you shall distill a water especially of the pilling or skin which will be profi●able to prouoke vrine and sweat●ng Water of lymons or the juice of them doth helpe verie profitably in the stone of 〈◊〉 reines The water of fennell Take the rootes and leaues and distill them or else boyle ●hem in water afterward put them all hot into a tin or copper platter and couer the 〈◊〉 vvith another platter the liquor vvhich shall be vpon the vppermost platter ●hall be kept in a viole to put a drop or two thereof into the corner of the eye for the ●iseases of the eye Water of parsley of the garden Stampe in a morter the leaues of parsely then di●till them it cleanseth the stomacke and comforteth the reines After the same manner are distilled the waters of smallage basill buglosse mi●es cammomile marigolds Carduus benedictus clarie succorie capillus Vene●i● che●uile end●ue aller fumitorie broome Iuie horse-taile lauander marierom mehlo● mallowes holihocke vvater lillies nigella organie pionie poppie pellitorie of the wall burnet plantaine purcelaine penniryall rue rosemarie madder sage sauorie scabious scolopendrium nightshade houseleeke willow leaues groundswell thyme white mulleine tansey valerian veruaine of the flowers and leaue● of the stinging nettle as well as of the dead nettle and of many other plants obseruing the generall precepts which we haue set downe before This is the manner of distilling cinnamome Take a pound of fine cinnamome breake it lightly and infuse it a certaine time in the distilled water of Roses the quant●tie of foure pounds and of verie good white wine halfe a pound after put it all into a glasse-still to be distilled either vpon hot ashes or else in Maries-bath such water is forcible against all cold diseases especially of the stomacke spleene liuer braine matrix sinews faintings and swo●nings to prouoke the termes of women and retayned vrine to stay vomits to represse the malignitie of all sorts of cold venime and for the deliuerie of wo●en that are in trauell of child Rose-water is distilled either of new roses or of drie roses and they are either white or carnation The fashion and manner of distilling of it is diuers for sometimes it is distilled by defluction tending downeward vvhich is called in Latine Distillatio per descensum according to the matter which we shall declare in the seuentie first Chapter hereafter following Sometimes it is distilled by insolation as we will likewise shew in the same place sometimes and that oftest as also best in Maries-bath and before the distilling of it if the roses be drie it is good to moisten them vvith the vapour of some boyling water or some Roses The water which is distilled of red Roses is more cordiall and corroboratiue as that which is made of white roses is more cooling Then to distill good rose-water you must infuse roses in distilled Rose-water or else in the juice drawne from them and that by the space of two or three dayes your vessell being well lured and stopt and afterward put them in a glasse-still couered with his head and they both well luted and fitted one to another and finally set them thus conjoyned in your vessell of Maries-bath Water of Orange-flowers called water of Naffe being distilled by a bell is good to procure vomit as also to make a good smell The water of vvild Apples and of Oke Apples vnripe of chesnuts and of veriuice that is halfe ripe is good against the red pimples and hard knobbes in the face The vvaters of flowers as of Rosemarie vvhich is good to rejoyce the 〈◊〉 of Elder-Tree vvhich keepeth the face cleare from Sunne-burning of Marigolds vvhich comforteth the eyes and such others are distilled after the manner of rose-Rose-water CHAP. LXVI Of the manner of distilling liquors WE haue heretofore declared that the singular and rare efficacie and 〈◊〉 of things distilled haue in such sort rauished and carried away the spirits and studies of men as that there is scarce any thing to be found vvhich hath any good propertie and speciall qualitie in it but it 〈◊〉 beene brought vnder the yoke of distillation But in this place I call liquor all th●● which hath a liquid consistence vvhether it be juice humour excrement or any such like floting thing as vvine vinegar honie vrine juice of hearbes of fruit●● and you cannot but thinke that the juice of hearbes or fruits being distilled doth afford a farre better water than that which is distilled of hearbes yea or of fruits either We will begin therefore with distilled vvine Aqua-vitae is thus distilled notwithstanding that all manner of Wine is fit to make Aqua-vitae of so that it be not sowre spent or otherwise tainted yet indeede the strongest and noblest Claret vvine is the best vvhether pallet and inclining to vvhite or high coloured and inclining to red Take then of claret vvine a certayne quantitie according to the bignes●e of the vessell wherein you distill
matter as you shall know to be necessarie for the present disease as conserues of roses and buglosse damaske raisins the powders of the electuaries of precious stones aromaticum rosatum and such like things and finally distill them after the manner aboue specified Some there are vvhich vvill not make any restoratiues but of capons-flesh the oldest they can get such they strangle and plucke by feather and feather not vsing the helpe of any hot vvater then they take out the entrailes and chop them small adding thereto flowers or conserues of buglosse burrage damaske raisins mundified barley whole coriander-seed pearles powder of the electuarie diarrhodon or some other like vnto it and the leaues of gold they distill all together and cause it to be giuen to sicke persons women in child-bed and old folke To make a restoratiue in shorter time and that vpon the sudden with lesse cost charges as also paine and labour chop your flesh small after the manner alreadie deliuered put it into a glasse viole or bottle of a sufficient bignesse and in such sort as that all your peeces of flesh be strung or put vpon a double threed and hold one by another and the double threed vvhereupon they hang be vvithout the bottle which must be well stopt aboue with a linnen or cotten cloth wet in a mixture made vvith whites of egges and barley ●lower set this bottle in a caldron full of water boyling at a small fire and there let it stand foure houres more or lesse vntill such time as a good part of the flesh bee conuerted into moisture See that the bottle stand in the vvater vp to the necke and that it touch not the bottome of the caldron and vvithall vvell stayed vp on euerie side that so it may not slip or bend more one vvay than another When the foure houres are spent rebate the fire gently that so the bottle also may coole by little and little vvhich if so bee that you should take all hote out of the water it vvould breake presently Afterward vnstop the bottle vvith vvarme vvater if you cannot vvell otherwise and then draw forth the string and the flesh softly that so the liquor may remaine alone straine the vvater after the manner of Hypocras and aromatize it vvith Sugar and Ci●●●mome that so it may be giuen to the sicke that are vvasted You may after this manner make restoratiues such like as you shall thinke good either cheaper or dearer more or lesse pleasant and delicate and more or lesse medicinable as occasion may require CHAP. LXIX The manner of distilling compound waters WAters are not onely distilled of one onely or simple plant liquor or other matter but also of many mixt together and such vvaters are called compounded vvaters by reason of the mixture of many things These compound vvaters are of three sorts some are for physick othersome for sweetnesse and the other for ●ukes and painting as ornaments to the bodie vve vvill first and before the rest speake of those which serue for medicine and physicke Sage water compounded Take equall parts of sage and penniryall stampe them in a mortar and distill them This water taketh away the paine of the bellie and stayeth cold rheumes if it be drunke with a little quantitie of castoreum Water of turneps compounded Take turneps either garden or wild ones or both together the roots of smallage and parsley and anise-seed infuse them all in white wine or vinegar and distill the vvater as good against grauell Angelica water Take equall parts of Angelica as well the rootes as the leaues but especially the rootes and the flowers of lauander infuse them in Wine there will distill from them a singular water against the Falling-sicknesse if it be taken in the quantitie of two or three spoonefulls Water of Celandine Gather in the beginning of the moneth of May the leaues of celandine veruaine rue and fennell pound them and draw from euerie one of them three ounces of juice vvhich you shall mix together put vnto them some buds of roses of sugar-candie three ounces of verie good Tutia foure ounces and as much of dragons bloud distill them all in a stillitorie This vvater taketh away the rednesse and spots in the eyes Water of the Vine Take the vvater that distilleth from the vine-stockes at such time as they are cut vvhich is in the Spring-time distill it with like quantitie of honie this vvater healeth itchings heat and rednesse of the eyes the verie vvater of of the vine alone vndistilled doth the like Rose-water Take roses three parts fennell and rue of each one part shred them small and mingle them verie well together afterward distill them and let the distilling vvater fall into a vessell wherein is a handfull of the foresaid hearbes this vvater preserueth the sight if the eyes be vvashed therewith in Sommer Water of Eye-bright Take Celandine Fennell Rue Eye-bright Veruaine red Roses of each halfe a pound Cloues and Long-pepper of each two ounces bruise them all and distill them in a glasse stillitorie This vvater is singular good for a vveake sight Water of Rosemarie Take Aqua-vitae distilled of white Wine the distilled vvater of rosemarie and sage of each fiue pound of sugar two pound in these infuse of the flowers of sage and rosemarie for the space of eight daies of each two ounces straine them and keepe the water to heale the fistulaes of the eyes Water of Treacle Distill in a glasse stillitorie Treacle with a like quantitie of Aqua-vitae and Vinegar This vvater is good to touch the vlcers and rawnesse of the mouth vvithall especially if there be added vnto it a little bole-armoniacke Another Treacle water Take old Treacle a pound of the rootes of Enula campana Gentian Cypers Tormentill of each an ounce of blessed Thistle halfe an ounce of conserues of Borage Buglosse and Rosemarie of each an ounce infuse them all together in three pints of white Wine a pint and a halfe of Cesterne water and two pints of rose-Rose-water distill them Water of Cloues Take equall parts of Cloues Ginger and flowers of Rosemarie infuse them in verie good Wine the space of eight daies distill the whole This vvater comforteth the stomacke assuageth the paines and vvringings of the bellie killeth vvormes and maketh fat folke to become leane or maketh fat the leane if they drinke it mixt with sugar Water of Saxifrage Take of the juice of Saxifrage two pound of the juice of Pearlewort Parsley Anise and Clotburre of each halfe a pound of vvhite Vinegar eight ounces distill them all This vvater drunke in the morning breaketh the stone Water of Swallowes Take Swallowes and drie them in an ouen make them into powder mixe it vvith a little Castoreum and a little Vinegar distill it all this water cureth the Falling-sicknesse if it be drunke foure
for their leane dogs which hunt the hare and you must mingle sometimes amongst these pottage a little brimstone to heat them withall As for your raw flesh meate which amongst huntsmen it called ket if you do not eate it all at a meale you shall preserue it in some cleare running streame by suffering it to lie hid in the water till your next occasion to vse it Oates ground hulls and all and so scalded in hot water is a very good mange or meate for hounds and so is also your mill-dust scalded in the same manner But if your hounds happen to fall weake or sicke or bee ouer hunted then you shall take the bagges and intrailes of sheepe hauing turned the filth and excraments forth and washt the bagges well and also the sheepes pluckes and boyle them in faire water with a good quantiof ●atemeale till the pottage bee thicke and so giue it reasonably warme to the hounds this is a soueraigne good meate and it is very comfortable for weake and sicke dogs of what kind soeuer they bee and bring them into lust and strength sodenly Their kennell must be made in some place standing vpon the East through the midst whereof dot●●un some little riuer or spring The place wherein the dogs shall lie shall be builded with very white wals and floores of boords close ioined for ●eare that spiders fleas wal-lice and such like should breed there He that shall be appointed to keepe them must be gentle mild and courteous louing dogs of his naturall instinct and such a one as will make them cleane and dresse them carefully with wisps of straw and little brushes being readie to giue them some prettie dainties to ●ate and to draw them alongst the greene corne and meadowes as wel to giue them appetite to their meat as also to learne them to run and to cause them to passe through the the flockes of sheepe and other tame cattell that so they may bee accustomed vnto them and be made to know them I● the dogs be sicke you must vse the remedies following for lice ●leas and other vermine wherewith dogs are loden oftentimes especially in the times of great heat you must bath them or at the least wash them and rub them with a wispe with a decoction made of large quantitie with ten good handfulls of wild cresses wild marierome sage rosemarie rue patience and fix handfulls of ●alt all being well boiled together to the consumption of the herbs To driue out wormes you must soke perrosin made into pouder aloes po●dred vnquencht lime and liue brimstone made likewise into pouder euen all these in one oxegall and with this liquor rub the place infected with wormes If dogs be bitten of serpents you must cause them to take downe the iuice of the leaues of ash tree incontinently or else a glasse full of the decoction of rue white mullein mints and broome whereunto must be added the weight of a French crown of treacle applying treacle in like manner vnto the bitten place When the dogs are bitten of mad dogs they must forthwith be cast into a vessell of sea water nine times one after another or for lacke of sea water into common water wherein hath bin dissolued foure bushels of salt this will preserue them from going mad And if it happen that you haue not prouided this remedie timely inough but that now the dog is fallen mad to the end that you may keepe the other from the same mischiefe you shall be carefull that the mad dog run not abroad and therefore you shall kill him by and by for it is but all in vaine and altogether impossible to goe about to cure such madnesse the signes of such madnesse are the drawing vp of of his taile at the vpper end hanging the rest straight downe a very blacke mouth without any froth a heauie looke and that aside in ou●●thwart and crosse manner Against the scabs tetters itch and gauls of dogs you must take three pounds of the oile of nuts one pound and a halfe of the oile of oile of lees two pounds of old swines grease three pounds of common honie a pound and a halfe of vineger and make them all boile together to the consumption of the halfe of the vineger putting thereto afterward of perrosin and common pitch of each two pounds and a halfe of new waxe halfe a pound melt altogether casting in thereto afterward the pouders that follow a pound and a halfe of brimstone two pounds of reboiled coperas and twelue ounces of verdegrease making them all vp together in an ointment but they must be washed with water and salt before they be annointed with this ointment For the wormes in dogs you must make a drinke of the decoction wherein haue beene boiled wormewood southrenwood and the shauings of harts-horne or else cause them to swallow downe pils made of harts-horne brimstone aloes and the iuice of wormewood When the dogs are tired rub their feet with this restrictiue made of the yelkes of egs the iuice of pomegranets and soot finely poudred all of it being wel mingled together and left to settle one whole day Dogs are often hurt of wild bores in many parts of their bodies and then according to the places where they are hurt they must bee ordered and looked to with dressing of their wounds If the wound be in his bellie and that the guts comeforth vnhurt you must first put them in againe and then afterward put into the bellie in the place where the hole is a slice of lard and so sow vp the skin aboue but the thred must be knit of a knot and made fast at euerie stitch of the needle and withall cutoff the thred at euery stitch so fastened as much is to bee performed in the wounds that shall be made in other places alwaies obseruing to put some lard into them For wounds which dogs shall receiue the iuice of the leaues of red coleworts is a very souerainge balme being applied presently vnto the wound healing them vp very speedily or else take the iuice of Nicotiana whereof we haue spoken in the second booke Against the canker breeding in the eares of dogs taking a dramme of Sope of oile of Tartar Salarmoniacke Brimstone and Verdegrease incorporated all together with white vineger and strong water and rub the cankered eares therewith nine mornings If the dogs after they haue run in frost after raine and such other bad weather or swum the riuers lakes after the game come to take cold presently as soone as they come to their kennell they must be chafed and dried at a great fire and after that their bellies rubbed and wiped with wispes thereby to wipe away the dirt sticking vnto them Oftentimes in coursing ouer the fields rocks dogs come to haue the skin striken off of their feet for the remedying whereof it will bee good first to wash their feet with
Too much watchfulnesse Swimming in the Head The Apoplexie The Palsie The Epilepsie or falling sicknes Rednesse of the face Spots in the face The Kings euill Ill eyes A weake sight Paine in the eyes Rednesse in 〈◊〉 eye Filth in the eye A blacke and blew eye A blemish in the eye Rednesse in the eyes The inflammation of the Eye The weeping Eye The white spots of the Eyes Ache in the Eare. A noise in the Eare. Deafenesse The smelling lost Swelling vnder the eare Stinking nosthrils Bleeding at the nose Tooth-ach Loose teeth Blacke Teeth Red Teeth Stinking Mouthes Stinking Teeth Wrinkled Hands The Cough Squinancie Pleurisie Spitting of Bloud The beating of the Heart Swouning Flagging wither●d and hanging Brests 〈◊〉 of Milke Aboundance of Milke The inflammation of the Breasts Belching Hicket Vomiting Paine in the stomacke The Liuer obstructed Heat of the Liuer Iaundise Dropsie Paine of the Spleene Collicke Flux of the Bellie The bloudie Flux Flux of Bloud 〈◊〉 Wormes Painet of the Hem●● 〈◊〉 The flux of the Hemorrhoids The stone in the Reines Difficultie of Vrine The stone in the Bladder Pissing in bed Hot vrine Barrennesse in women The men●●ruou● flux 〈…〉 Suffocation of the Matrix The falling downe of the Mother The Inflammation of the Matrix The Inflammation of the yard The Stinking of the feet To be brought in bed before due time Hard and painfull labor The claret water The after-birth Throwes of wom●n after child-birth For the Rupture Gout and ach in the hands Sciatica Sinewes oppressed For the pricking of the sinewes For the paines of the sinewes Paines of the ioynts Windie swellings Red pimples or swellings To suppurate an Impostume A naile otherwise called a furuncle or cats-tayle Tetters The pits of the small Pocks Vlcers about the nailes For schirro●● tumor● Falls from on high A greene wound Old or new wounds The Carbuncle Anthrax c. Vlcers of the Pocks A wound with shot Inward wounds Knots or knobs The falling of the ha●re Vlcers Kibes on the heeles Black and blew spots through blowes Wart Nolime tangere Crab-lice Burning Ringwormes The Canker The Moth in the ha●re To make the ●a●●e blacke The bit●●g of a mad dogge The bitings of Serpents A Snake crept into the bodie Horse-leach●s The stinging of Spiders Lice Mushromes eaten A cleane cow-house The putting of Ki●● to the Bull The time of the year● fittest for Ki●● to be put to the Bull. Sienes of a good ●ull Feeding of Cattell A C●w with Calf● The Cow would haue a cleare water as the Horse a troubled The Barbs vnder Calues 〈◊〉 Lice and Scabs of Calues Kine To g●ld the Calues The marks of a good Cow Milke The keeping of Milke Good Milke Creame Fresh or greene Cheese Sowre milke or Serate Whay Butter The making of Cheese To curd the milke The best runni● Hard Cheese The goodnesse of Cheese The Hen-house kept cleane Baskets for Hennes to lay in Pearches and ladders made cleane and rubd downe Their d●●nking ●●ought kept cleane Fresh straw on the dung ill The dustin of Pullen To take away the le●s of Hennes ●aying Beasts to be prouided against as enemies to poultrie The wings of Cocks Capons must not be cut The Brood-house The markes of a good Henne The Henne with spurs The daint●e-mouthed Henne The o●er-fat Henne The mad-brained Henne A young Henne clocking A young Henne good only to lay egges An old Henne is good to sit To take away a Hennes desire to sit Capons to brood and lead Chickens The diseases of old Hennes The Henne Pip. Fleas and vermin● about Hennes Physicke for Hennes For the rheume in Henn●s For the loosenesse of the belly in Hennes For costiue●esse in Hennes To take the Pip from H●nes Against Fleas and Vermine Against the ●itings of venimous Beasts Against Beasts that eat Pullein Against Foxes The laying of Hennes To haue egges all Winter time The time to set Hennes Ouens to set egges in To set egges of other birds vnder Hennes To haue Henne-birds or Cock-birds A Ceremonie obserued in setting of egges The Hennes meat drinks must be set within the thing she siteth in The impatiencie of women To trie the egges that must be set The Henne Pip. To hatch Chickens without the heat of the Henne Y● know a good egge How egges may be kept in Winter and Summer To g●ld Cockreld To fat Capons capons of Means and Bretaigne Chickens of diuers colours Great egges To make egges soft How to keepe egges What egges will keepe best The stone in a Capons stomack To rost an egge without any fire An egge written vpon An egge lifted vp into the aire The applying of a Henne to draw forth venome The innermost skin of the Hens stomack against the flux of the be●●y grauell The broth of a Henne good to loosen the belly The stones of a Capon The fat of a Henne The gall of a Henne Henne-dung A hard rosted egge The yolke and white of an egge The white of an egge The yolke of an egge Geese loue to bath and tumble themselues in the water The Goose is a bird of great profit and disprofit Wild Geese The memorie of a Goose. To set Geese The ordering of Goslings How to 〈◊〉 Goslings Meat for Geese The quills of dead Geese are not so good as those of the liue The diseases of Geese Goose greese A place for Ducks to set in The ordinarie food of Ducks The egges of Ducks see vpon by a Henne are better than if they were hatched by the Duck her selfe Wild Ducks may be will taken when they are drunke The bloud of Ducks The Drake cureth the Collick Teales Young Ducks Water Hennes Small Ducks Woodcocks Curlewes Birts of a double life Swannes Valentia the vale of Swans How manie Swannes are ynough to be together Cran●● Storkes Hennes of Numidia Feasant Cocks and Hennes not so ●asie to make tame To fat Feasant Cocks and Hennes The Peacock● walke The diseases of Peacocks The nature of Pea-hennes The sitting of the Pea-henne A Peacock of a white colour The feeding of yong Peacocks The laying of Pea-hennes The diseases of Peacocks The flesh of Peacocks is hard Indian Hennes good coffers to burie Oats in That a Peacock is better meat than a Turkies What meat is fit for Turkies The times wherein Turkies doe lay The diseases of Turkies Turkie egges Turtle doues What meat Turtles feed vpon The diseases of Turtle doues Stock-doues Partridges of browne colour and spotted The egges of Partridges The gall of a Partridge Fierce Quailes Thrushes Sous The value of this bird in times past and yet also The ordinarie meat for Thrushes The profit of a Doue-house Where a ground Doue-house is permitted and lawfull to be had Pies and Sparrowes male and female do sit A dore window Beasts to be kept out of Doue-houses A draw lattice window To store a Doue-house To tame Pigeons Perfumes for the Doue-house To draw Pigeons to a place Pigeons dung The Oxe-house The Oxe-keepers charge The
the Ouen and taken in the weight of a French crowne with white Wine halfe a quarter of an houre before the fit Furthermore the Liniment made with Mithridate or the oyle of Scorpions applyed to the ridge of the backes soles of the feet palmes of the hands brow and temples some small time before the fit The verie same vertue hath the oyles of B●yes mixed with Aqua vitae Some townesmen doe vse this superstitious rite against such manner of agues that is to say they eat nine dayes together being fasting the leaues of Sage the first day nine the second eight and so consequently they diminish euerie day a leafe vntill the last of the said nine dayes and the confident persuasion that they haue of this medicine doth cure them Some find it verie singular in a Quartane Ague after purging to drinke white wine wherein there hath beene Sage steeped all night if you eat before the fit a head of Garlicke pilled you shall scape the fit of shiuering cold if you drinke one or two ounces of the iuices of the root of Elder stamped and strained some small time before the fit and take the same againe two or three times you shall lose your ague The distilled water of the roots of Sea-Holly or else take a dramme of Myrrhe in powder and drinke it with Malmesey an houre before the fit The distilled water or decoction of Cardu● Benedictus and taken before the fit Pills made of Myrrhe and of Treacle as big as a ●ich pease taken an houre before the fit For the Thirst of an Ague let him roll to and fro vpon his tongue the three-cornered stone found in the heads of Carpes or the leaues of round Sorrell or a piece of Siluer or Gold or a Snayle stone or a piece of Crystall oftentimes dipt in water or the leaues of Pursl●ne or of Houseleeke or the husked seeds of Cucumbers For a Tertian Ague steepe in white Wine the bruised root of hearbe Patience for the space of three or foure houres afterward straine it and reserue about a pretie draught to giue the sicke to drinke an houre or two before his fit or else doe the like with the rootes of Plantaine steept in equall quantitie of Wine and Water or take a pretie draught of the iuice of Plantaine or of Pur●lane or of Pimpernell and drinke them a verie little while before the fit or else drinke with Wine euerie day six leaues of Cinquefoile that is to say three in the morning and three at the euening or the iuice of Smallage of Sage and good strong Vineger of euerie one an ounce three houres before the fit The most soueraigne remedie that some men doe find for it is to drinke fasting fiue houres before the fit two ounces of the iuice of Pomegranats and presently after to lay to the wrists temples and soles of the feet small pills of the bignesse of a Pease made of an ounce of the oyntment of Populeon and two drammes of Spiders webs and there to leaue them vntill such time as that the houre and feare of the fit be past or else a Cataplasme made of Sage Rue Greeke Nettle gathered before Sunne-rise of each a handfull Salt and Soot the quantitie of a Walnut it being all stamped with vineger and applyed to the pulset an houre before the fit Some doe greatly approue of a Liniment of Earthwormes boyled with Goose grease to rub the brow and temples of the sicke partie withall before the fit or else to carrie about his necke the hornes of a swift Hart which is a singular remedie For a Quotidian it is good to drinke somewhat before the fit the iuice drawne out of Betonie and Plantaine or to drinke euerie morning a reasonable draught of the decoction made of the root of Smallage Parsley Radishes Sperage leaues of Betonie and Spleenwort red cich Pease and the middle ri●de of Elder or to steepe in white wine the roots of Danewort and to drinke a small draught thereof an houre before the fit but after that hee must take heed of sleeping or let him drinke euerie day with Wine two leaues of Cinquefoile one in the morning and another at euening as also let him apply vnto his pulses the Cataplasme that wee haue set downe for the Quartane Ague To take away the paine of the Head comming of great heat namely such as befalleth Mowers during the Summer time there must be applyed vpon the browes slices of Gourds or Linnen Clothes dipped in Rose water or the iuice of Plantaine Nightshade Lettuce Purcelane and Vineger of white Wine or let her beat two whites of egges with Rose water and with Flaxe make a Frontlet or stampe bitter Almonds with Veruaine water and apply them vnto the browes or to wash the head in warme water in which hath beene boyled the leaues of Vines and Willowes the flowers of Water-Lillies and Roses and with the same water to wash the feet and legges and if in case the paine be so great as that there is feare that hee should loose his wits let there be applyed vpon the crowne of his head browes and temples a Cataplasme made of the white of an egge Bole-armoniacke Crabbes throughly boyled and Poppie seed with the water of Betonie and Vineger If the Head complaine it selfe of too much Drinke there may be made a Frontlet with wild Time Maiden haire and Roses or receiue and take the fume of the decoction of Coleworts or by and by after the head beginneth to be ill to eat one or two short-started Apples or some bitter Almonds or else to drinke of the shauings of Harts-horne with Fountaine or Riuer water or if you see that your stomacke be not sicke thou mayst take of the haire of the Beast that hath made thee ill and drinke off a good glasse of Wine If the Head become sicke of some great Cold apply and lay to the Head a bag full of Branne Millet and rubbed Salt or of Sage Marierome Betonie Tyme Annise-seed Fennell-seed Bay-berries and Iuniper-berries as hot as you can endure them or else chafe the temples with the iuice of Nightshade oyle of Roses and Vineger To cure the Frensie that commeth of a hot cause you must apply vpon the head of the patient the lungs of a Sheepe newly killed or the whole Gather or some Henne or Pigeon slit along the backe and applyed vnto the same place or rub his browes and all his head ouer with oyle of Roses Vineger and Populeon or with the iuice of Nightshade oyle of Roses and Vineger To awake those which are giuen to sleepe too soundly it is good to make a Frontlet of Sauorie boyled in Vineger or to make a perfume for the patients nosthrils with strong Vineger or seed of Rue or Nigella or feathers of a Partridge or of old Shooe soles or of the hoofes of an Asse or of mans haire or else to apply vpon the browes a Cataplasme of
pure Wheat boyled till it become like pappe with thicke red Wine and apply it vnto the teates vpon plageats as hot as may be endured For belching at the mouth it is good to take fasting a Dredge made of Annise Fennell Caraway and Coriander seed or else to drinke Wine in the morning two or three times and that such as wherein hath beene boyled Bay-berries Annise Coriander and Fennell seed and apply vpon the stomacke a bag full of Rue Wormewood Marierome and Mints For the Hicket it is good to keepe ones breath oftentimes and long to stop both his eares to hold his head awry and his mouth couered and vpward to procure himselfe to neese to labour much to endure thirst to cast cold water in his face which hath the Hicket thereby to cause him to feare Some are of opinion that if he which hath the Hicket doe count and reckon the first saying one or borrowing hee shall haue no moe but that one Against Vomiting take a tost of bread and steepe it in the claret water hereafter described or in the iuice of Mints spread it ouer with the powder of Masticke apply it warme vnto the stomacke renewing it euerie three houres Otherwise take two handfuls of Mints and one of Roses boyle them in Wine take afterward two ounces of tosted bread and let it be well steeped in Wine and afterward compounded with Masticke and the said Mints and Roses make thereof a playster to lay to the stomacke before you goe to meat It is true that if the vomiting be with an ague it will be good to boyle the Mints and Roses and to steepe the tosted bread in vineger In like manner Mints brayed and mingled with oyle of Roses applyed vnto the stomacke is a singular helpe for any kind of vomiting it is good likewise at the end of meat to swallow downe one gulpe of Water or a morsell of Marmalade of Quinces not drinking afterward and in the morning two houres before meat to swallow fiue or six Pepper-cornes whole with Wine or the sirrup of Mints or of Wormewood or greene Ginger preserued It is also good to set cupping Glasses vpon the bottome of the Stomacke or vnder the Nauell and then chiefely when the partie eateth to take rest after meat and to talke or cough any thing at all For the paine of the Stomacke fill a dish with hot ashes sprinkle them with Wine oue● them cast a Linnen cloth which may couer all the dish apply this vnto the pained place or else put vnto the stomacke a hot bagge full of fried Salt or else take the crums of a good thicke Loafe and being dipt as it commeth hot out of the Ouen in the Oyle of Camomill and wrapt in a Linnen cloth let it be applyed vnto the paine or else fill a Swines bladder with the decoction of the leaues of Bayes Organi● Marierome Mints Time Camomill Calamint Melilote Annise and Fennell seed apply it to the paine warme it againe when it shall be cold or else make a cake with a handfull of Wormewood Mints and Roses kneaded with Rye Leauen and Wine and apply it vnto the stomacke For the obstruction of the Liuer vse a decoction made of Succorie the roots of Parsley Smallage Fennell Dogs grasse Patience Butchers broome Cich pease Capillus Veneris Hoppes and Fumitorie vse-likewise oftentimes the shauings of Iuorie For the heat of the Liuer there is nothing better than to vse Lettuce Sorrell Purcelane Hoppes in pottage and sometimes to drinke the water of the said hearbes fasting or the water of Endiue Against the Iaundise drinke fasting of the dung of Ganders the weight of a French crowne well mingled with white wine for the space of nine dayes or else of the decoction of the leaues and roots of Strawberries or else take Missletoe of the white Thorne gathered before the Sunne rise about a handfull three or foure roots of Parsley bray them all together with white wine let them runne through a linnen cloth or strainer and drinke of this euening and morning a reasonable draught This is a more excellent remedie than many others which notwithstanding women with child must not vse but in place of it you must apply to the wrists and soles of their feet the leaues of Missletoe of the Oake of great Celandine and Horehound the whole being brayed with a little wine and made in forme of a Cataplasme Some commend highly against the Iaundise to take of the wormes of the earth to wash them in white wine and after to drie them and making a powder of them to giue thereof a small spoonefull in white Wine or the decoction of Wormewood or of Horehound or to drinke fasting ones owne vrine certaine dayes or to drinke for the space of eight mornings with white wine fasting fiue trottles of ● Goat Some say that to carrie in the left hand three leaues of wild Rocket doth cure the Iaundise Some also hold that to weare vnder the soles of the feet the leaues of Shepheards purse or of great Celandine next vnto their bare feet doth the like For the Dropsie it is good to make a drinke with the seed of Broome pouned and brayed in white wine or to make a drinke of the iuice of the root of Gladiolus or Asarum with white wine or to drinke fasting his owne vrine for the space of certaine dayes to apply in like manner vnto the moist places a Cataplasme of Cowes dung warme with which as Galen testifieth a Physition of Misia did maruellously heale all manner of Dropsies or to apply vpon the swolne place shell-Snayles aliue not washed but carefully bruised A secret remedie against the Dropsie is to drinke with honied water the powder of Glasse seuen times burned and seuen times quenched in the iuice of Flower-de-luce or white wine For the paine or heauinesse of the Spleene drinke wine wherein hath boyled Scolopendrium Sperage and Hoppes or else drinke oftentimes fasting of the broth of red Coleworts halfe boiled or of the decoction of Romane Wormwood or of Pauls Betonie or of small Centaurie or Smiths forge-Forge-water For the paine of the Collicke there is nothing more soueraigne than to weare about him a Ring or Boxe of siluer in which is inclosed some part of the nauell of an infant newly borne and that the Ring do touch the flesh There is also nothing more singular than to drinke in a pretie draught of white wine the red pill which is to be found in the space and cartilaginous gristles of Walnut kernels dried in the moneth of August and made into powder or to drinke foure or fiue ounces of the oyle of Nu●s or of Linseed or of the shells of ripe Nuts or the water of Camomill or the decoction of the seed of Hempe or Wine wherein hath beene steept for the space of tenne or twelue houres the root of Enula campana bruised or the powder of a Stag● pizzle drunke
into the pot Licorice bruised let this decoction coole at leisure And as for outward meanes it is good to apply a Cataplasme made of Pellitorie of the wall vnto the reines or else a Cataplasme made of the root of Cypres and the leaues of Bell-flower boyled in wine The best and most soueraigne of all the rest is to prepare a Bath wherein haue boyled the leaues of water-Pa●sley Mallowes Holihocks March Violets Pellitorie flowers of Broome and Camomill and within the Bath vpon the reines a bagge full of Branne and water-Parsley For the Collick caused of Grauell cause to boyle the leaues and flowers of Camomill in an equall quantitie of water and white wine to the wasting of the third part drinke the decoction warme suddenly the paine will be appeased For the difficultie of Vrine drinke the iuice of Winter Cherries or the decoction of Radish roots in white wine or the decoction of hearbe Patience or of the Thistle said to haue an hundred heads or of Bell-flower or of the white prickly Thistle or of Sperage or of Dogs-grasse or of Rest harrow also apply vpon the yard or secret parts a Cataplasme or Liniment of Fleawort Some hold it for a great secret to drinke white wine wherein hath beene brayed Sowes found in caues and hollow places or to make powder of the said Sowes dryed and so to giue the same to drinke in white wine Others doe greatly esteeme the distilled water of the pillings of the root of Rest-harrow first steeped in Malmesey For the stone in the Bladder it is a singular thing to drinke the iuice of Limons with white wine or to make a powder of the stones of Medlars first washed in white wine and after dryed of Broome-seed Burnet-seed and of the seed of Sperage Holihockes Saxifrage Melons Pompions Citruls and of the hearbe good against pearles and to vse these with white wine There is an hearbe growing at the new Towne LeGuyard called in French Crespinette by those that dwell thereabouts and of this the young Ladie of Villeneufue sister to the late deceased Monsieur Cardinall of Bellay caused to be distilled a Water which is singular against the difficultie of Vrine and the stone in the Bladder as I my selfe haue proued diuers times Some hold it also for a singular remedie to make a powder of the stones of Sponges or of the stone which is found in the head of Cray-fishes or of the shells of small Nuts or of the gumme of Cherrie trees and to take it with white Wine or the iuice of Radishes Or else the distilled water of the stalkes of Beanes red Cich-pease and the seed of Holihock The which followeth of Glasse is a great secret which being burned and quenched seuen times in the water of Saxifrage and afterward made into a verie fine powder and giuen with white wine vnto the partie troubled with grauell doth breake the stone in them in any part of the bodie Another secret is that of the shells of egges which haue brought forth Chickens being brayed brewed and drunke with white wine which breaketh the stone as well of the Reines as of the Bladder For all such persons as pisse in their bed whiles they be asleepe and cannot hold their vrine there is nothing better than to eat oftentimes the lungs of a young Kid rosted or to drinke with wine the powder of the braines or stones of a Hare as also the powder of a Cowes bladder or of a Hogs Sheepe or Goats bladder or the powder made of the roots of Bistort or of Tormentill with the iuice of Plantaine or with the milke of Sheepe or the ashes of the flesh of an Hedgehog For the burning of the Vrine let be taken of shell-Snayles and whites of egges of each a pound of the great and small cold feeds of each halfe an ounce hal●e a pound of the water of Lettuce foure ounces of good Cassia three ounces of Venice Turpentine powne that which may be powned and let it all stand to mix together for the space of a night afterward distill them in a Limbecke in Mari●s bath let this water settle some time before that you vse it giue thereof halfe an ounce euerie morning with a dramme of Saccharum Rosatum continue the vse thereof as long as you are able To make a woman fruitfull which is barren let her drinke foure dayes after the purging of her naturall course the iuice of Sage with a verie little salt and let her continue and goe ouer this course diuers times To stay the excessiue flux of the flowers of Women they must drinke with the iuice of Plantaine the powder of the Cuttle bone or the bone of a Sheepes foot burned or the shells which Pilgrims bring home after their pilgrimage to S. Iames or of Corall or of Harts horne or of the shells of burnt egges or of twelue red graines of the seed of Pionie or to swallow with the yolke of an egge the powder of Tezill or the scumme of yron first dipt in vineger and after made into fine powder And as for outward meanes it is good to apply vnto the Nauell shell-Snayles well brayed or the red in the void space of the Nut burnt and powdred and mingled with wine Make a Cataplasme of Soot or of the scraping got from vnder the bottome of a Caul●rton mingle it with the white of an egge or the iuice of dead Nettle or white Mul●●●ne and apply it vnto the loynes and bottome of the belly Or to fill a bag sufficient full of gros●e salt to dip in fresh water newly drawne out of the Well and to apply it to the hollow of the Reines Some make great account of Cherry-tree gumme infused in the iuice of Plantaine and cast into the priuie parts with small Si●ings 〈◊〉 to apply to the breasts the leaues of Celandine For the white termes of Women after that the bodie is purged it is good to drinke with the iuice of Plantaine or the water of Purcelane the powder of Amber of Corall or of Bole Armoniake or of Terra sigillata or of Steele prepared or of Sponge burnt in a pot or of the Sea-Snayle first burnt and afterward washt in wine And as for outward meanes there must be made a Lee with ashes of Oake wood or of the Figge-tree or of the Osier in which there must be boyled the rind of Pomegranats G●●●s pieces of Corke leaues and roots of Bis●ort and of Peruincle beyond-sea Roses with a ver●e small quantitie of Allome and Salt and of this to make a fomentation or a halfe bath For to cause women to haue their termes they must drinke euerie morning two ounces of the water of Mugwort or of the decoction of Dogs-grasse Cich-pease the seed of common or Romane Nigella of the root of Smallage Cinnamon and Saffron the roots of Radish of the Tasell in which one may dissolue as much Mirrhe as the quantitie of a Beane The iuice
of it be consumed the vessell in the meane time being close couered and the fire burning cleare and softly after draw the vessell somewhat further from the fire and let it coole vnto the next morning then straine it out a little warme the grosser parts that it may so be forced through some hairie strainer and adde thereto of white Pitch melted by it selfe and also strained through a hairie strainer a pound halfe a pound of white Waxe in graines Masticke and Turpentine of each one ounce make thereof an oyntment of good consistence Likewise there is nothing more singular than to take of Greeke Pitch Brimstone and Olibanum equall parts to bray them together with the whites of egges and after you haue stanched and wiped away the bloud in handsome sort to ioyne and bring together the edges of the wound and to apply it thereto with a linnen cloth and a Cataplasme afterward to bind and roll it vp with double linnen clothes and so to leaue it for certaine dayes or else boyle the leaues of Carduus Benedictus and flower of Wheat in Wine vnto the forme of an Oyntment wash the Vlcers twice a day with Wine afterward lay thereunto this Oyntment Or else wash the wound with the decoction of Dent de lion more easily thus Take the dyrt which you find vnder Buckets Troughes or such like and apply it vnto the cut it closeth it vp incontinently For all wounds as well old as new vlcers and whatsoeuer cuts in the flesh take the leaues of Plantaine Spearewort or small Plantaine Mallowes All-good of each a handfull French Sage about foure and twentie leaues let all the foresaid hearbes be well picked washed and after stamped verie well all together this done take five quarts of old Swines grea●e put thereinto a hot pestill and cause it to melt then boyle it with the said hearbes and when you see that the liquor of the hearbes i● consumed you shall straine it and put thereunto as much Frankincense as a Nut greene Waxe and Perrosine of each as much as two Nuts melt them that so they may all be brought vnto the forme of an oyntment of which you shall make vse for all sorts of wounds Otherwise take Brimstone most ●inely powdred and searced put it in a Glasse-vessell and powre thereupon so much oyle Oliue as will doe more then couer it by foure or fiue singers set it out vnto all the heat of the Sunne you can for the space of tenne daies and stirring it about manie times with a Spatull of cleane and faire wood and keeping the said vessell close shut continually to the end there may not any dyrt fall thereinto At the end of the tenne dayes emptie out all the oyle by leaning the glasse softly to the one side seeing it hath extracted all the substance or essence of the Brimstone into another Glasse-bottell by the helpe of a funnell and let not any of the drosse or residence goe in withall after which you shall stop the bottell verie carefully and at such times as you would vse it you shall dip Lint white linnen Cloth Cotton or blacke Wooll in it and apply it vnto the parts that are hurt whether by Vlcers or Cuts as also vnto Impostumes and that so long as vntill they be cured You may powre in oyle againe the second time vpon the residence left after the oyle powred out as beforesaid and doe as was done before Make account of these two later Remedies as of those which will not faile you For the Boyle called Anthrax Carbunculus and other such pestilent tumours see that you apply vnto them Rue brui●ed and mixt with verie strong Leauen Figges Cantharides Onions of the Land and Sea vnquencht Lime Sope gumme Ammoniacke and a little Treacle for this emplaster draweth forth such kind of tumours Or else take a Toad drie her either in the Sunne or in the Ouen make her into powder and put of this powder vpon the Carbuncle it will draw forth all the venome Or else apply vnto the Carbuncle a Frog aliue and if she die then another and do● this so oft as vntill that one doe liue and so you shall draw out all the venome For vlcers comming of the Pocks and such other maligne ones take tenne pints of water quench therein hot yrons so long as till the tenne pints become but fiue and in these fiue pints infuse for the space of foure and twentie houres a pound of vnquencht Lime after that straine the water when it is strained dissolue therein fifteene graines of Verdegrease and as much of Vitrioll and twentie graines of Camphire this water is singular to mundifie cleanse and drie vp Vlcers Otherwise set to boyle in a new earthen vessell verie cleare water when it beginneth to boyle put into it by and by vnsleckt Lime and presently thereupon powre it out into another vessell all new let it rest there so long as vntill after it be scummed it become cleare the Lime falling to the bottome of the vessell in manner of pap in the end you shall gather the water swimming aloft by leaning the vessell and letting the Lime abide vnstirred in the bottome and this water thus gathered shall be reserued in a cleane violl or other vessell well stopped that so it may serue for your vse in which being warme dip a linnen cloth and apply it in stead of an emplaister vnto the Vlcer and renew it oft To draw out miraculously a Pellet make a tent of a Quince and for want of it of Marmalate of Quinces onely without any addition of Spices or other things annoint it with the oyle of egges and put it into the wound or hole made by the shot of the Pistoll For inward wounds in which there can no tents be put there must be drunke oftentimes the decoction of Auens and the outward wounds washt or else take Mugwort great and small Comfrey whole Betonie Agrimonie the roots of Rubia otherwise called the Diers hearbe the roots of small Plantaine otherwise called Carpenters hearbe Sage the leaues of Brambles Parsley pricking Nettle Marigolds Sanicle Bugula Mouse-eare Burnet Dendelion Plantaine the crops of Hempe female Ferne Buglosse Gentian Veruaine Birds ●oong ground Iuie water Germander Catmint hearbe Robert Cinquefoile Tansie all the Capillar hearbes of each one halfe handfull Damaske Rai●ins their stones taken out Licorice the seed and flowers of S. Iohns wort the seed of blessed Thistle of each an ounce the three cordiall flowers of each foure ounces all these being thus carefully pickt and made cleane let be brayed verie throughly after strained through a hairen strainer with one pint of white wine you must cause him which i● thrust through to drinke of this drinke a little draught fasting or one houre before he eat and as much before his supper If these iuices displease thee in stead of braying bruising or stamping of the things aforesaid you may make a decoction in common water adding in
that they will happen about tenne moneths after which is the iust time of their going with Calfe to calue and that being at such time as new grasse doth draw on it will be an occasion of greatly encreasing their milke and vpon this occasion also their Calues shall be a great deale the better fed To the end they may hold bulling the better you must see that at such time they be kept bare and leane for so they will hold a great deal● better On the contrarie a good Bull for breed must be fat well set together and well meated hauing for two moneths space before beene fed with Barley and F●●ches He must also be chosen more long than high of a red haire large betwixt the shoulders strong legged round trussed and bodied broad breasted short 〈◊〉 broad browed fierce countenanced terrible to fight blacke eyes short hornes long tayle and full of haire But in England and other places they neuer vse to feed their horned Cattell with Corne for they find it of small or no profit Grasse or Hay being euer sufficient and though in France the red colour be euer most preferred yet as Serres also affirmeth the blacke is fully as excellent for the red exceedeth but 〈◊〉 prouing an extraordinarie vertue in the milke but the blacke is euer the hardest best flesht best ●allowed and hath the strongest hyde And if it happen that the Cow refuse the Bull or the Bull her they must be brought to haue a desire the one to the other by holding neere their nosthrils the tayle of a Hart burned or else vsing som● other composition whereof we will speake in the Treatise of Horses During the time of their going with Calfe they must be kept from leaping of Ditches as 〈◊〉 from leaping of Hedges or Bushes and a little before the time that they doe calue to feed them in the house or yard adioyning to the house and that with good Prou●●der or Blossomes not milking them at all for the milke that they haue then cannot be but naught and becom●neth hard as a stone When they haue calued they may not be milked to make any Butter or Cheese vntill two moneths be past after which tim● you shall send them againe to their pasture not suffering their Calues to sucke them any longer except it be at night when they returne from Pasture so long as they feed vpon fresh Prouander which you shall haue in readinesse for them and in the mor●ing before you send them to Pasture In what state soeuer they be you shall not let them drinke aboue twice a day in Summer and once in Winter and that not of Riuer or Floud water but of some water which is wa●me as Raine water Fenne or Well water hauing beene drawne a long time before for Well water by reason of the coldnesse might somewhat hurt them It is true that the Cow will not refuse any water that is without fault so that it be cleare for she loueth cleare water especially as the Horse on the contrarie that which is puddly and troubled being a signe of his goodnesse if so he ●umble the water with his foot before he drinke And as for ● Calues newly calued you must leaue them with good litter of fresh straw vntill such ● time as she haue licked cleansed and wiped them and for some fiue or six daies after ● for the being of the Cow with the Calfe doth heat and settle the Calfe After such ● time you shall put it by it selfe in some Shed prouiding it good Litter and renewing ● the same oftentimes and thence you shall bring them forth when you would haue them sucke and carrie them thither backe againe so soone as they haue sucked And if you see eyther that they will not sucke or that being willing to sucke they can doe nothing but offer to take the paps without sucking any thing you shall looke vnder the tongue if they haue not the Barbes which is a whit●sh fleshinesse growing vnder the tongue almost after the manner of the Pip which and if it be so you shall take away gently without slaying the tongue with little nipping Pincers washing the place afterward either with red Wine of it selfe or with the infusion of Salt and Garlicke stamped together for this disease will cause them to languish vnto death by keeping them from sucking Let the huswife also be diligent in taking away the Lice that may breed vpon Calues and make them languish and thrine nothing at all as doth also the Scab when they haue it and this is to be knowne by their skins if they become hard and stiffe after the manner of little ridges and that stroaking your hand along you feele the skin hackt and rough like a File and the haire staring and standing vpright For the healing of such scabs she shall rub them with Butter or with Oyle of the setlings of the Lampe all ouer the bodie where the scab is seized But as it is a great deale better to preuent diseases than to cure them the huswife shall cut off all entrance from these two annoyances if she cause to be rubd with the wispes of straw vnbound her Calues twice a day if she suffer not their pisse to stand in puddles vnder them if she see that they be kept with fresh Litter and drie causing their dung to be carefully cast out from among their Litter But to returne to the keeping and ordering of Kine the huswife shall appoint times for the milking of them as that they be milkt euening and morning at a conuenient houre and when they be at red That the Milke be strained so soone as it is taken and that Butte● be chernd with leysure but not any losse that the Cheese be well crasht prest and freed from their Whey and especially that her Pots kneading Troughs Strainers Slices and Che●se presses and other implements seruing for the Dairie be kept neat and cleane and that none of her maids haue any thing to doe with either the Butter or Cheese when they haue their termes In the morning before going to field she shall cause the Calues to be gelded and that before they be two yeares old and not after for Calues grow the more when they are gelded in the time of their growth because thereby their bodies are made the more moist When they are gelded in respect of their paine and griefe there shal be giuen them Hay small shredded and mingled with Branne vntill they be come againe to their former stomackes and appetites They must not be gelded either when it is verie hot or cold or in the old of the Moone Being more than three yeares old they shall be put to the Neat-heard to begin to prepare them for the Draught and likewise she shall deliuer him her Ki●e with Calfe and those which after nine yeares doe not bring forth any more Calues for yet they may serue to draw in the
Runnet is the small Cheeslep bagge or stomacke of a young Calfe not aboue three weekes or a moneth old well washt salted cleansed and seasoned with Cloues Mace and a little Nutmeg and so kept in a close pot with Bryne and so vsed according as occasion serueth The pot in which the milke is must not be without some quantitie of heat for to keepe it warme and yet notwithstanding it must not come neere vnto the fire as it may not stand farre off And when it is curded and gathered together it must be put presently into slices tormes or fats for it is profitable that the Whay should run out and separate it selfe from the Curd But chiefely and aboue all other things it is required that the maidens which shall meddle with the making of Cheese should be cleanly f●t for the purpose their sleeues from about their hands and armes folded vp and aboue all farre from being troubled with their termes In like sort the people of the Countrey of Auergnac which make great reckoning of their Cheese doe chuse the young children that are but of foureteene yeares of age and those proper neat and handsomely trim●ed vp not hauing scabbed or scur●e hands neither yet of an vntemperate heat for they thinke and persuade themselues that such filthinesse of the hands doth hinder the full curding and ioyning together of the Cheese and so doth make them full of eies If she determine to drie harden and keepe them long she shall the more carefully looke to the strayning forth of the Whay and cleare Milke and after to set 〈◊〉 in rowes vpon 〈◊〉 Lattises or Cheese-heigh●● fit for the same and that withall it be in a cellar or in some darke and coole place or else to take them vp into some high place hauing store of aire prouided alwayes that the Sunne haue 〈◊〉 power ouer the Cheese She shall shift them euerie day vntill about the fourth or fifth day at which time they will begin to cast a slowre as though it were the flowre of meale and then shee shall cast a little small salt vpon them The next morning shee shall turne the other side and doe the like therewith after she shall turne them euery day and if need be make them cleane on both sides and about the edges with a rebated knife made of purpose such a one as will not cut After some time when 〈◊〉 knoweth that they are somewhat drie shee shall put them in another place as vpon boords layd as it were vpon ladders she shall cleanse and scrape them oft and keepe her boords cleane also and if by striuing to keepe them long they become hard and bitter she shall couer them ouer in Grauell or in Barly flower or in Cich-pease or else she shall couer them with the leaues of Dragons which likewise doe keepe them from being eaten of Mites and that they doe not become mouldie And in case that wormes doe eat them shee shall take away this vermine and annoint them with oyle of Linseed or the drossie parts of the same which will preserue them singularly 〈◊〉 or else shee shall put them in a great heape of Millet corne or Linseed which will keepe them fresh and coole in the hotest times and hot in the coldest times And seeing the deepest point of skill about Cheese is to bestow them so as that they may best mellow she shall bring them together in the end and put them in presses the clothes taken out and set neere the walls of cellars vnder the ground vpon small boord● hauing moistened them before with oyle Oliue or Linseed and vineger mixt together She shall iudge that for good Cheese which is fat and heauie the meat of it close and well compact of colour somewhat yellowish sweet to ●ast pleasant to smell and nothing mouldie neither yet full of mites or wormes and which is made of pure Cowes milke without mixing any sheepes milke therewith for it maketh the Chees● lesse sauorie and more whitish It is true indeed that it may be made to looke yellow some Saffron mixt therewithall as is vsuall amongst the inhabitants of Poictou An old Cheese all mouldie brayed and mixed with the decoction of a salt gammon of Bacon and applyed in forme of a Cataplasme doth soften all the hard swelling● of the knees CHAP. XV. Of Hennes AS concerning the ordering of Pullen which is the chiefest thing that a good Huswife is to regard there must care be had that the Henne-house be euerie day made cleane euen so soone as the Pullen be out and the dung p●t aside for the fatting of the Medowes The Baskets for them to lay in oftentimes shaken vp and refresht with new straw and neasts and their Pearches and Ladders scraped euerie weeke The roofe or vpper part of the house shut in euerie night at Sunne-set for feare of Fulmers and opened euerie morning at Sunne-rise Their Water-pots to let them drinke at must be kept cleane and filled with clea●● water euerie day and that twice in Winter and thrice in Summer Let their water be cleare alwayes least otherwise it cause them to haue the Pip which thing happeneth as soone vnto them of the filthinesse of their water as of the want of it Let her 〈◊〉 to be cast out vpon the dunghill oftentimes fresh straw right ouer-against the Bar●● where the Pullen vse to scrabble and neere vnto the same place let her cause to be put sand dust or ashes to procure them the pleasure of dusting themselues in the Sunne and pruning of their feathers Let her cause to be remoued farre from them the residence of wine or drosse of the Presse of whatsoeuer fruits and from the place of their haunt for such things keepe them from laying And it further behoueth her to haue this care as to see that throughout all the Henne-house there be neither Lath broken nor any place of the walls hauing any Lome fallen either without or within or any shee● of Lead lifted vp or raised thereby to preuent the danger of Ca●s Foxes Weasels Poleca●s Fulmers and other beasts giuen to rauin abroad in the night as also the Kite Hen-harrow and Owle which sometimes will not let to swap into the very Brood-house to catch and carrie away the Chickens And to the end you may not lose any of them you must cut off the great feathers of one wing from such as vse oftentimes to flye ouer walls that so also by this meanes you may keepe them out of your Gardens for they would take it vp for a custome and it would keepe them from laying And for a surer preuention of the foresaid mischiefes ouer and aboue that which hath beene said for it is not good to clip the wings of Cocks or Capons you must fasten and set rowes of thorne faggots vpon the tops of the walls of the said Gardens and all other places elsewhere The Brood-house shall be
rightly be tearmed Cofers to cast Oates into a deuouring gulfe of meat and wherein there is no other pleasure to be taken but onely in their crie and furiousnesse when they are come to be great ones or continually chirping whiles they be little besides that both the one and the other are ill-fauoured and ougly to behold for the deformitie of their heads for the male hath no combe as our Cockes but in stead thereof a red fleshinesse and vnder his chinne a great wide and long throat which swelleth and changeth into manie colours when he beginneth to be angrie It is very true that his flesh is fine and delicate but without taste and of hard digestion And this is the cause why men vse to powder them larde them much and season them with Spices There is much more pleasure and goodnesse in the flesh of a Peacocke The meat fit for this kind of Bird is the same that is good for Hennes and so made and with like diligence and because his propertie is to be abroad to feede vpon Grasse Wormes and Hearbes therefore it remaineth that wee set downe what is required ouer and aboue And the Farmer may well say That looke how manie Turkies he hath in his yard euen so manie Mule Colts hath he in respect of their feeding Their ordering is lesse troublesome that of the Peacockes saue that they doe not so well endure and abide the cold neither doe they require to be pearched so high in the open ayre but they eat vp and make great wast in Gardens and are filthie as Goslings and therefore some must be readie to make them cleane euerie day In Winter they must be set in a warme place and drie their pearch must not be aboue eight or tenne foot from the earth because they doe not flye high As concerning their laying and sitting it is altogether like to that of the Peacockes and their egges may as well be set vnder Hennes and ledde afterward by the same whiles the Turkie Hennes doe accomplish their seuerall times of laying Their diseases and remedies are also all alike so that it were in vaine to speake of them here againe The Huswife shall not make anie great account of Turkie egges at least hee that loueth his health shall not esteeme of them for to vse them for Physitions hold that egges of Turkies engender grauell and minister cause to breed the Lepro●ie CHAP. XXI Of Turtle doues Partridges Quailes Stock-doues and Thrushes THe place to put these kindes of Birds in seruing rather for food and pleasure than for breeding shall be ordered after the manner of the Feasant-house that is after the manner of a great Cowpe so leaning against the wall of the back-yard and open toward the light wouen and wrought with the strings of a small Bow put through wood after the manner of Bird-cages with a dore of the same And within especially toward the corners there shall be great store of Perches and branches of boughes of Iuniper Bayes and other trees within which there shall be tyed against the said wall small baskets to allure them to lay and sit in if so be they haue any inclination thereunto It shall be of the height of a man and ouerthwart and euerie way you shall hang Perches stayed vp at both ends for seats for them to sit vpon and vnder their Perches much fresh straw which you must often renew when you make them cleane On that side towards the light all along their house you shall weaue and worke in two boords of a good length and a third vnderneath them and there shall you make places for the● to eat their meat and to set their water-pots for them to drinke which you shall refresh and make cleane verie often These birds are all of them such as vse to got together in flockes and delight in hot ayre and in cold weather flye ouer the Sea out of one Countrey into another And therefore to tame them in such manner as to make them like our house-birds would be a verie hard and difficult thing And againe wee make no further account of them than for their daintinesse and delicatenesse which is the cause why they are of such request in Feasts and Banquets Of all these fore-named kinds of Birds there is none more apt to tame than the Turtle doues neither yet sooner fatted for to take them after they be somewhat great and slie well you must giue them wine for by the means of it they doe quickly fall to forget their libertie and freedome for this bird is of a great stomacke and beareth it therefore verie mournefully when shee perceiueth her selfe taken for which cause also they almost neuer lay when they be restrained and kept in neithe● yet seed fat in Winter quite contrarie to Thrushes They feed vpon Barly F●●ches and almost all other kind of graine they desire faire and cleare water and often renewed and a large water-pot that they may bath themselues therein sometime Especially they loue Millet and Pannickle and make no lesse account of Wheat of which sorts of Corne a bushell will satisfie six score Birds And you must not forget Grauell which must be layd by their water-pots for to be their physicke and some also in some of the corners of the house for them to scratch in If they hang the wing and st●rre not out of their Basket you must take them and looke to the● billes whether they haue the Pip or no and if need be to take it from them and ●o their feet to s●e if their owne dung make them not that they cannot stirre or vnder their wings for vermine and in all other places to cure them as hath beene said of Hennes The bloud of the right wing of a Turtle dropt into the eye is excellen● good against the stripes and vlcers of the eye And their dung is good against spo●● in the eyes Stock-doues may be fatted and fed after the verie same manner but they are greater eaters and more hard to tame in Winter they loue a sup of wine and doe grow verie fat so also doe the Turtles Againe you must take heed not to forget your Grauell The browne or Woodcocke-coloured Partridge is more easily tamed than the spotted or any other sort likewise they haue not so delicate and fine a flesh being notwithstanding well fed they are little inferior vnto Feasants and you must handle them after the same manner and giue them all one meat but that Partridges loue ●ow and then to eat Corne and feed vpon greene Grasse The male Partridges are ●erie hot and the Henne doth lay a great sort of egges The Cocks also doe beat one ●nother for the Hennes vntill the one hath ouercome the other and he that ouer●ommeth ouer-croweth the other which is ouercome and maketh him follow and ●ome behind him after the manner of the Hennes The Henne Partridge is so fruitfull that
she conceiueth at the onely voice or ●light or breathing of the Cocke The meat that they most delight in is Millet ●nd Pannicke The egges of Partridges often eaten doe bring fruitfulnesse vnto barren women ●nd great store of milke vnto Nurces The gall of a Partridge doth cleare the sight ●nd mixt in equall quantitie with honey doth heale the bruises of the eyes the bloud ●f Partridges hath the like vertue Quailes being birds liuing altogether vpon the earth rather than in the aire doe ●ot make or build themselues anie Neasts anie more than all other birds which are ●eauie and cannot so well flie They be verie fierce and in that respect they are not ●ccustomed to haue either so much scope or light as other birds Likewise wee see ●hat they are wont to haue their Coupe couered with nets or skins least in flying vp ●n high and rising with some boisterousnesse they should beat themselues to death Some prouide them Meat-pots and Water-pots apart that is to euerie bird his owne ●rouision and diet They loue greene Corne and Wheat and Mustard seed is their ●hiefe and principall feeding They eat in those Countries whereinto they go being ●lsewhere than in this our Countrey great quantitie of Hellebore And this is the ●cause why Didimus saith that their flesh is laxatiue and that it doth procure the turning sicknesse and headach that it causeth the falling sicknesse conuulsion and distension of the Muscles and for that cause that they ought to be stuffed with Millet or boyled therein or else if anie should find themselues ill after them for to drinke the decoction of Millet or of Mittle tree berries and it will be good also to giue the same to Quailes to eat The Cockes are nothing lesse hot than the Partridge The Henne so soone as she hath layd her egges sitteth them and by and by after the hath hatched her young ones she draweth them into some other place to the end that such as goe about to take them may not find their place They be birds vsing to flocke together and they goe away at Spring time and returne in Winter and in the beginning of Autumne Thrushes are not naturally breeding in this Countrey as being an excessiue cold place and hardly at anie time doe they endure this aire and therefore it were but foolishnesse to goe about to fat them here This bird is addicted to hot Countries as also to such places as where there are great store of Oliue trees for they doe greatly delight in Oliues and grow fat at such season as they grow ripe It is a bird also giuen to make great hauocke and spoyle for the Thrushes doe poure downe themselues vpon the Oliue trees in great flights and hauing eaten their full they also carrie away at their departure one in their bill and one in their clawes after the manner of men of Warre They are found also and made fat in the mountaine and hillie Countries but it is in Winter time for they gather fat and fill themselues in cold weather if it be anie whit moderate The men of old and ancient time did much esteeme them and sold them in the time of the Romanes for tenne Sous a peece Thus also to this day doe the Italians and Spaniards and in this our owne Countrey those of Lyons Prouence and Auuergnac but they are not so great on this side the mountaines as they are beyond This bird is more sullen than anie of the afore named and dieth shortly after she is taken if she be carried out of her ordinarie ayre or if she be not put presently amongst other old tame ones They must haue their meat cast them vpon a verie cleane floore and farre from their Perches and some cast them dried figges stamped with the flower of meale and that so much as that there may something remaine more than they can eat And sometimes for change of diet they may haue cast them the fruit of Masticke or Mulberrie tree or the berries of Iuie and wild Oliue trees and yet notwithstanding their meat-pots must alwaies be full of Millet for this is their chiefe meat Againe you must see them prouided of cleare water as well as other bird● afore named CHAP. XXII Of the Doue-house THe profit that commeth of the keeping of a Doue-house is nothing lesse than that of the keeping of a Hen-house especially in respect of the selling of young ones and others which euerie yeare increase in●●merably for there are some Farmers which sell at euerie flight two hundred and three hundred paire vnto the Victuallers The care to be had abo●● them is not so great as that about other birds neither the cost so great in as much as they get their owne liuings the most part of the yeare and in that they lay sixe or seuen times a yeare two egges a peece yea and oftener and greater if you change the young House-doues Pigeons with those of the Cote after that they be once eight daies old to the end they may accompanie the Cocke Pigeons which goe by themselues without anie Matches but this must be done so cunningly as that the dams doe not perceiue it It is true that this bird is of great charges and w●steth much in respect of grounds and for this cause there is no ground Pigeon-house allowed but to such as be Lords in see simple neither yet verie oft anie Dofeu-houses in vpper roomes except it be to such as haue a competent quantitie of arable ground Let vs then prepare to our good liking and for the ease of the Huswife a ground Doue-house out of the noise of folkes the dashing of Trees one against another and the roaring of Waters and let it be set in a place somewhat raised or else let vs build it right in the middest of the base Court which is the place of our Countrey house before in this Booke appointed and that after the fashion of a stone Tower made for a Wind-mill or somewhat neerely resembling it but let it be distant flight or two from anie water to the end that the old Pigeon may warme that which shee bringeth for to giue to her young ones For it is certaine that as the Pies and Sparrowes the male and the female doe sit by courses and as while the one of them is seeking her food abroad the other is sitting vpon the egges so doe these for the safetie of their young ones vntill such time as they be out of their holes abroad And I would not haue you to vnderstand that the Doue-house should onely lie open vn●● the East quarter in this Countrey but that it take part also of the South because this bird doth greatly delight in the Sunne beating and casting his beames vpon their house and entring in at their windowes and loope-holes or higher lights especially in the Winter time and further that vpon the South there be prouided a sh●●ting and opening window
not to be come by but out of some farre Countrey For though the feeding be good and singular for Oxen as in Flanders and elsewhere yet it falleth out so that if they can haue Horse to doe their worke they doe like better thereof than of the Oxe Euen as in Prouence Languedoe and Auuergnac men doe vse the labour of their Mules and their young Colts rather than of Oxen and Kine because they effect not or dispatch their worke 〈◊〉 well or yet so speedily howsoeuer yet the labour of the Oxe is maruellous good auaileable and profitable in strong grounds for they draw the Ploughes deepe into the earth and turne ouer great furrowes as may be seene in Italie where there are great Oxen long and broad breasted in Gascoigne Bourbon Poitou Aniou and Mayne Againe men of ancient time vsed no other beast but Oxen because that Oxen are more sparing for the profit of the Farmer for they are contented to feed vpon pasture without anie other food or prouender besides the great profit and good prouision comming of them for being either shoulder-shot or bruised in ani● part or growne impotent and vnable to worke by reason of old age they are 〈◊〉 either for to sell or to kill and salt for his vse profits and commodities which the other kind of Cattell I meane the Horse doe not affoord The Oxe-house must be built of stone paued with grauell or sandie ground somewhat descending and sloping that so the moisture may not stand It must also stand vpon the South that so it may be the more drie and lesse subiect vnto cold and frostie winds it shall be nine foot wide and onely of such height as that the Oxe may stand vpright and the Oxe-keeper may haue space ynough to goe round about them to see and serue them with fodder as also to the end that seeing Oxen will be striking one another with their hornes the weaker may haue space to withdraw himselfe The Rackes must be so high as that the Oxen cannot easily reach them The charge of him that is to keepe the Oxen is to be gentle and louing vnto the Oxen dressing and giuing them their meat prouiding them good litter either of straw or some other thing to rub them euerie euening before they lye downe and in the morning to eurrie them and wipe them cleane gently washing their tayles oft with warme water To keepe their house cleane and not to let Hennes or Swine come therein for feathers will kill Oxen and the dung of a diseased Swine engendreth the Murraine or Plague To giue fresh straw vnto these Cattell and to cast to them in Summer the greene sprouts and tender ●hoots of the arbors of Vines or others and in Winter of Beane stalkes and grasse euening and morning Let him be skilfull to discerne when Plough Oxen haue labored much or little that he may accordingly giue them a proportionable quantitie of meat and also such as shall be necessarie he may not let them take paine or labour in verie hot or verie cold weather neither yet when it is verie moist he may not let them drinke quickly after their trauell but if they 〈◊〉 heated so soone as they be come home hee shall cast a little wine into their throa● and shall not tie them to their Manger vntill such time as their wearinesse be ouerpast When there commeth together anie companie of Festiuall daies and rest 〈◊〉 shall grease their hornes and vnder the pasterne together with the hoofe or else ●e shall put vnder an Onion rosted verie soft betwixt two coales tying it thereto with a cloth Let him oftentimes make cleane and refresh their pasternes and not suffer them to cleaue or rend and to that end let him euerie yeare cause to be repaired the pauement of his Oxe-house which will serue also to keepe away beasts and 〈◊〉 which are wont to annoy Oxen. Let him remoue them one farre ynough from another least they should strike one another When they labour not let him water then twice a day in Summer and once in Winter and that in cleare cleane and coole water For as hath beene said heretofore the Oxe seeketh after the water that is clear and most bright as the Horse after that which is troubled Let him carefully looke vpon their comming from field whether anie of them haue got anie thorne in his foot if they be sweatie if the Collar or the Yoke haue caused them anie hurt abou● their head or if they be chafed about the neck if they haue beene much prickt with the Goad or with the Gad●●ie or Horne● and let him accordingly apply something for the healing of them The gelded Oxe is better meat better marchandise and better for labour than th● Bull whose flesh is more hard and tough like a Hide and more troublesome to driue wherefore of a hundred Calues that the Oxe-keeper may haue he shall not ●eepe aboue two to bull the Kine the rest he shall geld all of them about when they ●re two yeares old for after this time he cannot doe it commodiously It would be ●one in Autumne and in the later end of the Moone and the ashes of Vine bran●hes mixt with Lytharge must be applied to the wound and three daies after pitch ●elted and mixt with the said ashes you must not let him drinke the day wherein ●e is gelded and he must for the same day also eat but a little meat The manner to geld him is to take with two streight rules of wood as it were with quitches or pin●ers the strings of his stones then afterward to open the purse and cut out his stones ●n such sort as that he leaue the vpper end thereof whereto the said strings are fastned for by this meanes the calfe is not so much subject to effusion of bloud neither yet will it be altogether spoyled of courage not hauing all his pride taken away but some little left behind and reserued which may still expresse his first and naturall forme Hauing gelded him you must feed him well that he may be fit for labour and feed him according to the seasons and times cheering and cherishing him by sometimes giuing him a little salt sometime robbing his head with your whole hand str●aking his backe and rubbing the rest with louing and gentle speeches notwithstanding so long as he is in the house let his hornes be tied and he close made fast to the cratch Couple him with another of the same greatnesse grosenesse age and strength tie them the one by the other lead them into the fields tied together to the end they may one of them loue another let them oftentimes see the Oxen that draw the plow or which till the ground or doe any other manner of worke and to the end they may loose their naturall wildnesse lead them to heare the noise of mills of men of forges and other things which make great rumbling neere vnto the time when
good Oyle and afterward take the poulder of Tartar and of vvild Gourds mingle them vvith red Wine and the vvhites of Egges and make him to drinke them vvith a horne And if this doe not stay his pissing of bloud within foure and twentie houres he will die If he stale not but with paine let him bloud of the blad●●er veine and cause him to take a drinke made of Honie Oyle and white wine all boiled together for three Mornings one after another afterward let him rest for eight daies It he haue a stone in his yard first cast the Oxe downe vpon the ground after let him take hold vpon his 〈◊〉 with pincers somewhat higher than the stone lieth the● let him make incision in the side of the O●e his pis●e to draw out the stone and then lastly consolidate and heale vp the wound with Turpentine washed foure times in the water of Horse-taile If he haue the stone in his bladder take two ounces of Sea Fennell stamped two drams of Cloues and a dram and a halfe of Pepper poune them altogether and make him drinke them in red Wine warme If after you haue continued the 〈◊〉 some certaine daies the stone come not forth then in the end you must cut the bladder and so draw it out If his pis●e be hardened annoint it with the oyntment made of the stamped 〈◊〉 of Hollihocks and fresh Butter twice a day For his shoulder out of joynt you must first set it in againe and afterward bind and roll it vp againe with splenters verie close and fast For the strangles or glandules vvhich happen vnder the Oxe his throat and spring from the braine ouer-cooled plucke away their glandules and after couer his head vvith some couering and chafe and annoint vvith Butter his throat oftentimes If his pallate be swolne open the swelling quickly vvith an incision knife or hot yron that so the corrupted bloud may run forth after giue him for his meat som● Grasse or soft Hay If he haue the Ranula vnder the tongue much swolne then open it vvith a hot yron or a verie sharpe incision knife afterward rubbe it vvith Salt and Oyle so lo●● as till all the corrupt matter be run out then in the end giue him some tender hear●●● or grasse to eat When the tongue is clouen or chopt vnder neath annoint those clefts vvith a● oyntment made of Aloes Roche-Allome and Honie of Roses all being mixt together then vvash them in Wine vvherein Sage hath boyled or some such other d●ying herbe If he haue lost his appetite cause him to swallow raw Egges well beat together with Honie and mingle Salt among his meat or giue him in drinke some horehou●d fiuely pouldred with Wine and Oyle or stampe the leaues of Rue Leekes S●●llage and Sage and giue him them to drinke with Wine For the eye that is troubled and darke blow within it of the poulder of Cu●●lebone Sugar candie and Cinnamon verie finely pouldred For the swolne Eye applie thereto a Cataplasme made of the the flower of Wheat mixt vvith Honie or the vvater of Honie after the manner of pappe for children For a vvhite vpon the eye applie thereto a cataplasme made of Sal gemma and Masticke finely pouldred and mixt vvith Honie continue and vse this oftentimes For the Leeke of the Eye or tumour called Porrum growing vpon the Eye-lid foment the place vvith the Gall of any beast vvhatsoeuer it be or vvhich is better snip away the tumour with a paire of Cysers or make it fall away with ● threed tied verie strait afterward annoint the place vvith Salt Vinegar and Alo●● boyled together For the Weeping Eye you may blow into it Tutia and Vitrioll made into fine poulder For the Cataract which is nothing else but an aboundance of vvaterishness● ingendred eyther by ouermuch cold or by too long stay and respite within the Eye of the Oxe in that place where the watrie humour is placed vpon which the glassie humour swimmeth as the Chrystalline againe vpon it For the cure thereof take ground Iuie and stampe it long in a Morter of vvood of the juice 〈◊〉 out of it make a medicine for the eye insteed of this herbe if you cannot recouer it take the berries of Iuie or the leaues and draw the juice of them in manner aforesaid Continue and vse the one medicine or the other for many daies both ●●●ning and euening the Cataract will consume and wast away It is certaine that who so insteed of Water shall vse Wine shall seeme to deale more fitly and better to 〈◊〉 purpose Epiphora a disease of the eye called a drie inflammation of choler is when the beast ●eeth not but by halfes whether it be of the one eye or of both bloud taken away from vnder the eye doth correct and amend the sight And further you must continually drop honey into it vntill it be perfectly cured For bleered eyes which come with continuall falling downe of excrements out of the braine take Myrrhe fine Frankincense Saffron of ech two ounces mix them all togither dissolue them in cestern water make therof a Collirie to drop into the eies For the agues of Oxen you shall know it by their being exceeding restlesse and trembling all ouer their bodie by their great heat in the midst of their forehead and towards the roots of their hornes and in their eares their mouth is verie hot and sweat aboundantly and withall eat almost nothing at all the hanging o●t and drawing in of his tongue verie drie heauie in his head his eyes distilling and halfe sh●● his muzzle filled and all to be dri●eled with flegmatike water and his taking of his breath long and yet notwithstanding hee doth not without great paine and much distance of time complaine himselfe or turne often The first day that you shall perceiue him thus sicke let him fast all the day long the next day let him bloud in the morning whiles he is fasting and that vnder the taile in small quantitie Fiue daies after you shall feed him with the decoction of Clot-burre with honey and brine at the least you shall offer him this before all other meat either greene or moist as shall be the crops of Lentils and other young sprours and buds which you shall thinke meet and conuenient for the beast wash his mouth thrice a day with a sponge dipt in vineger and after that you shall make him drinke verie cold water 〈◊〉 like manner three times and so you shall let him goe into some pasture ground vntill his Ague haue cleane left him The Cough of an Oxe must likewise be as carefully looked vnto as that of the Horse for it must not be suffered to grow old and endure long vpon him seeing 〈◊〉 is not curable but at the beginning you shall make him take fasting halfe a quarter of a peck of
Barly meale wherein you shall put a whole egge the shell excepted and with a quarter of a pint of cured wine you shall make him drinke it with a hor●● or otherwise Or else take of Dogges-grasse and stampe it after mixe and steepe it in warme water with Beane meale cold Gruell and the meale of Lentils all this being well mixed you shall giue it to the beast early in the morning For an old Cough it is sufficient to take two handfuls of Hysope old or new and make a decoction in common water after when you haue strained it you shall mix therwith of the flower of Starch two parts and cause the beast to take them thus The distilled water of Hysope may be put amongst or else the decoction of Mints and Hysope together The iuice of Leekes is good for the same being pressed out well and strongly and giuen with oyle Oliue for there hath not beene knowne so old and long growne a Cough which the roots of Leekes washed made cleane and giuen in decoction with the flower of Wheat hath not put downe and rebated the strength of Of the same effect is the flower of the euerlasting Tare commonly giuen and vsed or offred with ho●ied water at such time as the Oxe driueleth most at his mouth For all manner of pains in what parts of the bodie soeuer they be causing the Oxe that he can neither goe nor doe anie other thing well make somentations and apply cataplasmes with the decoction of Camomill Melilot and Linseed For the ach of the head bray Garlick in wine and make him let it downe through his nosthrils after bath all his head with the decoction of the leaues of Sage Marierome Lauander Rue Bay leaues and Walnut-tree leaues in wine Scabs are healed with Duckes grease mingled with oyle Oliue or else take the gall of an Oxe and powder it with Sulphur viuum adding thereto Myrrhe Oyle and Vineger and a little plume Allome well brayed and small powned Exulcerated places caused either without manifest occasion or else by some accident are verie much holpen with the powder of Galls well brayed in a Mortar So are they likewise by the iuice of Horehound wherein hath beene steept the soot of a Smithes Forge In the diseases of the flanks wherewith Oxen are oftentimes tormented you must make a Cataplasme of three handfuls of the seed of Coleworts with a quarter of a peck of Starch well powned together and mingled with cold water applying it afterward vnto the pained places But the most soueraigne that may be found is to take of the leaues of Cypresse without the boughes three handfuls and to doe as is abouesaid adding thereto strong vineger to knead and dissolue the same in but if this will not then take three ounces of Perrosin or Colophoni which is more hard and dissolue and make them liquid at the heat of the fire and whiles it is yet good and hot mixe therewith the flower of Barly and make it all boyle together and so you shall applie this cataplasme verie hot vpon the flankes and so vp to the reines It is to be knowne that the Oxe hath paines in his reines when he seemeth to draw his hinder parts after him and cannot lift his legges behind for his best ease he staggereth and soltreth behind he breaketh not vp his taile but suffereth it to draw all along after him his stale hath an ill sent and all his hinder loynes shew heauie mooue not but constrayned and that in mincing manner If there be any inflammation about them he pisseth red as bloud If this continue and that he cast forth much such there is then no more remedie but and if it be but a little coloured with bloud there is some hope of recouerie For this disease you shall cause him be let bloud vpon the taile veines behind or else of the veine called the Mother-veine which is found alongst the flanke to draw neere vnto the reines For his drinke make him to take the juice of Leeks vvith vvarme vvater or else his owne vrine For the inflammation of the muscles as well outward as inward of the reines and flankes vvhich commeth of some fall that the beast hath taken in some hard and stonie place and vvhich happeneth not without the companie of a contusion appoint that the Oxe which hath fallen so soone as he commeth into his house doe not remoue from one place bath the hurt part vvith cold vvater after that vse and applie vnto it comfortable liniments and seare-clothes which may not be too hot The markes of this disease are the outward parts ouer against the reines are hard the cods hung short being gathered into the bodie and that in such sort as that there is not much of them left out to be seene he stirreth not his hinder legs vvith any ease and vvhen he is laid he riseth not but vvith verie great paine Of verie great cold gotten by hauing trauelled in snowie and frosen places or else after some thaw the fault also may be committed in not hauing his pasternes so well bathed vvith vrine and couered ouer with dung as they should at euening after his labour for vpon these causes the heele groweth exuleerated and maketh shew as though it would fall off and loose his place there beginneth a bearing out vvhich afterward turneth to an vlcer and troubleth the gate of the Oxe the place must be verie deepely scarified and a sleight fire applied afterward to the places searified and againe vpon the places so scorched the sweet oyntment otherwise called oyntment of Roses vvith a defensatiue of vinegar and vvater and so bound vp and rolled The core once fallen out the place must be vvashed vvith vrine and vinegar made hot after this there must be an emplaister or cataplasme of Melilot made either of the fore appointed or of old Swines-grease vvrought and plied betwixt your two hands If the cods be swolne vpon any occasion whatsoeuer you shall annoint them euening and morning vvith sweet seame or else bath them vvith strong vinegar wherein shall be tempered sine fullers earth and the dung of Oxen. Some hold it for a naturall remedie to haue the dung of a dogg to cure the swellings of an Oxes genitories if so that they be often rubbed therewithall The Oxe is inchanted as vvell as the horse either by hauing eaten or by hauing passed vnder the crosse of a charmed straw or ouer a marked logge the signes are he becommeth sad and not cherefull and quicke as he vvas wont at his vvorke yea he consumeth and pineth away if there be not prouided for him a verie good remedie cause him to take downe through his nosthrils Bitumen judaicum Brimstone Bay-berries or Iumper-berries all mingled vvith vvarme vvater So soone as you know that the Oxe is sicke of any disease vvhatsoeuer it be cause him to take this purgation the root of the Sea-onion
or Harts-thorne and of common Salt all being boyled in vvater and taken in the same vvater vvarme and giue him nothing to drinke or eat vntill it haue done purging And to the end that you may keepe him from being sicke all the yeare at the beginning of the Spring Summer Autumne and Winter cause him to take downe a drinke made of the leaues of Capers Mercurie and Cypres pouned and mixed in water and let rest in the vessel one whole night and so continuing this for three mornings If he haue beene bitten of any Adder Scorpion or Shrew or Mad-dogge it 〈◊〉 ordinarie to annoint the wound with Oyle of Scorpions or with Sope tempered and softened in Vinegar also some vse to vvash them with the decoction of B●●●●burre And against the stinging of Hornets it is accustomed to rubbe the place with Ceruse tempered in Water and some doe sprinkle the place of the Oxe his fee●ding with the d●coction of Bay-berries thereby to cause the Oxe flies to auoid and keepe away or else they rub the Oxen themselues with the said decoction and if he be alreadie stung some doe moisten the place with the Oxe his owne driuell The small beast abiding in the grasse called of the Latines Buprestis and resembling in so●●e sort the beast which the French men call Fouillemerde if it be eaten of Oxen Kine or Horse as they feed in the meadowes it so swelleth them as that they burst and die as we haue obserued in many in the yere past 1572. Now if the Nea●heard doe perceiue that any of his Oxen or Kine haue eaten any of these beasts he must make them presently to drinke some Cows milke or the decoction of drie figs or Dates in Wine and withall giue them verie strong Clysters For the scabbe some rubbe them with bruised Garlicke Sauorie Brimstone and Vinegar of Galls stamped in the juice of Carmint or Hore-hound and Iuie And as for vlcers they are rubbed with Mallows stamped in white Wine and as for 〈◊〉 and apostumes they must be killed with strong leauens onions lillies or squils and vinegar and afterward to digge them out and wash them with the beasts owne 〈◊〉 hot and also put into the hollow places tents of Tarre and finally lint dipt in Goata or Oxe sewet For the paine of the Eyes if they beswolne and puffed vp there must be made an Eye-salue of the floure of Wheat kneaded with Honie and Water If there be in them euer a spot or naile you must take Sal-armoniacke and make an oyntment thereof with Honie When the Oxe hath his eye continually trickling downe teares and berayeth all his cheekes with the humour dropping downe from it take of the pappe that is made with Wheat floure and make a cataplasme to be applyed vnto the eye The vvill Poppie stalke and root stampt with Honie serueth to make a medicine for this purpose In the paines of the flankes which oftentimes torment Oxen you must make a cataplasme of three handfulls of Colewort seed with a quarter of a pecke of Starch well stamped together and tempered with cold water and after applie it vnto the parts pained The best remedie that can be found for them is to take of the leaues of Cypres without the boughs three handfulls and to doe as before adding to them strong vinegar to worke and dissolue them in In the paines of the reines you must let him bloud in the veines vnder the tayle behind or else the veine called the Mother-veine which is found along the flankes drawing neere vnto the reines for his drinke giue him of the juice of Leekes with warme water or else with his owne vrine For the scabbe you must rubbe it with his owne stale and with old salt Butter or annoint it with Perrosin melted in white Wine Vnto Lice you must vse the decoction of the wild Oliue tree with Salt and you must take away the bladders which he hath vnder his tongue For the paine of the Lungs some make him drinke the juice of Leeks with sweet white Wine and some put into his eare the root of Hazle tree For the difficultie of breathing some doe pierce his eare or the great skinne of his throat with the root of Beare-foot or Lyons-paw or Hellebor If he haue his should pitcht and shrunke you must let him bloud vpon the foot behind and on the contrarie side and if both his shoulders should be shrunke then you must let him bloud on both his hinder legges If he haue his necke broken and the chine bagging and swolne you must let him bloud vpon one of his Eares and if it be in the middest of the necke then of both and lay vnto the disease an emplaister made with an Oxe marrow and sewet of a male Goat molten in equall portions in Oyle and Tarre or melted Pitch as also to rub the swelled part with a collop of Bacon without anie fat and which is of a Hogge and a little heated and this to be continued morning and euening the space of fiue or six daies If his feet swell you must apply vnto him a Cataplasme made of the leaues of the Elder tree stampt with seame made of Hogges grease If his hide cleaue to his bones you must bath him with wine either alone or mingled with honey If he halt by taking cold on his feet you must wash them with his owne stale old and warme If it come through aboundance of bloud falling vpon his pasterne and foot it must be dissolued by rubbing it hard and scarrifying it If yet it will not away and be notwithstanding but newly fallen downe you must cleaue the horne of the hoofe at the tip thereof euen to the quicke and so cause it come forth and wrap his pasterne in a Leather pouch in such sort as that the water may not hurt him till he be whole If he halt by reason of some sinew hauing taken a blow by some other beasts heele then you must bath his legges with oyle and salt If it come with anie swelling in the knee you must bath it with vineger made hot or with the decoction of Millet and Linseed In all such haps you must burne with a hot yron the part diseased and then put vpon it fresh butter washt in water and vineger and after in the end to make an oyntment with salt butter and the grease of a male Goat If it grow vpon anie splint or dash against anie stone or stocke you must bath the place with hot stale and lay vpon it old Hogges grease melted in Oyle and Tarre And there is nothing that will more keepe them from halting than to wash their feet with cold water so soone as they be vnyoaked and after to cha●e them with old Hogges grease If the horne cleaue or shiuer you must first foment it with vineger salt and oyle mingled together after put vpon it old Swines
he shall make them drinke pottage made of a pint of Wine stamped Garlicke and tenne whites of egges or else the iuice of red Coleworts mixed with white Wine In the meane time hee must take away from them their Oates and Barly altogether and to feed them with nothing but their owne and accustomed Fodder and Grasse meat to see and if they will recouer through the time of the yeare It will be good also to put within the sheath of their yard a Collirie of Honey boyled with Salt or else a Gnat or line Flie or quicke Fleas or a prettie little piece of Frankincense as also to lay vnto the Reines and Flankes Oyle mixed with Wine or else to annoynt his yard with Wormewood stamped and boyled with Vineger and moreouer to squirt a Syring full of coole water against his cods These Medicines are good when the Vrine hath scalded the priuie parts or when they haue great heat in their Vrine The cruell paine of the Head and rage of the Horse is cured by the often vse of Smallage and much Branne in which you shall haue chopped the leaues of Lettuce and Barly straw newly gathered let him bloud vpon the place where the braine lyeth or vpon the temples or vpon both places and let him stand in a verie darke Stabl● and such a one as standeth low You shall know if hee haue paine in his head by the distilling and dropping downe of water from it in that his eares-will be withered and hanging his necke and head heauie and hanging downe The ouer-cooled Horse is cured by giuing him to drinke Swines bloud all hot with Wine or Masticke and Rue boyled with Honey or a little common Oyle with Pepper This disease commeth vnto him when as sweating and being hot he is set in a cold place and thereupon it draweth vp his sinewes and hardeneth his hide you must set him in a verie hot place couering him verie warme with couerings downe to the ground and putting vnder his bellie seuen or eight great thicke stones red hot you shall quench them there by casting warme water vpon them by a little and little and oft that so by this meanes the heat may make him sweat The naile in the eye shall be lifted vp with a little small needle of Iuorie and then cut quite away with Sc●●ars or else make a powder of a greene Lizard and Arsenicke put it into the eye for to fret away the naile Against the suffusion there is a singular remedie an Eye-salue made of the iuice of ground Iuie stampt in a Woodden Mortar or else the iuice of the berries of Iu●e running along vpon the ground or the leaues of great Clarie beaten and stamped in a Mortar in Wine after that you haue let the Horse bloud vpon the veine of the eye that hath the suffusion and to continue this remedie manie daies euening and morning Or else blow into the eye through some Pipe or Quill the bone of Cuttle powned small or the seed of Rocket whole or else the seed of the hearbe called Tota bona and there let it alone till by his vertue it haue cleansed and taken away the spots or the powder of the yolke of an egge and salt burnt together and put into the eye or the powder of Sal-Armoniake Myrrhe Saffron and the shauings of the Cuttle bone The strucken eye is cured by applying vnto it a cataplasme made of bread 〈◊〉 steept in coole water or bread tosted and steept in white wine if this doe no good you must open the head veine The bleared eye is cured by an eye-salue made with frankineense myrrhe starch and fine honie as also by a frontlet made of frankincense mastick finely powdred ●●nd brayed vvith the vvhites of egges applied to the brows and suffered there to lye ●ntill the eyes cease to shed teares and after to raise the frontale vvith annointing the ●●dges thereof vvith Oyle and warme water beaten together The scarres of the eyes are healed with rubbing them vvith your owne fasting ●pittle and Salt or vvith the powder of the Cuttle-bone mingled vvith burnt Salt or the seed of vvild Parsnep pouned and pressed out of a linnen cloth vpon your eye scarres All paines of the eyes are cured by annointing them vvith the juice of Plantaine vvith Honie The Enceur doth bring present death vnto horses vvherefore you must so soone as euer you see the brest kernell to be swolne plucke it away immediatly without 〈◊〉 staying and if in thus pulling of it away any veine should burst you must tie it 〈◊〉 both ends with a silke threed looke how much the kernell shall grow greater so much greater an impostumation it would make and not so onely but therewithall ●●●ause death The horse hauing drunke much or watered verie quickly after his heat and trauaile and vpon it growing cold and not being vvalked doth beget the Auiues which doe but little differ from the disease called the Kings-euill because as well in beasts as in man the Kings-euill commeth of too much cooling of water the throat hauing beene heated vvhereupon the horse looseth his appetite to eat and his rest likewise and his eares become cold you must presently prouide to helpe him in taking away the Auiues after this manner Bend downe the eare betwixt his necke and his chyne make incision with a knife for the purpose along vpon the hard fleshinesse which one would say to be nothing but a verie whitesinew plucke away the white carnositie or fleshie substance lay to the place as well within as without a linnen cloth dipt in the white of an egge couer the horse by and by vvith a good couering and vvalke him so long as vntill that his eares become warme giuing him a drinke made with water salt and meale but first causing him to eat a little good Hay let him rest three daies in the stable and eat and drinke there or else make him hot fomentations and those of such things as are proper in that case to be applied vnto the part for to remoue the humour afterward applie a cataplasme made of Barley meale and three ounces of Rosin all boyled in due sort in good strong red wine and when the matter shall be gathered and readie for suppuration giue it a gash with a knife to let the suppurated and ripe matter out afterward put in the hollow place tents wet in water oyle and salt with bolsters layd vpon them and dipt in the same This disease craueth a speedie remedie for and if you stay till the Auiues be gotten vp higher it is past hope of curing The Squinanci● otherwise called the disease of the throat and swelling of the tongue requireth first of all that the horse should be let bloud vpon the veine vnder the tongue or of the palate of the mouth after that a fomentation for the whole mouth and for the tongue with warme water then after that
from the other the smell of which Elder is so odious 〈…〉 beasts that they haue no desire to come neere it either vnder or aboue the 〈◊〉 so long as it is greene and therefore when these first stickes shall be drie you 〈◊〉 renew them Othersome put Thornes that are verie sharpe and pricking or 〈…〉 of Chesnuts vnder the earth round about the plants of the Artichokes 〈…〉 one neere vnto another to the end that the Rats comming neere vnto the 〈◊〉 may presently be driuen backe againe Others cause Beanes to be boyled 〈…〉 poysoned water and doe put them in the holes of this wicked cattell for they 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sent thereof they run thither presently As concerning Moules we will speake of 〈◊〉 manner of killing them hereafter The root of Artichoke sodden in Wine and drunke is soueraigne against the dif●●cultie of making water for the stinking and strong smell of the arme-pits and of 〈◊〉 vrine also for the hot and scalding fretting of ones vrine whether it come of the 〈◊〉 or of some other cause and so also for the dropsie the pulpe boyled in flesh 〈◊〉 and eaten with Salt Pepper and Galanga made in powder helpeth the weak●sse of the generatiue parts The Italians eat them in the morning raw with bread 〈◊〉 salt whiles they be yet young and tender CHAP. XV. Of Sorrell and Burnet SOrrel and Burnet notwithstanding that they grow vntild in great aboundance yet they may be sowen in fine ground and well manured in the Spring time especially the Sorrell for as for Burnet it groweth likewise and as well in drie grounds nothing tilled or stirred both of them 〈◊〉 planted in gardens must from the beginning be well watered and he that de●reth to gather the seed must take them vp and plant them againe suffering them to ●row to their perfection and then to drie and wither They feare not cold or frost ●either yet aboundance of water but they looke especially the Sorrell that they 〈◊〉 become the fairer to be cut three or foure times a yeare All the sorts of Sorrell as well those of the field as those of the garden haue this ●ertue that being boyled with flesh how old and hard soeuer it be yet they make it ●nder and loose the bodie The leaues of Sorrell rosted in hot ashes haue a singular force to resolue or to cause 〈◊〉 Apostumate the swellings of the eyes or as some Surgeons vse if you take the 〈◊〉 of Sorrell and lap them vp close in a Burre-docke leafe then lay it in the hot 〈◊〉 and rost it as you would rost a Warde then open it and applie it as hot 〈◊〉 the patient is able to endure it to any impostumation or byle whatsoeuer about 〈◊〉 part of a mans bodie it will not onely in short space ripen and breake it but also ●raw and heale it verie sufficiently it is also being boyled in Posset-ale a verie ●●od cooler of the bloud and a great comferter against inflamations which come by ●●urning Feauers A Cataplasme made of the leaues of Sorrell with twice as much 〈◊〉 Swines-grease all beaten and mingled together and afterward put in the leafe of 〈◊〉 Colewort vnder the hot ashes is soueraigne against cold Apostumes The seed of ●orrel powdred and drunke with water or wine doth asswage the paine of the blou●ie flux Sorrell steept in vinegar and eaten in the morning fasting is a preseruatiue ●gainst the plague as also the Syrope or Iuleb made with the juice thereof The ●aues of Sorrell well stamped and applied vnto the wrest doth tame the fiercenesse 〈◊〉 the ague Burnet of the garden being an herbe that some vse to put in their salades whereof 〈◊〉 haue here spoken and which is also the same which the Latinists call Sanguisor●● taken in drinke is good to restraine the monethly termes of women and all other 〈◊〉 of the belly but especially such as are of bloud it is good also to dry vp wounds ●nd vl●ers if it be applied vnto them in forme of a Cataplasme Some doe much ●teeme it in the Plague time and some say that the often vse of Burnet especially 〈◊〉 juice thereof is a verie soueraigne preseruatiue against dangerous diseases be●●use it hath a propertie verie much strengthening the Liuer the Heart and the Spi●●●ts The leaues of Burnet put into the wine make it more pleasant more strong and ●omewhat Aromaticall and of the taste of Millions they are verie good to be put in sallades made with Oyle Salt and Vinegar according as we see them vsed 〈◊〉 day CHAP. XVI Of Harts-horne Trickmadame and Pearcestone AS for Harts-horne and Trickmadame they haue no need of any 〈…〉 or planting for both of them will come in any ground that 〈◊〉 would haue them whether it be husbanded or not True it is that if 〈◊〉 would haue Harts-horne flourish and faire liking you must cut it oft 〈◊〉 it along vpon some roller or cause it to go vpon foot by it selfe for it delighteth to 〈◊〉 so intreated and vtterly refusing to grow otherwise than against the ground 〈◊〉 madame doth nothing feare the cold and doth grow principally vpon the old 〈◊〉 of vines in a stonie and grauelly earth These are put in Summer-sallades 〈◊〉 neither of the●● haue either tast or smell fit for the same The Harts-horne is good● stay the flux of the bellie Trickmadame stamped with Lettuce and applied vnto the pulses doth delay 〈◊〉 heat of an ague The distilled water thereof being often times drunken doth 〈◊〉 roughly heale burning and tertian agues Pearcestone is sowen in a drie and sandie soile and craueth to be much 〈◊〉 euen from the beginning he that desireth the seed must let the hearbe grow to 〈◊〉 perfection and afterward to drie the seed as corne is dried It may be preserued in salt and vinegar after the manner of purcelane and then 〈◊〉 soueraigne for the difficultie of vrine for the jaundise and to breake the stone to pro●●uoke vvomens termes and to stirre vp ones appetite if it be vsed in the beginning 〈◊〉 meat For want of such as is pickled in vinegar you may make the decoction of 〈◊〉 leaues roots and seeds in Wine for to vse in the same disease CHAP. XVII Of Marigolds MArigolds haue not need of any great ordering for they grow in 〈◊〉 fields and in any ground that a man will neither doe they 〈◊〉 to 〈◊〉 sowen euerie yeare for being once sowen they afterward grow of the● selues and beare flowers in the Calends of euery moneth of the yere 〈◊〉 in Sommer as in Winter for which cause the Italians call them the flower of all 〈◊〉 moneths To be short the place where they haue once beene sowen can hardly 〈◊〉 of them If they be neuer to little husbanded and cut many times they will beare 〈◊〉 faire ●lowers and verie great but yet euer more in Autumne than in the Spring The juice of the
well fed 〈◊〉 for then for some yeares following they will grow without being sowne againe 〈◊〉 though the seed of the second yeare will be somewhat weake for to keepe 〈…〉 the f●ost you must couer them with Walnut-tree-leaues and that before 〈◊〉 or ●ogges doe fall in any manner of sort The inhabitants of Paris know well ynough how profitable Spinage is 〈…〉 make meat o● it Lent which vse to make diuers sorts of dishes thereof for their 〈◊〉 as sometimes they ●rie them with butter in pots of earth sometimes they 〈◊〉 them at a small fire with butter in pot of earth sometimes they make 〈◊〉 of them as also diuers other fashions especially they make a most excellent 〈◊〉 sallade thereof by taking the greene leaues thereof and boyling it in ●aire 〈…〉 i● be soft as pap then take it from the fire and straine it and vvith the backes of 〈◊〉 chopping-kniues chop it so small as possibly you can then put it into a verie 〈◊〉 sweet pipkin or skelle● with a good quantitie of sweet butter and currants verie 〈◊〉 vv●sht and so bo●le it ouer againe a good space then with vinegar and sugar 〈◊〉 i● according to the tast vvhich pleaseth you best and so serue it vp vpon 〈…〉 hard egges or otherwise as you please for it is of all sallads the best The vse of 〈◊〉 is good for them vvhich haue some impediment in breathing or speaking 〈◊〉 vvhich are much troubled vvith the cough especially if such a one in the morning 〈◊〉 the broth of Spinage boyled vvith fresh butter or oyle of sweet Almonds 〈◊〉 loosen the bellie their juice is good against the stinging of Scorpions and 〈◊〉 whether you drinke it or 〈◊〉 it to outwardly CHAP. XX. Of Borage and Buglosse BOrage and Buglosse being hearbes much differing in leaues and flowers are alike notwithstanding in their roots seeds and vertues seruing to put in the pottage whiles their leaues are tender and the flowers are vsed in Salades They are sowne in August or September for Winter vse and 〈◊〉 Ap●●ll for Summer they may be remoued at anie time And as for the seed it 〈◊〉 be gathered halfe ripe that so it may not leape out of his coat And of this 〈◊〉 and Buglosse you shall sow but a verie small quantitie for it is ●o apt and 〈◊〉 of growth the seed so soone ripe and so apt to shed that albeit your vigilance 〈◊〉 verie great yet you shall find it will in short space soone spread and ouer-runne 〈◊〉 ground neither where it is once sowne can it but with great difficultie euer 〈◊〉 be rooted out Buglosse but especially the flower doth minister pleasantnesse vnto men that vse 〈◊〉 times because it cheareth vp the heart purgeth the bloud and comforteth the 〈◊〉 spirits The broth wherein Buglosse shall haue beene boyled doth loose the 〈◊〉 The root that beareth three stalkes stamped with the seed and boyled in 〈◊〉 doth serue to be taken against tertian Agues The wine wherein the leaues of 〈◊〉 shall haue beene steept taketh away all sadnesse The iuice of Buglosse 〈◊〉 and Parsley mixt with Wine or oyle of sweet Almonds is a soueraigne 〈◊〉 to cause the after-birth of women to fall away The iuice of Borage and 〈◊〉 drunken is a preseruatiue against poyson if a man haue drunke it as also 〈◊〉 the biting of venimous beasts Buglosse hauing three leaues being stamped 〈◊〉 his seed and root and drunke doth helpe to put away the shakings of a 〈◊〉 Ague and that which hath foure against the shi●ering colds of quartaines 〈◊〉 water distilled is singular against the do●ages happening in Feauers as also 〈◊〉 the inflamation of the eyes CHAP. XXI Of Leekes both great and small LEekes as well those that are long headed as those that are round doe not require so rich and fat a ground as the hearbes going before and they may be sowne at all times if it were not for the gathering of the seed for which cause they must be sowne in December Ianuarie and 〈◊〉 and there it will be ripe after March and mid August and that if from the 〈◊〉 that they are sowne you goe and tread vpon the Beds and water them not but 〈◊〉 daies after They are wont to be remoued when they grow of seed and that either into 〈◊〉 euerie one being set foure ynches from another and then there is nothing 〈◊〉 from them but the ends and tops of the leaues or into a hole made with a sticke 〈◊〉 then the roots must be made cleane and cropped off as also manie of the leaues 〈◊〉 sand with the earth or you shall plant them to make them great if you 〈◊〉 a bricke vpon the head of them after you haue planted them This must be in ●prill May or all Iune to haue for Summer vse and in August September and ●ctober for the Winter vse in anie case you must weed water and dung them 〈◊〉 times especially the round headed ones Furthermore to make them verie ●●icke put the seed of a Cucumber and of Nauets in a Reed or in Boxe boared through and graft this reed into the head of the Leeke when you plant it the second time or else if you will haue great and grosse Leekes you must put so much of their seed as you can hold in three fingers in an old Linnen Cloth that is foule and put it into the earth couering it with dung and watering it by and by for all this little heape of Seed thus put together will make one great and thicke Leeke Ner● vsed euerie morning the leaues of Leekes with oyle to haue a good voice● although that Leekes be noysome to the stomacke as being verie windie except they be boyled in a second water If you eat Cummin before you eat Leekes your breath will not smell afterward of Leekes The leaues of Leekes boiled and applyed vnto the swol●e Hemorrhoids doth verie much good both against the swelling and paine of them The leaues of Leekes stamped with Honey and applyed informe of a Cataplasme vnto the stingings of Spiders or vpon the biting of venimou● Beasts are soueraigne remedies for the same The iuice of Leekes mixt with vineger and rubbed vpon the browes stayeth bleeding at the nose The seed of Leekes stamped and drunke with white or sweet Wine doth heale the difficultie of making Water The iuice of Leekes drunke with white Wine helpeth to bring Women a bed which trauell in child-birth The seed of Leekes stampt with Myrrhe and the iuice of Plantaine it good to stay the spitting of bloud and bleeding at the nose The seed of Leekes cast in a vessell of Wine doth keepe the Wine from sowring and if it should be sowre alreadie it reneweth it and returneth it to his former goodnesse The iuice of Leekes or Leekes themselues boyled in oyle take away the paine and wormes in the eares Leekes roasted vnder embers and eaten is singular good against the poyson of
A Linimen● made of Garlicke Salt and Vineger killeth Nits and Lice The decoction of Garlicke not bruised giuen in Clysters or applyed vnto th● bellie in manner of a fomentation assuageth the paine of the Colicke and expelleth wind Against an old Cough comming of a cold cause it is verie good to rub the soles of the feet the backe bone and wrists of the hands with an Oyntment o● Liniment made of three Garlicke heads well powned and beaten in Swin● Seame Against the paine of the Teeth comming of a cold cause there is nothing be●ter than to hold in the mouth Vineger or the decoction of Garlicke or to apply vnto the aking tooth three cloues of Garlicke stamped in Vineger For the killing of Wormes in children it is good to giue them to eat Garlicke with fresh Butter or else to make a Cataplasme thereof to lay vpon the Stomacke They which can scarce or hardly make their Water or are subiect vnto the Stone receiue great comfort by eating of Garlicke To keepe Birds from h●●ting of young Fruit you must hang at the boughes of those Trees some quantitie of Garlicke CHAP. XXV Of Scalio●s SCalions are like vnto Garlicke in tast and smell but in stalke and fashion the leaues resemble Onions saue onely that out of their head there grow manie hulles or huskes which bring forth manie round little leaues They thriue and grow better when they be set than when they be sowne for when they be sowne there is no great hope of their comming to any fairenesse before the second yeare They may be planted from the first day of Nouember vnto the moneth of Februarie to haue the fruit thereof the next Spring and they are planted as Garlicke But in the meane time you must gather 〈◊〉 before the March Violets doe flower for if one vse them not before that they be flowred they will fall away and become but sillie ones They are knowne to be ripe if their leaues begin to drie away below For to cause them to haue 〈◊〉 and thicke heads you must put brickes round about their rootes as hath beene said of Leekes As concerning the vse of Scalions there is no great helpe or profit to be hoped for or expected except of such as are giuen more to their pleasure than to their health for the Scalion serueth for no other thing but to prouoke and stirre folke 〈◊〉 the act of carnall copulation and to haue a good appetite They haue the same ve●●wes that Garlicke saue onely that they be somewhat troublesome to the 〈◊〉 because of their more sharpe and subtle tast CHAP. XXVI Of Parsley PArsley craueth no great labour but loueth a stonie and sandie ground for which cause it is called Parsley againe it craueth not anie store of manure wherefore it will be good to sow it vnder Arbors It desireth aboue all things to be well watred and if it so fall out as that it be sowne or planted neere vnto anie Fountaine or Riuer it groweth verie faire and in great quantitie And if anie be desirous that it should haue large leaues hee must put into a faire Linnen Cloth so much seed as he can hold in his three fingers and so cast it amongst the stones in the ground or else he must put in a Goats trottle a quantitie of Parsley seed and so set or sow it And he that will haue it curled must bruise the seed with a pestle of Willow to the end that the huske may breake and fall off and afterward wrap it in a Linnen Cloth and so put it in the ground Otherwise without thus much to doe it may be made to curle howsoeuer it be sowne if you draw a Rowler vpon it so soone as it beginneth to grow It is a good time to sow it from mid May vntill the Sunne be risen to his highest point in the Heauens for it somewhat craueth the heat The seed thereof that is but a yeare old is nothing worth for looke how much elder the seed is by so much it is the better and endureth a long time vnsowne in such sort as that it will not be needfull to sow or plant it of fiue yeares although when it is sowne it groweth not vnder the space of threescore daies Notwithstanding to cause it to grow and put more speedily out of the earth it behoueth that the seed be steeped in vineger some certaine time and after sowne in a well toyled ground and filled or mixed with one halfe of the ashes of Beane stalkes and after it is sowne it must be oft watered and sleightly with a little Aqua vitae and by and by after the watering to lay aloft it a piece of Cloth that the heat thereof may not be spent and breath away and by this meanes it will grow vp within a few houres and then you must take off the Cloth couering it and water it oft and by this meanes it will haue both a high stalke and great leaues A Cataplasme made of the leaues of Parsley with the crummes of White bread doth heale a Tettar or Ringworme doth resolue the swellings of the Breasts and maketh Women that are brought in bed to loose their Milke The iuice of Parsley drawne ●ut with vineger and mixt with a little salt helpeth Women that are in trauell to be deliuered The often vse of Parsley taketh away the stinking of the breath especially from such as haue drunke much Wine or eaten Garlicke And therefore such as vse to keepe companie much and haue an ill breath must not goe vnprouided of good store of fresh Parsley to chew or hold in their mouthes The decoction of the roots or leaues of Parsley helpeth downe Womens termes 〈◊〉 Vrine casteth out Grauell contained in the Vrinarie vessels taketh away the paine of the Colicke and of the Reines applyed in manner of a fomentation vpon the pained parts It serueth also for the obstructions of the Liuer but better for such as are flegmaticke than for the cholericke or those that are of sanguine complexion The leaues of Parsley cast vpon the water of Fish-ponds doe recreate and reioyce the sicke and diseased Fish CHAP. XXVII Of Rocket and Tarragon ROcket being an hearbe verie vsuall in Salads and good to temper the coldnesse of Lettuces may be sowne as well in Winter as in Summe● for it feareth not cold nor other iniurie of the ayre neither doth it ●●quire anie great labour it loueth notwithstanding to be 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 in a grauellie ground Rocket must not be eaten by it selfe by reason of the great heat that it maketh in them that eat it and for that cause it hath commonly for his companion in Salads the leaues of Lettuce seeing that the one of these doth notably temper the other It is good notwithstanding to prouoke vrine applyed in forme of a Cataplasme vpon the share bone And some say that three leaues
through a Limbecke in Maries-bath doth maruailously heale the Agues caused of the obstructions of any noble part and which is more it killeth the wormes and wipeth away all the spots of the face it they be often washed therewith It is exceeding good against the inflammation of the eyes It is verie soueraigne against any infection or mortall sicknesse if it be drunke with Water and Honie it abateth the swelling of the bodie and easeth the colicke whether it be in the stomach or in the bowels it also cureth the biting or stinging of venimous beasts and it causeth a woman to be deliuered of her dead birth The root is a present remedie against the Plague not onely in men but also in all ●orts of cattell it is a speciall preseruatiue against all poyson and a meanes to withstand all putrefaction in regard whereof the Switzers mingle it amongst their owne meat and the sodder or prouender of their cattell that so they may continue in good health Arsmart so called because the leaues applied to the fundament for to wipe it doe cause great paine and of the Latines Hydropiper doth require a marshie ground full of water or at the least verie moist or often watered and it groweth rather being planted of a root then sowne of seed It is verie singular in ointments for old vlcers and fistulaes as also in clysters for bloudie fluxes the leaues thereof washed in cold water and applied vnto wounds and vlcers either of man or beast doe take away by and by the paine thereof and doth throughly heale them as the swellings or gaules vnder the saddles of horses that 〈◊〉 hurt if they be renewed euerie day and the horse needs not to be forborne for all that Or else take the hearbe new steepe it in water and wash it then rub therewith the swolne or gauled place then put the hearbe in some place where it may quickly rot or else burie it in some fat ground and co●er it with a great stone so soone as the ●hearbe is rotted so soone will the fore be healed If you spread it all greene in the bed it killeth fleas you shall keep powdred proke from wormes if you wrap it in the leaues of this hearbe th● juice thereof dropped into wormie eares doth kill the wormes that is in them Eye-bright delighteth in a leane ground and shadowed place and yet where moi●ture is not altogether wanting such as are the meadows and little mountaines is groweth of roots not of seed It is singular good against the dimnesse waterishnesse ●ataract rheume and weaknesse of the eyes being either applied and layd thereto or ●aken inwardly by the mouth there is a powder made of ●he dried leaues which be●ng oft taken by the mouth with the yolke of an egge or alone or mixt with aloes ●nd swallowed downe with Fennell-water or with water of veruai●e doth comfort ●nd strengthen mightily the weake and diseased eyes some vse much to take Win● wherein eye-bright hath beene infused and steept a long time for the same purpose or the powder vsed with wine but the powder alone or the decoction without wine 〈◊〉 a remedie far more certaine than the wine of eye-bright as I my selfe haue proued ●y experience in as much as the Wine by his vapours doth fill the braine and pro●ureth rheumes and therefore if you would auoid these inconuenienees you must ●elay your Wine vvith the vvater of Fennell or mixe Sugar therewith 〈◊〉 de ●illa-no●a a●●irmeth that by the continuall vse of this he●healed an old man which ●●ad alreadie wholly lost his sight by the often vse of the leaues of this hearbe as well 〈◊〉 as drie as well in his drinke as in his meat Veruaine as well the male as the female must be planted of roots in a moist soile ●nd that it may grow the fairer it requireth to be remoued and that into a place of ●he like nature and qualitie Besides the helpes that this hearbe affordeth vnto vveake eyes it is also good a●ainst the paine of the head teeth and vlcers of the mouth and principally in the ●●fections of the skinne as the itch the tetter the flying-fire the ring-worme the ●prosie the Gangrena and Shba●lus if it b● vsed in manner of a bath 〈◊〉 in manner of a fo●entation made with F●mitorie in Water and Vinegar Elicampane must not be sowne of seed because the seed hath no power to 〈◊〉 but it must rather be planted of the young sprouts pulled gently from the 〈…〉 that in a verie well tilled ground and which hath beene manured not verie 〈…〉 yet ouershadowed It is good to plant it in the beginning of Februarie leauing 〈◊〉 foot distance betwixt plant and plant for it hath great leaues and the roots do 〈◊〉 verie much as doe the young sprouts or roots of Reed The Wine wherein the root of Elicampane hath steept for the space of four● 〈◊〉 twentie houres is singular good against the colicke as we haue alread●e said in 〈◊〉 first booke the juice of the root is singular good to continue and keepe the 〈◊〉 and beautifull hew of women The decoction of the root is likewise good 〈◊〉 ●●joyce the heart and to prouoke vrine and the termes of women as also to 〈…〉 to spit out but then it must be vsed inwardly and whiles it is new and greene 〈◊〉 when it is old and drie it is fit to be vsed outwardly and not to be taken into 〈◊〉 bodie Dittander which hath the tast of pepper and mustard for which cause it is 〈◊〉 of the Latines Piperitis must be planted before the first of March cut as the 〈◊〉 but not so oft for feare it should die with cold It will continue two 〈◊〉 prouided that it be carefully weeded and dunged it continueth in many 〈◊〉 whole ten years and it cannot easily be destroyed The root of Dittander stamped with Hogs-g●ease or with the root of 〈◊〉 and applied in forme of a catapla●me vnto the Sciatica doth cure it throughly It taketh away the great spots freckles and scales or pilling of the face by 〈…〉 the thin skin wherein these are fixed and as for the rawnesse left after the away of this skin it is healed easily with ointment of Roses Great Celandine groweth in euerie ground so that there be any shadow 〈…〉 and it would be sowne in Februarie and may so continue ten yeares so that ●waies after it hath cast his seed the stalkes thereof be cut downe within 〈…〉 of the root The juice of the flowers mixt with honie or womans milke or some othe● 〈◊〉 asswage the sharpenesse of it doth take away the spots in the eyes 〈…〉 scartes and vicers healeth the ring-wormes and itch of the head and the 〈…〉 the haire of little children The Alchymistes doe make great account of it 〈◊〉 their extractions of mettalls Some say that the old Swallows doe recouer the 〈◊〉 of their young ones being pore-blind by applying vnto their
eyes the leaues 〈…〉 some say likewise that the lea●e of this hearbe carried in the shoo●● 〈◊〉 vnto the bare sole of the feet doth heale the jaundi●e being applied vnto th● 〈◊〉 it taketh away the aboundance of Milke stamped together with the root in th● 〈◊〉 of Cammomile and being warmed or fried and applied vnto the nauell or 〈◊〉 it asswageth the frettings of the bellie and paines of the mother the whole 〈◊〉 being d●●ed and made in powder doth heale wounds and vlcers the juice 〈◊〉 dropt into a rotten or hollow tooth mortifieth it and causeth it to fall out 〈…〉 also the 〈◊〉 called Porrum to fall away The small Celandine otherwise called Pilewort or the hearbe for the Kings 〈◊〉 because it heal●●h the same doth grow well in warrie moist and shadowie 〈…〉 groweth likewise in drie places but not so well though there it get a more 〈…〉 as wel in his leaues as in his root vertue to heale the Kings 〈…〉 to exulc●ration as also other virulent vlcers hemorrhoides cankers hard 〈…〉 whether 〈◊〉 or porracious and other cold tumors by a ●oollifying and 〈…〉 quali●●e that they haue Asarum bacchar craueth a leane ground and drie and where there is 〈…〉 to be set than sowne The root of Asarum being dried 〈…〉 good to be taken the weight of a French Crowne in white 〈…〉 and by this it c●reth the quartane and ●ertian ague and this 〈…〉 daies the quantitie of a good goblet full of the decoction of this root made in wine with honey putting thereto some Cinnamon Mace and other such Spices by which they purge verie much as well vpward as downeward Likewise when they feele the fit comming they chafe the backe and soles of the feet with oyle wherein they haue caused to be infused this root in the hot Sunne-shine and after lying downe in bed the shiuerings and shakings of the Ague is taken away and a great sweat procured The decoction of Asarum is good against the Sciatica the infusion thereof in wine doth cure the Dropsie and Iaundise the iuice dropt into the corner of the eyes doth heale the Web in the eye and dazeling of the eyes Manie good women doe apply Asarun vnto the wrists of the hands to driue away the heat of an Ague You must obserue as it were diuers parts in this hearbe For the root is a prouoker of Vomit and the leaues thereof are Aromaticall and agree verie well with the stomacke Valerian groweth verie well in a moist and well manured ground and would be often watered that so it may put forth a tall stalke The good wiues are wont to apply to the wrists in burning Agues the leaues of Valerian but without reason for the Valerian doth rather encrease the Ague by his heat than diminish it It will be better to vse it in the paines of the sides and in the prouoking of vrine and womens termes If you wet lin in the iuice of Valerian and put it into anie wound made either with Arrow or Sword or otherwise and the drosse or gros●e part thereof layd vpon it you shall cause the yron to come forth if anie such be stayed behind and so also heale the wound Cats doe delight much to eat this hearbe The decoction is good against Venime and the Plague It is good also against shortnesse of breath if there be mixed therewith Licorice and Damaske Raisins Angelica would be sowne in a well tilled ground oftentimes wed and reasonably watered The root is soueraigne against the Plague and all sorts of Poyson Whosoeuer shall keepe a little piece of it in his mouth or which shall drinke onely in a Winter morning a little draught of Wine and Rosewater wherein it hath beene steept hee ●●●not be infected of anie euill ayre of all that day Englishmen vse the l●aues and roots of this hearbe in sawce with their meats because it correcteth grosse humours and a stinking breath and surthereth digestion verie much The leaues of Angelica stamped with other leaues of Rue and Honey and applyed in forme of a Ca●●plasme doe heale the bitings of mad Dogges and the stinging of Serpents Being layd vpon the head of one that hath an Ague it draweth vnto it all the burning heat of the Ague and it is good against Sorcerie and Inchan●ment The distilled water of Angelica it singular good against the fainting of the Heart the bi●ings of mad Beasts the stingings of venimous creatures especially against the Plauge if with this ●●stilled water there be drunke halfe a dramme of the root in powder and a dramm● of Treacle and that afterward the patient giue himselfe to sweating for by this means manie haue beene saued The root put into a hollow tooth assuageth the paine being ●●●wed it maketh the breath sweet and concea●eth and small of Garlick or anie other 〈◊〉 meat which causeth an ill breath Blessed thistle would be ordered and dressed with such manner of ●illage as Angelica It is true that it would be sowne in the encrease of the Moone and not abou● three fingers depth in the earth It lo●eth the compaine of Wheat 〈…〉 It will not be prickly it before that you sow it you put the Seed in the roo● 〈…〉 the leaues broken off or it you breake the sharpe point●d end of the Seed against a stone after the manner spoken of before in the Chapter of 〈◊〉 Blessed thistle hath no lesse vertue against the Plague or anie other sort of Poyson ●han hath Angelica whether you vse it inward or outward This vertue is it which driueth away Moules and other kinds of such Cattell being hu●●full vnto Garde●● from the place where it groweth Such 〈…〉 troubled with a Quartan● Ague or other Agues which haue their fits comming with a Cold are cured if 〈◊〉 take in the morning three ounces of Blessed thistles water or of the decoction 〈…〉 weight of a French crowne of the seed in powder The same remedie is good 〈◊〉 Pleurisies and for children that haue the Falling sicknesse If it be boyled in 〈◊〉 the decoction is good to assuage the paines of the reines and colicke to kill 〈◊〉 and to prouoke sweat Blessed thistle as well drie as greene taken inwardly 〈…〉 ourwardly doth heale maligne vlcers Physitions likewise commaund it 〈…〉 ●mingled in decoctions and drinkes for the Pocks Mother-wort groweth in vntilled and rough places and standeth not in 〈◊〉 of anie tilling notwithstanding it is singular against the beating and fainting of the heart for which reason it is called of some Cardiaca It prouoketh also Womens termes it taketh away obstructions and prouoketh vrine it raiseth 〈◊〉 deliuering the Lungs thereof by making it easie to be spet foorth It 〈…〉 Wormes dryed and made in powder and the quantitie of a spoonefull 〈◊〉 in Wine doth mightily helpe forward the deliuerie of Women labouring of Child-birth Golden-rod would be sowne in a fat ground which is not open vnto the he●●
of the Sunne but hath the shadowes of some Trees the top of a Mountaine 〈…〉 other such like thing It hath a verie astringent power as also it is verie 〈◊〉 by which after the manner of Comfrey it healeth wounds vlcers and fistulaes 〈◊〉 well inward as outward it stayeth rheumes and bloudie fluxes healeth the 〈…〉 the mouth and the inflamation thereof Which is more it is verie singular to prouoke vrine and to breake the stone Saxifrage as well the great as the small delighteth in a drie ground chal●●● clayie sandie stonie and altogether barren And it is sowne of small seedes which are found hanging to the rootes thereof It prouoketh vrine and so driueth foorth the grauell of the reines and bladder If you boyle the root and 〈◊〉 thereof in Wine it procureth Women also their termes and bringeth ou● 〈◊〉 after-birth The great and small Burre otherwise called Bardana and of the Greeke● 〈…〉 hath not need of anie great tilling for it will grow either of seed or 〈◊〉 in a leane ground that is drie and vntilled as wee may well see in ditches 〈◊〉 it groweth without anie labour at all and in the high wayes and by-p●●h ● 〈◊〉 the fields The rootes seedes and iuice of the great and small Burre are verie 〈…〉 prouoke vrine to breake the stone of the reines and bladder and to stay the 〈◊〉 flux The iuice is drunke with white Wine or alone and the seed in like manner which is sometimes for the more pleasantnesse sake confected or couered with S●gar The leaues stampt with a little salt and applyed vnto the bitings or 〈…〉 Adders mad Dogges or other venimous Beasts are verie soueraigne The rootes 〈◊〉 seedes of small Burre stampt and layd on cold swellings and rebellious 〈…〉 verie profitable and good Star-thistle so called because it hath little heads at the tops of his stakes 〈…〉 Thistles haue set round about with sharpe prickes after the manner of 〈…〉 groweth in vnhusbanded grounds as well of his root as of his seed Some doe 〈◊〉 esteeme of the seed made into powder and drunke in wine for to prouoke 〈◊〉 and to auoid grauell and herein it is of so great vertue as that the much vse of it 〈◊〉 cause one to pisse bloud sometimes The decoction of the root with honey after 〈◊〉 manner of a honied water doth the like but more gently and without 〈…〉 partie for to pisse bloud Maries Thistle otherwise called Spina alba or white and siluer Thistle or 〈◊〉 Artichoke or Asse-Thistle because that Asses delight much to eat it doth 〈◊〉 fat and well tilled ground and other ordering like to that of Beets and it 〈…〉 that it letteth not to grow in vntilled and vnhusbanded grounds The seed and 〈◊〉 haue as it were the like power to take away obstructions to prouoke vrine and it breake the stone that Star-thistle hath The Italians vse the roots thereof in Salads after the manner of Artichokes and good wines to gather the milke of it for to eat Some make a Ptisane with the root of this Thistle made in powder the seed of Fennell and a little long Pepper to giue to Nurses to vse which haue small store of milke The distilled water of the leaues is good against paine in the sides being drunke with halfe a dramme of the seed of the same hearbe Siluer-grasse so called because the leaues doe resemble siluer on the backe-side doth delight in a moist and grassie ground howsoeuer vnhusbanded it be It hath one excellent propertie aboue all other hearbes for to breake the stone to heale vlcers and malignant wounds within the bodie to stay the bloudie flux and to dissolu● cluttered bloud being taken in drinke Some say that if you put it in halfe a basin full of cold water and couer that basin with another basin or vessell or other couering that there will gather great store of vapours in the hollow of the thing couering it and will turne into the forme of distilled water and that this water thus gathered is verie good to take away the spots freckles staines and dye of the Su●ne out of the face Patience doth willingly grow in coole and moist grounds and we see it ordinarily to grow neere vnto Riuers and little Brookes The root by reason of the great bitternesse and desiccatiue power hath singular commendation against the Plague for being dried and powdred and afterward drunke with wine it driueth away all venime from the heart by the aboundance of sweat which it procureth Some fo● this purpose take away the rinde and core of this root stamping it in vineger and after making a drinke of the vineger the iuice of Rue and Treacle for to take in pestilent Agues The powder of this root drunke with wine is excellent for the suffocations of the Matrix and the wringing throwes of the bellie This powder also killeth the Wormes healeth maligne Vlcers the falling of the haire called Tinea and the Kibes the Farcie in Horses whether it be taken inwardly or applyed outwardly either in iuice or in the decoction thereof Scabious groweth in the same ground that Patience doth that is to say in woods vntilled places and especially in sandie places It is verie proper and appropriate vnto the Cough and diseases of the Lungs fo● the same purpose also the iuice is sometime extracted sometime the hearbe it selfe made into powder and sometime the decoction of it is made to endure for a long time Likewise there is sometime conserue made of the flowers His leaues or rootes applyed to itchie places and the places bare of haire or mixed with oyles and ointments doe great good vnto the same as also vnto plaguie carbuncles for they being rubbed with the iuice of Scabious will be found to vanish away within three houres The iuice of Scabious drunke in the quantitie of foure ounces with a dramme of Treacle not yet one day old is a singular remedie against the Plague so that afterward the partie sweat in his bed and withall continue the drinke for manie times The same remedie serueth for the bitings of venimous beasts if besides the drinke you apply outwardly vnto the soare the leaues of the same hearbe bruised A Liniment made of the iuice of Scabious the powder of Borace and a little Camphire is singular against tettars itch freckles and other infections or desilements of the skin Aboue all other things the decoction of Scabious being drunke the space of fortie daies doth heale the tettar throughly yea though it came of the Pocks as I my selfe haue oftentimes pro●ed by experience Scolopendrium or rough Spleene-wort called also Harts-tongue would be planted in a stonie and grauellie ground which is moistened with some running Brooke and for want of this it must be often watered The rootes thereof must neuer be pulled vp but onely the leaues cut for it cannot be sowne seeing it bringeth forth no seed The decoction thereof made
the seed of Gromell to the quantitie of two drammes Ceterach halfe a dramme and Amber two scruples all being powdred with the iuice of Plantaine or Purcelane or Lettuce In like manner two drammes of the seed of Gromell with womens milke doth much comfort and strengthen a woman in her child-birth Hyporicum loueth the like entreatie that Gromell loueth and yet withall it doth refuse a fat and well tilled soyle The iuice of the leaues and flowers healeth cuts and wounds The seed drunke with white wine taketh away the tertian Ague The flowers and crops are principally in vse to make Balmes of for the curing of wounds such like as this is Take of the fruit of the Elme tree the flowers of Hypericum and the buds of Roses put them all together in a Glasse-bottle and set them in the Sunne so long as vntill you see them all so altered and changed as that they may seem to be rotted then straine them all through a linnen cloth and reserue it for your vse See further in the third Booke of the oyle of Hypericum Ground-pine loueth a drie sandie and stonie soyle and groweth better planted than sowne The whole hearbe boyled in honied water doth heale the laundise prouoke the termes in Women prouoke Vrine and is soueraigne against the Sciatica either taken in drinke or applyed vpon the hippe in forme of a Cataplasme for the whole hearbe with the flowers and roots made into powder and taken at the mouth fortie daies with halfe an ounce of Turpentine doth throughly heale the Sciatica The conserue made of the flowers is good for such as are subiect vnto the Palsie The whole hearbe boyled in vineger and taken at the mouth doth minister insinit helpe to a trauailing women when the child is dead in her bodie Agrimonie would be planted in a stonie and drie place and further craueth no great helpe of hand or husbandrie The decoction openeth the obstructions of the Liuer and strengtheneth it and it being boyled and drunke doth helpe against the bitings of venimous beasts The iuice of Agrimonie mixt with vineger and salt in a Liniment doth cure the Itch. Agrimonie is good against the cough of Sheepe and for broken-winded Horses The liquor of the decoction of Agrimonie with fumitorie made like Whay doth prouoke Vrine expell the Termes heale the Itch and Scab of the whole bodie whereupon it is singular in the beginning of the Leprosie The seed mixt with the iuice of Agrimonie and taken in manner of pilles doth kill the Wormes The Stagge being shot and wounded is healed so soone as he hath eaten of this hearbe If you gather good store of this hearbe and steepe it in faire Spring water in a large earthen pot till the water putrifie and then euerie morning wash the face therein it will take away all manner of Morphew Sunne-burning Farn-freckles and other spots or dunnesse of the skinne whatsoeuer making the same also cleare and smooth and filling vp euerie manner of wrinekle Some likewise vse in this case to vse with Agrimonie the like quantitie of Goose-grasse and sure it is not amisse for they haue both one manner of force and working White Mullein groweth euerie where but best in a stonie and sandie ground The white Mullein both leaues flowers rootes and seed is singular good against all manner of venime as also to containe in his place the falling Fundament Good wiues in like manner for this consideration doe make a fume of the seed and flowers of Mullein the flowers of Camomill and Masticke all made into 〈◊〉 The iuice pressed from the root before it put forth his stalke and drunke foure●●●● in the quantitie of an ounce with Hippocras or Malmesey in the beginning of a 〈◊〉 of a quartane Feauer doth driue it quite away The iuice pressed out of the flowe●● or leaues applyed to Warts doth take them cleane away Likewise Gentlewom●n find no better remedie than the iuice of white Mullein flowers to take away the wrinckles and other blemishes in their face The leaues bruised betwixt two stone● and applyed in forme of a Cataplasme vpon the foot of a Horse that hath beene cloyed doth affoord him a singular and present reliefe The water distilled of the flowers quencheth the firinesse of the face if there be a little Camphire added there● unto It doth in like manner with the tumor called Erisipelas the itch burnings 〈◊〉 other diseases of the skin The flowers of white Mullein with the yolke of an egg● crummes of bread and the leaues of Leeks applyed vnto the Hemorrhoids doe 〈◊〉 them altogether There groweth about the leaues of white Mullein a whitish 〈◊〉 which is good to make match or tinder to take fire Mercurie craueth one and the same ground with the Vine there to be sowne and grow in great aboundance without anie great care of husbanding and yet th●●● must care and regard be had not to sow it among Vines because the wine which 〈◊〉 Vines should yeeld amongst whom Mercurie hath beene sowne would retaine the tast of Mercurie and become verie vnpleasant to drinke The iuice of Mercurie being drunke helpeth conception prouoketh wome●● termes and deliuereth them of their after-birth The decoction of Mercurie do●● loose the bellie being drunke or taken in a Clyster Some make a honey of the 〈◊〉 of Mercurie with a halfe quantitie of honey and this is good for laxatiue Clyste●● The iuice of Mercurie taketh away Warts the seed of Mercurie in a decoction with Wormewood doth cure the Iaundise and the iuice thereof with vineger doth rip● vp the scab and scurffe Yarrow doth grow in a ground that is indifferent fat and moist The decoctio● thereof doth stay all manner of fluxes and especially the red termes of women 〈◊〉 also that which commeth of a wound especially the leaues dried made in powder and drunke with the iuice or water of Comfrey or Plantaine The leafe put into the nose stayeth the bleeding and put into a Clyster it stayeth the bloudie flux Milfoile bearing a white flower being powned with his flower and drunke with 〈◊〉 distilled from the same and Goats milke doth cure the burning of the vrine in 〈◊〉 and the whites in women Danewort groweth better plunted than sowne and craueth a fat ground well ●●nured and somewhat moist The iuice pressed from the roots of Danewort being drunke for a certaine time preserueth a man from the Gout The seed of Danewort being well washed and drunke in powder to the quantitie of a dramme hauing beene first steeped a whole night in Wine doth helpe the Dropsie because it procureth stooles downward and vomit vpward to the voiding of great store of water Being drunke also with the d●coction of ground Pine it as●uageth the paine of the Gout and Pocks There is also made a soueraigne Oyntment of the same for the appeasing of the said paines Ta●● the iuice of the roots of Danewort the flowers of Rye and
fresh butter of ech alike mixe all and let them worke together in an earthen pot set in the Ouen with this Oyntment rub the aki●●g parts or else infuse the flowers in oyle with mans grease set in the heat of the Sunne Some also make an Oyle of the seedes pressing it 〈◊〉 of them Orpin groweth for the most part in moist and shadowie places The Countr●y people doe by their good wills plant it vpon Saint Iohns night in dishes or vpo● trenchers of wood in some cleft of a wall the foot being thrust into clay and the●● they set it where it abideth a long time greene growing and flourishing if it be now and then watered The liquor of the decoction of the leaues is a soueraigne remedie to heale wounds and stay fluxes of bloud for inward wounds and vlcers and for burstings and ruptures Goats-beard groweth verie well in a moist ground and shadowed and craueth to be oft watered The Latines call it Vlmaria because the leaues are like to the leaues of Elme The root and leaues made in powder doe cure the flux of the bellie and bleeding The distilled water being drunke is singular good for wounds both inward and outward Ground-Iuie groweth likewise in a moist and shadowed place The decoction of the leaues hath great power to take away the obstructions of the liuer and spleene to prouoke vrine and the termes in women There is made of it an excellent balme for new cuts and wounds also for the Collicke ministred in Clysters or taken in drinke putting the small chopt leaues into a Glasse-violl well stopt with gummie wax and strong parchment and setting the said violl in Horse dung for the space of fortie daies The iuice thereof with the rust of Brasse is a fit medicine for fistulaes and hollow vlcers the decoction thereof with Betonie Pimpernell Mouse-eare Bistort Horse-taile Tormentill red Coleworts and Dittander is singular for wounds in the principall and inward parts if it be oft vsed This ground-Iuie is otherwise called of some Ale-hoofe and it hath a most singular vertue for the curing of all manner of ●ore eyes either in man or beast if you take it and beat it well in a mortar and drop into it three or foure drops either of white Rose-water or the water of Eye-bright and then straine it into a cleane Glasse-bottle and keepe it close then wash the sore eye therewith when occasion is ministred and the oftener in the day that you doe wash the sore eye therein the better it is and the sooner recouered Hounds-tongue groweth easily in peblie and vntilled ground The leaues powned and applyed vnto burnings the wild-fire old vlcers wounds and inflammations aches fluxes and hemorrhoids doe verie much good There is made a singular Oyntment for wounds of the iuice thereof mixed with honey of Roses and Turpentine There are also made thereof pilles to stay vehement and violent rhewmes Adders-tongue doth require aboue all other things a fat place well tilled and moist it groweth also in medowes but it is destroyed by and by and spoyled The leaues stamped and applyed vnto burnings inflammations burstings and principally vnto wounds and maligne vlcers are of a maruellous effect There is a balme made of the leaues thereof for the same effects whereunto some put Turpentine Red wine wherein this whole hearbe hath beene steeped is good to stay rhewmes falling downe vpon the eyes Goose-grasse doth grow in anie kind of ground and hath no need of great tillage Some doe distill the water of it which is singular good against the Pleurifie and other paines of the side being taken in the beginning of the disease as also against the bitings and stingings of venimous beasts and to coole the heat of Cankers Corne-rose craueth a fat ground and well tilled such as are Corne-grounds wherein we may see them grow faire and verie well blowne The flowers of Corne-rose as well the great as the small either in decoctions or the distilled water or in sy●rups or in powder the weight of halfe a French crowne are singular meanes to prouoke spitting in Pleurisies and to cure the same Bastard Dittanie in like manner requireth a fat ground and well tilled and therewith a diligent care to water it and to keepe it from the coldnesse of the ayre The seed root leaues and flowers as well in powder as in a decoction doe prouoke vrine breake the stone prouoke the monethly termes cast out the dead conception and after-birth being eaten with Rubarbe they kill and cast out the wormes The iuice applyed outwardly doth draw forth thornes and thistles and stumpe● of splints Knot-grasse is called in Latine Polygonum it groweth by the edges of Vineyards and fields that are badly tilled especially when it is a moist yeare Amongst the principall vertues thereof the distilled water is soueraigne against the difficultie of vri●● as I haue oft proued by experience Salomons-seale must be set in a drie ground and raised high The root whiles it is new being powned or the iuice of the same wipeth out freckles spots blew markes of blowes falls or other such like thing whether they be in the face or in anie other part of the bodie Some distill the water which as verie good for the paintings of women Great Dragons must be planted in a shadowed place and good earth The small Dragons loue a moist ground and waterish as neere vnto the Fountaine in the Garden Their rootes boyled or rosted and mixt with honey and afterward taken as 〈◊〉 Eclegme doe profit greatly for shortnesse of breath difficult and hard coughs and painefull getting vp of the spittle in such sort as that they cut ripen and wast the grosse humors and slimie Being powdred and mixt with honey they heale maligne and corroding vlcers especially the Polypus Their leaues spread vpon Cheese doe keepe them from spoyling and ●otting If the iuice thereof be mixed with honey and put into the eyes they take away all manner of pa●●e and aking thereof Also who so batheth his hands in the iuice thereof may handle anie venime without danger Also it is a great cooler of lust and maruellously abateth all lecherous cogitations As concerning the Nettle it hath no need either of sowing or setting for it commeth vp in Gardens more than one would haue it yet notwithstanding it is not without his great vertues as well the Greeke Nettle as the Hungarian or dead Nettle The leaues and especially the rootes of dead Nettle stamped and put vpon the nosthrils doe stay the bleeding of the nose and their iuice rubbed vpon the brow doth as much The leaues of the stinging Nettle stampt with a little Myrrhe and applyed vnto the nauell in forme of a Cataplasme haue great power to prouoke the termes of women Their iuice drunke a certaine time prouoketh vrine and breaketh the stone A Liniment prepared with the leaues of Nettle Salt and Oyle doth
principally in that which is moist Neither the one nor yet the other doth beare any seed as Writers record notwithstanding it hath beene tried that the male beareth seed and that it cleaueth to the hindermost part of the leaues but yet so little that hardly can a man see it and which cannot be acknowledged or gathered but in the end of Iulie which is the time when it is ripe for to gather it you must cut the leafe neere vnto the root and then hang them vp in your house spreading a linnen cloth vnder them or else some faire cleane white paper I know well that the common sort doe verily thinke and auerre that this seed cannot be gathered but on the night of the wakes of S. Iohn in Sommer and that more is not without great ceremonies and mumbling and muttering of many words betweene the teeth which haue power to driue away Deuills which haue the custodie of the same seed but all this is nothing but fables The decoction thereof is good to prouoke womens termes to cast out the dead child to kill wormes and some doe vse it to heale the frettings or hurts that may be in the fundament fallen downe but especially the female Hearbe Two-pence so called because the leaues resemble small peeces of siluer requireth no great peece of husbandrie about it saue onely that it would haue a moist ground The whole hearbe either in decoction or powder but especially the water thereof distilled in a limbecke is verie singular good for the falling downe of the fundament Fleawort being called of the Latines Psyllium craueth a verie fat well manured and batled ground for else there will no good come of it The seed prepared in forme of a Mucilage and applied in vinegar doth kill the wild fire and te●●er applied vnto the head or brows it taketh away the paine thereof it taketh away also the rednesse of the eyes being applyed thereunto The distilled water is of infinite goodnesse seruing in the paynes of the eyes two or three drops thereof onely being dropt into them This hearbe requireth a verie fat place well manured and tilled likewise we see it grow aboundantly in vineyards and grounds for Wheat and Barlie The leaues are verie singular good for the opening of the liuer and cleansing away of adust humours and this also is the cause why physitians prescribe it with whay in scuruie scabbie and itchie cases and where the leprosie is The juice thereof is good to cleere bleared eyes Ground-swell groweth in euerie ground and without any great care we see if grow likewise neere vnto walls and vpon the townes walls it is greene all the yere and flourisheth as it were in euerie moneth and this is the cause why the Italians call it euerie moneths flower Some thinke that Ground-swell distilled is verie singular good for the Whites in women but beleeue it not before you find it true by proofe for I haue obserued by often vse that this hearbe whether in decoction or otherwise prouoketh the termes that are stayed Birt-wort as well the long as the round must be planted in a fat and fertile soyle such as that where Wheat is sowne and Oliue trees planted Their roots amongst other al●●ost in●inite vertues cause womens courses purge the lungs cause spitting cure the cough and prouoke vrine which more is if either of them be taken in drinke especially the round one made in powder with Pepper and Myrrhe it driueth forth the after-birth the dead conception and all other superfluities gathered in the Matrix it doth the like being applied in forme of a Mother suppositorie It purgeth all obstructions of the liuer and easeth all manner of colicke or other griefes which proceed from windie causes it is soueraigne against all manner of poyson or any other infection it cleanseth the bloud and by rubbing the gummes therewith it preserueth the teeth from rotting Centaurie or the gall of the earth aswel the great as the smal desireth a fat ground that is fruitfull and well tilled and yet in such a ground they thriue not well without the great care and industrie of the Gardener Their root in decoction juice or powder moueth womens termes and prouoketh vrine expelleth the dead child purgeth ●legmaticke humors which cause the sciatica openeth the obstructions of the liuer and spleene killeth the wormes profiteth and helpeth palsies convulsions and diseases of the sinews it cleareth the sight and taketh away all mistinesse from them especially the juice dropt into the eyes doth heale their fresh and new wounds and siccatriceth old and maligne vlcers Woodbind craueth no great tilling or husbanding for it groweth euerie where and in what place soeuer it listeth It is true that it desireth greatly to be neere broome hedges and also the borders of fields The fruit of Woodbind drunke with Wine the space of fortie daies taketh away the obstructions of a hard and indurat spleene it purgeth out vrine with such force as that the tenth day the vrine becommeth all bloudie it helpeth women in their child-birth the leaues in decoction or distilled doe heale wounds and filthie vlcers wipe away the spots and scarres of the bodie and of the face Pimpernel hath red and blew flowers and craueth a moist and shadowed ground so likewise we see it grow in the shadows of hedges and bushes Pimpernell with the red flowers stampe and applied vnto the eyes or the juice thereof dropt within them taketh away the inflammations dimnes●e and vlcers of the eyes and heal●th the inflammations of the secret parts Pimpernell with the blew flower boyled with salt and water is a verie good and proper medicine to cure the itch or scurfe and the lice or wormes in the hands if you wash them o●t therewith Buckwheat is a verie common hearbe and yet but little knowne by his name it is verie ordinarie in corne and tilled grounds about haruest time The Peasants of Champaigne doe commonly call it Veluote because in my judgement the leaues are hairie which name I mind not to change but rather to keepe for the easier knowing of the hearbe They make vse of it by applying it if at any time in shearing they happen to cut themselues with their sickles For to know it better therefore than onely by the name it putteth forth from the root fiue sixe seuen or eight small branches for the most part layed along vpon the earth of the length of a hand and sometime of a foot bearing leaues somewhat like vnto the little bindweed but indeed they be lesse and more round verie hairie and a little fattie The flower is small and of diuers colours drawing verie neere vnto a pale yellow but in greatnesse it commeth ne●re vnto the flower of eye● bright but in shape and fashion vnto the nettle slower The water of the leaues and branches distilled whiles it is in force in a Limbeck in Maries-bath is singular
and maruailous good to stay the spreading of the canker in the breasts and the creeping Polypus howsoeuer some hold them as incur●ble The same applyed to the brows taketh away the hear and asswageth the paine of the head In an injection it mundifieth first and afterward conglutinateth wounds and drieth vp fistulaes verie readily and maligne vlcers which are easily prouoked and become worse by other remedies being dropt into weeping eyes it healeth them and stayeth such rheumes as fall downe vpon them and cause inflammation and dazeling of the same being applied with a linnen cloth vpon itchings wheales scabbes poukes the wild fire S. Anthonies fire or shingles it cureth and healeth them in a verie small time as also all other burning inflammations Being drunke for certaine dayes it stayeth all rheumes vomitings and fluxes of the bellie it drieth vp the water in those that haue the dropsie appeaseth the paines of the colicke it cureth terti●n and quartan agues and I am verily of mind that it may be giuen to good and profitable purpose to other agues the temperature thereof considered and his infinite other secret qualities which euerie day are more and more manifested being drunke and applied a certaine time it re●uniteth the rupture and falling downe of the bowels the falling downe of the mother and the excessiue courses of women by suppressing them and whatsoeuer other ●luxes of bloud Taken in a gargarisme with a little Wine it driueth the vlcers of the mouth and being vsed for a gargarisme it selfe alone it is singular against the distillations causing the swelling of the v●ula or the inflammation of the throat called the squinancie likewise taken in the same mann●r it is good against the blacknesse and roughnesse of the tongue caused of a continuall ague The juice and decoction of the leaues worke the verie same effects if they be taken whiles as yet the herbe is not too much dried by the heat of the Sunne Of this Buckwheat there is made a compound water to make the face faire and beautifull and vndoubtedly to take away the freckles and it is thus made Take of the leaues thereof bruised in a mortar two good handfulls of the roots of Salomons seale made cleane with a linnen cloth and after brayed a quarter of a pound mingle all together and infuse them for the space of twelue houres in wine this being done put all into a limbecke adding thereto the juice of three Lymons or Oranges then distill and draw out the water in Maries-bath which you shall keepe verie carefully for your vse but it is requisite that before this you haue made prouision of the liquor of the Brionie root which must be gathered about the end of Aprill or in the beginning of May whiles the dews continue and that in this manner The head of 〈◊〉 root must be cut a little vncouering the top and not pulling it vp by the root 〈◊〉 it is thus pared at the top you must cut a hollow hole in it some two or three fing●●● deepe and then couer it againe with the cap you haue cut off from the head and some few of the leaues thereof and so to leaue it to the next morning before Sun●● rise not taking off this cap or couering then there will be found in this hole a liquor which must be gathered with a spoone and put vp and kept in a violl glasse after which the couering must be put on againe as it was the day before and this to be continued euerie day vntill mid-May and longer if so be that one be disposed Now when you would vse it take an ounce of this liquor and mixe it in a violl with two ounces of the abouenamed compounded water and at night when you goe to bed you must wet a linnen cloth in this mixture and spread it all ouer the face then letting it rest a good part of the night but in the morning you must auoid the b●●ning heat of the Sunne and this course shall be continued for certaine nights together But although the hearbe alone applied his juice water and decoction hauing great and excellent qualities as it is easie to judge by that which hath beene said before yet forasmuch as that one simple or one drugge or many joyned together and to good purpose and effect in that thing for which it was compounded and made is of much more efficacie by the helpe and assistance afforded vnto it I am willing for that cause to impart vnto you a maruailous oyntment made of the same Backe-wheat and the description of it it in manner as followeth Take of the juice of the leaues of Buck-wheat layed in steepe in a little white wine the space of foure and twentie houres one pound of the juice of Vernaine which is as yet but a little 〈◊〉 vp into branches in like manner steeped as before and that by it selfe a quarter of a pound of the juice of the leaues of yellow Henbane commonly called small Nicotian or the Queenes-herbe halfe a pound Oyle-Oliue a pound mix all these together in a skellet and boyle them vpon a small ●ire stirring it often with a spatule of wood vntill the juices be almost consumed then adde thereto of new waxe brok●n into peeces and of Perrosine of each a quarter of a pound and melt the whole by little and little still stirring it with a spatule and keeping a low fire without increasing of it which being done take the skellet from the fire and put into it at th●● present instant of Venice Turpentine a quarter of a pound by little threeds 〈…〉 were and stirring it continually with a spatule then when the oyntment shall begin to wax cold put in Masticke and Frankincense mixt together in powder of each the weight two French Crownes and cease not to stirre it as before vntill it 〈◊〉 all well incorporated The marke to know when the oyntment is well made and fully finished is if a drop thereof being put vpon your naile doe congeale and 〈◊〉 together or that it cleaueth vnto the spatu●e stirring it Then put you vp this composition or mixture in Gallipots for to serue you as shall be declared hereafter This oyntment aboue all other remedies is singular good in the curing of the 〈◊〉 as well of the dugs as of other parts in the curing also of the Polypus N●li 〈◊〉 tangere the Kings-euill bruised or squat ●●●les wounds old and new fistulaes and maligne vlcers be they neuer so rebellious It quencheth all sharpe inflammation● the shingles and burnings either of water or fire It rooteth out all sorts ofringwormes scabs itches pastules the wild scab and the wild fire It is good for 〈◊〉 of sinews i● there be added to it pouned wormes It cureth the moth or falling of the haire if before you annoint the head the haire be pulled and taken away 〈…〉 away the swelling and paines of the Hemorrhoides Being applied with 〈◊〉 grea●e and a little oyle of
soeuer doth heale and cure the same presently it 〈◊〉 the like in old vlcers though they pierce vnto the bone i● you continue the vse of it so long as there shall be any need for it maketh the flesh to grow againe and consumeth the filhinesse of the vlcers which I my selfe haue proued in two 〈◊〉 of the nose caused of the French disease out of which the juice of this hearbe 〈◊〉 great store of vvormes to come Greene vvounds prouided that they be n●t 〈◊〉 deepe are healed in a day by putting into them of this juice and applying of th● drosse vpon them and if it happen that they should be deepe then it is but the ●●●ther washing of them with wine and then to put this juice into them and the 〈◊〉 thereof aboue and vpon them with a linnen cloth dipt into the juice also for 〈◊〉 more briefe and speed●●hr curing of them it were good that they were washed 〈◊〉 and without with the same juice Nicotiana dried hath the like operation in the diseases and accidents aboue sp●ken of the way to drie them is this You must take the fairest leaues and those also that are indifferent faire and put them vpon a file and afterward drie 〈…〉 the shadow hanging vnder some chamber doore not in the Sunne Wind or 〈◊〉 and so you may keepe them whole to vse them afterward thus dried or else in po●der And that I may particularly touch the diseases which the dried leaues are good for If you take of the best Tabacco or Nicotiana I doe not meane such as gro●eth and is frequent with vs but that which is naturally good as hauing all his right both of Sunne and soyle and is brought from the Indians of which there are 〈◊〉 kinds according to the natures of the countries and the plantation of the herbe 〈◊〉 in leafe some in roll and some in ball and twine it verie hard as you can togeth●● then with a knife shred it verie small and spreading it vpon a cleane sheet of 〈◊〉 drie it ouer a gentle fire made of charcoale or other fuell that hath no stinke 〈◊〉 smoake then when it is cold you shall put it into a Tabacco pipe that is 〈◊〉 cleane or new 〈◊〉 the figure whereof is needles●e to relate because the world 〈◊〉 so much inchaunted therewith that not any thing whatsoeuer is halfe so 〈…〉 this is now a daies and hauing slopt it hard into the pipe you shall with a 〈◊〉 candle or other sweet flame set it on fire and then sucking and drawing the 〈◊〉 into your mouth you shall force the fume forth at your nosthrills which fume 〈◊〉 the head be well couered make that you shall auoid at the mouth such 〈◊〉 s●●mie and flegmaticke water as that your bodie thereby will become leane a● if 〈◊〉 had fasted long by which one may conjecture that the dropsie not confirmed 〈◊〉 be holpen by taking the same fume the same fume taken at the mouth is 〈◊〉 good for them that haue a short breath old cough or rheumes in which 〈◊〉 maketh them to auoyd infinite quantitie of thicke and slimie flegme The 〈◊〉 of the Mother otherwise called the Suffocation of the Mother is healed by 〈◊〉 this fume into the secret parts For the head-ach comming of a cold or windie cause if you cannot come by the greene leaues then take the drie moistening them first with a little wine and after drying them at liue ashes then afterward sprinkle vpon them sweet water and so applie them vnto your head or any other such place where you feele any paine you may doe as much with the powder of the leaues dried wingling therewithall things appropriat vnto the disease Such as are subject vnto swounings are by and by brought againe by taking at the mouth or nosthralls the fume of the said leaues burnt in respect whereof Indian women keepe this hearbe verie carefully because they be subiect to swounings Which is more the inhabitance of Florida doe feed themselues a certaine space with the fume of this hearbe whatsoeuer a certaine new Cosmographer say to the contrarie who seeketh by his ●yes to triumph ouer vs in this respect which they take at the mouth by the meanes of certaine small hornes the picture whereof you may see by the figure of the hearbe And the truth hereof we gather from them which haue beene in the countries of Florida and by mariners comming daily from the Indies which hanging about their neckes little pipes or hornes made of the leaues of the Date-tree or of reeds or of rushes at the ends of which little hornes there are put and packt many drie leaues of this plant writhen together and broken They put fire to this end of the pipe receiuing and drawing in with their breath at their mouth wide open so much of this fume as possibly they can and affirme thereupon that they find their hunger and chirst satisfied their strength recouered their spirits rejoyced and their braine drencht with a delightsome drunkennesse as also to auoyd out of the mouth an infinite quantitie of flegmaticke water But in that the fume of this hearbe maketh men somewhat drunke some men haue thought it to be verie cold and by that reason a kind of yellow Henbane which it resembleth much in his stalkes leaues cups and seed as we haue said before but we must know that the fume of this hearbe doth not make drunken so quickly and withall that this kind of drunkennesse doth not proceed of excessiue cold such as is found in Henbane but rather in a certaine atomaticall vapour which doth fill the ventricles of the braine All which vertues and properties besides that we haue proued and tried them in many diseases here in the countries of France to the great comfort of the sicke they also which come from the Indies and new world of Florida haue confidently auouched vnto vs to haue proued and tried the same in themselues hauing beene wounded and hurt when they made warre in the countrie against the rebellious and trecherous Indians who likewise affirme that much good is spoken of this hearbe euen of all the priests of these barbarous nations whereof they make vse in their Magicall practises and diuinations imagining that by the vertue thereof the things which they desire to know are reuealed vnto them And that it is so the sauage and bruitish Indians being accustomed to aske of their Priests the successe and euents of things to come is proued by the Priests for then they to fulfill the desires and requests of the Indians take the leaues of this plant and put them in a pipe or hollow end of a cane and being mixt with Wine they sup in and receiue it all at the mouth and by and by after they f●ll in a trance and become as men without life so long as vntill the hearbe haue ended his operation and then they rise vp halfe giddie and so
abo●●dantly The best season either to sow or plant it is in the Spring time and it endure●h manie yeares without aid or replanting all parts of it is verie medicinall both the root stalke leaues and flowers The water distilled of this hearbe is good again●● all Venimes or Poyson taken into the stomacke and also against all inward infection Itch Byles or Vlcers Then is Agrimonie of which we haue spoken 〈◊〉 Then Serpentar which is so called through the likelyhood it beareth of a 〈◊〉 and of it there are two kinds one great the other small It desireth a verie good earth and somewhat moist and may be sowne or planted in the Spring time The roots of this hearbe is excellent for all malignant Vlcers a decoction of the 〈◊〉 thereof is good for Womens termes and the leaues thereof keepeth Cheese long from rotting Then Onos which will grow in anie earth and rather in a barren 〈◊〉 a fertile and is best to be set of the root either in the Spring time or in 〈◊〉 It is soueraigne against the Stone and prouoketh Vrine speedily and a decoctio● of the roots thereof taketh away the paine in the teeth Then Cinquefoile which groweth almost in euerie place and may be planted in anie season the decoction 〈◊〉 it being gargled or held long in the mouth taketh away the paine of the teeth and heales anie Vlcer in the mouth it is also good against anie Infection or pestil●● Ayre Then Sellodnie of which wee haue spoken before Then Staphi●●●● which desireth a good ground yet euer to be planted in the shadow and that pr●●cipally about the Spring time It is good against paine in the Teeth 〈◊〉 and other Obstructions which grow from cold causes Then Goats leafe which will grow euerie where if it be not annoyed with wind and may be sowne or planted either in the Spring or in Autumne and is exceeding good for the stone Then ground Iuie of which we haue spoken before Then Tussilago or Colts foot which groweth best in watrie of moist places and would euer be planted in the Spring time or 〈◊〉 Autumne it is verie good against infection and against all straitnesse of breath 〈◊〉 the smoake or fume thereof being taken through a small tunnell in at the mouth 〈◊〉 cureth all infirmities of the lungs Then Salicaria or Lifimachus which receiued the name from the King Lisimachus who first made vse of that hearbe it loueth to be planted neere vnto Riuers either in the Spring time or in Winter it is good against the Dissenteria or to staunch bloud either being vsed in the leafe or in powder Lastly Vlmaria which loueth to be planted in low and shadowie valleyes a great 〈◊〉 more moist than drie and would be planted chiefely in Autumne The decoction 〈◊〉 it purgeth and cleanseth the bodie of all flegme whether it be sharpe or grosse it helpeth the Falling sicknesse the powder either of the roots or the leaues stayeth 〈◊〉 flux of the bellie or the issue of bloud and the distilled water easeth all paines both inward and outward Those hearbes which affect the North and delight to endure the blasts and ●●●pings of those colder ayres are first Gentiana of which we haue spoken before Th●● Cabaret or Asarum which neuer groweth so well from the seed as from the plant 〈◊〉 asketh little cost in tillage and beareth flowers twice a yeare that is to say both 〈◊〉 the Spring and in Autumne it cureth the paine in the head and assu●geth the inflammation and anguish of sore eies it is good against Fistulaes the Gout and Sci●●ticaes The powder of the root prouoketh Vrine and stayeth the menstruall Flux 〈◊〉 helpeth the Dropsie and putteth away both the Feauer tertian and quartane Then the Golden rod which onely groweth from the seed and would be planted in a good soyle in the Spring time it is good against the Stone or Strangurie it bindeth vp Vlcers and healeth Fistulaes Then the hearbe which is called Deuils-bit it desireth but an indifferent earth rather moist than drie and where the Seed often say●eth there the Plant neuer doth if it be set in the Spring time It is good against bit●er griefes as those which proceed from choler and against pestilent tumors against ●ice in childrens heads and such like Then Betonie of which we haue spoken be●ore Then Harts-tongue which onely groweth best from the root it is to be plan●ed in the moneths of March and Aprill in a fat earth yet the moister the better it helpeth all oppilations and cureth those which are troubled with a quartane Feauer Then the hearbe Dogges-tongue which desireth a light blacke mould yet but rea●onably tilled it may be sowne or planted in the Spring time it is good to cure the Hemorrhoids and easeth all Ach in the limbes Then Serpents-tongue which must ●uer be placed in a rich earth coole and moist for it can by no means endure the heat of the Summer it is best to be planted from the root in the first beginning of the Spring there is in it much vertue for the resoluing of Tumors and helping of Scal●ings or Burnings or other malignant Vlcers or anie inflammations in the Eyes Then water Germander which delighteth most in cold grounds enclining more to ●oisture than drinesse and rather fat than leane it flourisheth most in the moneths of Iune and Iuly yet in such sort that the flowers continue not aboue a day at most ●or as one falls away another rises it is best to be planted from the root or slippe 〈◊〉 the moneths of Februarie or March it is soueraigne against all manner of Poy●ons as Pestilence or the Dissenteria it prouoketh Vrine and the termes of Women it cleanseth Vlcers and reuiueth all benummed members Then Tormen●ill or Septifolium which loueth a darke waterish and shadowed earth yet that which is verie fat and ●ertile it is alwaies to be sowne from the seed either in the Spring time or in Autumne it is soueraigne against the Stone but chiefely it cu●eth Fistulaes and old Vlcers it withstandeth Poyson and easeth the paine of the Teeth Then Enula Campane of which we haue spoken before Then Persicaria which is oftest planted from the root in the Spring time in grounds which are rather moist than drie The decoction of this hearbe cureth all manner of bruises in Beasts where the bone is not broken onely by bathing them therein Also the flesh of Mut●ons Beeues Veales and such like is kept fresh manie daies by the vertue of this herbe ●nely being wrapped about the same Then Lyons foot which will not liue but in 〈◊〉 good earth fat and fertile yet somewhat moist and is best to be sowne in the ●oneths of March or Aprill it hath an excellent vertue for the healing of ruptures 〈◊〉 young children Then Eringo which craueth a good and well tilled ground and ●ay be sowne or planted either in the Spring or in Autumne it is good against the Collicke against Grauell or the
difficultie of Vrine it strengtheneth the Reines ●nd healeth the bitings of venimous beasts The distilled water thereof is good a●ainst both quotidian and quartane Feauers it helpeth the French disease and stop●eth salt humors Then lastly Feniculus Porcinus which delighteth a great deale ●ore in the shade than in the Sunne-shine it would be sowne or planted either in 〈◊〉 Spring time or in Autumne it comforteth much the sinewes and strengtheneth ●eake backes To conclude those hearbes which affect the South is first the blessed Thistle of ●hich we haue spoke before Then Veruaine of which there be two sorts the male ●nd the female both desire to be planted from the roots in good ground either in the ●pring or in Autumne This hearbe is of great reputation especially amongst the ●omanes who vse if continually amongst their Inchantments it taketh away the ●aine of the Teeth and it healeth anie old Vlcer it is good against anie Fea●er easeth the paine of the Collicke and expelleth Grauell Then Saxifrage which is of two sorts the great and the lesse they may be sowne or planted in anie good ground which is fat and light in the moneth of March The chiefest 〈◊〉 of this hearbe is to breake the Stone prouoke Vrine helpe womens Termes and 〈◊〉 driue away all euill humours out of the Stomacke Then Pionie of which wee 〈◊〉 spoken before Then Hermole or the Turkes hearbe which loueth a fat blacke and drie mould it may be either planted or sowne The vertue of this hearbe 〈◊〉 to make one to hold his Vrine the powder of it being taken either in Broth or 〈◊〉 white Wine Then Acanthus or Brankvrsine is an hearbe which the auncient A●chitects were wont to carue infolding and imbracing their Columnes or Pyllast●● of the Corinthian fashion Whence it came that the Romanes of auncient 〈◊〉 did call it Marmoralia because such Pillars commonly were of Marble It is 〈◊〉 be sowne in the moneths of March or Aprill in a well tilled Garden his 〈◊〉 are good against the Stone and stay the flux of the bellie Then Aristolochia 〈◊〉 both kinds of which wee haue spoken before Then Perforatio which is so called from the affection that it beareth to the Sunne it may be sowne in the Spring 〈◊〉 in anie light earth The seed of this hearbe beaten to powder and drunke in 〈◊〉 Wine cureth a tertian Feauer and easeth those which are troubled with the 〈◊〉 or Sciatica if the powder of it be cast vpon Vlcers it also healeth them and the decoction of the leaues thereof prouoketh Vrine exceedingly Then Arum 〈◊〉 also delighteth in a good Soyle rather moist than drie it flourisheth most in Iune and the leaues thereof are like the leaues of Millet and when it is in the prime 〈◊〉 hath a yellow colour like vnto Saffron it is to be sowne onely in the moneth of March This hearbe is verie soueraigne against the Gout and driueth away 〈◊〉 flegmaticke humours if it be bruised it cureth old Vlcers and all wounds or ●●tings giuen by the Wolfe the leaues boyled in Wine helpeth bruises and displaced members or bones out of ioint it helpeth the Hemorrhoids also Then 〈◊〉 of which we haue spoke before Then Carline which tooke the name from Charl●● the great King of France who by the vse of it onely cured himselfe of the Plagu● it loueth a drie stonie ground and where it may haue the strength of the Sunn● beames it must be sowne in the Spring time or else planted from the root 〈◊〉 powder of this hearbe being drunke chaseth away all infection and prouok●● Vrine it is good against all Conuulsions and being made into a Cataplasme ●●●tifieth and strengtheneth the heart if it be steeped or mixed well with vineger 〈◊〉 easeth either the Gout or the Sciatica being applyed vnto the place grieued Th● little Germander which differeth not much from water Germander onely it ●●ueth a drie and stonie earth and rather a hot than a cold it loueth the 〈◊〉 beames and is rather to be planted from the root than sowne from the seed 〈◊〉 in the Spring time or in Autumne it is good against infection and helpeth 〈◊〉 Feauers it helpeth the Epilepsis paine in the head and anie other griefes of 〈◊〉 braine it cureth Conuulsions the Gout and warmeth the entrailes Then Nic●●●ana or Tabacco of which wee haue spoken before Then Peper which must 〈◊〉 planted immediately after Winter in a well tilled earth and endureth long in G●●dens without anie helpe of transplanting Then Camomill which is of three 〈◊〉 differing onely in the colours of their flowers for the one is white the other yell●● and the third purple It loueth an earth cold and drie it is best planted from 〈◊〉 root or slippe either in Autumne or the Spring time it loueth to be oft troden 〈◊〉 or pressed downe and therefore is most placed in Alleyes Bankes or Seats in 〈◊〉 Garden It is good against a tertian Feauer and the bath which is made 〈◊〉 strengtheneth much weake members and comforteth the sinewes both of the 〈◊〉 and legges it comforteth also the reines The water thereof also distilled is 〈◊〉 good for the same purposes and the iuice thereof mixed with womans 〈◊〉 Rosewater and the iuice of Housleeke warmed and a Rose-cake steeped 〈◊〉 with a Nutmeg grated on it and so applyed vnto the temples of the head ●keth away all paine therein how violent soeuer it be Diuers other hearbes 〈◊〉 be which are of like natures to these alreadie rehearsed but from the experience 〈◊〉 these a reasonable iudgement may find how to plant nourish and vse anie whatsoeuer There be also diuers purgatiue Simples as Rhubarbe Agaricke and such like which for as much as our Soyles will not endure or beare them I will here omit to speake of them onely a word or two of the hearbe Sene which is somewhat more frequent with vs and is of that delicate holesome and harmelesse nature in his working and operation that it may be tearmed the Prince or Head of Simples Then touching Sene you shall vnderstand that it beareth little small thicke leaues vpon a high large stalke it hath flowers of the colour of gold with diuers purple veines running vpon them Some take the Hearbe which Theophrastus writeth of called Colutea to be Sene but they are deceiued therein for the one is a Tree and no Hearbe and the other is an Hearbe and no Tree besides diuers other differences needlesse here to repeat all which are at large see downe by Anthonie Mirauld Doctor of Physicke and a Bourbonois in his booke intituled Maison Champestre It may be planted either from the stalke or root like Rosemarie in anie good fertile and drie soyle where it may haue the full reflection of the Sunne and the season best and fittest for the same plantation is at the later end of Autumne As touching the choice of the best Sene that hath euer the best reputation which is brought from Alexandria in Syria as
may grow faire and haue a more pleasant smell it must be planted ●nder the shadow of a Figge-tree or grafted in the rind of a Figge-tree for the 〈◊〉 and sweetnesse of the Figge-tree doth temper the sharpenesse and acrimo●ie of the Rue Some say likewise that Rue will grow fairer if the branches thereof 〈◊〉 set in a Beane or Onion and so put into the ground It is likewise reported that it ●●oweth fairer if one curse and hurt it when they set and plant it But looke how ●●iendly and kind it is to the Figge-tree so much it is enemie vnto and hateth the ●●emlocke likewise Gardiners when they would pull vp Rue for feare of hurting ●●eir hands rub them with the juice of Hemlocke Wild Rue is of greater force than the garden Rue and of a more vnpleasant ●●ell and also a more dangerous smell furthermore of so sharpe a vapour as that if 〈◊〉 come neere vnto the face neuer so little it will breed the wild fire in it The feed 〈◊〉 of the one and the other by the hot and drie temperature it hath drieth vp the 〈◊〉 of man and maketh him barren the same seed in decoction is good for distil●●tions and the moisture of the matrix Rue hath a singular vertue and force against all manner of venime Likewise we 〈◊〉 that the king Mithridates was accustomed to vse an opiate made of twentie ●●ues of Rue two drie Figges two old Walnuts and a little Salt to preserue his state ●gainst all manner of poyson For this cause you must plant in your gardens and 〈◊〉 your sheepecoats houses for your fowle and other cattell great quantitie of ●ue for Adders Lizards and other venimous beasts will not come neere vnto 〈◊〉 by the length of the shadow of it Some also hold it as a tried thing that to 〈◊〉 away Cats and Fulmers from hen-houses and doue-houses there is nothing ●etter than to set Rue at the doores thereof or round about them And that to free a ●ome of fleas and g●ats it is good to water that same with water sprinkled about with branch of rue In the plague time it is not good to put rue neere vnto your nose ●ontrarie to that which we see many men practise because by the sharpenesse of the 〈◊〉 there is caused a heat and excoriation of the part which it toucheth notwith●●anding to draw out the venime that is in a bubo or pestilent carbuncle there is no●●ing better than to applie thereto a cataplasme made of the leaues of rue stampt with leauen hogs-grease onions figges vnquencht lime sope cantharides and a 〈◊〉 treacle If a man haue eaten of hemlocke ceruse mandrakes blacke poppie 〈…〉 other hearbes which through their great coldnesse haue caused them to be 〈◊〉 and blockish they may profitably vse the juice of rue to drinke it for the 〈◊〉 of them from such danger or else the wine wherein it hath beene boyled Th● distilled water of rue powred into vvine and rose-rose-water of each as much is good 〈◊〉 the weakenesse of the sight It is verie soueraigne for the headach and being 〈◊〉 in wine with fennell and so drunke it easeth all obstructions of the spleene or 〈◊〉 and taketh away the pain of the strangurie and also stoppeth any flux being 〈◊〉 with Cummin-seed it easeth all maner of aches and being stampt with home 〈◊〉 flower and the yolke of an egge it cureth any impostumation whatsoeuer All sorts of mints whether garden or wild doe nothing desire the ground 〈◊〉 dunged fat or lying open vpon the Sunne but rather a moist ground neere 〈◊〉 water for want thereof they must be continually watred for else they die it is 〈◊〉 sowne than set but if it be set then it may be either of roots or branches in 〈◊〉 or in the Spring time especially about the twelfth of March or September 〈◊〉 wanteth the seed to sow it may insteed thereof sow the seed of field mints 〈◊〉 the sharpe point downeward thereby to tame and reclaime the wildnesse of it 〈◊〉 it is growne it must not be toucht with any edge toole because thereupon it 〈◊〉 die Neither need you take care to sow it euerie yeare for it will grow of itselfe 〈◊〉 being sowne of set in great aboundance Mints stampt and applyed to breasts too hard and full of milke doe seften 〈◊〉 and hindreth the curding of the milke stampt with salt it is good against the 〈◊〉 of a mad dog stampt and put into a cataplasme it comforteth a weak 〈◊〉 and strengtheneth digestion two or three sprigs of mints taken with the juice of ●●pomegranat stayeth the hicket vomiting and surfets It is good to help them 〈◊〉 haue lost their smelling by putting it oft to the nose Then leaues dried made in 〈◊〉 and drunke with white wine doth kill the wormes in yong children Such as 〈◊〉 milke a●ter they haue eaten it must by and by chaw of the leaues of mints 〈…〉 the qua●ling of the milke in their stomachs for mints haue the speciall 〈…〉 keeping milk from curding as also to keepe chee●e from corruption and 〈◊〉 if it be sprinkled with the juice or decoction of mints being ●pplied vnto the 〈◊〉 it asswageth head-ach commming of cold The water of the whole hearbe distilled 〈◊〉 Maries bath in a glasse Alembecke and taken the quantitie of foure ounces 〈◊〉 stay bleeding at the nose which is very strange thing they that would liue 〈◊〉 must not smell vnto not eat any mints and therefore in auncient time it was 〈◊〉 captaines in warre to eat any mints Calamint otherwise called Mentastrum delighteth in the same ground 〈◊〉 mints we see it likewise grow in vntilled grounds neere vnto high waies and hedg● It prouoketh the termes in women whether it be taken at the mouth or in 〈◊〉 and that with such violence as that women may not in any case meddle with 〈◊〉 if they take themselues to be with child it is singular good vsed in formentation 〈◊〉 the paines of the stomach for the colicke and distillations the juice thereof 〈◊〉 the mouth killeth wormes in the bellie and being dropt into the eare it killeth 〈◊〉 there also Of this Calamint there are three kinds as the stone Calamint the 〈◊〉 Calamint and the water Calamint the water Calamint is excellent to make 〈…〉 the earth Calamint is verie good against leprosie helpeth paine in the 〈◊〉 and comforteth the stomach lastly the stone Calamint is soueraigne against 〈◊〉 and strengtheneth the heart if it be bruised and made into a plai●ter with 〈…〉 sewet it healeth any venimous wounds and to drinke it three or foure daies 〈◊〉 either in ale or wine it cureth the jaundise Thyme as well of Candie as the common doth grow better planted than 〈◊〉 and craueth a place open vpon the Sunne neere vnto the sea and leane and it 〈◊〉 be planted at mid-March in a well ●illed ground that so it may the sooner
〈…〉 also that it may grow the fairer and fuller leafe it will be good to water the 〈◊〉 ●oft with water wherein hath been steeped for the space of one whole day drie thyme somewhat bruised If you be disposed to gather the seed you must gather also the flowers wherein it is contained seeing they cannot be sundred A Cataplasme made of thyme boyled in Wine appea●eth the paine of the Sciati●●ca and the windinesse of the bodie and matrin The smelling of thyme is soueraigne to raise them that haue the Falling-sicknesse out of their fit and also to keepe them from their fit by decking their bed about with the leaues thereof The oft vsing of thyme with wine or whay is good for melancholicke persons Winter Sauourie craueth no fat manured or well tilled ground but rather an ●pen stonie and light ground lying so as the Sunne may shine full vpon it Both Thyme and Winter Sauourie are good for the nourishing of bees and for the preser●ing and seasoning of meats they are also called fine sebtill or small and slender hearbes Organie otherwise called bastard Margerome loueth a rough stonie peble weake and yet well fu●nisht ground and vvithall craueth a manured ground as also to be watered vntill it be growne vp to his full bignesse notwithstanding it be seene ●o grow in many places without watering or dunging It may be remoued of little ●prouts or sciences and the lower end set vpward to the end that it may put forth new ●prings and shoots and be sown of his seed the which the elder it is so much the soo●er it will put forth of the earth although that organie do not ordinarily shew it selfe before the 30 or 40 day after the sowing of it in many places it is sowne neere vnto ● because they willingly load themselues from thence and make singular honie Organie boyled in Wine and layed vpon the region of the raines doth take away and vndoe the difficultie of making vvater being boyled in wine and drunke it is good against venimous beasts or the stingings of Scorpions and Spiders A Cataplasme made of Organie and Barly meale boyled together resolueth the tumours vnder the eares The decoction thereof is good to comfort the sinews and the relaxed and weake parts the seed thereof drunke vvith Wine doth prepare and dispose a vvoman to conceiue the flowers and leaues of the sayd Organie dried at the fire in an earthen test or melting pot and being wrapped vp verie hot in a cloth and applied vnto the head and kept fast tied thereunto doth cure the rheume comming of cold Hyssope affecteth a place free from shadow and lying open vpon the Sunne it ●ay be set or sowne about the twelfth of March It must be cut in the moneth of August and dried to put in pottage in Winter Amongst other principall vertues that it hath it is of great vse for the affects of ●he lungs and to prouoke vvomens termes of there be a broth made thereof to sup ●asting in the morning Some say that the syrope of Hyssope taken oftentimes with ●owerfold so much of the vvater of Pellitorie of the wall causeth the stone and much grauell to auoyd from the reines Hyssope with figs rue and honie boyled together ●n water and drunke is good for those that are short breathed and for old and hard ●oughs stampt with salt cummine and honie and applied healeth the stingings of Scorpions stampt with oyle and rubbed it killeth lice pills made of hyssope ●orehound and pionie roots doe heale the falling-sicknesse Sommer sauourie doth delight in an open Sunne shining place and therefore must be set or sowne in such a one not in a fat or manured ground for it is often seen grow of it selfe in leane grounds and neere vnto the Sea It groweth more delight●ully and of a better tast if it be sowne amongst onions It is verie good for sauce to ●eat The leaues and flowres applied vnto the head in forme of a cap or garland doth away the drowsily inclined A Cataplasme made of sauorie and wheat meale ●oth cure distillations The Sciati●●● Coriander ●orteth well with any kind of ground notwithstanding in a fat and ●ew ground it groweth a great deale more aboundantly and it seeketh for an hot ●ire againe that which groweth in a sunnie place doth ouerthriue that vvhich groweth in a shadowed place when you goe about to sow it chuse the eldest seed you can get for by how much it is the elder by so much it is the better so that it 〈◊〉 not mouldie and foughtie Sow it also in a fat and moist ground and yet 〈…〉 a leane ground and to cause it to spring vp the sooner you must steepe the 〈…〉 water two daies before you sow it If you must dung the ground where it is to be sowne it must be with Sheepe or Goats dung rather than anie other The excessiue heat thereof bringeth Head-ach and the trembling of the 〈◊〉 being eaten after meat it comforteth digestion and dispelleth windinesse so that 〈◊〉 be prepared The way to prepare it is as followeth You must hauing dried it 〈◊〉 cast vpon it verie good wine and vineger mixt together and leaue it thus sprinkl●● and wet the space of foure and twentie houres then drie it vp and keepe it for Physicke vse being stamped in vineger and cast vpon flesh it keepeth it from 〈◊〉 it prouoketh womens termes and some say that looke how manie seeds a woman drinketh with white wine so manie daies shall her termes continue 〈…〉 drunke with the iuice of Pomegranats killeth the Wormes in children The 〈◊〉 thereof with Ceruse Litharge of Siluer Vineger and Oyle of Roses 〈…〉 Wild fire and all Rednesse The seed stamped in Vineger doth keepe the 〈◊〉 from corrupting in Summer Also to drinke the iuice thereof with Honey 〈◊〉 Wine killeth Wormes and adding the seedes bruised thereto it helpeth a 〈◊〉 Feuer Sage as well the little as the great it planted of branches wrythen at the foot 〈◊〉 also of roots in the Spring and Autumne It is sowne also at the same time The 〈◊〉 delighteth to be laid about with Lee ashes It must be set neere vnto Rue to 〈◊〉 from Adders and Lizards which vse to take vp their lodging neere vnto Sage 〈◊〉 may be knowne by the leaues which haue their tops oftentimes withered and dried the same comming of hauing beene touched by Serpents Sage refuseth neither 〈◊〉 nor cold ayre how beit naturally it groweth in a barren sto●●e and ill 〈◊〉 ground and that in such sort as that in some places of Spaine the mountaine● 〈…〉 ouer-growne therewith and the Countrey inhabitants burne no other wood No●withstanding to grow faire it would be well digged about and kept clean● 〈◊〉 leaues and stalkes that are dead It hath a singular vertue to comfort the ●inewes that are hurt by being 〈…〉 or otherwise become weake
euill aire It is vvith good successe vsed in the decoctions prescribed against the pockes take seuen Iuniper-berries and as many Bay-be●ries halfe a dram of Zylocassia and a dram of Cinamome put all this whole in the bellie of a Turtle-do●e roast the said Turtle thus stuffed and ba●t her with Capons grease giue euerie second day one of these at supper to a woman that is readie to be deliuered and she shall haue an easie deliuerie boyle twelue pound of Iuniper wood cut small or raspt in a great cauldron and in a sufficient quantitie of water to the consumption of the third part of the water put this wood and water in●● a bathing tub and let the partie troubled with the gout ●it in this water vp vnto the middle he shall feele incredible reliefe hereby Elder tree is fitter to plant in the garden hedge than to make at bou●s in 〈◊〉 notwithstanding where other sorts of small trees are wanting there may vse be made of the Elder-tree It would be set in the moneth of Nouember vpon sciences and shoots in a moist and shadowed place neere to some little riuer or brooke To cause it to grow well you must take this diligent course to cast the earth as it vvere into furrows of a good halfe foot broad and a whole foot deepe with a spade and not with a pickaxe for there must no earth be taken away then presently after the 〈◊〉 of Saint Martin in Winter plant your Elder-trees the great end thereof which sha● be put into the earth shall be cut bias like the foot of a Hind and thrust downe 〈◊〉 the ground thus prepared a foot or nine inches deepe and let it stand vp aboue the ground at the least a foot and a halfe or two foot so as that in all your plant m●st be two good foot and a halfe or three foot long before you put them into the gro●nd open it vvith a dibble either of yron or vvood so that the rind of the plant may 〈◊〉 be torne in putting of it into the earth If you plant it in the furrows there must be at the least three foot betwixt euerie furrow and a foot betwixt euerie plant Hauing once thus planted them you shall neuer need to take any further paines 〈◊〉 them if you vvill not your selfe but to cut it two joynts at the least euerie yeare 〈◊〉 the space of the two or three first yeares to the end the root may grow the 〈◊〉 and the first two or three yeares being past you may cut it from two yeares 〈…〉 yeares to make props for vines in any case you must ●op it euerie yere and cut away all the euill sciences and shoots vvhich it ill fauouredly putteth forth Some distill the vvater of the flowers as singular to appease the head-ach comming of heat if the brows or hinder part of the head be rubbed therewith Some likewise doe make verie good vinegar vvith the ●lowers and juice of the be●●ies The juice pressed from the rind of the root moueth vomit and draweth forth the 〈◊〉 that is in tho●e that haue the dropsie the juice pressed from the leaues and take● vvith some pottage doth loosen the bellie the dried seed is good against the dropsie and for ●at folke to make them leane taking of it the quantitie of a dram in 〈◊〉 vvine and continuing it a certaine time and mixing therewith a little 〈◊〉 because it is a procurer of vomit and a disquieter of the stomach Rose-marie and Iesamin are likewise fit for the adorning of arbours in 〈◊〉 of the ordering vvhereof vve vvill say nothing in this place because vve haue before spoken thereof verie largely Iuie as vvell the great as the small doth delight to be planted in moist and vvaterie places from the moneth of Nouember vntill March and it flowreth not but in Autumne neither doth the ber●ie thereof become ripe but in Winter it growe●● not high if it be not neere vnto some tree or old ruine vnto both vvhich in the end 〈◊〉 vvorketh ruine and ouerthrow It vvill bring forth a goodly fruit if you 〈…〉 vvith powdred Allome or ashes made of burnt Oyster-shells Blacke Iuie vvill become vvhite if you vvater the root thereof vvith vvhite earth tempered vvith vv●ter eight daies together continually If you take three Iuie berries and tying them vp in a cleane linnen cloth 〈…〉 thread giue them to some one that is troubled vvith paine and stifnesse of his 〈◊〉 to vveare about his necke the said partie so vvearing them three daies together 〈◊〉 be vvhole and cured of his disease The leaues brayed and applyed doe heale ●●nings and ●●●ldings made vvith hot vvater boyled in vinegar and applied 〈◊〉 cure the hardnesse of the spleene the gum thereof killeth lice and ni●s and 〈◊〉 annointed in any hairie place causeth the haire to fall away The vessells 〈◊〉 the wood of Iuie are singular to know if there be any vvater in the vvine for the 〈◊〉 vvill abide in the vessell and the vvine vvill run out Seuen Iuie ber●ies 〈…〉 many peach kernels the skin● taken off boyled in oyle and afterward stamp● 〈◊〉 applied vnto the temples and brows doe assuage the head-ach comming from the braine the juice of the leaues of Iuie drunke with red vvine doth heale the swelling of the spleene a cap made in forme of a head-piece or skull of the leaues of Iuie sowed together and applied vnto the head of a little child which hath the falling of the haire called Tinea doth heale it throughly the water or gum which droppeth out of the stocke of an Iuie tree the rind being cut killeth nits and lice Priuet groweth more than a man would wish amongst brambles and bushes from which places it may be transplanted into the garden for the benefit of arbours The water of the flowers thereof may be distilled and it is most singular against all manner of ●luxes vvhether of the bellie matrix spitting of bloud and of the eyes as also for all sorts of cankers the same vertue hath the juice pressed out of the leaues especially for the canker growing in the mouth There is an oyle made of the flowers thereof infused in oyle in the Sun which is singular good for the head-ach comming of a hot cause and also for inflammations CHAP. LIII Of Hearbes for the Arbours of the Garden FOr want of trees of low growth such as haue beene spoken of here before you may helpe your selfe in the making of your Arbours for your Garden of Pleasure with certaine hearbes which are plyant and with their leaues apt to make shadow still prouided that they be borne vp by poles of Willow or Iuniper dressed and ordered in forme and after the manner of Arbours They are such as follow the wild Vine Hoppes Gourds Cucumbers the maruellous Pease Winter Cherries the maruellous Apples and other such like And as concerning the wild Vine it groweth more plentifully than a man would
excellent good against melancholie and the wormes if you make syrrups thereof of seuen or eight infusions to be taken fasting The gumme of the Peach-tree is taken with good successe in the spetting of bloud with the water of Plantaine or Purcelane for the cough and difficultie of breathing with Hydromel or the decoction of Folefoot for the grauell and stone with the 〈◊〉 of Radishes Citrons or white Wine the weight of two drammes The leaues stamped and applyed vnto the belly doe kill wormes the iuice thereof dropt into the 〈◊〉 doth the like the kernels eaten take away the wringings of the belly eaten to the number of six or seuen in the beginning of meat they preuent drunkennesse 〈◊〉 and boyled in vineger to the forme of a broth and after rubbed in place con●enient they hinder the falling of the haire stamped and made in forme of milke with the water of Veruaine and ●ubd about the browes and temples they cease the head-ach the oyle made by expression ceaseth the paines of the eares and 〈◊〉 the Collicke and Sciatica He that hath regard of his health must not vse these fruits but as sparingly as he can possibly and fasting rather than otherwise because they corrupt easily in the stomacke but aboue all things they may not be eaten dipped or steeped in wine because wine correcteth them not as some thinke but rather causeth that their 〈◊〉 pierceth the more suddainely and easily into the veines The Peaches of Corbeil●●● counted for the best hauing a drie and solide pulpe and somewhat red not sticking or cleauing anie thing vnto the kernell The Romanes made great accoun● of the Peaches which they called Persica Duracina as doe also the Brittons The least dangerous least subiect to be corrupted and most pleasant are the Abricots which also some haue left out of the number of the kinds of Peaches and placed amongst the Plums as well because of their pleasant smell as for their harmelesnesse and 〈◊〉 both within and without they doe rather resemble the Plum than the Peach The oyle pressed out of their kernell is maruellous good against the Hem●●●● 〈◊〉 and swelling of vlcers and is also vsed as a remedie against the impediments of the speech and paine of the eares CHAP. XXIII Of the small Nut-tree or Hasel-tree THe Hasel-tree which is called the small Nut-tree of the small fruit which it beareth or the Filberd-tree of the great fruit that it beareth groweth in anie aire or ground but it best delighteth in a leane ground that is sandie and moist neere vnto waters or in places that men vse to water because this helpeth them as well in the bringing forth of their fruit in great store as for to make them endure long adde hereto that they put forth and spring in such sort at the root as that thereof one may set as manie as he will in other places When they are sowne they must be put two fingers vnder ground but indeed they grow better of a plant that hath root or of a shoot cut by as and hauing old and new wood as we haue alreadie declared in the sixt chapter They are planted in October and Nouember in a warme and temperate place or in Februarie and March and it is better to leaue vpon them some boughes when they are set than to set them of one single rod for so they beare the more fruit They must yearely be digged anew at the Spring neere vnto the foot and round about and their shoots all cut away without leaking anie standing saue three or foure for to plant and make thick bushie shadow and the same verie neat and cleane for height not leauing anie branch or bough after three or foure fadome from the top Wherefore if they be oft lopped picked and pruned they will grow the more streight compact and high and will beare better and fairer fruit but otherwise if a man neglect them they runne out all their nourishment into wood and leaues without fruit Their fruit is called the small Nut or Filberd The Filberd of hot Countries where such trees are called Filberd-trees is more round and fleshie than the French small Nut and it is a fruit verie easily dried and made yellow But and if you would keepe it fresh and white almost all the yeare long shut it vp close in an earthen pot and set them in the earth and when it is thus kept it bringeth not so much annoyance with it as otherwise it would for it naturally procureth drowsie headach and inflammation of the stomacke I know not by what obseruation of our ancestors this speech hath growne common amongst the people That the yeare which yeeldeth plentie of Nuts doth also yeeld manie mariages Both the little Nut-tree as also his fruit haue a certaine contrarie vertue against venimous beasts for if you hang a cluster of small Nuts in anie part of the house no Scorpion or venimous beast will enter thereinto but slie away presently The Countrey people haue likewise marked in all ages that the Serpent Lizard or other venimous beast dieth presently hauing beene stricken with a branch staffe or rod of the Hasel-tree And it is no maruell seeing Nut kernels eaten with Figges and Rue doe resist venime and the biting of venimous beasts The best small Nuts and Filberds and those which haue red shells and which are hardly broken The raw shell finely powdred and drunke with water of Carduus Benedictus doth heale the pleurisie in the beginning thereof being drunke to the quantitie of two drammes with red wine it stayeth the flux of the belly and the whites It is true that for the flux of the belly and whites ●he red part of the kernell which sticketh vnto the shell within is a great deale better and more forcible The Filberd nourisheth a great deale better than the Nut as being ● closer but not so fat a substance CHAP. XXIIII Of the Cherrie-tree sweet Cherrie-tree bitter Cherrie-tree and the hart Cherrie-tree IT is apparant that common Cherrie-trees sweet Cherrie-trees bitter Cherrie-trees and hart Cherrie-trees are sorts of trees agreeing in manie things for they all delight to grow in a cold and moist ground or else altogether indifferent betwixt hot and cold for a hot ayre they 〈◊〉 hardly endure and so likewise they refuse to haue anie dung because it ouer-heatech them and is contrarie vnto them and for this cause they must neuer be planted in a manured ground Notwithstanding if you so temper the dung as that it may not be ouer-hot for them it cannot ●urt them to be dunged no more than as wee will shew by and by to haue vnquench● 〈◊〉 laid to their feet to has●en their fruit but this is true that if you dung them yearely that then you shall not haue them of anie lo●g continuance They delight rather to haue their roots compassed with small branches and the broken parts of their owne siences or small lumpes and gobbets cut from their owne
hee tha● will be carefull of his health shall vse none but the best Ciders Wee will speake●● gaine of the faculties of Cider in the sixt Booke in the same place where wee 〈◊〉 speake of the faculties of Wine How Perrie is made PErrie is made of diuers sorts of Peares sometimes of rough harsh sowre and wild ones neuer husbanded planted grafted or otherwise hauing had anie labour or paines taken with them such Perrie will keepe long euen three or fo●re yeares and be better at the end than at the beginning Sometimes of Garden ●ender and delicate Peares such as are the Eusebian and the Marie Peare the 〈◊〉 Hasting Rimolt Mollart Greening butter Peare the laques du four Peare the little the Conie Peare the perplexed Peare the Alablaster Peare the two-headed Peare the dew Peare and the wood of Hierusalem and such Perrie is pleasant for a certaine time but after it is once come to be fiue moneths old it becommeth void of all tast and dead The best and most excellent Perrie is made of little yellow waxe Peares and such as haue beene throughly dres●ed and husbanded as the little muske Peare the two-headed Peare the Peare Robart the fine gold Peare Bargamo● Taho● Sq●●e and such other Peares which haue a ●ast and solide ●lesh and hard coat The A●iot Peare is commended aboue all the rest whereof likewise is made the Perrie called waxen Perrie because it resembleth the colour of waxe but which otherwise is called Car●sie very pleasant and delightsome but notwithstanding indifferent hard and not so easie to be corrupted as the later some doe also sometime● mingle diuers sorts of Peares together to make Perrie of But of what sort of Peares soeuer the Perrie is made the Peare-trees must be carefully and diligently husbanded and ordered according to our former deliuered precepts in what ground soeuer that the Peare-trees grow as whether it be in Orchard Garden arable ground or other such like so that the said ground be such and so well seasoned as is requisite to bring ●orth Peares in aboundance and such as be good Peares must be gathered to make Perrie of some before Apples and some after with ●udgels or poles some when they are ripe as the Amiot the Tahou and the Squire and to breake and grind the same with a turning Mill-stone so ●oone as they be gathered in such manner as hath beene said of Apples Othersome must be gathered before they be ripe as the Peares of Grosmeuill and others which haue a hard flesh rough cote and are heauie as those which by reason of their hardnesse and heauinesse cannot ripen well vpon the tree Such as these are not to be employed to make Perrie of till they haue layne to ripen and mellow that so they may become the tendrer and softer to get the greater quantitie of iuice out of them Whether they be Peares to be gathered early or late pressed they must be and the like implements and meanes vsed about them in making the Perrie that were vsed in the making of Cider for after the same manner must you proceed in sometimes mingling water with it when there is need as also in the manner of the vsing of it in the working boyling and purging of it in the tunning of it vp into vessels in appointing it a place to be kept in in the gouerning of it and such other necessarie care for the defending of it from all th●ngs that might hurt it and that it is subiect vnto euen in as great measure or rather greater than you vsed about Cider especially in respect of the cold and frost which Perrie cannot in anie sort endure insomuch as that all Winter long you must keepe the windows of the cellar or caue vnder ground where it lyeth close shut and well stopped with straw or some such other thing to driue away the cold besides that Perrie is not so good for keeping as Cider is except it be the Carisie or that which is made of the Peare Grosmeuill or such other Peares as haue a hard flesh and skinne the Perrie whereof may be kept two yeares vndrawne and after they be pierced or drawne of six weekes foreseene they be will ordered and gouerned Perrie maketh as great yea greater setling then Cider whereof you must ●ree the vessell presently after the Perrie is drawne forth for otherwise there will breed an infinite number of wormes in the vessell which will infect it The good house-holders doe make a sort of Perrie for the household of the drosse of the Peares comming from pressing and that by casting of them into some vessell with su●●icient quantitie of fountaine water Some others cast away the said drosse as a thing altogether vnprofitable In all other things Perrie is to be ordered after the ●anner of Cider The faculties and qualities of Perrie must be considered of and weighed in such manner as we haue said of Cider that is by his tast age and making The tast of the Perrie dependeth for the most part of the rellish of the Peares out of which it is pressed and those are either sweet or sowre or harsh or of mixt tasts or else altogether without tast according to which rellishes you are to find out the vertues and qualities of Perrie following such forme and manner as we haue largely laid downe in the handling of Cider It is true that to speake particularly of the good qualities of Perries the most wholesome profitable and of best iuice are tho●e which are made of the Peares called the waxen Peares the same being pressed out in the Summer time and foreseene also that it be drunken so soone as it is fined because it is not to be kept being a verie delicate and tender iuice and therefore apt to corrupt easily and verie soone Next vnto this in goodnesse is the Perrie made of Peare Robart and Muscadel Peares prouided that they be drunken also so soone as they be well fined and their lees setled but then also they must be drunke with water and but in a reasonable and meane quantitie for otherwise by the piercing smell and subtilnesse thereof it causeth great paine of the head oftentimes The Perrie called Carisie or made of the Kersey Peare though it be one of the best and most excellent and of those which are last pressed is yet to be drunke after it is well fined in a mediocritie and allayed with water to represse the fuming smell of the same which easily would take hold of the braine There is no cause why you should greatly esteeme in respect of your health of the Perries which are pressed out of wild Peares and all such as are vnhusbanded vntamed of a sharpe tast fat reddish or of those which are pressed 〈◊〉 of diuers sorts of Peares not agreeing together either in tast or otherwise neither yet of such as are made of Apples and Peares mingled and pressed together as neither of that Perrie which is newly put vp into the
or hang vpon the sides of the vessell as being the verie marke of the perfect and sufficient boiling If you be disposed to put any spice into it as Cinnamon Cloues Nutmegs and Ginger you must doe it in the end of the boiling of them and then also stirre it well about with the spatule After the same manner you may preserue or make Marmalade of Peaches Peares and other fruits Yet there is another Marmalade which is made of Oranges which desireth a great deale of more curiositie in the working and is exceeding pleasant to tast and indeed more wholesome than anie other Marmalade whatsoeuer especially for those which are sicke and weake for it fortifieth the stomacke and encreaseth appetite it expelleth wind and comforteth the vitall spirits This Marmalade of Oranges is made in this manner Take of the fairest and best Oranges you can get not those which are called Ciuill and haue a sweet tast but those which are of a cleere high and bright colour and are sowre in tast then with a very sharpe knife pare away the vpper yellow rinde I doe not meane to the white but so exceeding thinne as is possible taking away as it were but onely the smooth thinne skinne and leauing the Orange as yellow as before onely looking a little more blanke and rough this done you shall by them in faire running water pressing them so downe that they may be all couerted ouer with the water then at the end of euerie fiue houres shift them into fresh water till hauing layne full fiue or six houres in each of them you cannot tast anie bi●●ernesse in the water but that it is sweet and pleasant as when it came out of the Fo●●taine then you may be assured that they are steept ynough so that then you shall take them forth of the water and drie them with a fine cleane cloth then to euerie pound of Oranges you shall take a pound of refined Sugar well beaten and ●earced and six or eight spoonefuls of Damaske-Rose-water and in the same you shall boil● the Oranges till they burst and become like vnto pappe or pulpe which you shall the more occasion by continually stirring them with a spoone or spatule then when they are fully broken ynough you shall take them from the fire and presently strain● them through a cleane Strainer into your boxes and so let them coole and stiffen I● this sort you may make Marmalade of Limons Citrons or anie other whole 〈◊〉 whose rinde is bitter or vnpleasant You may also after this manner preserue other Oranges Limons Citrons or anie other such like fruit obseruing not to let them boile vntill they breake but keeping them in a verie moderate and gentle temper If you would make a laxatiue Marmalade such as they vse at Lyons looke into the 26. Chapter of this Booke To make good and excellent Gellie of Quinces cleanse your Quinces that 〈◊〉 verie ripe and yellow taking out of them their kernels them cut them in small quarters without paring of them for the skinne doth encrease the smell whiles you are thus making of them cleane and cutting them in quarters cast them presently into a basin full of vvater for if they be not cast into vvater so soone as they be thus chopt in peeces they vvill become blacke boyle them in a great quantitie of water vntill such time as they be almost become like pap meat vvhen they are sufficiently boyled strayne this water through a new linnen cloth that is good and thicke and that euen all the decoction and so strongly as possibly you can To this decoction thus strained adde the fourth part of fine sugar cause all to boyle vpon a reasonable coale fire so long as till in the end you perceiue it verie neere perfectly boyled then make a small fire that so it may not burne to the sides for that would make the gelly to be of an euill colour and you shall know when it is perfectly boyled if you find it cleauing like glue vnto the oyle and therefore you must then put it in boxes To preserue Walnuts Gather vvalnuts whiles they are small tender and greene vvith their rinde and all and make many small holes therein and after lay them to sleepe in vvater eleuen or twelue dayes more or lesse cleanse then from the skinne that lyeth vpon the shell vvithout shaling of them and boyle them in clarified Sugar a long time still putting vnto them more and more clarified Sugar because the long boyling vvill make great vvaste in the end put them into vessells with cloues ginger and cinnamome but lesse of cloues than of any of the rest because they would make them ouer bitter Another vvay to preserue them is to take greene Walnuts about the moneth of May or of Iune before that their pilling become hard pill them and let them steepe nine dayes more or lesse according as you shall perceiue them to become tender in pure water vvhich must be changed euerie day three or foure times boyle them yet afterward to make them more tender being boyled drie them in the shadow of the Sunne or vvipe them drie with a linnen cloth afterward pricke them with cinnamome and cloues In the end set them a boyling in clarified sugar so long till the sugar be boyled vp to the consistence of a sirope afterward put them in tinne or earthen vessells made for the purpose together vvith the sirope vvherein they were boyled Others doe them otherwise They gather the Walnut whiles it is greene they pricke it vpon a spindle or some such like instrument of wood not of yron for yron vvould make it more blacke and let it steepe in water often changed and then boyle it till it be tender being tender they cast it by and by into verie cleane cold water being cooled they cleanse it from a little skin which sheweth it selfe aboue the shell and drie it with a linnen cloth and finally pricke it about with cloues and cinnamome they put it thus in vessells and couer it with sirope to keepe it in if it happen that after some small time the sirope become too thin then they boyle it againe and put it againe into the vessell this is the way to keepe walnuts alwaies greene according to their naturall colour In steed of sugar or honie to make liquid preserues you may for need vse cute such as we will intreat of in the fi●t Booke vvhich cute or boyled vvine is of no lesse sweetnesse and goodnesse than honie or sugar To preserue pills of Cytrons or Oranges chuse great pills of Cytrons or of Oranges or of Assyrian Cytrons cut in foure or six peeces cleanse th●m from their inward skin and pippins steepe them in cleare vvater for the space of nine daies changing the water the fifth day vvhen the nine daies are past put them againe in cleare vvater to steepe vntill they become sweet and haue lost their bitternesse and withall appeare cleare
haue heated but here in this you must note that the Almonds are not alwaies blanched before their oyle be drawne because many times a mans leasure will not serue him to doe it though indeed it be the best way to pill or blanch them that so the oyle may come the more neat and pure and to pill them rather vvith a knife than by the meanes of water either warme or cold for feare that through the mixture of vvater there be caused to come forth great store of vvaterish and vnpleasant oyle After that the Almonds haue beene thus pressed you may bake the drosse vnder ashes and vse them in steed of bread you must obserue that such manner of preparing of oyle of sweet almonds is onely to be vsed vvhen such oyle is to be taken at the mouth to stay and take away the throws gripes of women newly deliuered of child●or else to mitigate the paine of the collicke or of the reines taking it in a drinke of two ounces of vvhite Wine or with Aqua-vitae And this oyle is drawne oftentimes without fire or any other heat whatsoeuer sometimes the almonds are fried to giue them a light drying and after the oile is pressed out The oyle of bitter Almonds is made of almonds fried in a frying-pan and sti●ed oftentimes that so they may not burne to after which they are to be pressed out so strongly and long as till they will yeeld no more After this manner a man may pressed out two other sorts of oyle out of sweet almonds one appropriated vnto ●●●ments to be applied vnto the outward parts of the bodie that are pained the other seruing for perfumers vvhich two are made of old sweet almonds sound and whole and verie oylie by reason of their age they must be fried in a frying-pan and alter pressed with weight or presses being close wrapped in a bagg or haire cloth The oyles of Pistaces common vvalnuts filberds Indian nuts the kernels of pine apples cherries seeds of gourds cucumbers melons Palma Christi the seed of hempe line pionie henbane wild saffron stauesacre and other fruits and oylie seeds are pressed out after the same manner that the oyles of sweet almonds be euermore looking to it that the expression be not without the heating of the thing pressed either by cha●●ng and warming it selfe at the fire or else by heating the plankes betwixt or the weigh● vnder which they are to be pressed Oyle of Bayes it thus prepared Take ripe bay-berries and new pound them and make them into masses or small lumps boyle them a sufficient long time in water in a caldron straine the decoction and let it coole gather the fat that swimmeth aboue and keepe it for oyle or else let all the water run out at some hole which shall be in the bottome of it and the fat which stayeth behind is the oyle Some doe not boyle the masses of bay-berries but presse them from vnder a presse and let the oyle fall downe into a vessell standing vnderneath with vvater Otherwise mixe an equall portion of bay-berries and oliues pound them together and presse out the oyle The oyle of bayes is soueraigne to put in clysters for the paines of the cholick and to make oyntments of for cold tumors the palsie shaking of quartaine agues and cold affects of the sinews After the same manner you may make the simple oyle of my●●tes I●niper-berries of the fruit of the masticke-tree turpentine-tree and Iuie which is also verie singular for cold distillations and benummed members Sometime men take an equall portion of Iuniper and bay-berries and steepe them in Wine pressing out the oile thereof afterward You may likewise boyle bay-berries in oyle and presse them out after or else without any other mixture or preparation you may put 〈◊〉 and greene bay-berries in a bagge and by weight or pressing draw out their oyle Oyle of nutmegs is thus made lay nutmegs on heapes bray them with a woodden stamper afterward presse them out from betwixt the plankes heated or else divide them into little heapes and steepe them three daies in verie good Wine after drie them in the shadow of the Sun two whole daies then heat them reasonably in a frying-pan vpon the fire sprinkling them with rosewater and presently presse them out You must note that in this manner of drawing of oyle which is done by expression men are forced many times to sprinkle the matter with water or wine to draw out the oyle both more easily and in greater quantitie so we see it practised sometimes in the expression of sweet almonds that when they are too drie there is some small 〈◊〉 of water put vnto them but vnto other things some Wine as in oyle-de-baies ●●●megs Iuniper-berries and such like CHAP. LIII How to make Oyles by impression THe Oyles made by impression are commonly compounded of Oyle oliue because it is more temperate than others easilier to be gotten and retayning more exactly the quantitie of ingredients whether hote or cold It is true that verie often in place of Oyle oliue some take the oyle of sweet Almonds F●●berds Cammo●ile or such other according as the occasion of things require as you may know and vnderstand by particular description of such oyles Whatsoeuer it is there are three things to be considered in the making of oyles by impression the heat vvhich is the efficient cause of the making of the oyle the qualitie of the ingredients and the quantitie of them As concerning the heat vvhether it be of the fire or of the Sunne or of other things which yeeld heat it must be measured according to the qualities of tendernesse or hardnesse which shall be in the substances and matter for flowers doe not craue so great a heat is fruits or roots whereupon it commeth to pas●e that for the composition of such oyles men are oftentimes contented with the heat of the Sunne or with the heat of boyling water otherwise called Maries-bath or the double vessell And I for mine owne part jam of this mind that for the making of these oyles there ought not any coale fire to be vsed nor yet any other kind of fire but rather the helpe of Ma●●●●-bath For as by the gentle and milde heat of Maries-bath all the parts of the ingredients are kept and the oyle well prepared and digested so by the heat of a violent and forcible fire there followeth rather the exhalation or combustion of oylie things than any digestion The preparing therefore of such oyles as haue need of a greater heat than that of the Sun will be a greater deale the better if you put the matter out of which you draw the oyle in a glasse or tin vessell for to be infused in oyle mingled with Wine or vvater or other conuenient liquor or without liquor according as the nature of the ingredients and the present thing requireth After that this vessell borne
a matter to trouble himselfe much withall and to be at much cost and charges therewith as many not well aduised men be now adaies but onely that he would take his time thereto at his best leasure and without any great expence or else to leaue the same to his wife or his farmers wife for indeed such occupation is farre better beseeming either of them than him for as much as the maistres●e or dairie-woman hath the pettie affaires and businesses belonging to this our countrie Farme and lying vvithin the doores resigned and put ouer to 〈◊〉 Therefore let it not seeme strange in this point if after our briefe intreatie of Oyles vve discourse somewhat briefely and according as a countrie thing requireth of the manner of distilling of vvaters and extracting of oylie quintessences out of such matter as our Countrie Farme shall affoord vvhich we would should serue for the vse of the Farmers vvife as well to relieue her folke withall as to succour her needie neighbours in the time of sicknesse as we see it to be the ordinarie custome of great Ladies Gentlewomen and Farmers vviues well and charitably disposed who distill waters and prepare oyntments and such other remedies to succour and relie●● the poore CHAP. LIX What Distillation is and how manie sorts there be of Distillation I Will not trouble my selfe here with setting downe the partie which was the first inuentor of Distillation as namely whether it were some Physitian of late time who hauing a desire to eat stewed Peares set them a stewing betwixt two dishes vpon the fire and hauing afterward taken off the vpper dish and finding the bottome thereof all set with pear●●e sweat retaining the smell and fauour of the stewed Peare it selfe inuented thereupon certaine instruments to draw out from all sorts of hearbes cleere and bright airie waters it is better that we see our selues to worke about the declaring of what Distillation is a●d what things they be which may be distilled Distillation or the manner of distilling is an art and meanes whereby is extracted the liquor or moisture of certaine things by the vertue and force of fire or such like heat as the things themselues doe require no otherwise than as we see here below that by the force and power of the Sunne manie vapours are lifted into the middle region of the ayre and there being turned into water fall downe in raine True it is that the word Distill sometimes reacheth further and is taken not onely for things that are distilled by the meanes of heat but without heat also as wee see it done in such things as are distilled after a strayning manner that is to say when the purer and thinner part of certaine waters or liquid iuices is separated and extracted from the more muddie and earthie part by the meanes of a Felt or by the meanes of a piece of Cloth fashioned like a little tongue or border or out of Sand and small Grauell or out of earthen Pots not yet baked or out of Vessels made of the wood of Iuie or out of Glasse made of Fearne Sometimes likewise things are not only distilled without heat but with cold as nemely when the things which you would haue distilled are set in cold and moist places as Oyle of Tar●ar is wont to be made as also Oyle of Myrrhe Dragons bloud Otters and other things But howsoeuer yet I would not haue the Mistresse of our Countrey House to busie her braine with all the sorts of Distillation but that she should content her selfe onely with that which is performed by heat True it is that it is meet and requisite that shee should know the diuersities of heat to the end she may procure such a heat as will best fit such matter and thing as shee is in hand withall or to goe about for some things craue the heat of a cleere fire or of coale or of the Sunne or of hot ●●●bers or of small sand or of the filings of yron or of the dros●e of Oliues others craue the heat of Horse dung or boiling water or the vapour of boiling water or of Wine boiling in the fat or of vnquencht Lime or of some Barke or other putrified thing And for this cause she shall marke and obserue foure degrees of heat the first whereof shall be called warme like water when it is halfe hot or the vapour of boiling water and in this there is no feare of anie hurt it can doe the second is a little hoter but yet so as that it may be well endured without anie annoyance or hurt such as the heat of ashes or embers the third is yet hoter than the second and so as that it may annoy and hurt one grieuously if hee should hold anie part or member therein anie long time such is the heat of small sand The fourth is so vehement as that it cannot without great paine very hardly be endured and such is the heat of the scales of filings of yron The first degree is fit to distill fine subtle and moist things as flowers and cold simples as Endiue Lettuce and such other The second for distilling of fine subtle and drie things of that sort are all fragrant or smelling things as Pepper Cinnamome Ginger Cloues and manie simples as Wormewood Sage c. The third for to distill matter that is of thicke substance and full of iuice of which sort are manie roots The fourth is proper for the distilling of mettals and minerall things as Allome Arsenicke c. By this meanes it will come to passe that the Mistresse of our Countrey House shall not haue anie thing brought vnto her out of which shee will not be able to draw the waterie humour and to distill cleere and bright waters CHAP. LX. Of the fit and conuenient time to distill in and of the faculties vertues and durablenesse of distilled waters EVerie thing is to be distilled in the time wherein it is best disposed and best fit that is to say rootes hearbes flowers and seedes when they are ripe but liuing things and the parts of them when they are of middle age as wee shall haue occasion to declare in his place Now as concerning the ripenesse of rootes hearbes flowers seedes and fruits we referre you to our second Booke where wee haue sufficiently at large laid open at what time euerie one of these things is to be gathered But it is to be noted that necessitie sometimes compelleth vs to distill drie plants and then it will be good to macerate and s●eepe them in some conuenient liquor or decoction answerable vnto the vertue of the thing● by that means in part to renew and bring againe their youthfulnesse and to endow them with such moisture as they brought with them when they were first gathered from off the earth as we will further declare by and by As concerning the vertues of distilled Waters it is most certaine that such as
mornings Water of horse-taile Take horse-taile plantaine red roses Winter-cherrie-berries rootes of holihockes and scraped licorice of each an ounce of bole-armoniacke halfe an ounce of the seed of gourds and cucumbers of each three drams of the seede of white poppie six drams of the seed of quinces halfe an ounce Infuse them all in vvhay made of goats milke the space of two daies afterward distill the vvater which will serue for the vlcers of the reines and bladder if there be foure ounces of ●●taken vvarme in the morning Water of corneflag Take equall parts of corneflag hyssope and southernewood stampe them throughly and leaue them so a certaine time afterward distill them this vvater prouoketh womens termes and killeth wormes in young children Burnet-water Take the seed of burnet parsley smallage the leaues and rootes of clotburre and smallage of euerie one equally stampe all together after put thereto of draggons bloud an ounce and a little good vinegar ●et all to infuse together a certaine time afterward distill it this vvater hath a meruailous vertue against the stone and grauell A singular vvater for the grauell vvhich the deceased Monsieur de Tillet had great vse of vvith happie succes●e Take the rootes of parsley and fennell made verie cleane and the vvooddie part taken out of each ●oure handfulls boyle them in twelue pintes of riuer water vvhen they are halfe boyled put thereto of the tender buds of Mallows holihockes violets and sea-weed of each foure handfulls boyle all together to the consumption of the halfe after straine them through a white napkin distill them putting thereunto two pound of Venice turpentine A singular water for the eyes Take celandine veruaine betonie eye-bright rue and fennell all new and fresh of each two handfulls stampe them together sprinkling them with halfe a pound of white Wine presse out the juice and afterward infuse in the same pepper and ginger made in powder of each halfe an ounce of saffron three drams of myrrhe aloes and sarcocol of each one ounce of verie good honie a pound distill them all in a glasse stillitorie at a small fire and keepe the water for the spots of the eyes Take foure ounces of the pills of Oranges dried in the shadow of the Sunne sixe dayes nutmegs and cloues made into powder either of them by themselues of each foure ounces infuse the said aromaticall powders in a glasse viole with rosewater the space of seuenteene dayes in the Sunne after cast vpon the said powders the rindes of oranges vvhich you shall let steepe there a certaine space of time Afterward take of new red roses gathered two daies before a pound of the roote of cype●us halfe a pound of the leaues of rosemarie hys●op balme roses of the bush of each two handfulls of bay-leaues a handfull lay them all to drie in the Sunne for two houres after infuse them in rose-water the space of three houres this done put them all into a Still after this manner In the bottome of the Still make a bed of one pound of new red roses then next a bed of aromaticall powders and the rindes of oranges in the third place a bed of Violet flowers and in the fourth place the last and fourth bed of the afore named hearbes distill them all in Maries-bath with a gentle fire Adde vnto the distilled water two pound of rose-rose-water or thereabout so that it may be in proportion equall to the third or fourth part of the water drawne out by distillation This vvater taken in the morning the weight of a dramme keepeth the bodie sound lustie and reneweth youth It is singular for the paine of the head tteeth bellie gripings palsie con●ulsions apoplexie faintings and other such cold diseases This is the vvater that is so much esteemed in the courts of kings and princes and amongst the great and renowned ladies An Allome-water Take Verjuice the juice of Plantaine and Purslaine of each a pound seuen whites of egges ten ounces of Roch-allome mingle them together and distill them Otherwise take plantaine purslaine sorrell gourds nightshade and verjuice of each a handfull poune them grosly mixe therewith ten or twelue whites of egges put them all in a glasse stillitorie to distill mingling amongst them halfe a pound of Allome as you lay bed vpon bed this water is good for ca●kers for the rednesse of the face and for vlcers applying linnen clothes thereunto that haue beene wet therein You may likewise distill purging waters in infusing purgatiue medicines both simple and compound seeing that they be as new as may be and that in Aqua-vitae wine milke whay distilled waters or conuenient decoctions and such waters vvill haue the like vertues as the purging medicines haue thus you may distill Catholicum Diaphoenicon confectio Hamech and Electuarium de ●ucco rosar●m Thus you may distill rhubarbe agaricke hellebor scammonie and such other purgatiues that are sound and new The maner of distilling rhubarbe may be this take a quantitie of new and greene Rhubarbe vvhether it be a pound or halfe a pound more or lesse make it ●●to small pieces or make it into grosse powder and vpon it cast of the iuice of Borage and Buglosse of each two pound for one of Rubarbe infuse them all together for the space of foure and twentie houres vpon hot ashes then distill them in a Stillitorie in Maries bath This distilling of purgatiue Medicines is for such kind of people as are verie delicate and cannot abide the smell of the purging medicine to be ministred otherwise vnto them CHAP. LXX Of sweet Waters particularly described SWeet Waters serue to wash the hands face haire of the head and beard as also to make Linnens Garments Gloues and such other things to smell sweet Water of Lauander Take the flowers of Lauander new or drie be●prinkle or infuse them in Rose-water Wine or Aqua-vitae afterward distill them The water will be sweeter if you drie the flowers in the Sunne in a Glasse-violl close stopped and cast vpon them afterward some white Wine And if in the time of want and lacke of distilled water you would haue a water presently made which should resemble the smell of the water of Lauander cast a drop or two of the Oyle of Spike into a good sufficient quantitie of pure water and swill them well together in a bottle or Glasse-violl with a narrow necke This water though it be not distilled yet it ceaseth not to haue the sweet smelling sent and sauour that the distilled hath Water of Cloues Take halfe an ounce of Cloues well bruised set them to infuse in a pound and a halfe of Rose-water the space of foure and twentie houres after distill them in Maries bath The water of sweet Smells Take Basill Mints Marierome rootes of Corneflag Hyssope Sauorie Sage Balme Lauander and Rosemarie of each a handfull of Cloues Cinnamome and N●tmegs of each halfe an
true that besides the helpe comming by this tinning of the vessels the ve●ie action of the fire which worketh and dispatcheth speedily and violently whe●e as there is great quantitie of water doth keepe the Oyle from being ●ainted with anie euill smell or other accident that is not naturall and therefore there needs no feare to be taken for the vsing of Copper vessels in the distilling of Oyles for the occasions aforesaid although that earthen or glasse-vessels would be farre better and more naturall seeing in them there resteth no iot of mettall-like matter than either those that are of Copper or molten or of anie other mettall saue onely there is some danger of breaking or cracking of them being the things whereunto earthen and glasse-vessell are verie subiect when they are hot yea though they were armed with mo●tar fat earth cement or anie other matter of defence and then such breach or cracke proueth a matter of no small dammage or consequence in the distillation of Oyles especially those which are precious Notwithstanding it is free for euery man ●o vse vessels of earth or glasse vpon paine that they be carefull to keepe them that they neither cracke not breake and the rather seeing that in the extracting of some Oyles there must needs be vsed glasse-vessels or earthen ones vernished and leaded and not Copper or Latten as which will verie hardly let runne anie Oyles from things that consist of an eager taste whether it be that the Copper hath the like it selfe or of some secret vertue and facultie which is in it And this thing wee see sufficiently tried in the seedes of Grapes whose Oyle conuerteth and turneth rather into a greene rust in such vessels than into anie airie or thinne exhalation doe a man what he can either about the fire or anie other way whatsoeuer but in the distillation of fragrant and aromaticall things as also those which are sweet in taste or haue a diuers qualitie from the Copper it might seeme that a molten vessell might be more conuenient CHAP. LXXVII At what time Oyles would be distilled and how the matter and things whereof they are made must be prepared THe matter of euerie Oyle is to be distilled at such time as when it is best disposed that is to say seedes and aromaticall things when they are fresh and new gathered for the fresher and newer that they a●e so much the more excellent Oyle will they yeeld especially the thing● that are of a sweet smell and aromaticall And as for hearbes they must be gathered when they are come to their full force that is to say when they are in flower for and if they be deferred longer the Oyle that commeth of them for the most part will be more full of scumme and ranke as also there will not so much be gathered of them Being gathered at such time they must be dried in the shadow for the space of a moneth or two to the end that some portion of their moistnesse and feeding humo● may be diminished and taken away and that the oylie and radicall humor may be extracted more pure and sincere and thirdly that the hearbes themselues may be the more easily crushed and bruised But on the contrarie side if the hearbes be 〈◊〉 and fresh gathered when they are distilled they will yeeld sufficient store of Oyle in as much as their naturall moisture will abound but the Oyle will not be of such ●fficacie nor yet so odoriferous as when the merrie and good meane betwixt both is kept But as concerning the preparing 〈◊〉 such matter as you meane to make your Oyles of there is not anie need to vse infusion or putrifaction as is done in the distilling of waters as we haue said before For if one should bestow an infusion vpon them either in water wine or Aqua-vitae it would but breed a confusion and mix●ure of the naturall sauor and smell of the Oyle with that of the liquor and againe i● would make them more moist than need would require in respect of the pure and since●e extracting of the Oyle Againe if you should take the way to putrifie them in Horse-dung earth hot ashes or boyling water the better to distill and draw out your Oyle afterward and following the way that we will speake of by and by yet thereby you shall giue occasion of infecting your Oyle with some ill vice For the matter being putrified it is not possible but that the Oyles should haue a smatch of it seeing it is one part of the matter That it so falleth out with Oyles that are so distilled of matter aforehand so putrified although it doe not by and by corrupt appe●●eth sufficiently for in some space of time it is without all doubt corrupted and that in a great deale shorter time without comparison than other Oyles which are drawn● without putrifaction of their matter going before by which it may appe●●e what my aduice and counsaile would be to euerie man namely that the matter 〈◊〉 you would extract your Oyle be not infused or putrified but onely crushed b●●ised brayed and brought into small pieces so as that afterward they may be si●ted through some wide sieue which course shall doe as well yea rather better than your infusing or putrifying of them without stamping braying and bruising of them besides that the businesse is sooner dispatched yea and if you would infuse and putrific the ●●●ter you should not thereby gaine three drops of Oyle more than you should 〈◊〉 by onely beating and stamping of them CHAP. LXXVIII Of the manner and order that must be kept in distilling of Oyles WHen you haue prepared the matter whereof you meane to make your oyle that is to say bruised it and brought it into small cornes then passe it grosly through a scarce casting it into the vessell of copper with certaine measures of fountaine water that is to say to match two pound vveight of matter with eighteene pound of vvater and for that cause it is meet that the vessell should containe betwixt twelue and fifteene pintes and yet the third part remaine void and emptie vvhen the water and matter are both in This vvater standeth in steed of a coach or waggon vnto the matter to be distilled for the carrying vp of his vapors and to seperate the humours by the decoction and boyling that it there maketh You may adde or diminish of the quantitie of vvater according to the matter his quantitie vvhich you are about to distill vpon paine notwithstanding that you put in nine or ten times as much water as you doe matter and that your vessell of copper glasse earth or any such matter as shall seeme best be of bignesse proportionable and agreeing with the quantitie of matter which you would distill for being too great or too little it would proue but cost cast away It is true that the two pound of matter and eighteene of water here mentioned is the most certaine rate that we can sticke to
cold goe crosse the water are the oyles of anise and fennell-seed and that by reason of a certaine proportion which they haue with the weight of the vvater Therefore for the seperating of the oyle vvhich the water hath carried along vvith it it were good first that the receiuer should haue his bottome somewhat sharpe pointed and that in the said bottome therewithall there should be a small hole which hauing beene stopped during the time of the distillation with Waxe o● cement should now after the distillation the water and oyle being growne cold by the operation of the ayre be vnstopped if so be that after attentiue beholding of the receiuer it appeare that the oyle is gathered into the bottome of it for so the ceme●● or vvaxe taken away the oyle vvill come out and the vvater stay behind in the vessell if by stopping the hole in time it be your mind to keepe it there If the oyle 〈◊〉 aloft vpon the vvater if you vnstop the foresaid hole in the bottome the vvater will run out below and the oyle vvill stay behind in the receiuer if by mishap it doe not fall downe into the bottome of the receiuer first before it come into the viole prepared for it but this you must take heed vnto but and if the oyle be mingled amongst the vvater in manner of a cloud strayne the water through a fine linnen cloth vvhich afterward vvill be easily gathered together vvith a knife in such sort at that you may put it vp in a viole wherein afterward if need be you may turne it into a thin liquor by a small heat set in the Sunne or vpon hot ashes if the oyle swim vpon the vpper face of the vvater you shall seperate it in a furnace of digestion vvith a siluer spoone you may also vse other meanes to seperate your oyle from his fellow vvater as for example by a funnell of glasse putting your finger toward the poynt of it and vnderneath and doing the like oftentimes vnto t●●t vvhich hath been done by the receiuer that is to say by powring of liquor into the said funnell You may likewise do● the same by the sucking of the vvater out of the receiuer for so you may sucke out all the water and lea●● the oile in the bottome vvhich sucking may be performed by pipes of pla●e made after the fashion of those vvhich you see pictured here vvhich vvill draw all the vvater in a short time out of the receiuer as you see them vsed in France to cause vvater to runne in manner of a fountaine out of any bucket or other vessell wherein water is con●ayned CHAP. LXXX Of the faculties or properties continuance and vse of distilled Oyles SEeing that distilled oyles as vve haue before declared are the radicall humour of euerie matter and that such radicall humour is as it were the soule and forme which giueth being vnto all matter and vvhereupon depend the vertues powers faculties and actions of the said matter you need not doubt but that the vvhole and intire vertues of simples distilled is imparted vnto the Oyles drawne from them and that in a purer and most subtile man●●r in as much as by such chymicall resolution the most subtile substances are seperated from the gros●er by being mingled vvherewith they vvere greatly weake●ed and hindered from doing their effects and so it also commeth to passe that ●ooke vvhat vertue vvas in a pound of the simple is contayned in a dram more or 〈◊〉 of the oyle besides this such oyles haue this propertie amongst others that by a meruailous subtilenesse of substance vvhich they haue gotten by the fire they doe 〈◊〉 pierce into the most profound and deepe parts and quickly vvorke their ●ffects As concerning their lasting and continuance they vvill keepe long especially 〈◊〉 after they haue beene rectified that is to say yet once more distilled vpon ashes vvith a s●all fire in a retort you stop them vp in bottles of double glasse and such 〈◊〉 are armed and close stopt vvith Cement or Masticke or Waxe and Masticke 〈◊〉 tegether without giuing them any ayre except at such times as you vvould ●se them and wh●ch then you cannot doe vvithout damage done vnto them for ●●●ing they be all ayrie and firie they cannot chuse but easily euaporate and spend ●nd that in such sort as that it may be euidently seene and discerned as amongst the 〈◊〉 will easily be found true in oyle of camphire As for the vse that is in drops if you take them simplie and alone by themselues ●●hether it be into the bodie or vvithout as you shall vnderstand hereafter But to vse them to the most profit inwardly you must dissolue sugar in violet rose cinna●ome or other such like waters and into it cast one or two drops of the oyle which you would vse and so make vp lozenges thereof CHAP. LXXXI A particular description of certaine Oyles that are distilled according to the former methode BVt the oyles of Seeds as of Anise Fennell Elder-tree Cummine and others are distilled after this manner Take such quantitie of Seeds as you please as fiue or sixe pound at the least and for the better bruise them gros●y seeing carefully to it that not so much as one seed con●inu●●vhole put them into the vessell of copper poure in vpon them of cleare fountain● vvater ●iue and twentie or thirtie pound mingle them diligently together couer th● vessell vvith his head and doe in manner as hath beene said before The oyle vvhich distilleth first is of greater effica●i● than any one for vvhich cause the receiuer may be twice or thrice changed This thing is vvorthie obseruation that oyle of anise-●eeds in the time of So●●er cannot well be distilled because that the spirits thereof are too subtile and much more subtile indeed than those of Fennell vvhereupon it followeth that at the 〈◊〉 of the fire they doe easily spend by euaporation though it be guided and kept verie low and soft But the fittest time to distill them ●s Winter for how much the colder that Winter is so much the more it becommeth coagulate and resembling the cafphire vvhen it runneth downe into the receiuer After that you haue s●rayned it through a cleane linnen cloth all the vvater passeth away and the oyle 〈◊〉 behind in the linnen cloth and vvhich you must dissolue shortly after in a great glasse by the heat of a ●ire-pan and so the ●legme is easily seperated This is a singular oile whether it be taken alone by drops with wine or broth or sugar Lozenges for to comfort the stomacke helpe digestion and discusse winds for the 〈◊〉 also and diseases of the lungs as also for the mother whereupon it commeth that it s●ay●●h the whites of women Fruits as of Iuniper berries c. by reason that they are somewhat more oylie than hearbes and seedes doe not require such quantitie of water as hearbes and seedes so that for a pound of fruits fiue or six
pound of water will be 〈◊〉 They must bee brayed sufficiently small put into the gourd and dealt with as seedes and hearbes are dealt withall The Oyle commeth forth first and afterward the water Spices and aromaticall things are distilled after the same manner that seedes are but in their distillation mingle not Wine or Aqua-vitae as some doe but onely pure fountaine water for Wine and Aqua-vitae rise vp presently without carrying wi●● them the vertues of the aromaticall things whereas the water riseth no● vp without taking with it the aromaticall things The Oyle of Nutmegs swimmeth alo●t and so doth that of Mace For to distill Oyle of Cinnamome in excellent manner Bray a pound of Cinnamome in such sor● as that it may goe through a sieue but beat it not all to powder put it in a gourd and powre vpon it water of Buglosse Borage Endiue and Balme of euerie one halfe a pound let them stand together foure or fiue daies in the vessell well stopt then out of this gourd powre them into another gourd and set this gourd in an earthen pot with sand betwixt the pot and it and so set them both in the furnace first make a soft fire but after make it greater by little and little after that there is a measure distilled out after this manner take it away as the best for that which 〈◊〉 loweth is of a great deale lesse vertue than the first but yet may be kept to 〈◊〉 new Cinnamome in After the same fashion you shall distill Cloues Pepper Angelica Galanga c. See in our secret remedies CHAP. LXXXII Of the manner of extracting Oyles out of Wood. FOr as much as the oylie substance of wood is more ●enacious and clammie by reason of the slyminesse thereof therefore the extr●c●ing of the ●ame is diuers from that of hearbes and seedes and is not 〈…〉 but 〈◊〉 greater cost and drawne and gathered with greater 〈…〉 and industrie than those of seeds and plants which we haue entrea●ed of before know well that some doe accustome to draw Oyles per des●●nsum● as they vse 〈◊〉 call it in two vessels of earth set one vpon another and a plate of yron with a hole in it betwixt them both but such Oyle is nothing worth and tasteth for the most part of I cannot tell of what adustion but the best is to draw it per ascensum that so you may haue that which is excellent good faire and penetratiue the manner is such Make your furnace of matter and forme as aboue sauing that in the vppermost part of it you must haue a cleft or open place for the more easie placing and disposing of the necke of your vessell The vessell shall be fashioned like a Bladder Corner or bagge of a Shepheards Pipe called of the Chymists a re●ort it must be of glasse or else of earth and varnished and leaded within and of such bignesse as that it may containe a dozen pound of water hauing a necke of a foot and a halfe long or a foot long at the least and bending downeward It is to consist of two parts the one of them stretching from the bell●e of the said bladder forward some six fingers long and for thicknesse so made as that ones hand may goe into the orifice of it to make cleane the said vessell within and the other growing euer lesse and lesse euen vnto the end must be made to ioyne with the former part by the mea●es and helpe of some fastening matter as glue or cement of Bole-armoniacke and yet in such sort as that they may be set together and taken asunder when need shall require This is the figure and shape A The Retort of glasse or earth vernished within and leaded B The orifice of the Retort for the taking in of matter into the bellie and bodie and for to giue way also for the making cleane of the said bellie and which for that purpose must be made larger than it is pictured here for else the hand cannot enter into it C The other part of the Retort into which must be inserted the nether part of the Retort which must haue a ring about in the place where the two parts shall be cemented and luted together D The Pipe which must be narrow and sharpe-pointed to the end it may be inserted and put into anie sort of glasse-violl or bottle If you haue not the benefit of a furnace you shall place the Retort in fit and conuenient sort within an earthen panne or in stead thereof in a vessell or pot of yron good and wide and filled with sand or ashes or without anie thing in it and that vpon a brandrith if there be need of vsing a verie great fire as we see it daily practised amongst the Apothecaries Wherefore to draw oyle out of oylie wood you must first make it small and bring it into pieces in such sort as Turners doe with turning of wood and not with anie Saw or anie other edge-toole neither yet must you make it like powder for in boiling it would too lightly and easily rise and swell as also those gobbe●s and lumps which are cut by edge-tooles or other instruments doe hardly and with great difficultie yeeld anie oyle put into the Retort two pound of this wood diuided into pieces after the manner of the Turners and as much Aqua-vitae for the steeping and infusing of it let them infuse together certaine daies This Aqua-vitae by reason of his subtlenesse pierceth more easily than any other liquor and likewise without any difficultie separateth and forcibly draweth the oyle from his proper subiect and yet in the meane time in neither changeth nor corrupteth any manner of way the nature of the said oyle because it draweth neere vnto the temperature of oyles which is the cause why we mingle with the wood Aqua-vitae rather than common water howsoeuer I do not any thing doubt of the maner before described about the distillation of oyles hearbs seeds in which is vsed the vessell of Copper with a head powring thereinto some cleare fountaine vvater as though it could not be verie certaine and profitable for the extracting of oyles of vvood vvere it not that vve doe ●eare more than any thing else the ouer great and vehement boyling thereof proceeding of the disagreement of the drinesse of the matter and moisture of the vvater vvhich might hinder the course of our distillation Adde hereunto also that such kinds of oiles can hardly rise to the inner top of the head if we see this fashioned copper vessell When as the vvood hath beene sufficiently infused place the earthen pan in the vppermost part of the furnace vpon the barres of yron set the retort within this earthen pan with sand in the emptie spaces betwixt as also couered ouer vvith sand cause the necke to passe through the cleft made in the vppermost part of the furnace and to turne downeward towards the receiuer into the mouth vvhereof it must
be close joyned and as carefully and firmely luted vvith cement as may be afterward by little and little put the kindled coles vpon the grate and sometimes it will not be amisse to lay them vpon the retort vvherein the matter to be distilled is inclosed if it like you not better to set an earthen pan ouer it in forme of an head and that to reuerberate and beat backe the heat againe vpon the said retort These things accomplished you must see to the ordering and continuing of your fire increasing it by little and little as reason shall require euermore carefully looking vnto the sequence and successe of the vvorke vntill such time as the Aqua-vitae before infused be all of it distilled for this is it vvhich commeth ●orth first in the distillation and is gathered into the receiuer then after this commeth the oyle pure and all alone vvithout any thing mixt with it and that in such store as a man could not looke for the like of any manner of putrifying of the matter vvhatsoeuer keepe vvell this Aqua-vitae to serue you againe for the s●me vse because it still is getting some part of the facultie of the matter wherewith it is mixed and there is nothing to let vvhy it may not serue twice yea thrice When the receiuer is taken away you must put another in his place halfe full of cleare water that the oyle may distill into it this vvater vve allow in the receiuer in respect of the impressions vvhich the fire may haue made by too veh●ment a boyling in the oyle that by the meanes of this vvat●r the same may be conected and taken away and the oyle also kept the better from euaporation vvhich thing is yet the more f●●ly atchieued if you set your receiuer in a bason or other vessel full of cold vvater changing and renewing the same from houre to houre till the distillation be finished You may also change your receiuer if you thinke good once or twice the better to know the differences of your oyles The distillation accomplished vvhich you shall gather by the markes before set downe you shall sep●rate the oyle from the vvater by the meanes also aboue set downe and at the same time or before any of these things done take your retort from the fire and take off his necke emptying the bellie of the drosse and excrements setled and staying behind vvhich afterward you shall temper with vvater so oft as that hauing strayned them and boyled them againe they come fo●th thicke and small like pap-meat which is also good for the same diseases that the oyles are good for After this order is the wood Guajacum distilled vvhich is singular good for the vlcers and paines happening in the French-pockes The oyle of the Ash-tree and this is good to be vsed in cold distillations and to the helping of the morphew and palsie taken also inwardly it is singular good for the diseased of the spleene the oyle of Iuniper-wood is a special good thing in the comforting of the reines and matrix CHAP. LXXXIII Of the manner of drawing Oyles of Gums and first of those that are liquid FOr the distilling of Oyles of Gummes you must vse the same furnace and retort wherein you distilled your oylie vvoods but to tell you the truth they are not distilled without much paine by reason of their glutinous clamminesse giuen to hold fast their radicall humour and moisture And vvhich is more there are as many wayes of drawing oyles of Gummes as there are differences of Gummes For some are liquid that is to say in substance like birdlime vvhich vvill hardly be kept within his bounds such is Turpentine liquid Storax and such other like vvhich participate more of an oylie qualitie than of an earthie and so are easily resolued with a small fire The others are hard as is incense benjouine and masticke vvhich require a reasonable heat to be mollified vvith Some againe are resolued with a vvaterie humour as Myrrhe and Gum arabicke Therefore to distill liquid gums and to draw out their oyles there may two waies be taken the one is such as hath beene vsed of a long time and the other is new after the first way you may distill oyle of Turpentine thus Take cleare Turpentine as much as you please and for ●uerie pound take of the ashes of some hard and strong vvood two ounces or small sand vvashed grauell or the powder of brickes to keepe the Turpentine for rising high and swelling put all these in the retort vvhich you shall set within the earthen pan in the furnace as you did in oylie woods in the beginning you shall haue but a gentle fire to draw out the vvater vvhich vvill first come forth and after make it bigger for the distilling of the Oyle It is likewise distilled another and that a new vvay Take two pound of Turpentine and eight pound of fountaine vvater that is verie cleare put both into the retort together and distill them at a reasonable fire following the order set downe for oylie vvoods The Oyle vvhich you shall gather vvill be most pure and fine of a verie cleare and bright colour of a sweet smell and pleasant tast vvhich properties are not to be found in the oyle which is drawne after the common and ordinarie fashion and this commeth to passe by reason of the vvater tempering the qualities conceiued and b●gotten in the matter distilled by the force of the fire and heat of the vessell vvhich otherwise would haue begotten some fierie impressions therein had not the resisting qualitie of the vvater vvithstood the same by his moisture and that so much the more for being likewise receiued into a receiuer halfe full of faire and fresh vvater vvhich affordeth another good helpe likewise vnto the same of all which helpes the common manner of distilling this oyle vvith sand and ashes hath not one as is too apparant in the vnpleasant taste and blackish or sad yellowish colour and that it is not fit to be vsed about the bodie outwardly so farre is it off from being worthie to be taken inwardly vvithout the endangering of the sicke partie beside the vnpleasantnesse of the tast but this vvhich is distilled vvith vvater is singular good for all manner of diseases for which it is so highly commended of all men as namely for the shortnesse of breath stone colicke and diseases of the lungs being taken inwardly in the quantitie of two drams as also to take away scarres remaining freckles staines and other spots of the skin being applied outwardly But and if you desire to know vvhen your Oyle is all distilled then you must marke and see vvhen it ceaseth to runne out of the retort into the receiuer for then the distillation of the best and most excellent Oyle is finished And in case you yet desire to draw some more oyle out of the rest of the matter remaining within the retort you may doe it verie easilie if
and therefore I vvill wade a little further in this art and shew you the maner of taking of all sorts of fish by the angle which is the most generous and best kind of all other and may truely be called the Emperor of all exercises To speake them first of this art of angling or taking of fish with the angle you shall vnderstand that it consisteth in three especiall things that is to say in the instrument which is the angle in the intisement vvhich is the bait and in the true vse of them both together vvhich is the seasons and times of the yeare fittest for the sport To speake then first of the angle-rod it must be generally of two peeces but particularly as for the pike or other greater fish it may be made of one entire peece the substance of the stock would be a vvel grown ground Wi●ch●n an elme or an Ewe or a hasel and the top would be of hasel or Whale-bone●some anglers vse to compound their rods of many peeces as those which are made of cane wherein one joynt is applied into another but they are more for pleasure than any generall profit To these rods doe belong lines made of the strongest and longest horse-haire which can be got nor are th●y to be gotten of leane poore and diseased j●des but such as are faire fat and in ●ul strength and if conueniently you can it is best euer to gather them from stoned horses and not from mares or geldings of haire the blacke is the vvorst the vvhite and gray best and other colours indifferent your smallest lines vvould consist of three haires and your bigger of seuen if amongst your haire you mixe a silke-threed or two the line vvill be the better and stronger you shall twist your haires neither too hard nor too soft but hold a mediocritie so as they may twine and couch close together and the ends you shall fasten together vvith a fishers-knot vvhich is your ordinarie fast knot foulded foure or fiue times abou● both vnder and aboue to make it from loosening in the vvater for the length of your lines they must answer to the places in which you angle some being foure fadome some sixe and some more according to the length of your rod or the depth of the vvater your lines though their naturall colours as being vvhite or gray is not amisse vvould yet sometimes be coloured of other colours according to the seasons of the yeare for so the shadow of them vvhich is most daungerous will least scarre the fish and soonest in●ice them to bite and of these colours the Water-green● is the best yellow next then russet darke browne or tawnie To die your lines of a Water-greene you shall take a pottle of Allome-vvater and put thereinto a handfull of Marigolds and let them boyle vvell till a yellow 〈◊〉 rise on the top of the vvater then take the quantitie of halfe a pound of greene coperas and as much of Verdigrea●e beaten to fine powder and put it vvith the haire into the vvater and so let it boyle againe a little space and then set it in some 〈◊〉 to coole for the space of halfe a day then take ●ut your haire and lay it vvhere it may drie This colour of Water-greene is good to angle with in all clayie vvaters from the Spring till the beginning of Winter If you vvill haue your haires yellow you shall take Allome-water as beforesaid and Marigolds and boyle them therein adding thereto a handfull of turmerick or for want thereof so much of green Walnut-leaues and mixing it with the vvater steepe your haires therein a day and a night then take them from them and drie them these yellow coloured lines are good also to angle with in cleare water if they be full of weeds ●edge and other water flowers for it is not vnlike to the stalkes thereof and the time best from Michaelmas till Christmas To make your lines russet you shall take a quart of Allome water and as much strong lee then put thereunto a handfull of soot and as much Browne of Spaine then when it hath boyled well an houre or two set it by to coole and being cooled steepe the haires therein a full day and a night and then lay the haires to dry This colour is good to angle within deepe waters whether they be riuers or standing pooles and are best to be vsed from Christmas till after Easter But if you will haue them of a darke browne colour then you shall take a pound of Vmber and halfe so much soot and seeth it in a pottle of Ale a good space then being coole steepe your haires therein the space of foure and twentie houres and then hang them vp to drie and if the colour be not darke ynough you may adde a little more of the Vmber and it will darken it These lines are best to angle with in blacke and muddie waters whether they be standing pooles or running streames and will endure all seasons of the yeare Lastly to make your lines of a ●awnie colour you shall take lime and water and mixe it together and steepe your haires therein halfe a day then take them forth and steepe them double so long time in Tanners ouze and then hang them vp to dry These lines are best to angle with in 〈◊〉 and heathie waters which are of a reddish or browne colour and wil serue for that purpose all the seasons of the yeare Now if with this colour or the greene you mix a siluer thred it wil not be amisse and with anie of the other colours a gold thred they will be much better to angle withall Also you must remember to make at each end of your lines good bigge loopes the one to fasten to the top of your rod the other to the hooke-line which commonly is not ●boue a foot long at the most To these lines there doth also belong Corkes or Floats which you shall make in this manner Take of the best and thickest Corke you can get and with a fine rape ●●●ing pared it cleane cut it into the fashion of a Peare bigge and round at the one end and small and sharpe at the other euer obseruing according to the bignesse of your line to make the bignesse of your corke as for a line of three haires a corke of an ynch or little more long and to the bigger lines bigger corks through this corke you shall thrust a quill and through the quill the line The corke serueth onely to let you know when the fish biteth therefore the lesse it is the better it is for it onely giues the lesse shadow prouided that it be euer in your eye for though some Anglers will fish without corkes yet it is not so good nor so certaine In placing your corke vpon your line you must put the small end downeward and the bigge end to the topward Now there be some Anglers which make their corkes of the fashion of
heat is not good but for the winter angling you shall not make anie difference of times if the day be calme for all houres of the Sunne are al●ke onely the noone-tide is esteemed best If the water where you angle ebbe and ●low the best time of angling is at an ebbing water but in those places where the ●yde is not great there the time of flowing is preferred also lastly whensoeuer you see the T●out play or leape aboue water and the Pike shute in the pursuit of other ●i●hes it is then a verie good time to angle in and all times and seasons contrarie to these before rehearsed are vild and naught to angle in After the knowledge of seasons you shall know the best manner how to stand and place your bodie whilest you angle for if you angle in anie pond or standing water then you shall chuse that place which is deepest blackest and least transparent shadowing your selfe vnder the banke or so as your shadow may be carried from the water for it euer breeds a fright vnto the fishes but if you angle in anie riuer you shall chuse that place which is deepest and clearest and here also you shall striue to conceale your selfe as much as is possible by standing behind trees or bushes or anie thing else that may couer you Next to this you shall know the haunts of fishes as thus the Carpe Eele and Tench doe euer haunt muddie places the Carpe lying in the bottome thereof the Tench amongst the weeds and the Eeles vnder stones or other couert the Breame the Cheuine and the Pike haunt euer the cleare and sandie bottome the Pike where you see great store of small frie the Cheuine where the streame runneth swiftest and the shade is greatest and the Breame where the water is bro●dest and the depth giueth greatest libertie also these three delight more in ponds than in riuers The Salmon hath his haunt in the swiftest and broadest riuers whose channell falls into the sea The Trout loueth smaller brookes the current being cleare and grauellie and lodgeth most in deepe holes so doth the Pearch also onely he abideth most in the creekes or hollow places which are about the bankes The Gudgin the Loach and the Bulhead haunt shallow waters The Barbel Roche Dace and Ruffe haunt the deepe shadie places of those waters which are mixt with more ●and than grauell or where the clay is firme and not ●●imie and loue to lye vnder the shadowes of trees or bushes that grow on the banke The Luce or Lucerne haunteth the broad and large meares being deepe and still and euer lodgeth in the bottome thereof The Shad and Tweat haunt those waters which are brackish deepe and accustomed to ebbe and flow and where they haunt there commonly is found both the Muller and the Suant all which loue to lodge close and flat at the bottome so it be rather clay than grauell Next to the knowledge of the haunts of fishes you shall learne to know the seuerall baits which besides those formerly described which are indeed French secrets there are manie other and may be reduced to two kinds Liue-baits and Dead-baits your Liue-baits are wormes of all kinds especially the Red-worme the Maggot the Bob the Dore browne Flyes Frogges Grashoppers Hornets Wasps Bees Snailes small Roches Bleakes Gudgins or else Loaches your dead-baits are pastes of all kinds of which we haue exprest diuers before and their vse yong brood of Waspes dried or vndried clottered Bloud Chee●e Bramble-berries Corne-seedes Cherries and all sorts of flies made of silke and feathers so liuely that they will many times deceiue a good iudgement of which there are diuers as the dunne flie the stone flie the red flie the yellow flie the blacke flie the darke yellow flie the moorish flie the tawnie flie the Waspe flie the shell-flie and the cloudie darke flie Now for the seasons in which all these seuerall baites are to be vsed you shall know that the Red-worme will serue for small fish all the yeare long the Maggot is good in Iulie the Bob and Dore in May the browne flies in Iune Frogges in March Grashoppers in September Hornets Waspes and Bees in Iuly Snailes in August all pastes are good in May Iune and Iuly dried Waspes in May Sheepes bloud and Cheese in Aprill and for Bramble-berries or Corne-seeds they are good at the fall of the lease onely Lastly for your dead flies the dunne flie is good in March and Februarie the stone flie is for Aprill the red flie and the yellow flie are for May the black flie the darke yellow flie and the moorish flie are for Iune the tawnie flie for part of May and part of Iune the Waspe flie and the shell flie are for Iuly and the cloudie darke flie for August Now for the preseruation of all baits especially the liuing ones for the dead doe not so soone perish you shall vnderstand that they must not be kept all together but euerie kind seuerall by it selfe and nourished with such things as they delight in and first for the Red-worme you shall put them into a bagge of red cloth and chopping a handfull of Fennell mix it with halfe so much fine mould and put it to the wormes and they will not onely liue long therein but also scoure and seed Some put mosse amongst them others put Pa●sley or sweet Marierome neither is it amisse but the first is best and will keepe them full two moneths in perfection For the Maggot you shall mix with them Sheepes ●allow or little bits of a beasts liuer The best way to scoure them is to put them into a bagge of blanketting with sand and hang them where they may haue the ayre of the fire for an houre or two For Frogges and Gr●shoppers you shall keepe them in wet mosse and long grasse moistened euerie night with water As for the Bob Cadys worme the Canker and such like you shall keepe them with the same things that you find them vpon and for all sorts of liue flies you shall vse them as you take them onely the Waspe the Hornet and the Bumble-bee you shall fi●st drie them a little in a warme Ouen after the bread is drawne and then dippe all their heads into Sheepes bloud and then drie them againe and so keepe them in a close boxe and they will keepe two or three moneths in verie good perfection Now for the seuerall fishes and how they delight in euerie seuerall bait you shall know that the Gudgin Roch and Dace loue the Red-worme Cod-worme Maggot clottered bloud or the young brood of Wasps the Carpe loues paste the Mosse-worme the Red-worme the Menow the Cadys worme or Grashopper the Chub Cheuine or Trout loue all sorts of dead flies Cadys worme Bob Frogges Do●es or Hornets the Eele loues the Red-worme or Sheepes guts the Flounder or Suant loues the Red-worme or brood of Waspes the Grayling or the Barbel loue all that the
and waterish which the Grecians call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is to say not admitting the mixture of any quantitie of water of which we will speake more amply hereafter being as it were like vnto water in thinnesse and colour and hauing little or no sent in them neither yet any manifest heate They nourish but very little for there is is but a very little of their substance turned into bloud but they cause great store of vrine and agree better than any other wines with all sorts of natures if wee may beleeue Gal●n There are other weake waterish and greenish wines very ordinarie in this countrie which are hurtfull vnto old men and all other cold constitutions as hauing in them very small store of heate and yet sometime profitable vnto hot constitutions as in Sommer according to our former aduertisement There are others that are very good but hot and strong of an easie concoction and speedily distributed but nothing lesse vapourous than white wines whereupon they trouble the braine and make men drunken and so proue hurtfull to such as are rheumatike and subiect to distillations Such wines are brought hither out of Gascoigne very well pleasing princes and men of great estate all of them being of a yellow colour either deeper or lighter The wines of Ay as they are inferiour to them of Gascoigne in strength so they are better and without comparison more wholesome The grosse and thicke wines some of them are simply such and consist in mediocriti● and othersome are very grosse and thicke We haue heretofore declared that grosse wines are of a more hard concoction and slow digestion than other wines are but being once concocted and digested they yeeld a more firme and solide nourishment vnto the bodie And of them more than the rest such as are very grosse and thicke which for certaine are hardest to be concocted and digested of all others These sorts of wine for that they ingender many rebellious and obstinate obstructions are not fit to be vsed but of dressers of vineyards and such other as leade a toilesome life as wee haue declared before Such wines as are indifferent thin and indifferent thicke are profitable for many purposes and the rather in that they charge not the head as the strong wines do and those which are of subtile substance neither yet ingender obstructions as those which are thicke and grosse doe The wine called of the Grecians Oligophorum is the holesomest of all others Wine smelleth well or else nothing at all The odoriferous wines are very apt and commodious for the begetting of good humours and to recreat and fetch againe the powers of the bodie but they assaile and charge the head especially if it be of a subtile substance and of a reddish or yellowish colour or of a deepe yellow they are also more hot than the other sorts of wines For that which is such doth help very much for the making of concoction easie and for the begetting of fine and subtile bloud but it filleth the head full of vapours and heate and greatly offendeth the sinewes and vnderstanding whereupon it proueth very apt to cause headach and a world of rheume The wine that hath small or no smell no not any more than water is called waterish Such vtter depriuation or want of smell in wine is a mightie note and most certaine marke that the same is but a weake and cold wine as the strong and mightie smell of the same is a very notable signe of his force and strength Such wine as is neither of an ill smell neither yet without smell but hath a certaine s●inging and vnpleasant sent which it hath gotten either of the soile or of the vessell or by some other occasion is not good for any bodie For as nothing as Columella testifieth draweth to it strange and vnnaturall sents more speedily than wise In like sort nothing impaireth or communicateth his hurtfull qualities sooner to the heart and noble parts than wine when it is drunke Amongst wines some are generous and noble wines and therefore said to be full of wine contrarie to those which are waterish and admitting the mixture of much water These heate much hurt the sinewes make a full braine stir vp frensies mightily increaseth the heate of agues and to be briefe they are not delayed with a great quantitie of water and doe good but to a few There are other which are weake and for this cause called Oligophora and waterie These wines are of two sorts some greenish which haue a sensible cooling facultie fitting cholericke stomaches and hot countries if so be that a strong stomacke can beare them and of these wee haue spoken before others which are waterie and of a thinne substance not retaining any smell but agreeing with all natures be the stomacke neuer so weake and especially with those which are often tormented with the megrim or long continued head-ach they comfort concoction prouoke vrine and sweat and offend the head nothing at all more harmelesse than any other sort of vvine they may be permitted to such as are sicke of agues for that they cannot be said to be of any manifest qualitie as other vvines may for they are neither sowre nor astringent neither yet sweet or sharpe nor yeelding any kind of smell Of these kinds of vvine some as Galen saith grow in euery countrey and coast but much more in this of France than in any other the greatest part whereof doe participate a certaine greenenesse especially vvhen the yeares fall out cold and moist Such vvines are called of the Grecians 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They are not any way noysome or hurtfull to the head but very profitable because as Galen saith they asswage and take away head-ach rising of the cruditie of the stomacke that is to say when the stomacke being weakened and as it were relaxed by the eating of some hurtfull victuals or by the drinking of some such like water is made the receptacle of some offending humour ●lowing thither from the whole bodie Which offensiue humour so contained in the stomacke becommeth corrupt and from that corruption sendeth vp burne and adust fumes vnto the braine which cause like paine in the head to that which commeth of fasting and from these annoyances the head is deliuered by the vse of this vvine vvhich by and by tempereth these putrified ●umes especially if the vvine haue any astringencie in it whereby the stomacke may be fortified and strengthened For such vvines doe by and by driue downeward that which is hurtfull in the stomacke carrying it along with it selfe and casting it forth and therefore verie auaileable for such as liue a loitering and sitting life and apply themselues wholly vnto the reading and studying of good Authors The differences of Wines according to the properties of the Countries IT remaineth now that we briefely discourse of the wines which we vse in Paris and those such as are either growne there or
brought thither out of other Countries and Regions The French wines offer themselues in the first ranke which growing in the grounds borders neere about Paris and the whole Isle of Fraunce and other places adioyning thereunto are amongst all others and aboue all others best agreeing with students Citizens of Townes and to be briefe with all such as liue a quiet idle and restfull life especially those which are made in well seasoned yeares or such as shew forth their seuerall qualities euerie one in his proper and due season For such wines doe not heat burne and dry the inward parts of the bodie as the wines doe which are brought vs from Gascoignie Spaine and other countries more hot vvhich by reason of excessiue heat and too great drinesse do burne the liuer and spleene in such as drink them Such wines doe not make a replete heauie or offended head with multitude of vapours as other vvines of Orleance doe In like manner such wines doe not load the bodie with superfluousnesse of serous excrements as doe the crude greenish wines which grow in these grounds in cold and moist yeares or which are brought vs hither from other cold Regions and Countries Such wines likewise ingender no obstructions neither doe they gather any quantitie of melancholike humour as doe the thicke and red vvines vvhich are sent vs by sea from Burdeaux These vvines vvhen they be through ripe they are of a very p●easant tast especially such as are yellow clarert and white which are of a hot dry temperature as other wines but not aboue the first degree or the beginning of the second on the contrarie the wines of Spaine Gascoigne and others such like are hot drie in the end of the third degree Wherfore these our French and natiue wines ought to be preferred before all strange forraine ones seeing they burne and heat the bowels inward parts ouer-much and that as wel for the vse of such as are in health as of those that being sicke are yet permitted their vvine Amongst these our French vvines some are white othersome are of a deepe yellow commonly called clarets or reddish vvines vvhich are the most wholesome of all so that they be not accompanied with any sowrenesse and harshnesse for rough harsh vvines and others which are greene if they become not ripe and mellow in time by the concocting of their cruditie greenenesse they stand for things not fit to be vsed of any but rude and rusticall fellowes vvhich liue by toyling their bodies vvith great labour and trauell The rest are all red more or lesse But of all other French vvines there is very small store of sad and light red coloured ones White claret vvines being bright cleare and through ripe or mellow in as much as they are of a subtle substance are easily concocted digested and distributed they prouoke vrine nourish the bodie but a little but they reioyce the spirit and are for the same cause taken longed after and desired of all Some of them are readie to be drunke the second or third moneth othersome not before the seuenth or eight moneth All of them begin to fade and loose their goodnesse in the beginning of the second yeare The red although they be bright and cleare are not of so subtile a substance as the former and therefore they nourish more and are more fit for such as liue hardly than for such as liue delicately and nicely and what although they cannot bee so easily concocted and digested nor so speedily distributed neither yet cause such aboundance of vrine as those which are yellow claret or white yet trauell often exercises and labour doth ouercome all these inconueniencies yea and whatsoeuer greater that such red wines may ingender and breed Amongst them those which participate and haue any sourenes or astriction become not mellow before the Sommer heat whereupon it followeth that the second yeare their crud and raw parts being concocted and digested they grow to bee more excellent than they were in the first The deepe red and vermillion coloured are for the most part harsh and rough and so the most vnpleasant and vnwholesome of all other for that they are woont to bee ill concocted and digested and slowly distributed as also to ingender many obstructions and beget a grosse and melancholicke bloud And for these causes are not conuenient but for such as labour and lead a very toilesome life in whose bodies they being once concocted and digested do nourish very much and make them more strong and lustie to go about and finish their worke and therewithall corroborate their stomacke Of white French wines those are most accounted of which are cleere and bright as rocke water of a subtile substance neither sweet nor greene such do nourish the bodie a great deale lesse than the yellow and claret wines but in recompence thereof they are more easily concocted digested distributed and carried more speedily and readily through all the veines True it is that they are accompanied with this inconuenience namely that they do more assault the head and therefore are to bee accounted greater enemies vnto gourie persons such as haue weake braines and are subiect to rheumes and diseases of the ionts and such likewise as haue weake ioinus than the red which are not yet come to their liuelyhood and maturitie which strengthen and corroborate the mo●th of the stomacke by reason of some easie astringencie that is in them Such as in the first moneths become somewhat sweet if they bee kept any time in the end grow so concocted and rip● that hauing le●t their sweetnes they proue strong mightie and most excellent wines Greene wines whether they be white or red such as we oftentimes see in these countries especially in cold and moist yeares if they containe any strong heate as it were buried in their crud and raw parts if they be kept any time are woont to concoct themselues and attaine to such a degree of ripenesse as that they are ●ound good well contenting the taste and pleasant vpon the tongue such as those are which are not simply greene but together with their greenenesse doe taste somewhat rough and sower the other become spent faded decayed in the beginning of Sommer by reason of the said euaporating and wast of their weak feeble hea●e Wherefore you must drinke such vvines as are greenish and waterie not hauing any sharpenesse or sowrenesse in them in the beginning of Summer that so you may be sure that the great Summer heat shall not cause them to fade vtterly and quite fall away by the spending of their feeble heat caused through the vehemencie of the Summer heat but those which are greene rough and harsh hauing a strong heat couched and lying in grosse and thicke matter may be kept very securely vnto Autumne or Haruest time Such as are onely and simply greene are good and fit for seruants drinke and other such folke as liue hardly and
the streame to bereaue the dogges by that meanes of comming by the sent of him The horsemen shall see to such his escapes and therefore if he haue taken his way into any champion ground they shall find out his traces by the sight of the eye and with the blast of the horne they shall cheere vp and encourage their dogges to a new course If the Hart haue taken the water whether it be for the cooling of himselfe or as the vttermost refuge he hath for the sauing of his life the hunter shall looke at what place the Hart shall haue taken the same and there cast in good store of boughes attending his passage and if they see that he commeth not out of the water they shall cause their dogges to take the water or else if they be afraid of causing them to take cold they shall send to seeke a boat or else if they can swimme they shall put off all their clothes and with a dagger in 〈◊〉 and swimme vnto him to kill him and yet they must looke that they see not vpon him but in some deepe place because that if the Hart find ground for his feet he would be able to hurt one of them with his horns whereas in a deepe place he hath no strength Furthermore there must great wisedome be vsed in the hunting of the Hart when he can no longer hold out but being out of all hope of his life standeth still and suffereth the dogges to barke at him for then he groweth dangerous as being giuen to strike with his hornes the first of the hunters that he can mee● withall And this is the cause why it is growne to a prouerbe A Beere for a Hart and a Barber for a vvilde Bore Wherefore it standeth euerie man vpon to looke vvell to himselfe in comming neere vnto the Hart when he endureth the bay and not to aduenture too farre and hazard himselfe too boldly When the Hart is taken he that shall haue giuen the blow shall ●orthwith thereupon sound the retrait to the end hee may call together his fellow hunters and the dogges and after he hath presented the right foot of the Hart vnto the King or vnto his Lord then to cut him vp as he shall know it meet to be done In the meane time he must not forget to take care of the dogges and to giue them some reliefe sustenance of the prey they haue gotten in hunting vnto the bloud-bound that is vnto the dog which by his sent hath led the way to the Hart his lodging he shall cast the head and the heart as his right and due vnto the rest he shall giue the necke and braine of the Hart or which is better he shall take bread and cut it into little lunches into to a panne with cheese and temper the same both together with the bloud of the Hart in his greatest hea● and afterward put all this prouision forthwith vpon the skin stretched forth vpon the grasse and in the meane space euery man shall put his horne vnto his mouth and therewithall comfort and cheere vp the dogges Some men vse now and then and yet after this first prouision to make a second with the entrailes of the Hart all whole which the master hunts-man doth cast vnto the dogges after they haue ended their feast holding them vp on high and whiles the dogges are eating these entrails they must be cheered vp with the noise of the hornes shoutings and hallowings CHAP. XXVI Of the profit that may be reaped by the killing of the Hart. NOtwithstanding that the hunting as vvell of the Hart as of other vvilde beasts be vndertaken and performed by great States rather for the exercise of the body and recreation of the spirits than for any other desire and hope yet the killing of the Hart is not without great profit and that in two respects the first being for the making of meat thereof and the second for the medicinable helps which may be made of his parts and members As concerning the meat made of the Hart his flesh is not very pleasant if it be not of that part of him which is commonly called the pizzle for to speake generally according to the truth Harts flesh is verie hard of an euill iuice melancholicke hard to digest in the stomacke and verie apt and easie to procure many great diseases It is true that many great Ladies hauing an opinion that the flesh of Harts being eaten often doth free and deliuer men from all danger of Agues because the beast himselfe is not subiect at all thereunto at their rising euerie morning haue accustomed to taste of Harts flesh notwithstanding vvho so is carefull of his health should not touch anie such flesh except it be of some tender Fawne or young Hiude vvhich are made seruices for the most part at the Tables of Princes and great Lords The medicinable helpes vvhich may be prepared and made of the Hart are infinite Some find a bone in the heart of the Hart howsoeuer there be some that thinke it to be false which is singular good against faintnes or swowning trembling and beating of the heart and other effects of the same as also against the venimes poysons and dangers of the plague and likewise against the hard ●rauell of vvomen The bloud of the Hart fried in a frying-panne and put in clysters doth heale the bloudie flux and stayeth the flux of the belly being drunke with vvine it is a soueraigne remedie against poysons The priuie member of the Hart washed diligently in water and the water wherein it hath beene so washed drunken appeaseth forthwith the paine of the collicke and retention of the vrine if it be steept in vineger the space of foure and twentie houres and afterward dried and made in pouder the weight of a French crowne of this pouder being drunke with water of plantine stayeth the fl●xe of bloud and all manner of fluxe of the bellie Likewise dried and poudred it may be mingled with remedies which haue power to prouoke carnall copulation It may also bee made seruiceable and of good vse in the ple●risie and against the bitings of Serpents if it be taken either alone or mingled with things which are good for such diseases The horne of the hart burned made in pouder and drunke with honie killeth the wormes which is a signe that the harts horne hath great vertue against venome and that not much lesse than the horne of the vnicorne The tender hornes of a young hart 〈◊〉 in small gobbets and put in an earthen pot wel leaded and close stopped with clay and afterward put in a hot furnace vntil such time as they be dried they may also be beaten to pouder putting thereto pepper and myrrhe do yeeld a pouder which is singular good against the cholicke taken in excellent wine The marrow and sewet of the hart are good to make liniments and cataplasmes for cold gou●s
they shall be beset and compassed To take birds with your hand you must scatter in some plaine and smooth piece of ground Corne or Millet steept in the lees of good vvine and the iuice of Hemlock and afterward drie them whereof when the birds shall haue eaten they will not be able to flie afterward so that one may take them with his hand To kill birds with the Long-bow or Stone-bow vpon houses trees or butts it is requisite that he that shooteth should haue double shafts forked before vvhen hee vvould kill Geese or other great birds and those verie sharpe euerie vvhere to the end they may cut off the vving or the necke vvhere they shall touch them for to strike them vvith the common shaft vvould not so hurt the bird as that she might be constrained to abide in the place for shee vvould flie away notwithstanding that she vvere hurt or shot through although shee vvould die thereof in another place The end of the seuenth and last Booke of the Countrey House FINIS A TABLE OF THE MATTERS contained in the seuen Bookes of the Countrey House A ABel borne the fourth of the Moone a good day 32 Abrecock-tree and Abrecocks how planted 378. being grafted are verie tender in the time of frost 372 Acornes to grow Oakes vpon how they must be sowne and husbanded 655 An Acre of ground how much it containeth 518 Adam created the first day of the Moone 32 Agr●monie 25. their vertues ibid. A good Aire is a necessarie thing to a Farme 4 Alberges or small Peaches 372 Alembecks of glasse how they must be ordered 446 Alembecks of the Venetians 445. how to choose them of glasse 446 Alembecks for distillations 447 Alkermus and the confection thereof 487 Alkakengi and the vertues and statutes thereof 288 Alleys 235 Aller trees and Aller plots 504. how planted 660 Almond trees where and when to be planted 307 Bitter Almonds made sweet 371 Almonds without shell and naturally written vpon ibid. Amel corne 551 Angel●ea and his vertues 199. the compound water thereof ibid. The Angeuins louers of their profit 23 Aniou a good soile 12 Annise 249 Ants spoyling Trees and Vines 405 406. to driue away Ants. 314 Apple-trees in what ground they grow best and how grafted 360. most precious and most in request of all other trees 379 How to keepe Apples 408. golden Apples 253. how to haue red Apples 365. Apples with short starts 380. Apples of loue 252. maruellous Apples 287. brought by Monsieur du Bellay B. of Mans 288. Apples of yellow colour 364. Apples of two tastes ibid. wilde Apples distilled 454 Aqua vitae often distilled 455. and whereof it must bee made ibid. it hath infinite vertues 456 Aquitaine a countrey fruitfull in all manner of good things 12 Arach the hearbe and the obseruations thereof 174 Arh●rs for Gardens and woods fit tor them 282 Arb●rs of the Kitchin Garden 156 The Arders of Arable ground 531 An Arpent of ground how much it containeth 518 Ars●●art why so called and the properties thereof 197 Artichokes 170. their vertues and maner of dressing and the Moules and Mice are enemies vnto them ibid. Asarum Bacchar and the vertues thereof 198. good for a quartane Ague 40 Ashes make a leane ground 6 Ashes cluttering together like balls a signe of raine 25 Ash-tree distilled and the oyle thereof 482 A●peragus may be growne of sheepes hornes 183 Asses to plow withall 539. Asses fore-shewing raine 25. 147 148. the nature burthen and goodnesse of an Asse ibid. Astrologie inuented by Shepheards 110 Auens 182 Autumne and the constitution thereof 34 126 366 380 Auuergne the people thereof are industrious and painefull but coueting other mens gaine 23 B BAdgers or Brocks are of two sorts their earths 699 Bay-tree where it must be sowne 337. in what soile and place it delighteth 396. the faculties thereof 397. Bay-tree keepeth the house from lightning ibid. Bakehouse belonging to the ●arme 570 That a Bailife of Husbandrie cannot carrie such an affection and vigilant eye as the Fa●mor 15 Balme 252. it increaseth milke in Kyne 496. Balme distilled 453 Balmes artificially made and the description thereof and their kinds 437. Balmes of S. lohns wort 205. excellent Balmes of the hearbe Nicotiana 223 Barbell the fish 507 Barbes in Calues 63 Barley when and in what grounds it must be sowne 554. to prepare mundified Barley 555. Barley must bee sowne in dust 542 Barnes where and how they must be made and seated 18 Basill sowne putteth forth at the end of three ●aies 161. Basill and Amber are at perpetuall hatred 242. Basill causeth ache and scorpions in the head 243. Basill distilled 454 Basse●s or earth-dogges and how they must be ordered and saued 702. Bassets of two sorts ibid. and how to traine them vp and nurture them 700 Bastard Dittanie otherwise Fraxinella breaketh the stone 207 Marus Bath 442. the patterne thereof 443. Maries Bath multiplied 442 443 To Bat●le ground and with what manner of dung 537 Against Ba●s 315 Beanes what soile they craue 561. and why there are manie fooles whiles they are in flower 562. Beanes amend the ground where they are sowne 11. to cause Beanes to be quickly sodden 569. flowers of Beanes distilled for to keepe 465 ●ards of Goats 238 ●ares-breech 203 〈◊〉 when to be bought and killed 30 of a double kind of life 506. Beasts or their parts distilled 470. to tame wild Beasts 670. signes foretelling death of Beasts 29 〈◊〉 scarce of water 6. it beareth Ri● contrarie to his nature 10. the people of Beauce are laborious 23 〈◊〉 of diuers sorts according to the diuersities of Countries and the manner of making of them and then temperature 587 590. it fatteth Hennes and C●pons 591 〈◊〉 the profit of them and how they must be ordered 316 317. what manner of ones they must be 318. how they must be handled 319. their conditions 321. their chast●tie sobrietie neatnesse 322. their kings and wa●res among themselues 323 324. their kings must be killed which are the cause of their contention and what be their marks ib●a Bees that are cruell 326. swarmes of Bees and their fights ibid. what diseases Bees are subiect vnto and their remedies 326. they are engendred of a putrified carcasse 320. their ●ot going farre from their hiues a signe of raine 25 〈◊〉 ringing clearer and louder than ordinarie a ●igne of aine 25 ●●aiamine borne the 23. d●y of the Moone 34 〈◊〉 173. and the speciall obseruations about the same ibid. 〈◊〉 tree 665 666 ●●esonie ●02 Betonie distilled 453. wat●r Betonie 211. Paules Betonie 204. called the Leapers hearbe and why ibid. 〈◊〉 or Oxen for the plough 539. fierce and cruell Beeues how tamed 92. of their diseases 9● 94. three Beeues will not plough so much ground as one horse 91. great Beeues of Languedo● or Prouence 103. to cau●e Beeues to haue a good stomacke 436. to fat Beeues to sell 104. how they sore-shew raine 25. to
head The Horse 〈◊〉 with cold The naile in the eye Against the bloud 〈…〉 pearl● and spots in the 〈◊〉 The 〈…〉 The bleared eye The skarre of the eyes Paine of the eye The ●ar●fore or swelling of the kernels of the hart The auiues The squinancie or inflamation of the throte The Strangles The Barbes The soupe or excrescenc● vnder the bellie To chase away files The paines of the gums and teeth The short winded horse The cough in a 〈◊〉 The horse 〈◊〉 Ague The faintnesse of the heart The broken backe The horse ouer-heated Paine in the belli Difficultie of vrine For the sniuell The Flying worme The Iauar The Figge The Wenne For a galled backe A horse swayed in the backe The backe 〈◊〉 The 〈◊〉 of the 〈◊〉 The iaundise Costiues The 〈…〉 For a horse that is bursten The ●●inging of Flies The farcie Clefts For the scabbe The Horse swelled The colicke in a Horse The swellings of the coddes For a Fistula For a Canker The Iauar or scab in the 〈◊〉 The Horse cloyed Alene Horse The enterfering of a horse The spauine Chaps Cli●ts The grapes or scabber For the 〈◊〉 swelling For the disease called Paumon or 〈◊〉 galle The disease of the hoofe or the corne of the f●oat The garrot The disease of the necke The Palamie or bloudie chops in the palate The courbe or a long swelling beneath the elbow of the hough The swelling of the Knee Broken and chapt Knees Chafings Old tumours Wormes and bots The current Flux of bloud The restie horse Poyson eaten The stinging of Vipers The biting of the Shrew The biting of a mad dogge Hens dung swallowed by the horse The leane horse The raging loue of Mares Yellowes Stagger Pestilence Cords Rheume in the Eye A Warte A Straine Spauen To know diseases by their signes Signes of inward griefes The Horse-leacherie of P. Vegetius translated by the Author The milke of an Asse good for them in consumptions and for to make faire the countenances of women Rest maketh an Asse alwaies after vnfit for labour The mark●s of a good Asse The diseases of the Asse The Asses-hide The Asses-●oo●e The A●●e doth 〈…〉 The Mules of Auernia The diuers maners of the engendring of male and female Mules The markes of a good Asse to c●uer she Mules Signes of a good Horse-Mule Of a good Mare-Mule The diseases of the Horse and Mare-Mule Ague Difficultie of breath Scabs in the pasternes Leanenes Cough Collicke Wearinesse and ●uer-heating The smo●ke of the hoofe of a Mare-Mu●e A Quick-set Hedge The Garden doore The paths in the Garden The Inclosure Grounds Hedges The fashion of an Arbor The binding of the Arbor The worke of the Arbor and of the Vine is alike All man●●r of ground by being long 〈◊〉 doth grow lea●t Little Turneps or Nauest Coleworts Great Turneps of both sorts Spinach Leekes and Cyues Onions Chiboles Carrets Sage and Hysope A Labyrinth Lettuce seed To chuse seeds Fine hearbs Seeds that will hardly grow Cucumbers and Citruls The power of the encrease of the Moone To ●●w seeds in the Spring To sow seeds in Summer At what time seed must be sowne is cold and hot places The age of seeds Watring What water is good for Seeds What time is good to water Weeding and raking Clipping or cutting of hearbes Slips Gathering● The time to gather Seeds The way to keepe hearbes The way to keepe flowers To keepe Prouence Roses To keepe seeds To keepe roots Common Coleworts The seed too old Prouerbe Cabage-cole The curled cole Coleworts of a good tast Red Coleworts The planting of Coleworts The watering of Cole●●●ts The 〈◊〉 betwixt 〈◊〉 the vine and the Colewort Coleworts doe keepe one from be●ng 〈◊〉 Coleworts enem●e vnto Organic and Rue Rotten Coleworts The vertues of Coleworts 〈…〉 The curled and cabbaged Lettuce The Romane Lettuce White Lettuce Cabbaged lettuce White and fair● Lettuc●● To cause Lettuce to small well Salad hearb● mixt together The vertues of the Lettuce ●ndiue 〈◊〉 Succori● The vertues of Succorie Spitting of bl●ud To sow Artich●kes vpon beds Choice of Ar●ichokes Artichokes of a good smell Artichokes smelling like Baye● Sweet Artichokes The vertues of the Artichoke The vertues of Sorrell The bloudie flux The plague The vertues of Burnet Harts-horne To cause harts-horne to thriue The vertues of harts-horne The vertues of Trickmadame Pearce●●one or Sampier The preseruing of Sampier Iaundise Stone Marigolds Tu●ied and wel thriuing Marigolds The vertues of Marigolds Beets A spe●iall 〈◊〉 of the 〈◊〉 Red beets The vertues of the beets For ●o make 〈◊〉 quickly The 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 Spinage The virtues of Spinage The vertue of Buglosse 〈◊〉 The vertues of L●●kes Poyson 〈◊〉 at the 〈◊〉 Difficultie● of making water For 〈◊〉 in 〈◊〉 birth Spitting of bloud Small Leeks 〈…〉 〈…〉 D●ought Burning agues Chaps in the lips To preser●● Purcelane To keepe 〈◊〉 from r●tting To make cho●ce of 〈◊〉 The vertues of 〈◊〉 Dropsie Kibed heeles The biting of a ●ad dogge Red spots Garlicke Sweet Garli●● How to keepe Garlick● The 〈◊〉 of Garlicke The 〈◊〉 of Garlicke The Plague The 〈◊〉 of a mad Dogg● Nits Li●e Colicke Cough 〈◊〉 ach Wormes Difficultie of 〈◊〉 Birds 〈◊〉 The vertues of 〈◊〉 Parsley The vertues of Parsley Deliuerie of women in their trauell A stinking breath To make water The Colicke Paine of the reines Rocket The force of Rocket 〈◊〉 and hardnesse of the spleene Tarragon Smallage Cheruile The vertues of Cher●ile Costmarie and 〈◊〉 The way to haue good ●●ore of Asparag●● Asparag●● may grow of a Sheepes horne 〈…〉 Garden Water-Cresse● The vertues of Wate● and Garden-Cresses T●●th-ach Palsie Co●●cke Good Saffron The g●thering and keeping of Napes The vertues of Napes T●●neps Turneps are the ●rdinarie ●eat of them of 〈◊〉 and Sauoy Turnep seed is veri● small Faire turneps The keeping of turneps The vertues of turneps Radishes Radishes 〈…〉 Sweet radishes Good radishes Tr●●ell of child b●●th N●ise of the ●ares The ill 〈…〉 wine Spots Grauell and 〈…〉 〈…〉 Parsneps Mypes Carrets Skirworts The vert●●s The goodnesse of Mustard The ●ertues of Mustard 〈…〉 The vertues of the cucumber Gourdes The goodnesse of the seed The vertues of Gourd●s Melons and P●●pions The gathering of Melons The goodnesse of Melons 〈…〉 The ●ertues of Melons Melons cause 〈◊〉 to 〈◊〉 Pompions Gourd● and Cucumber without seed For the helping forward of their growth A Cucumber without water 〈…〉 Sweet Pompions Suger-Mel●●s Lasting Po●pions A woman in her t●rmes maketh Pompions drie and di● To keepe Cucumbers fresh a long time Pompions smeling like Roses Strawberries The ●ertues of Strawberries 〈…〉 Mallowes 〈◊〉 The 〈…〉 〈◊〉 Arsmart Eye-bright 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The vertues of Elicampane Dittander The vertues of Dittander Celandine great and small The 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 Little Celand●●e 〈…〉 Valerian Angelica The virtues of Angelica Th● Plague Against the biting of a ●ad dogge Blessed Thistle The vertues of Blessed thistle Mother-wort Golden-rod The vertues of Golden-rod Saxifrage The great and small Burre Star-thistle L●die-thistle Siluer-grasse
Patience or Monkes 〈◊〉 Scabi●●● 〈…〉 〈…〉 〈◊〉 The properties of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Bugle Lyons-paw Great Comfrey Gout Ruptur● Self-heale Water Germander The vertues of Germander Fole-foot Carline thistle Hundred headed thistle Eringium Sea-Holly Beares-breech Diuels bit Cinquefoile Tormentill Perwincle Bistort Pionie Paules Betonie Gromell Saint Iohns wort The Balme Ground-pine Agri●●●ie White 〈◊〉 Mercurie The vertues of Mercurie Milfoile Danewort Orpin Goats-beard Ground-Iuie Hounds-tongue Adders-tongue Goose-grasse Of Corne-rose or wild Poppie Bastard Dittanie Knot-grasse Salomons-seale Great and small Dragons Stinging and dead Nettle Dead Nettle 〈◊〉 in boyling of flesh Stauesacre Plantaine Horse-taile Pellitorie of the wall Shepheards powch Sow-bread The vertues Crowfoot Pettie-whin Dittanie Germander Rupture●wort Mouse-●are Dogs-grasse Water betonie Palma christi Fern● The vertues Hearbe Two-pence Fleawort or Flea●ane I●●itorie Ground-swell Arist●l●chie or birth-wort Centaurie Woodbind or ●●nie-suckles Pimpernell Backwheat or binacorne The vertues of Buckwheat The compounding of the water of Burckwheat An ointment of Bucke-wheat Nicotiana the chief● of Physicke hearbes Why it was called Nicotiana The hearbe of Queene-mother The hearbe of the Great Priour Tabacco The Holie hearbe Mans●eur Nicot Embassador for the King in Portugall A matter of experience in the 〈◊〉 of a Noli me tangere Proo●e of it in wounds The Embassadors hearbe Proofe for Ring wormes Proofe for the Kings euill Madame of Montigny dead of a Noli me tangere in her breasts How Nicotiana was 〈◊〉 brought into France The distilled wate● o● 〈◊〉 ● good for a short breath The figure of Nicotiana The stalke Leaues Branches Flower Seed Roots Smell 〈◊〉 or t●st Temperatiue How to refresh and cheer● vp Nicotiana To wa●er Nicotiana How to handle Nic●tiana in Winter To s●w Nicotiana The way to remoue Nicotiana At what time Nicoti●ana must 〈◊〉 The l●aues of Nicotiana are the best part of the same Ache of the head armes and l●gg●● A weake stomach not able to digest Difficultie of breathing An old cough and causeth to spit out grosse and slimie humours The spleene ●●opt and hard Paine of the stomach Colicke Paime of the matrix 〈◊〉 To kill the 〈◊〉 Swellings Rheumes Cold impo●●umes V●ers of the nose Greene wounds Wherefore the dried 〈…〉 Nicotiana are good To drie Nicotiana The dro●sie The suffocation of the mother Head-ach Sw●uning The fume of Nicotiana asswageth hunger and thirst That Nicotiana doth not make drunke Diuination by Nicotiana Mad night-shade Anise-seed Turneps What is meant by Maries-bath The second oyntment An excellent Balme made of Nicotiana Female Petum growth of the seed of the male Female Petum as not Priapeia The vertues of female Petum The leaues of female Petum for the bloudie flux The reason why it is so called Rhamindicke The markes of Mechoacan To chuse the best Mechoacan The vertues of M●choacan Mechoacan is not fit for cholericke diseases The preparing of Mechoacan for to vse The infusion of Mechoacan Marchpanes of Mechoacan Pilles of Mechoacan The commodities of the vse of Mechoacan That the bodie and humours must be prepared before the taking of Mechoacan The day of the taking of it The day after the taking of it Costiuenesse Symptomes happening vpon the vse of Mechoacan Hearbes of the East Hearbes of the West Hearbes of the North. Hearbes of the South The Flower Garden The alleys of the Garden March Violets The vertues of Violets A blow on the head White yellow and red Gillo-flowres Daisies Kings-●uill Palsey ●owt Purple Veluet flower The white flowers of women Canterburi●-bells The vertues Prouence purple and Indian Gillo-flowers To make Gillo-flowers to smell like Cloues Gillo-flowers of Prouence Purple Gillo-flowres Indian Gillo-flowres The Indian gillo-flower doth cause the headeth and an ill vnwholesome ayre Wild Gill●-flowers Dame Violets Goats-beard Marians Violets Lillie 〈◊〉 Water lillie Hyacynth Nar●yssus carneflag or 〈◊〉 The vertues of Corneflag Sci●tica Vlcers Dropsie Lillies Lillies of 〈◊〉 colours Purple coloured Lillies Lillies in flower at divers and s●uerall times The vertues of Lillies 〈◊〉 Water of Lillie Burning of s●aldings Asmooth and glistering ●ew Small Paunces Flower of the night Tulipan The Mortagon of Constantinople 〈…〉 Crowne Emperiall Basill Basill neuer 〈◊〉 better t●hen it is cursed Hat●ed betwixt Amber and Basill The smelling of basill doth cause great paine and Scorpions in the head M. I. Hou●ier To be deliuered of child-birth without paine Rue The bewraier of women Rue thriuing best when it i● most curs●d Rue and Hemlocke are enemies Mithridates 〈◊〉 opiate for the Plague R●e ●n enemie to v●nimes and poysons Rne ●n enemie to cats and fulmers That rue should not come neer● to the nose For a 〈◊〉 or Plague 〈◊〉 Mints The vertues of Mi●ts Wormes The curding of Milke To keepe chees● Calamint Thy●● Goodly Thyme The vertues of Thyme Winter Sau●rie Organie The vertues of Organie Hyssope The vertues of Hyssope 〈…〉 The vertues of S●●●rie The drow●●● disease Coriander The vertues of C●riander Digestion Windinesse To keepe flesh It prouoketh the termes Wormes Wild fire Sage The vertues of Sage Weakenesse of the sinewes The trembling of the parts To cleanse the stomacke Oake of Ierusale● The 〈◊〉 Horehound 〈◊〉 The vertues of Wormewood A weake stomacke Iaundise Dropsie Wormes To make the haire blacke 〈◊〉 and his vertu●● The Plague Poyson Shiuerings of Agues Wormes Rosemarie The vert●es of Rosem●ri● An euill ayre He●da●h Iaundise Weake sinewes Iesamine 〈…〉 Mountaine Thyme Headach To kill Serpents 〈…〉 D●fficultie or painfull making of water Penyryall To prouoke womens termes To kill 〈◊〉 The Sciatica Dill. Belchings Gripes Difficultie of making water Annise A stinking breath A faire face Bishops-weed Caraway Cummin Windinesse Gripes Difficultie in making water Drie blowes Fennell Sweet F●●nell Cleare sight w●●dinesse Ab●undance of milke Marierome To p●rge the bra●e Dropsie Mugwort The vertues The Matrix out of order and 〈◊〉 After-birth Paines of the Matrix Tansie Wormes Stone Grauell Fetherfew Nept or Cats-mint Conception French Lauander Lauander Weake sinewes Palsies Conuulsions Apoplexies All-good otherwise Cla●y Cheerefulnesse To cleare the sight Nigella Balme Cheerefulnesse To keepe be●s from flying from their hiues To d●iue them from them Camomile To mollifie 〈◊〉 resolue ●erifie Me●●●ot Apples of lo●e Mandrakes The vertues Golden-apples The preseruing of the root of Elecampane Conserue of Elecampane roots Preser●●s and conserues of Gentian Pioni● Corne-flag wild Vine Pars●●ps Turneps 〈◊〉 The difference betwixt 〈◊〉 and conseruing The preseruing of Purslaine The preserue of Asparagus Harts-horne Trick-madame c. The pre●●●uing of Lettuces What is meant by the word preserue The preseruing of hearbes and flowers 〈…〉 Conserue of Rose● Conserue of drie Roses Conserue of Violets Conserue of drie 〈◊〉 The making of Mustard Mustard of Anion Mustard of Dijon Preseruing of Cucumbers The preseruing of Gourds How to keepe Onions The Cypresse tree The vertues The Rose-tree planted and remoued The Rose-tree sowne Seeds of Roses V●rie sweet smelling Roses Early hastie and timely Roses Fresh Roses To make carnation Roses white Box-tree Bees-bane
tree Pits to set the Walnut tree in or to remoue them into A signe of plentie or otherwise by the Walnut tree Walnut-trees must stand alone The Oake an enemie to the Walnut tree The grafting of the Walnut tree The beaten Walnut-tree becommeth fruitfull Tender walnut shells Walnut without shells The gathering of walnuts The profit of the walnut-tree The wood The rind shell kernell The gristle of the kernell The wood of the walnut-tree The rind● of walnuts The barke of Walnut-trees Mithridate The boyle 〈◊〉 capon Tertian agues The biting of a mad dogge To plant the Oliue-tree To graft the Oliue-tree Oliue-trees full of Mosse The barren Oliue-tree The fruit spoyled The withered Oliue-tree The Date-tree The gathering of Chesnuts To keepe Chesnuts The leaues of the Chesnut-tree The ashes of the Chesnut-tree The hardnes of 〈…〉 The Pine-tree The Plum-tree The Plum-tree out of frame The languishing Plum-tree Laxatiue Plums Sleeping Plums Plums of Brignoles The Pomegranate-tree Pomegranate wine Th● 〈◊〉 tree The flux of th● bellie Of the 〈◊〉 tree Of the Iuiube-tree The Boy-tree The greatnesse of trees 〈◊〉 to be considered The space and distance betwixt trees Plum-trees Sweet Cherrie-trees Common or the lesser sort of Cherrie-trees To 〈◊〉 To water Trees browsed wub 〈◊〉 To plant trees without roots Pits To moist an earth Too hard an earth The roots pilled Small trees A Prouerb● To giue trees their ●it p●aces To kill wormes The pricking downe of trees To take branches from trees To make way for the Sunne ●o come to the trees To take dead wood 〈◊〉 the tree What is meant by bourgening Exceeding heat of the sun hurtfull to trees To order a tree in Winter A dead dogge o● some other carrion made fast to the foot of the tree The mosse of trees The time to dig and cu● off vnprofitabl● members from young trees The fit time to pick an● prune trees To cut d●wne branches fr●● old trees An old Tree fallen barren Grafts broken How to order graf●s af●er they ha●● put forth new wood To order and ●andle Trees ● at are grow● vp Trees giuing ouer to grow To take away the Caterpillers nests The time to cut trees To water trees Much fruit vpon a tree Sliuen or shiuered trees Weeds about trees The small and dwarfish tree The barren tree The f●le in trees W●rme in trees The iaundise in trees Weeuils Against snailes and ants The tree that looseth his fruit Against ●●sting of trees The tree that looseth his flowers Against caterpillers The ouer fruitfu●n●s of a tree The d●fease of t●e ba●●e of ●he tree 〈◊〉 trees To hasten a tree his bringin● forth of fruit The drines of a tree To kill wormes that trouble trees The breeding of wormes The falling of apple● from the tree Fruits rising vpwa●d To kill Ants. Tourraine the garden of France Ripe Almonds Chesnuts Sound Chesnuts Cherries To keepe C●trons To keepe the Corneile-berrie For the staying of the flux of the ballie The mal●gnant 〈◊〉 of Quinces To keepe greene f●●ges To keepe walnuts sound To keepe Pomegranats To keepe apples To keepe m●dlars To keepe oliues To keepe peares To keepe mulberries To keep citrons and oranges To keepe peaches To keepe ceruises To keepe damaske-plums The way in generall to make such Wine What apples are fittest to make wine of The time to gather apples The manner of pressing out the drinke made of Apples Pinet The vertues of Cider Sweet Perrie Sowre Cider Cider that is harsh and rough Ciders without anie tast Ciders of mixt tast The vertues a● Perrie Marmalade Marmalede of Oranges Lim●●●s or Citrons To make gellie of Quinces To preserue Wa●nuts Cute wine to b● vsed in steed of hony or sugar Preserues of Orange pills The preseru● o● Peaches Preserued Abricots Small Peaches Peares Apples Timely Peaches To preserue Cherries Ceruiser Gooseberries c. To preserue Barberries Of Conserue Past of Plums and other fruits To keepe Peaches and other fruits To keepe Oliues The preserue of Oliue To preseru● Fi●berds or small Nuts Quince-cakes Diuersitie of colours Cinnamon sticks Conserue of fruits Conserue of flowers Leath of Date● Oyle of Oats Oy●e by expression Oyle the proper name of the liquor of Ol●●es What is necessarie before the making of the Oyle Milstones Oyle mills Pressers The South Sun necessarie for the oyle presser The Willon graceth the co●our of the oyle Three forts of oils of ol●e Virgins oyle Vessells for oyl● Oyle-cellars The North is fittest for oyle cellars to stand vpon Oile Omphacine Frosen oyle To keepe oyle from becomming ranke Troubled oyle Filthie oyle Stinking oyle Putrified oyle Cleare oyle Sweet smelling oyle Good oyle in the vpper part of the vessell The vertues of oile To loosen the bellie Aspent Wine Oile an enemie to plants The vertues of the lees of oyle Oyles made by expression of many things The making of the oile of sweet almonds The drosse of sweet almonds Womens throws Paine of the colicke and kidneyes Oile for to make 〈◊〉 Oyle of Sweet almonds for perfumers Oyle-de-Bay Collicke Cold swellings Oyle of myrtles iuniper mastick tree turpentine tree and iuie berries Oyle of nutmegs Oyle made by imp●●ssion Three things to be considerd in making oyles by impression Oyles of flowers To make oyles by impression in Maries-bath To know if the oyle be made The qualitie of the ing●edients Cold oyles Hot. Tender Hard. Hot oyles Of the tendernesse or hardnesse of the ingredients Oyles made of liuing things or their parts The quantitie of the ingredients Oyle of Roses Two sort● of oyle of Roses A new kind of making of oyle of Roses Oyle of Cammomile Melilote Yellow Violets Corneflag Elder-tree flowers White mulleine flowers Iasmin Poppie Lettuses Water Lillie flowers Oyle of Quinces Oyle of 〈◊〉 sticke Oyle of Elder-tree Oyle of S. Iohns woort Oyle of Rhu● Oyle of Myrtle-tree W●rme●wood Marierom Southernwood Thyme and Aller Oyle of Spike Paine o● the stomack reines bellie matrix Oyle of Foxes Rheumes Weaknesse of s●●●ws Paines of the reins and back Oyle of Wormes Sti●●e 〈◊〉 Paines of the ioynts Oyle of serpents Oyle of egges The ●yle 〈◊〉 Wheat Ringw●rme● Fistulaes Chops in the skinne Oyle of Haye Ringwo●mes S. Anthonies fire Oyle of Tart●● Oyle of Brimstone 〈…〉 Balme of th● maruellous apples Balsamin● Oyle of the flowers of Rosemari● White mullein● Nicotian Paules 〈◊〉 and gr●und luie A balme A balme Pai●●s of the eares Cankers A balme of 〈◊〉 flowers In leasure to take the opp●rtunitie of ●easure to go about distilling The inuentor or first finde● out of distillation Distillation Distil●●ng without heat D●stilling by a Fi●●re Sand ●●baked Earth-po●s vessels of Iuie glasse of Fern● To dist●ll by cold Diuers 〈◊〉 of ●eat Dis●●lling time The knowledge of the rip●nesse of the matter to be distilled The v●rtues of distilled waters The la●●ing of disti●●ed waters What distilling vessels were ●irst inuented Waters distilled in M●ries bath An old Leaden Limbecke is better than a new The making of Ceruse The cause that maketh
waters dist●lled in Maries bath to retaine their vertues Waters distilled in the ins●rument called the Bladder The waters distilled ouer the vapour of boyling water The 〈◊〉 of waters distilled in M●ries bath Chusing of the ●ead Heads of Bra●●● and Copper How to order Glasse-stills For the 〈◊〉 of water●● Two things to be considered in 〈◊〉 The 〈…〉 What kind of things are infused in wine What mat●er or things are to be infused 〈◊〉 vinegar or ●ine Infusions in the bloud of Man a Swine or mal● Goat Infusion must he●p or increas● the force of the things distilled The addition of salt Putrifaction Furnaces must be set in a place where they may not do● or take hurt When we are to stand farre off from the 〈◊〉 and not to come neere them The chusing of Glasse-stilles A gentle fire at the first What quantitie of matter is best to be put in the still To distill in the heat of sand To make a spe●dier distillation than o●di●arie Vinegar distilled in that sort To distill one water many times The heat required to the distilling of one thing o●● The extracting of quintessences To seperate the flegme in distilled liquors The time of the flegme his comming forth When the still is in good temper and stilleth not too fast nor too slow To giue a good smell or taste to distilled waters Troubled waters Water of wormwood Water of Winter Cherrie● Water of common Walnuts Water of Walnut tree leaues Water of strawberries a●ainst ve●ime spots To procure termes To dry the weeping eye The water of Ash-tree Water of cherrie stones and kernells The falling 〈◊〉 Water of filberds Water of danewort The water of Betonie The water of Gent●an The plague The water of pelli●●ri● Paine of the Teeth Water of eye-bright The water of Nicotian The water of Paules betonie Leprosie Scabs The water of Hyssope The water of turneps Water of Lymons The water of Fenell The water of parsley Water of smallage basile 〈◊〉 buglosse c. The water of cinnamome A bad stomacke 〈…〉 Venime Rosewater Water of orange flowers Water of wild apples The water of elder rosemary and marigolds What is meant by liquor in th●● place Aqua-vitae The bladder still to distill Aqua vitae in Aqua vitae o●ten distilled Signes sh●wing that the Aqua-vitae is sufficiently distilled Aqua-vitae is distilled either of wine or wine 〈◊〉 or beere Vessells for the distilling of Aqua-vitae Vertues of Aqua-vitae Distilled vineger The difference betwixt Aqua-vitae and Vineger in their maner of distilling What vessels Vineger would be distilled in The vertues of distilled Vineger Salted water or Sea water Honey distilled To colour the haire Turpentine distilled The bloud of a male Goat distilled The stone Mans bloud distilled The bloud of a Drake distilled Distilled milke The vertues of distilled milke The milke of a she Goat distilled The distilling of mans dung Deepe vlcers The biting of ● mad dogge To giue a good smell to the distilled water To distill liuing things The water of a storke Water of Swallowes The Water of flesh Water of Egges Restoratiues The diuine restoratiue Another restoratiue Another restoratiue Another restoratiue A restoratiue to be made presently Compound wate●s Three sorts of common compound waters Sage water compounded Turnep water compounded Water of angelica compounded Falling sicknes Water of celandine compound Water of the vine compound Rose water compounded It preserueth the sight Eybright water compounded Rosemarie water compounded Fistulaes of the eies Water of trecle Vlcers of the mouth Treacle water Water of cloues Paine of the stomacke and bellie Saxifrage water The Stone Water of Swallowes Horse-taile water Vlcers of the reines Corneflag water Burne●-water Stone Grauell A water for the eyes An imperiall water An Allome water Purging waters Catholicum and Diap●oenicon distilled Water of Rhubarbe distilled Sweet water Lauander water Water of Cloues The water of sweet smells Rose-water musked Water of Spike Damask water Water of Myrrhe Rose-water sweetned with Muske Water of Oranges Water of Nasse or Orange flowers The counterfeit water of Orange flowers A sweet smelling water A water for Fukes The vses of waters for Fukes Water of Strawberries Water of Beane-flower The water of Dragons Water of Guaiacum The water of Peaches and Willowes Water of whites of egges Water of 〈◊〉 of bread Water of Snailes Water of the whites of egges Water of Calues feet A water making white Water of crums of bread Water of the broth of a Capon Water of Bran. A sweet water Another water A water to paint the face withall Water of Cowes mi●ke Water of egges A water to colour or paint the face withall The water of Lard Water of Honey Water of Capers A painting and colouring water A water to cleanse the teeth To distill as it is called per ascensum Wha● 〈◊〉 of Oyles are distilled per desce●sum Rose-water distilled per descensum The Sea-Onion distilled per descensum To kill Rats and Mice Another manner of distilling waters per descensum and that without heat Water of the yellow parts of Violets To distill by the Filtre Virgins milk● Hearbes Seedes Flowers Fruits Spices 〈◊〉 Gumme● Beasts or the parts of Beasts Which ●e the distilled Oyles Two sorts of vessel● for th● distilling of Oyles The head The Gourd and the Head The preparing of the matter No oyle can be drawne in Maries-bath The order that must be kept in distillation The signes of the distillation ended A comparison betwixt th● water of the simple and the water vsed in the distilling of the simple To distill already distilled water The continuance of distilled oyles The 〈◊〉 Fruits Spice● and ar●maticall drugs Oyle of Cinnamome The preparing of wood for to draw oyles 〈◊〉 of The placing of the vessells Oyle of ●uaiacum wood Oyle of Ash-tree wood Two waies to extract oyles out of liquid Gums Oyle of Turpentine Thus 〈◊〉 Oyle o● waxe distilled When the distillation is ended Oyle of Waxe Another manner of making oyle of Waxe The 〈◊〉 of the oyle of wax The gathering of the Mulberrie-tree leaues Signes that the wormes would mak● silk● For to know the colour of the silk The choice of the 〈◊〉 The choice of breeding wormes The difference betwixt male and female wormes The diseases of silke-wormes Salt Marshes To make new medow grounds Oates a great breeder of grasse To sow Medowes Geese a greas enemie to good grounds 〈…〉 To gather out the stones To horrow it The manuring of it Bottomes of Hay-mowes Sluces and Draines To sow medowes Sops in wine or Snaile-clauer Cato Palladius Plantaine Wild Carret Wound-wort Germander Small Rampions Wild Saffron● Laughing Smallage Great and small water Germander in the Medowes of Cheles Carpenters w●rt-●alme Blessed thistle Pimpernell Saxifrage a great friend to Medowes Sweepings of Hay-barne floores Foddering of great cattell Foddering of Sheepe Commoditie of foddering Mowing of meadowes Best time to cut grasse Wind-rowes Great hay-cockes Sowre and harsh-grasse Choyce and vse of haye Moist-hay Drie-hay Curiositie
which you distill because the ●legme commeth forth sometime first sometimes the last in the distillation as in the distilling of Aqua-vitae is stayeth the last notwithstanding that it be distilled diuers times in the distilling of the most part of other things it commeth forth first as in vinegar honie and such things and the thing is discerned by tasting of the first and last distilled waters And if it happen that the flegme be not seuered in this sort as indeed it is not in some such as with which it is mixt then the next course is to set such vvaters in the Sunne certaine daies in vessells couered with linnen clothes or parchment prickt full of small holes that so the excrementous part by such meanes may be consumed and wasted or if the Sunne faile as in Winter time then you must set your vessell contayning your distilled waters in other vessells full of vvater and cause them to boyle to the consumption of the third part The distillation is to be judged to be in good state and case if betwixt the fall of euerie drop you can account to the number of twelue and hence also is the judging of the force and quantitie of the fire to be learned and fetcht If any man desire that waters should haue some smell taste or other qualitie of something as of honie cinnamome camphire muske or other like sweet smelling thing whether it be to giue such smell to the thing that hath none at all or vnto something that hath a bad and vnpleasant smell as we will speake of by and by in the water distilled of mans dung it vvill be good to annoynt and besmeare the head of the still vvith these things or else to tie vp the same in some little knot of linnen cloth and hang them at the verie poynt of the spout or pipe to the end that the vvater distilling through this matter may retayne that smell or other qualitie intended And vvhereas distilled vvaters by force of the fire are euermore seene to retaine some impressions and printes of the heat it will be good presently after they be distilled to let them stand some time vncouered in the vessells wherein you meane to keepe them hauing yet therewithall regard that neither their small nor any part of their force doe vvaste or spend and therefore to take the fittest course it will be best to set your vessell close and fast stopt in some cold place in moist sand to diminish and take away the great heat of the same Notwithstanding you must marke and know that cold waters vvhich shall be distilled in Maries-bath will haue no great need to be so vncouered but that they rather must be set in the Sunne in a glasse vessell not altogether full or else that they with their vessell be set ouer head and eares in hot sand for the space of fortie daies to the end that their flegme and thickest humour may be consumed If your distilled vvaters become troubled you shall restore them to their clearenesse by putting thereinto some one or two drops of Vinegar for euerie pint of water CHAP. LXV Of the particular manner of distilling of Hearbes Rindes Flowers and Rootes DIstilled vvaters are of diuers sorts and vertues some are physicall or medicinable as the water of roses sage marierom and such like Others are nourishing as restoratiues and many both medicinable and nourishing as nourishing restoratiues vvhereinto are put medicinable things Others are purgatiue as the water or liquor of rhubarbe if it were new and greene Others serue to grace the face and hands and to make beautifull Others for to gratifie the nose by yeelding a sweet smell as those which are drawne out of spices and sweet smelling simples vsed also to vvash the hands face and whole bodie and againe all these waters are either simple or compound but we will first speake of the simple medicinable ones Wormewood must be distilled in Maries-bath to draw out his vvater in such sort as that it may expresse by smell and taste from whence it came and for the better doing of it you must see that you distill it not verie new but somewhat dried and afterward infusing it a little in wine to distill it in Maries-bath or in hat● ashes Mugwort Agrimonie Sorrell and such other like plants are thus distilled also but with obseruation had of the generall things specified before Thus the water of Winter cherries is distilled seruing against the stone and grauell as well of the reines a● bladder The vttermost pilling of common vvalnuts vvhether it shale willingly or no may be distilled in the moneth of September and the water drawne from them drunke in small quantitie with a third part of Vinegar is a certaine remedie against the plague if before drinking of it you cause the partie to be let bloud it is singular good also to make gargarismes of for the vlcers of the mouth it is good also to foment goutie places withall and good to colour the haire blacke Water distilled of the leaues of the Walnut-tree in the end of the moneth of May is singular for to drie and cicatrize vlcers if they be washed euening and morning with a linnen cloth moistned therein To distill strawberries you must let them putrifie in a glasse vessell putting thereto a little salt or sugar and then afterward to extract and draw out their water which is verie soueraigne against venime as also to take away spots to prouoke the termes and drie vp weeping eyes it will performe all these vertues in admirable manner if there be mingled with it a little Aqua-vitae The inward rinde of the ash-tree being distilled doth yeeld a singular water against the plague if it be drunke in equall quantity with aqua-vite as three 〈◊〉 of either especially if the same drinke in the same quantitie be drunke againe vvithin three houres after it is good also being dropt into the eares for the noyse in them The stones of blacke cherries being broken or the kernells alone distilled make a vvater vvhich doth quite take away the fit of the Falling-sicknesse in young children presently after that there hath beene put into their mouth about an ounce The distilled vvater of new filberds drunke the weight of two drams is a present remedie against the collicke and gripings of the bellie a thing that will not fail● hauing beene proued and tried The vvater vvhich is distilled of the barke of Danewort or Elder-tree being oftentimes drunke doth euacuate and draw the vvater out of such as haue the dropsie The vvater of betonie You must stampe the leaues of betonie and infuse them a certaine time in Wine and after distill them The vvater of balme and sage is distilled in like manner The vvater of betonie is good for the diseases of the head reines and bladder The water of balme rejoyceth men keepeth away the fits of the Apoplexie and Falling-sicknesse
beene of all these seuerall colours onely the white is esteemed the most beautifull and best for the cie the blacke and fallow hardest to ●ndure labour and the dunne and brended best for potchers and night-men who deligh to haue all their pleasures performed in darkenesse Now for the choice of a good Grey-hound there are but two principall things to be obserued that is to s●y breed and shape Breed which is euer as touching his 〈◊〉 and generation for if a dog be not wel descended that is to say begot by an ex ellent dog or an exc●llent bitch there can be little hope of his goodnesse Now in the breeding of Grey-hounds there are diuersities of opinions for some gentlement of the leash d●sire a ●ost principall bitch though the dog be but indifferent and suppose that so they shall haue the best whelps supposing according to an old coniecture that a bitch is swifter than a dogge but it is an erronious fancie for the good dogge will euer beate the good bitch and the good bitch will euer beate the bad dogge againe it is most certaine that the dogge hauing aduantage both of length strength and courage hee must consequently haue the aduantage of speed also I doe not denie but that the bitch being much lesse than the dogge as naturally all are may haue some aduantage of nimblenesse and so in turnes slips and wries may get much ground which the dogge commonly looseth but yet notwithstanding when the full account is cast the good dogge will equall all those aduantages and wheresoeuer the course shall stand forth long will beat out the good bitch and make her giue ouer There be other gentlemen of the leash which desire a good dog and respect not though the bitch be but indifferent and this is the better choice yet both defectiue for where there is any imperfection at all there nature can neuer be fully compleate To breed then a good whelpe indeed you must be sure to haue both a perfect good dogge and a perfect good bitch and as neere as you can make choice of that bitch which is most large and deepest chested for from thence springeth both strength and wind For the true shape of a good grey-hound because it is the very face and charracter of goodnesse you shall esteeme that dog which hath a fine long leane snakes head with a cleere bright eie and wide nostrells a round bending necke like a mollard with a loose thropple and a full falling at the setting on of the shoulders he must haue a long broad and a square beame backe with high round ●illets and a broad space hee must bee deepe swine sided with hollow bended ribs and a full brest he mast haue rush growne limbes before and ●ickell houghes behind a fine round full cats foot with strong cleyes and tough soles and an euen growne long rats taile round turning at the lower end from the leash ward and hee must bee full set on betweene the buttockes and lastly hee must haue a very long slender close hid pizell and a round big paire of stones The food which is best for grey-hounds as touching their diet is chippings or houshold bread scalded in beefe broth or other broth that is not too salt and after made white with milke or else the bones of veale which are verie soft and tender or the bones of lambe rabits or other scraps comming from the Farmers table In the time of coursing or at other times if your grey-hound be leane or out of heart the best mea●e to raise him is sheepes heads boiled wooll and all in water together with oatemeale and synage succorie langdebeefe and violet leaues chopt verie small together and so boiled to pottage vntill the flesh fall from the bones The best food when a dog is in diet for a course is to make him bread of wheate-meale and oate-meale mixt together and finely bolted and knodden with a little water whites of egges barme licoras and any-seeds and so bakt in good houshold loaues and giuen morning and night with new milke or pottage which are warme If the dogge at any time grow costiue you shall giue him tostes which are made of the same bread or of manchets and steept in sallet oile Grey-hounds when they are for the course must bee walkt forth and ayred both morning and euening exceeding earely as before day in the morning and ver●e late as about seuen or eight of the clocke at night and when you bring your grey-hound home at night you shall bring him to a faire ●ire and there let him beake and stretch himselfe and doe you ticke him at the least an houre or more before you put him into his kennell You must haue a very great and diligent care that when you course him hee bee exceeding emptie as at least of twelue houres fasting more than for some small sop or bit or two onely to cherish or strengthen Nature A brace of grey-hounds are enough at one time to course either Hare or Bucke withall and two brace are sufficient to course the Stagge or Hind Much more might bee said of the natures of grey-hounds and the manner of ordering and dietting them for the course but this small taste is sufficient both for the farmers vnderstanding and to auoid tediousnesse Now for the hounds whose natures I haue alreadie in patt discribed and which hunt in great numbers or as it were ●lockes together you shall vnderstand that they are of foure sorts and dis●●inguished by foure seuerall colours belonging to the foure seuerall sorts of hounds that is to say the white hound the fallow or taund hound the grey-hound and the blacke hound The white are the best for they are of quicke scent swift hot and such as neuer giue ouer for any continuance of heate or breaking off because of the fe●ting of the horsemen or the cries and noises of men keeping the turnes and crossing better than any other sorts of dogs are more to be trusted notwithstanding they loue to be attended with horsemen and they do feare the water somewhat especially in Winter when the weather is cold Those which are altogether white are the best and likewise those which are red spotted The other which are blacke and dirtie gray spotted drawing neere vnto a changeable colour are but of small value and whereof there are some subiect to haue fat and tender feet The baie coloured ones haue the second place for goodnesse and are of great courage ventring far and of a quicke scent ●inding out verie well the turnes and windings almost of the nature of the white ones saue onely that they doe not indure the heate so well neither yet the treadings of the horsemen and yet notwithstanding they bee more swift and hot and feare neither cold nor water they runne surely and with great boldnesse commonly louing the Stagge more than any other beast but they make no account of hares It is true that they be
more head-strong and hard to reclaime than the white and put men to more paine and trauell about the same The best of the fallow sort of dogges are those which are of a brighter haire drawing neere vnto the colour of red and hauing therewithall a white spot in the forehead or in the necke in like manner those which are all fallow but such as incline to a light yellow colour being graie or blacke spotted are nothing worth such as are trus●ed vp and haue dewclawes are good to make bloud-hounds The white and baie dogs are not sit for any but Kings Princes and great Lords and then not for gentelmen because they course only the hart and not all sorts of game The graie dogs do run well at all sorts of game that a man would haue them to hunt but they are not so swift nor lustie as the others especially such as haue their legs of a bay or fallow colour drawing somewhat vnto a white and yet notwithstanding they are hot and stout not learing water of cold running with great courage and neuer giuing ouer the game till they haue killed but indeed they auoid and shun heat the footing of horses and the noise of men neither do they delight in the hunting of any beastes that are giuen to wiles and crosse windings but in recompence hereof it is possible that you may see them to ouer run the most swift and best dogs especially after beastes that vse to run out right The blacke dogs are strong bodied but they haue low and short legs in like manner they bee nothing swift howsoeuer they may bee of a quicke s●ent fearing neither cold nor waters and they doe delight most in coursing the rammish and strong scented beastes as wild Bores Foxes and such like because they neither haue mind nor yet swiftnesse to course and take the beastes that bee swift in running But whereas it is commonly giuen out and reported that their are good dogs of euerie shape it may bee so brought to passe as that the hare may not make much for the arguing of the goodnesse of the dogge and that there are found of all colours good and faire dogges for this cause it is both meere and requisite that a dogge of what haire or colour soeuer hee be to the end hee may be faire and good haue these notes and markes following his head must be reasonably thicke rather long than flat nosed his nostrells very wide and great his eares large and of a meane thickenesse his backe crooked in compasse wise his loynes great and thicke his lippes thicke and large his thigh round and trussed his houghs straight and well set together his taile thicke neere vnto his backe and the rest of it small and leane euen to the end the haire vnder his bellie stiffe his legs great the sole of his foot drie and shaped like vnto the foot of a Fox his nailes thicke his hinder parts as high as his sore parts The male kind must be short and crooked but the bitch or female long The signification and meaning of these signes is such his wide nostrels do argue his quicke scent his vaulted backe and straight hams do argue his swiftnes his taile thicke aboue and slender downe to the end both signifie that he hath a strong back and wind at will the stiffenesse of his haire vnderneath his bellie doth shew that he is willing painfull fearing neither water nor cold his thick leg fox foot and thick nailes doth signifie that he hath no sat or gouty foot and that he hath strong limbs to run long without griefe or annoiance But for as much as it is hard to get such hunting dogs when one would as are both good hunters and faire withall it will be requisite to prouide a faire bitch of a good race strong and of wel proportioned limbs hauing great and large sides and flanks and to procure her to be limed with a faire dog hauing the markes that we haue spoken of before and that at such time onely if it be possible as when the Moone is in the signes of Gemini and Aquariys for the dogs that are gotten at such times are not so subiect to run mad and besides there will be of them moe dogs than bitches When the bitch is with whelpe and beginneth to haue a bagging bellie she may not be set to course least her young ones should bee kept from euer thriuing her walke then must not be past the court or house neuer shutting her vp in any kennell because she is wearisome and giuen to loath all meat When she hath whelped the fittest time for which is in March Aprill and May rather than either in Winter or in the time of great heat and that the whelpes begin to see they must bee ●ed with cowes milke sheepes milke or goates milke vnmixt and made warme neither must they be taken from sucking the bitch till they be two moneths old and then feeding them with milke meats bread and all sorts of pottage till they be ten moneths old and all this while thus to keepe them in the kennell Hounds would bee fed all together in one kennell meete and conuenient for them to the end they may know and heare one another because that those which are fed together they become the better acquainted and agree better in hunting than those that are of diuers kennels and places Their meat shall be bread made of a third part of wheate a third part of barley and a third part of rie because that being so mixt it keepeth them faire and fat and cureth them of many maladies for and if it should be made of rie onely it would make them scoure too much if of pure wheat it would bind too much in their bellies and therefore the one mixt with the other There must bee giuen them some flesh meate in Winter but especially vnto those that are leane and hunt the stag but to those that hunt the hare you must neuer giue any least they sleshing themselues vpon the greater game they make light account of hares which thrust themselues commonly into the middest of tame cattel● to shift off the dogges by that meanes who vpon such occasion might leaue off the hare and fall to course the tame cattell but the dogs which hunt the hart would neuer do it because the stag is of a more full and strong scent than the hare as also because their flesh is more daintie and delicate than any other The best flesh meat that can bee giuen them and which doth strengthen them most is horse-flesh asse-flesh and mules-flesh but as for oxen kine and other such like their flesh is to them of too eager and sharpe a substance Their flesh meate must first haue their hide pluckt off that so they may not haue any knowledge of the beast nor of his haire Good huntsmen make great account of pottage made of mutton goates flesh and oxe heads