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

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5. parts of some emollient decoction and 1 or 2. of oile and some purging and stimulating electuaries or species c. in a double quantity to what is taken downwards Note oile is to be added when there is need of emollition and not when of purgation or revulsion Hereto belong Metrenchytes made of some distilled water decoction or juice c. to which way be added powders electuaries oiles c. as also other injections to be used with a syringe 7. Conditures are made of roots barkes stalkes fruits nuts and flowers of which the more grosse are to be mollifyed and dissected and then edulcorated or sweetened with purifyed and dissolved sugar and sometimes with clarifyed hony c. 8. Confections with sugar are made by dropping dissolved sugar by degrees on things to be prepared as seeds kernells spices roots barks as also flowers and tops of plants and they are canded with more grosse liquor 9. Conserves are made by stamping the matter in a stone morter and mixing the sugar therewith in a double proportion in things more humid and treble if more dry with a little distilled water thus are prepared flowers for the most part seldome herbs lesse often roots and fruits almost never and are then to be filtrated 10. Decoctions are made of all things that may communicate their vertue unto liquors as mineralls vegetables and animals or living creatures but Apozems chiefly of vegetables sc roots barkes herbes flowers berries fruits and woods with spring water whay hydromel or wine from a foure fold proportion of the liquor to twelve with a due preparation decoction and clarification with the white of an egge 11. Lambatives and ●ohochs are made of pectoralls sc powders conserves mucilages syrups decoctions honey pulps c. mixed to the consistence of honey note the proportion of powder is halfe an ounce to 2 of syrup 12. Electuaries sc the common or opiats are made of fine powders with warme clarified hony being set to ferment in some warme place after the mixture of the dissolved solubles but mixtures are made of powders electuaries conserves extracts and dissected confections with some convenient liquor or so much syrup as may suffice 13. Elixyrs are spirituous liquors of excellent faculties impregnated by infusion and agree for the most part with liquid tinctures 14. Emplaisters and cerots are made of fat things as oiles rosins grease marrow wax gums and sometimes powders to the wax melted are last added the proportion of oile fat or hony is three ounces to one of dry things of wax 1 pound of rosins 8 ounces thus are Cerotes made yet softer hereto belong Dropaces made of pitch a little oile other materialls as pepper pellitory rosemary euphorbium castor bitumen brimstone salts c. 15. Emulsions are made of the inward parts of fruits and milkie seeds as almonds the 4 greater cold seeds seeds of purslain lettuce pine apple kernells c. with spring or distilled water the decoction of barley liquorice raisins or jujubes being pounded strained and then sweetened avoiding things acid 16. Errhines are made of extracts liniments or powders 17. Epithemes are made of distilled waters juices decoctions emulsions c. alone or mixed with powders species electuaries c. and some wine vineger or spirits for penetration and so applyed with a spunge or linnen cloth c. the proportion is halfe a pound of liquors of powders from 1 dram to half an ounce of wine or spirits 1 ounce 18. Extracts are drawn out of mineralls vegetables and animalls by preparing them for infusion and then pouring the menstruum thereon to a convenient height sc the spirit of wine c. after which set it in a warme place and then extract it according to art 19. Faecula's are made of roots sometimes of leaves by pounding them in a morter and pouring on water till like a pulpe which is then to be pressed and set to settle 20. Flowers are made by chymicall separation by sublimation 21. Gargarismes and dentisrices are made for the most part of waters juices or convenient decoctions to which way be added of syrups or hony 2 3 or 4 ounces to 1 pound of water with a little vineger c. 22. Gellies are made of succulent fruits of hornes tender bones by decoction and filtration edulcoration and coagulation to which also may be added powders and extracts c. 23. Infusions are made of minerals and animals but chiefly of vegetables and such as are purging with their corrigents together with some distilled or spring water whay muscadell mede or wine c. to cover the matter 1 2 or 3. fingers which after steeping is to be pressed 24. Juleps are made of some potulent liquor as distilled or spring water corrected by a toste or some decoction as of harts horne liquorice or barley c. in which juyces and spirits may be dissolved and of syrrups 1 or 2 ounces may be added to a pint of liquor Hereunto belong morets made of spices and other confortatives with sugar or syrrups 25. Stones are made by digestion extraction and coagulation 26. Liquors are made by deliquium c. 27. Magisteries are made of animals vegetables and minerals prepared by solution in some convenient or acid liquor precipitation ablution in common water and gentle exiccation 28. Masticatories are usually made of mastick raisins bastard pellitory cubebs sage leaves agarick c. made into powder balls or troches with wax figgs turpentine or hony c. and so are to be chewed 29. Morsells and rolls may be made of all kinds of remedies as powders seeds conserves oiles extracts with sugar dissolved over the fire putting them in by degrees and stirring them after which it 's to be poured forth upon some plain thing and cut into tablets In those that are purging manna may be put in stead of hony things condited are to be first cut in pieces distilled oiles are last to be dropped in or used outwardly so muske and amber being dissolved in rose water Rolls also are thus made but the powders must be finer and in a lesse quantity and if there are acid juices they must be made only by mixture 30. Oiles as first the destilled are made of animals vegetables and minerals 2. Those by expression of seeds and certaine oleous kernells 3. By decoction the simples being cut and boiled in oile mixt with water wine or some convenient liquor untill the aqueous humidity be exhaled or by maceration in oile as that of olives or the omphacine if the simples are more dry 31. Pills may be made of any dry thing incorporated by some viscid and glutinous liquor as syrrups mucilages inspissate or thickened juices extracts c. or they may be made only of juices and inspissate extractions 32. Potions are made of syrrups electuaries extracts manna powders c. with decoctions infusions and chiefly distilled waters usually only by mixture 33. Pomanders are made of sweet powders to which oiles may be
c. to an ounce or an ounce half c. according to the strength of the patient and vehemency of the disease of oiles 3 ounces of sats hony and sugar c. halfe an ounce or an ounce of the yelks of eggs 2 or 3 of common salt a dram and halfe more or lesse according to the intended p●oritation of the expulsive faculty 3. In Gargarismes a triple weight of liquor to that of physicall juices and syrups sc 6 ounces to two hereof and of dry medicines 2 or 3 drams to halfe a pound of a decoction 4. In Errhines of the leaves of cephalick purgers being incided and contused 4 handfulls to 4 ounces of white wine c. in soft ●●●hines to two ounces of the juice aforesaid an ounce and a halfe of wine and of hony as much as may serve to make it into the forme of an opiat being boiled of sharp or purging powders 1 scruple in the solid to a sufficient quantity of turpentine and wax 2 drams of powders 5. In Epithemes to 1 pound of liquors a dram and halfe or two drams of the species or 1 ounce of wine and a few graines of saffron as in cordiall epithemes but in the hepatick and splenetick halfe an ounce of vineger to one of the waters 6. In Fomentations to each 1 or 2 handfulls of herbes one pint of liquor 7. In Embrocations for the most part 1 pint of liquors to 2 handfulls of herbes which are then to be boiled to a medietie 8. In Insessions of herbes from 5 handfulls to 8 or 10. of roots from 2 ounces to 4 of seeds from 6 drams to 6 ounces and of water as much as may serve thereunto which are to be put into a bagge and boiled to a third part 9. In Baths of liquids as much as may rise to the mouth of the stomack of herbs from five handfulls to fifteen more or lesse according to the nature of the disease and strength of the patient of flowers from one pugill to 12 of roots from three ounces to five pound of seeds to an ounce of pulses from 6 ounces to two pound of mineralls from three ounces to three pound c. which are to be boiled to a third part 10. In Lotions of herbs from 4 handfulls to 10. with a convenient quantity of liquids 12. In Tragaea's of sugar one ounce to every dram of species especially if bitter and lesse pleasant 13. In Aromaticall electuaries of hony or sugar a threefold or sixfold quantity to that of the species 14. In Cathartick or purging electuaries of the species one part to three of hony or sugar being well mixed with their correctives and the dirigents So also in Opiats or narcotick and stupefactive antidotes which are to be compounded with great care 15. In Conserves for the most part to one part of the herbs shred or flowers 3 of powdered sugar 16. In Conditures the proportion of sugar is according to the nature and temper of the matter 17. In Lohochs the proportion of the recipient matter is fourefold to the ingredient powders so that to 4 ounces thereof there is one of the powder usually 18. In Liniments to one ounce of oile 2 drams of butter fats and creams 19. In Unguents to one ounce of oiles one dram of species and two of wax 20. In Plaisters to one ounce of dry things 3 of oyle and to 3 ounces hereof one pound of wax of rosin 8 ounces that they may be more tenacious 21. In Cataplasmes to each handfull of the leaves or other things of oile or fats an ounce or an ounce and halfe 22. In Cerots to one ounce of oile a dram or a dram and halfe of the species of hard wax halfe an ounce with a little rosin 23. In Sinapismes to two parts of contused mustard seed one of figgs in those that are more weake the contrary 24. In Tablets Troches and Morsells 4 ounces of sugar to 2 drams of the species in tablets that are purging to one pound of sugar 8 drams of species or 12 thereof 25. In Collyries a little of the white of an egge to a convenient quantity of depurate or purified juyce 26. In Suppositories to one dram of the species and salt one ounce of hony 27. In Juleps of dulcorants or sweetening things from an ounce to an ounce and halfe of clarified juyces orliquors if more strong as the acid to halfe an ounce else an ounce of confections from one scruple to two and lesse if more pretious as bezar stone to foure or six grains of Vnicornes horne halfe a scruple and of pearles one scruple for one dose 28. In Physicall wines to one pint of wine cathartick three or foure ounces of sugar and of cinamon two drams 29. In Emulsions of dulcorants or sweetening things for one dose an ounce or an ounce and halfe of fruits an ounce and halfe or an ounce or two so of seeds and of rose water of manus Christi one dram of liquors s q 30. In Amygdalates or Almond milke of blanched almonds two ounces of warme water halfe a pint of sugar one ounce or two 31. In Ptisans of cleansed barley two ounces of sugar one or two ounces of water s q. or twenty parts 32. In Hydromel or Metheglin to one part of hony eight or twelve of water of cinamon two drams or halfe an ounce and it 's then to be boiled to the consumption of a 4th part 33. In Diet drinks to a pint and halfe of water one ounce of ingredients which are then to be boiled to a third part for sweating and for ordinary drinking to two ounces of ingredients twelve pints of water of sugar halfe a pound of cinamon three drams or halfe an ounce boiled to the consumption of a fourth part 34. In Hydrosaccharates of spring water depurate or purified by boyling twelve parts to one of white sugar and of cinamon or sanders in fevers from three drams to halfe an ounce 35. In Broths analeptick or restaurative to each pint of white wine of cordiall juyces or convenient liquors three ounces of sugar two of cinamon and of the confection of alkermes one dram in restaurative distillations to three or foure pints of the liquor of cordiall waters eight or twelve ounces of conserves and conditures three or six of the confection of alkermes c. three drammes or halfe an ounce 36. In Boles of conserves three drams or halfe an ounce of powders one scruple of confections a scruple or halfe a dram 37. In Pandaleons of fruits two drams of seeds an ounce of powders three drams of sugar s q. of conserves three drams or halfe an ounce 38. Of the Basis for Pills according to the strength thereof with convenient syrups 39. In Dropaces to an ounce or an ounce and halfe of pitch halfe an ounce or six drams of oile or so much of hot powders 40. In Vesicatories to two ounces of old leven as much of cantharides which are then to be
10. couple as figgs jujubes c. also the pulpe thereof is prescribed by measure as the pulp of raisins to two ounces in solutive electuaries in lohochs in a mean and in hepatick corroborating or malactick cataplasmes from a quarter of a pound to a pound so all astringent fruits the lesser fruits as currans c. in a greater or lesser weight according to the scope nature strength and jorme of the remedies and the indiscrete fruits are prescribed by weight not number 4. Seeds are always proportioned by weight The hot and pleasant to 1 or 2 drams as aniseed c. in peptick powders the lesse acceptible to halfe or 1 dram and the more sharp in a lesser quantity the temperate from 1 dram to an ounce in inward remedies and in baths fomentations and clysters from 1 ounce to more The Diuretick according to the scope and acrimonie if to provoke urine from 1 dram to 3 or 4. and with purging remedies from a scruple to a dram And in aperient remedies in a mean quantity In arteriacks from one scruple to a dram as also in Bechicks Those that expell wind in clysters remedies easing paine and the collick from two drams to 6 in antidotes from one dram to three the hottest seeds used powdered in inward remedies from one scruple to one dram and in the externall from 2 drams to an ounce but in decoctions to be taken inwardly from one dram to three and in externall remedies from 3 scruples to an ounce and half The greater cold seeds in diureticks from two drams to an ounce In pectoralls from half a dram to three In loosening remedies from a scruple to a dram In clysters from halfe an ounce to an ounce In bathes from two ounces to 6 but the lesser cold seeds in inward remedies as powders from a scruple to two drams In the outward from half a dram to halfe an ounce Narcotick seeds from halfe a dram to two or three as in remedies for the collick but in the externall from a dram to half an ounce Cerealls that are whole are to be measured by pugills or small handfulls more in baths in clysters one or two pugills In the decoctions of syrrups injections and gargarismes from halfe a pugill to a whole one but when they are powdered by weight as in cataplasmes from one pound to two and to inspissate the juice of herbes as much as may reduce it into the consistence of hony as in bechick and arteriack remedies from one dram to three Pulses are measured as cereals but are weighed when powdered 5. Roots in syrups and apozems from one ounce to three if for more doses if for one from 3 drams to an ounce more or lesse according to their nature and strength and the scope in baths they are proportioned by pounds or handfulls In clysters from 2 ounces to 3. and more for fomentations irrigations c. 6. Woods if sweet more noble and pretious from halfe a dram to a dram for the most part in inward or outward remedies as suunders c. but the more grosse ignoble of which are made decoctions as guajacum c. from an ounce to a pound 7. Barkes the more rare and excellent from a scruple to half an ounce as cinamon c. The more base from one ounce to more except ungratefull to the taste as guajacum c. 8. Juices according to the scope forme of remedies 9. So Rosms the liquid taken alone from a scruple to 3 drams to cleanse the reines if to loosen the belly from 2 drams to halfe an ounce in plaisters and unguents from halfe an ounce to more according to the scope but the more dry as pitch c. in outward remedies as plaisters and unguents from half an ounce to an ounce or more 10. Living creatures if used whole are proportioned by number except small their parts by number and weight the more liquid by weight so those that are burned or prepared and that from one dram to three as rasped harts horne c. but those that are more sharp foetid or sweet if used in● wardly from two graines to a dram as muske amber c. but more if used outwardly The Intestines from one dram to two if taken alone or with wine but in opiats and powders for more doses to one or two ounces The lungs and liver if unpleasant stinking and dryed from halfe a scruple to a dram or two if mixed with sweet things Excrements if more sharp from halfe a dram to two drams and outwardly from halfe an ounce to two ounces and if more gentle to a pound as that of the cow c. Galls by weight more or lesse according to their acrimonie and consistence those of four footed beasts to one dram of birds to two of fishes to three Hornes being burned or rasped from one dram to foure but the more precious as the Vnicornes from 6 graines to a dram Shells of fishes burnt from one dram to three and in outward remedies from halfe an ounce to two ounces Pearles in cordials c. from one scruple to two drams 11. Mettalls by weight according to their strength and acrimonie and the strongest from a dram to an ounce the weaker in a greater quantity but those that may be eliquated and are emplastick as litharge c. from an ounce to a pound or more and the sharpe as verdigrease c. from halfe a dram to two drams if washed in a greater quantity those that have but little acrimonie us lead tuttie c. and those which dry without biting from a dram to an ounce Mineralls that are very sharpe as brimstone alome c. are to be used only in strong remedies the caustick as vitrioll c. from half a scruple to a scruple used alone or a dram used with more gentle remedies Precious stones as the sapphire c. from halfe a scruple to a dram the stronger and acrid as the lapis cyaneus according to the scope and manner of preparation sc in cordialls from 7 graines to halfe a scruple in purging remedies from a dram to two drams and a half in a greater quantity if in greater compositions and those that are burned in a lesse quantity than those which are not or not washed but those stones that are without acrimonie as the lapis Judaicus c. from halfe a dram to two drams So Earths also More particularly 1. In Decoctions the proportion is of leaves 5 handfulls of flowers 4 pugills of roots 3 or 5 ounces of seeds 4 or 6 drams of water 2 or 3 pints boiled to one halfe or a third part with transcolation edulcoration and clarification to each dose of which one ounce of syrup may be added and sometimes catharticks with correctors So also in insusions 2. In Clysters in a double proportion to what is taken by the mouth sc of simple purgers as coloquintida c to two or three drams of the compounded as of hiera p●cra
kneaded together with aqua vitae or vineger 41. In Frontals to three or four pugills of flowers halfe an ounce of seeds if in a humid forme halfe an ounce of oiles to a sufficient quantity of unguentum populeon 42. In Oxyrrhodines to foure or six ounces of oiles two or three of vineger and foure of water being shaken together 43. In Cuoupha's of roots one ounce of dry leaves three handfulls of flowers two or three pugills of spices three drams or halfe an ounce of gums one or two drams of muske halfe a scruple or a scruple 24. In Moister Collyries of herbes appropriated to the eyes six or eight handfulls of seeds an ounce and halfe or two ounces of herbes for the head two handfulls of spices halfe an ounce or six drams of galls two ounces of urine halfe a pint or a quart of hony halfe a pound or a pinte of wine two pintes 45. In Apophlegmatismes the same quantity as in gargarismes 46. In Suffumigations of gums foure or six drams of powders three drams of amber muske and civet as every one pleaseth so in pomanders 47. In Stomack plaisters of mastick two ounces of powders half an ounce of sweet gums 2 drams of turpentine s q 48. In Pessaries of juyces 2 ounces or 3 of hony an ounce and halfe of powders halfe an cunce 49. In Injections for the Eares of powders halfe a scruple or a scruple of fats 2 drams of hony halfe an ounce c. For the Bladder of syrups one ounce of fine powders one or two drams II. As Compounds c. and so 1. Altering remedies if temperate they are given from 2 drams to 2 ounces if in the first degree from a scruple to an ounce if in the second from halfe a scruple to halfe an ounce if in the third from 5 graines to 2 drams if in the fourth degree from 2 graines and a halfe to a dram 2. Purging remedies in the first degree if in the first mansion from 2 ounces to 8 as syrups of roses and violets solutive in the second from 2 ounces and a halfe to 5. as the hony of roses and violets solutive in the third from two ounces to foure as the juyce of roses and violets and syrupe of peach flowers in the second degree if in the first mansion from halfe an ounce to two ounces as tamarindes and cassia in pulps in the second from halfe an ounce to an ounce and halfe as the seed of bastard saffron in infusion in the third from three drams to seaven as dodder of time in the third degree if in the first mansion from one dram to halfe an ounce as mirobalans or five drams as polypody in the second from two scruples to two drams as rhubarb agarick sene and bryonie of Mexico and Peru in the third from halfe a scruple to one dram as aloes hermodactiles turbith hedge hys●ope and jalap in the fourth degree if in the first mansion from ten graines to halfe a dram or two scruples as mezereon coccus Cnidius asarabacca and coloquintida in the second from five graines to fifteene as elaterium and the barke of black hellebore in the third from three graines to ten as euphorbium esula and scammonie 3. Apozems and distilled waters from two ounces and a halfe to five 4. Boles to one ounce 5. Clysters to those that are middle aged about a pinte to children two or three ounces or more c. 6. Confitures in the quantity of a wallnut so Conserves 7. Electuaries that are alterative and strengthening from one scruple to a dram and halfe the lenient from one dram to 4 the purging to an ounce or thereabouts 8. Elixyrs from halfe a scruple to a scruple halfe 9. Emulsions are to be taken often as need requireth 10. Extracts if harder and alterative from one scruple to a dram and halfe if cathartick or purging from one scruple to a dram 11. Liquors as of salts the like being dissolved from 5 drops to a scruple 12. Magisteries if corroborating and strengthening from halfe a dram to a dram the purging according to their efficacy 13. Morsells from one ounce to 2 or more 14. Oiles distilled from 2 graines to 15.15 Pills if laxative from halfe a dram to two drams if purging from 2 scruples to 4.16 Preparations from a scruple to a dram 17. Powders and species aromaticall or purging from a scruple and halfe to 4 scruples 18. Salts of vegetables from a scruple to a dram 19. Sapes and Syrups from one ounce to 3.20 Spirits if minerall from 3 graines to halfe a scruple or to 2 and more if weaker if of vegetables to a spoonefull when needfull 21. Troches to 4 scruples Here note that these quantities are proportioned for such as are strong and middle aged and for others they are to be moderated according to the ingredients and constitution of the patient as also that the more pleasant may be taken in a greater quantity and oftner but the unpleasant in a lesser and at once 11. The Chresiologie or use of them Thus Temperate remedies are used where there is no manifest distemper of the first qualities as heat and cold c. as also in fevers of flegme and to preserve the body in good temper strength and vigour and is to be done by such things that are appropriate thereunto The Rest as 1 The Hot if so in the first degree are used to reduce the body to naturall heat ease paines take away wearinesse and to help feavers as also to cause good digestion and breed good bloud if in the second to help moist stomacks remove obstructions and open the pores if in the third to cut tough humors provoke sweatings and to resist poyson if in the fourth to cause inflammations and raise blisters 2. The Cold if cold in the first degree they are used to qualifie the heat of food and asswage that of the intestines and bowells if in the second and third to asswage the heat of choller help the inflammations of hot swellings and to cause sleepe if in the fourth to mitigate paine by stupefying and dulling the senses 3. The Moist if so in the first degree to lenifie and lubrifie to help the cough and roughnesse of the threat if in the second to mitigate the sharpnesse of humours and loosen the belly and other parts 4. The Dry if so in the first degree to drink up moisture and stop fluxes and help the slipperinesse of the parts if in the second it strengtheneth the parts made feeble by too much moisture and disposeth them to action Remedies endued with the second qualities As 1. The Mollifying are used in scirrhus's and hard tumors and swellings 2. The Hardening are used to represse the heat of the humours in swellings and to hinder the flux of the thinner bloud and defluctions thereof 3. The Loosening are used in convulsions caused by cold and si●city 4. The Rarefying to open and dilate the pores that the vapours of the bloud may be
Clysters last not long are therefore to be made when usefull 32. Emplasters hardly endure a yeare and halfe 33. Ointments for the most part are kept a year or a year and halfe 7. The Criseologie or discrimination and distinction thereof thus are to be shunned 1. Herbs that are greatest smallest and withered as also those that are of an evill taste smell and colour 2. Flowers that are corrupted broken unripe or stale or of an evill taste smell or colour 3. Fruits that are wrinkled not corpulent or rotten of an evill taste and smell 4. Seeds that are withered unripe or not corpulent rotten of an evil smel or taste 5. Barkes that are worme-eaten rotten or soked in water 6. Juyces that are stale without good smel taste or colour 7. Liquors and gums that are old and have lost their vertues 8. Woods that are rotten light or corrupted 9. Roots that are worme-eaten or withered 10. Parts of living creatures that are taken from those that are sick old or dying by diseases hence appeareth the choyce Also 1. Emollients or the softening remedies are known by their temperatenesse in heat and moisture also by the gustile and tactile quality or touch and taste being in taste neere sweetnesse but of a fat and oilie substance so that they are neither sharpe austere acid salt or of any other taste that may shew either astriction or vehement heat or cold neither doe they seem rough or glutinous being touched 2. Indurants or the hardening are known by sapor or laste which is such that neither sheweth heat nor biteth or contracteth the tongue but is rather insipid cold so neither salt sharp bitter sweet acerb austere or acid 3. Tendents laxants or the stretching loosening are known as emollients yet laxants are lesse hot and dry than emollients 4. Rarefacients densants or rarifying and thickening are known as emollients sc by sapor shewing moderate heat so also densants being contrary hereunto and not vehemently cold therefore according to Gallen those things which vellicate the tongue by a biting sapor or astringent are not to be accounted among densants 5. Aperients or the opening are known by their sharpnesse and biting pricking and fretting the tongue 6. Occludents or the closing are distinguished by their coldnesse and astriction without biting for they coarctate and bind the tongue but do not vellicate or eate the same 7. Attenuants are sharp and bitter yet they rather dissolve the tongue than contract it being of thin parts and without astriction 8. Attrahents or the drawing are known as attenuants both having tenuity of parts and no small heat so that they differ secundum magis minus yet tenuity of parts is more proper to attenuants and heat to attrahents and sheweth the same not only by the taste but touch also 9. Discutients or the dissolving by tast which burneth the tongue being sharp very hot and of thin parts without astriction not contracting the tongue 10. Repellents or the resisting by taste acid acerbe or austere for these participating of astriction do presently contract the tongue by their contact 11. Adurents or burning by touching rather than by taste for such rather corrode the thick skin and humors and consume the same but the weaker are sharp being tasted doe prick the tongue 12. Extergents or the cleansing are not distinguished by one sapor for they may be either sweet salt or bitter but those that are cold shew themselves rather by some tactile quality than by taste for they are neither said to be acid austere or acerbe not having astriction which doth more impact the sordes or excrements 13. Emplasticks by being without sapor or having one that sheweth excesse neither of heat nor cold they are therefore either fat insipid or sweet in some measure and tough viscous being touched Furthermore medicines of the 3d qualities 1. Suppurants or things causing matter are known by not having any sapor which may shew excesse of heat and by being without astriction not biting or nitrous 2. Diureticks or provoking urine by their sharpnes heat and incision the cold by their nitrous quality with some small sharpnes or bitternes 3. Emmenagogicks or provoking the courses by heat 30 incision and abstersion biting of the tongue without contraction being sharp or somewhat bitter 4. Galactogeneticks or causing milk by a sweet taste and temperate yet some have a little acrimonie The contrary diminish milke as things bitter acerbe austere c. which shew excesse either of heate or cold 5. Spermatogeneticks or causing sperme by heat and moisture almost like the former but that they are more fat and viscous or tough and those that stimulate the sperme are known by their sharpnesse 6. Anodynes or easing paine by their temperatenesse and thinnesse of essence 7. Sarcoticks or generating flesh by their exiccation and abstersion or cleansing of the filth and corrupt matter 8. Glutinants or closing by astriction and more exiccation than the former 9. Epuloticks or cicatrizing and healing as the last yet exceeding in degree 10. Alexipharmicks or things resisting poyson by their corroberating contrary or extrusive faculty 8. The Taxilogie or way of placing them in Receipts so 1. Those which want longer preparation are first to be put downe as 1. Woods that are not sweet and barkes 2. Then Herbes 3. Fruits 4. Seeds Lastly Flowers and whatsoever are sweet or purging c. 2. Things that are to be boiled or infused before things that are only to be powdered 3. In things that want and are of the same preparation those are to be first placed of which the greatest quantity is required 4. In those things of which there is the same preparation and quantity those are to be first placed which either in commoditie or nobilitie do exceed 5. Those things are last to be prescribed which have the place of Matter as aloes in pills wax in unguents and hony in great confections 9. The Pharmacopoetologie or way of compounding them here 1. Vinegers are made of wine vineger and vegetables incided or contused by infusion in a warme place or by distillation 2. Waters are made by distillation infusion decoction or the mixture of herbs flowers roots woods spices and living creatures being first centused or bruised 3. Balsams that are sweet are made of sweet oiles incorporated in white wax purifyed c. The distilled are distilled spirits with a little oile drawn forth of rosins gumms spices c. by the spirit of wine 4. Boles are made by mixture or inspissation or thickening c. Of electuaries pulps conserves and powders reduced into a deglutible and lesse fluid consistence 5. Cataplasmes are made chiefly of herbes green or dry roots flowers seeds oiles fruits greases crums of bread c. reduced with or without fire into the forme of a pultise 6. Clysters are made of convenient liquors among which the purging are most usuall which for the most part are compounded and made of 4. or
added which may be incorporated with wax storax Indian balsame the mucilage of tragacanth with a little turpentine when need and a little rose water and so made up into small balls 34. Preparations are made by powdering the more hard matter sprinkling thereon some cordiall water sc rose water for the most part and afterwards drying it in the shadow Those things that are more solid are to be calcined 35. Powders and species are made by triture or levigation and the lesse if of a volatile substance and apart if of a diverse hardnesse 36. Fomentatorie little baggs may be made of any in●ided or contused vegetables sowed up in small bagges and are then to be applyed warme either dry or moist 37. Salts are made by incineration maceration transcolation and evaporation or crystallization 38. Wash-balls are made of sope especially that of Venice with which sweet things finely powdered are to be mixed with some fragrant water as of roses c. 39. Spirits if more volatile are made by a more gentle fire as by BM vel cinerum The more fixed by a retort and stronger fire and are made of animals minerals and vegetables and the more volatile of leaves flowers fruits seeds and spices but the more fixed out of woods barks c. The first differ not from distilled waters but that they are lesse flegmatick and separated by rectification after contusion and fermentation 40. Juices are drawn seldome out of animals but chiefly out of vegetables yet not all as those that are oleous and more dry and are made by contusion expression clarification filtration or digestion and the lesse succulent by maceration or elixation first 41. Sinapismes are made of mustard seed cresses nettles sowbread bryony squills garlick euphorbium cantharides c. with the pulp of figgs leaven hony oxymel sope c. And Vesicatories of cantharides prepared sc the heads and wings being cut off 30 being powdered and of sharp leaven 1 ounce with sharp vineger if need 42. Suppositories are used for divers indications but chiefly the dejectory of which 1. the more gentle are made of lard an open figge candle wax meat boiled in water stalkes and roots as of beets cabbage blites mercury c. 2. The meane with a certaine acrimonie are made of hony boiled thick sope and boiled tupentine to which sometimes is added mousedung salt or sugar 3. The morestrong and purging are made of agarick aloes hier● picra hellebore scammonie c. in the powder of which the suppositorie may be rolled Here the proportion of hony is 1 ounce of powder more gently purging 1 dram if more strongly halfe a scruple halfe a dram or 1 dram They are also at last to be annointed with oile or butter Pessaries and nascals are made in the forme of a finger of hysterick remedies which are to be put into a long linnen bag or made up with picked wooll or cotton or incorporated with hony laudanum galbanum wax juices c. they are in figure like suppositories but thicker and longer Roots also may be used in stead thereof as of madder cyperus lillies c. 43. Syrups are made of some medicamentous liquor decoction infusion juice distilled water or vineger which being clarifyed sugar or hony for preservation sapour are to be added then boiled and clarifyed it 's to be inspissated to the consistence of more liquid hony The proportion of liquor to sugar or hony is almost double or treble Hereunto belong physicall honies and syrupized Robs 44. Tinctures of which the more liquid are nothing else than extractions without an abstracted menstruum the more solid are powders without combustion remaining out of the liquid tinctures the menstruum being abstracted and are made after the manner of extracts 45. Trochiskes are made of all kinds of remedies which being powdered are made up in some convenient viscous liquor as in some mucilages with tragacanth juices syrups c. Hereunto belong sumale candles made of odoriferous powders with tragacanth storax c. as also troches for the same not differing in the way of making 46. Inunctory balsames liniments and unguents hardly differ in their preparation but consistence which in the first is more liquid like hony in the second a little harder and scarce fluid the third more hard and lesse fluid and are made of oile butter fats marrow rosins mucilages juices c. as also of powders and things that may be melted To 1. ounce of oile is used of fats almost 1 or 3 drames in liniments 1. dram or a half in balsams 1 dram a half or half an ounce in ointments with 1. dram of powder c. Also balsames are without wax liniments have a little or none as 1. dram to 1 ounce of oile but unguents have more and sometimes gummes and are made by mixture or liquefaction 10. The Dosologie or quantities thereof I. As Ingredients So 1. the doses of Herbs as used 〈…〉 are proportioned by handfulls in clysters and decoctions 1 or 2. for one time so if dry in externall and great remedies but in others as powders for the head and stomack c. from one dram to hafe an ounce or an ounce 2. Flowers if dry are measured by weight and measure if fresh they are proportioned by measure only the dry in antidotes and more noble compositions from a scruple to two drams as in cordiall capitall and stomachick powders and unguents but in syrrups apoz emes and other decoctions from halfe a pugill to 2 3 or more as also in bathes and clysters not being efficacious therein unlesse in a great quantity when fresh they are more effectuall to refrigerate humect or loosen and are therefore used only in syrrups and apozemes and other decoctions of the like nature and that from halfe a pugill to more and are not weighed except for conserves 3. Fruits if great whole and discrete are prescribed by number and not weight except some part thereof only be to be used and in exact compositions And in some the diversification is to be made according to the scope and use as prunes tamarinds c. for if used to refrigerate or alter choller a little number will suffice as two or three couple but tenne or twenty if to purge so of figgs c. in inward remedies for in bathes if to cleanse and relaxare they may be put in in a greater quantity sc 50 couple and loosening detergent and emollient fruits from 10 couple to 20. The refrigerating and lenient in injections agaist the inflammation of the intestines to 10. couple as prunes sebestens and tamarinds so also the sweeter fruits in clysters easing paine lenient loosening detersive and drawing downe wormes so also the astringent in clysters for fluxes but in a lesse quantity in altering decoctions least they should cause obstructions The detergent in loosening remedies from 20 couple to forty and in the altering to 5 or 6 couple but in pectorall decoctions or syrrups in a mean quantity or to
or when the aire is temperate if of sweet water in the spring summer and end thereof the body being first evacuated and clensed and excrements purged forth in the morning or evening after digestion in which the abode may be for two or three houres if a fat cold and moist body 11. Lotions if for the head in the morning before meate warme the excrements being evacuated after which the head is presently to be dried with towells if for the feet in the morning or evening before meat or sleepe after which the feet are to be wrapped up in a moist towell 12. Powders and aromaticall species in the morning being fasting and that in some convenient wine broth syrupe or other liquour 13. Tragaea's in the morning the stomack being emptie and in the evening two or three houres before supper and after meats if to represse vapours with a tost soaked in wine 14 Aromaticall electuaries when needfull in the morning and evening three or foure houres after supper 15. Purging electuaries in the morning the stomack being emptie 16. Opiates in the evening going to bed in wine or some other convenient liquor 17. Conserves often but chiefely in the morning or evening in the quantity of a wallnut alone or with other corroborating spices with syrups 18. Conditures before or after meat 19. Lohochs at any time before and after meat but chiefly at morning and evening and are to be taken with a liquorice stick and held in the mouth untill they dissolve and so are to be swallowed 20. Extracts in the morning the stomack being empty and that alone in pills or some liquid thing or else mixed with other remedies 21. Liniments two or three houres before meat being warme 22. Unguents before meate 23. Plaisters before meat 24. Cataplasmes if heating and discutient and to be applied to the hypochondriums the body being first evacuated 25. Cerots before meat the stomack being empty and then also if pectorall and stomachicall 26. Dropaces the body being freed from excrements 27. Sinapismes are then also to be used 28. Tablets rolls and morsels before meat two or three houres or foure if purging 29. Troches are often to be used and held in the mouth 30. Pills if capitall three or foure houres after a light supper or at midnight or after the first sleepe if lesser one or two houres before meat and the meane in the morning 31. Dry Collyries at morning and evening 32. Apophlegmatismes in the morning the body being freed from excrements 33. Dry errhines the whole body being evacuated by bloudletting or purges 34. Comfeits at any time before or after meat 35. Suppositories one or two houres before meate being first anointed with butter 36. Little baggs according to the nature of the disease 37. Pessaries in the evening and at bedtime and are not to be drawen out till six or seaven houres after 38. Physicall wines in the morning or two houres before dinner in the winter for ten or 20 daies space 39. Emulsions in the morning and evening and at bed time if to provoke sleepe 40. Almond milke at any time but chiefely before sleepe 41. So Ptisans 42. Metheglin for ordinary drinking 43. Diet drinkes in the morning 44 Hydrosaccharates as ptisans 45. Restoratory broths at any time or three or foure times in a day 46. Boles in the mornings as other purgers 47. Pandaleons as lohochs 48. Frontalls at bed time 49. Oxyrrhodines when there are violent symptomes and are often to be renewed 50. Cucupha's or quilts are to be worne some convenient time together but chiefely at nights 51. Moist Collyries are to be used warme for a quarter or halfe an houres space together 52. Suffumigations at any time 53. So Perfumes and Pomanders Note hence appea●eth the way and forme of prescripts the forme of remedies and time of use c. being considered II. As alimentous Thus of the faculties of medicinales now follow those of aliments which are such vegetables that nourish and increase the bodily substance by restoring that which is deperdite the body being in a perpetuall decay and therefore wanting refection by meat and drinke and this if it do not greatly affect the body by any other quality is properly and simply called aliment and is in some measure like unto the substance of the body into which it is to be converted but if it change the body by any exuperant quality it is not simply aliment but medicamentous such are those things which with sweetnesse have adjoyned an acid acerb bitter or sharp quality and from hence ariseth the difference of aliments of which some are 1. Euchymick or of good juyce sweet in tast pleasant to the pallate and not of any unpleasant smell as also fat things and some which are insipid as bread of the best wheat c. 2. Cacochymick or of evill juyce which besides sweetnesse have some other quality mixed therewith as sharpnesse bitternesse saltnesse acerbity and too much acidity also all fetid things of an unpleasant smell and corrupted as the oleraceous especially the wild except lettuce and succorie also cucumbers corrupt corne things growing in cenose and dirty places as also thick austere and acid beere made of bad graine c. and some of these ingender 1. A cold pituitous and crude juyce as the hasty fruits and cold herbs 2. But others a hot and bilious as all things that have acrimony so garlick onions leekes wake● Robin cresses mustard c. 3. And some a me lancholi●k as pulses especially lentils and cab bage 3. Of grosse nourishment as those things which have a strong and hard substance as bread baked under ashes and whatsoever is made of meale without leaven chestnuts acornes frogstooles thick sweet and black wine and ale also whatsoever is viscid and glutinous and are to be shunned by all that live at ease and use no exercise before meat but those are the best for dyet that are in a meane between incrassating and attenuating 4. Of thin juice as things thin and friable especially if joyned with acrimonie as garlicke onions leekes hyssop organie savorie bread of wheat well fermented and twice baked bitter almonds peaches and thin white wines These also open the passages cleanse away what is viscous incide and extenuate what is grosse but are to be shunned by those who are of a chollerick temperature the long use of them causing bilious and serous excrements yet are agreeable to those whose body and veines are full of a crude pituitous and melancholick juice Here note an attenuating diet differeth from a slender one the last prefixing a mode in the quantity and the other being so called by reason of the tenuity of the alimentary juyce 5. Eupeptick as things easily resoluble concocted or corrupted as most fruits 6. Dyspeptick as all things of a solid substance and thick juyce An Experiment of all which may be made by decoction in water For the liquor if sweet sheweth the thing to be of good juice
if thick of grosse juyce if well boyled of much nourishment if thin of little if slowly boyled not easily altered in the stomack and so the contrary Also some are 1 flatulent of cold unconcocted humidity 2. Without wind of easy elixation 3. Easily descending acrid salt insipid or excrementitious 4. Slowly as things dry binding Thus Reader desiring thy health I rest Thine T. L. A catalogue of the names of Authors as they are cited in the following discourse with the explication thereof and number of their cuts ACac Acacia A Cost A Costa Actuar Actuarius Aeg. Aegineta Aelian Aelianus Aemil. Mac. Aemilius Macer Aet Aetius Agric. Agricola Agrip. Agrippa Ald. Aldinus Aldrovand Aldrovandus Almeyd Almeyda Alpin Prosper Alpinus 46. Amat Lus Amatus Lusitanus Anguil Anguillara Ant. Musa Antonius Musa Apollin Apollinaris 141. Apollod Apollodorus Apul. Apuleius Aquap Aquapendens Arab. Arabum Arist Aristoteles Augen Augenius Aug. Augustani Avic Avicenna Auth. Pandect Author Pandectarum BApt Port. Baptista Porta Bapt. Sard. Baptista Sardus Barth Ang. Bartholomaeus Anglus Bauh Bauhinus 3547. Begu Beguinus Bellon Bellonius Benz. Benzo Bern. Paludan Bernardus Paludanus Bles Hortus Blesensis Blochwit Blochwitius Bokel Bokelius Bont Bontius Bor. Borellus Bras Brasavola Bruns Brunfelsius 238. CAEsalp Caesalpinus Cam. Camerarius 1003. Campeg Campegius Cass Bass Cassianus Bassus Cato Cels Celsus Chalm Chalmeteus Cieca Clowes Clus Clusius 1135. exot. 194. Col. Coles Columel Columella Column Columna 205. Cord. Cordus 272. Cornar Cornarius Cortus Cortusus Crat. Crato Cratev Cratevas Cresc Crescentius Croll Crollius Culp Culpepper Cuzen Cuzenus DAl Dalechampius Dam. à Goes Damianus à Goes De Laët Diosc Dioscorides Dod. Dodonaeus 1305. Dond. De Dondis Dorst Dorstenius Droet Droetus Dur. Durandus Durant Durantes 879. ERast Erastus Ern. Ernestus Eyster Hortus Eystettensis 1083. FAb Faber Fall-Fallopius Fern. Fernelius Ficin Ficinus Florent Florentinus For. Forestus Fracast Fracastorius Freitag Freitagius Fuch Fuchsius 516. Fum. Fumanellus GAl. Galenus Gall. Gallorum Garc. Garcias Gaza Gebelk Gebelkoveverus Ger. Gerard. Ger. Berg. Gerardus Bergensis Germ. Germanorum Gesn Gesnerus Goclen Goclenius Gron. Hortus Gröningensis Grul Grulingius Guainer Guainerius HAf Hortus Hafniensis Hart. Hartmannus Heurn Heurnius Hieron Hieronymus herbarius Hipp. Hippocrates Hisp Hispanorum Hoier Hoierus Holler Hollerius Horn. Hornius Horst Horstius Hort. san Hortus sanitatis Hubn Hubnerus Hugo Soler Hugo Solerius JArric Iarricus Ind. Indorum Jo. Joel Jo. Spiringus Johns Johnson 2730. Jordan Jordanus Jonb Jonbertus Isaac Isid Isidorus Ital. Italorum Jul. Alex. Julius Alexandrinus Junck Junckers KEgl Keglerus Kentman Kentmannus Kunr Kunradus LAcun Lacuna Lemn Lemnius Linschot Linschottus Lips Lipsius Lob. Lobelius 2116. Lonic Lonicerus 833. Lugd. Lugdunensis 1587. Lugd. Hort. Lugdunenfis hortus Bat. MAc Macasius Maff. Maffaeus Manard Manardus Matth. Matthiolus 957. Mes Mesue Mind Mindererus Miz. Mizaldus Monard Monardes Monardus Montag Montagnana Mont. Montanus Morescot Morescottus Myl. Mylius Myreps Myrepsus NEand Neander Nicand Nicander Nic. Nicol. Nicolaus Nicolus Noll Nollius OFfic Officinarum Orib Oribasius Ovied Oviedus PAllad Palladins Palmar Palmarius Parac Paracelsus Parey Par. Hortus Parisiensis Park Parkinson 2786. Pat. Hortus Patavinus Paul Paulus Pem. Pemel Pen. Pena Penot Penotus Pers Persarum Phyt. Brit. Phytologia Britannica Pisan Pisanellus Platear Platearius Plat. Platerus Plaut Plautus Plin. Plinius Plut. Plutarchus QUerc Quercetanus RAb D. Chimchi Rau. Rauwolfius 42. Recch Recchus Ren. Renealmus 42. Renod. Renodaeus Rhas Rhasis Ric. Ricius Riol Riolanus Riv. Riverius Rondel Rondeletius Rud. Rudius Ruell Ruellius 350. Ruland Rulandus Rums Rumsey SAla Angelus Sala Savon Savonarola Scalig. Scaliger Schenck Schenckius Scholtz Scholtzius Schrod Schroderus Schwenckf Schwenck felt Senn. Sennertus Serap Serapio Seren. Sam. Q. Serenus Samonicus S. Seth. Simeon Sethi Smith Solenand Solenander Stock Stockerus Sylv. Sylvins Sylvat Sylvaticus TAb Tabernaemontanus 2087. Tentzel Tentzelius Terent. Terentius Thal. Thalius Theoph. Theophrastus Thevet Thevetus Tradesc Tradescant Trag. Tragus 567. Tral Trallianus Tulp Tulpius Turc Turcarum Turn Turner VAl. de Tar. Valescus de Taranta Vall. Valleriola Varig Varignana Var. Varro Vesling Veslingius V. Vid. Vidus Vidius Vigon Vigonius Vill. Villanovanus Virgil. Virgilius Virgin Virginiae Virtruv Vitruvius Vlstad Vlstadius Vntz. Untzerus WArs Hortus Warsaviensis Weck Weckerus Weinrich Weinrichius Wirsung Wirsungus Worm Wormius A table of such abbreviations as are used in this Work P. Place T. Time N. Name K. Kinds or Species T. Temperature V. Vertue H. Hurts ap applied c. cause causeth or caused d. drunk fl flowers or floured h. help helpeth or helped m. mix or mixed pp. prepared p. aeq equall parts q. s or s q. a sufficient quantity gr a graine ob half a scruple scr a scruple drach a dram unc an ounce acetab two ounces and an halfe lib. a pound sem halfe an a like quantity m. an handfull a pugill a little handfull no. in number ferè almost 1° in the first degree 2° in the 2d degree 3° in the 3d degree 4° in the 4th degree initio in the beginning medio in the middle fine in the end A Adders Tongue Ophioglossum Place It groweth in moist Meadowes Time It is found in Aprill and May. Name It 's call'd 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lingua Serpentis Lancea Christi Eneaphyll lingua vulneraria ADDers Tongue Gerard Johns Kinds As the common and mishapen Temperature Is drie 3° Vertues The leaves stamped and boyled in oyle Olive untill the herbs be parched then strained yeeld an excellent balsame for green wounds Like that of S. Jo wort Park Temp. It 's temperate between hot and cold drie 2° Vertues The juyce drank with Horse-taile water distilled helpeth all Wounds Vomiting flux of blood and Whites The powder helpeth Ruptures decoct in red Wine it helpeth watering eyes Col It cureth Fevers and all heat in the body The juyce taken in the distilled water of Oken budds stopps the Courses With Hoggs grease it helpeth S. Anthonies fire also the leaves mixed with Swines grease and gently boyled strained and applied helpe burnings hot tumors apostumes and spreading sores also represse inflammations in wounds being infused in Oyle Olive with clear turpentine and insolated it cureth the bitings of Serpents by signature as some affirme See the Isagoge Adonis floure Flos Adonis P. It groweth in the west part of England amongst the Corne. T. Fl. In May June July and later N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eranthemum Flos Adonidis Adonis flowre Ger. T. That with red floures according to the tast seemeth to be something hot but not much V. The seed is thought to be good against the stone the seed stamped and the powder given in Wine Ale or Beere to drink doth with great effect help the Collick which also is affirmed by Parkinson who saith it hath been certainly tryed by experience and the first is consented to by Bauh Tabern it 's hot and dry 2° and is used in sudatory baths against cold humors Agrimony Agrimonia P. It groweth in barren places
comforteth the heart and cureth the bitings of venemous beasts so the wild but lesse effectually Park K. as the mountain great water Ang. V. the distilled water h. all pains of cold and winde 3 spoonefulls taken at once and with the powder of the root h. the pleurisie and diseases of the breast collick strangury tumors and stoppages the juyce ap h. the scotoma deafenesse tooth-ach ulcers and sciatica Pem. the distilled water d. h. the mother and ap h. the gout Aniseed Anisum P. Candy Syria the East Countries and Gardens T. It s to be sown in May the seed is ripe in Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Matahalna yerva dulce Hisp Aniseed Ger J. K. as the common and starry headed An. T. Gal. the seed is hot and drie 3° as others 2° or drie 1° hot 2° V. the seed h. wind and belchings and gripings of the belly gently provoketh urine causeth milke and lust h. laskes and the whites chewed it sweetens the breath h. short wind and dropsie quencheth thirst and h. the hicket dried and taken with hony it clenseth the breast from flegme with bitter Almonds it h. old coughs it prevents falling sicknesse with hony vineger and hyssope gently boyled h. Squinancy being gargled Park V. the seeds h. consumptions decoct with figgs and licorish 3 or 4 dropps of the oyle d. in wine h. giddinesse ap it draws things out of the eyes and h. bitings sc the seed with oile of roses ap it h. the ears the quintessence h convulsions Appletree Malus P. Orchards and fertile ground the rest in horsedung T. It bloom's in Aprill and May the fr is ripe in July and Septemb. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Malum the fruit and pomus the tree Apples Ger K. as the pome-water Bakers ditch apple the Queening the summer and winter Peare-maine T. are all cold and moist superfluously the sweet are not so cold and moist but more nutritive and descend more slowly the soure are colder and moister of lesse nourishment and eaten before meat mollify the body the austere unripe are cold c. grosse blood winde and the colick the middle tasted retain the faculties of the other V. the roasted are better then the raw apples h. a hot stomack the austere strengthen it enfeebled by heat and ap h. all inflammations the juyce of the sweet and middle tasted temper melancholy the ointment of the pulpe with swines grease and rose water beautifieth the face and h. rough skinnes the pulpe of the roasted n° 4 or 5. especially of the pomewater apples m in a quart of faire water till like lambs-wooll and d. last at night h. the strangury and gonorrhaea's c. the leaves coole and binde and h. inflammations in the beginning apples cut in pieces and distilled with camphire and butter-milke h. the markes of the small pocks ap in their state taking also milke with saffron or mithridate d. Madde apples Ger mala insana T. are cold ferè 4° and hurtfull yet those of Toledo eate them with scraped cheese pickled to procure lust The apples of love Ger are very cold and moist V. they are olygotrophicke and cacochymicke yet in hot countries are eaten boiled with pepper salt and oyle The Aethiopian apples T. are as those of Love V. they are eaten as sauce as the former The thorny apples and those of Peru. T. are cold 4° and narcoticke as Mandrake V the juyce boyled with axungia to a salve h. all inflammations burnings and the leaves with oile olive boyled till crisped and strained then with wax rosin and a little turpentine boyled to a salve h old ulcers and sores of the secrets and new wounds Park V. the soure h. thirst the sharp cut flegme h. the appetite the rotten h inflammations Adams apple T. as lemmons yet milder dissect and ap with powder of brimstone heated under cinders it h. the itch and scabbs The Indian T. is binding and h. laskes The tart Indian h. the appetite chollerick agues and ap the web in the eye Thornie apples V the seed h. the stone and urine Adams apple Serap fructus musae T. heateth and moistneth fine primi V. the fr is of little nourishment h a hot breast the lungs and bladder provoketh urine and c venery too much eaten it hurts the stomack and stopps the liver Apricock-tree Malus Armen P. Gardens against walls T. Fl in Aprill the fruit is ripe in July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Praecocia the lesser Chrysomelon Apricocks Ger K as the greater and lesser T. are cold and moist 2° yet not so moist as Peaches V. they are more wholsome to the stomack then Peaches oligotrophick and full of excrements they putrifie taken after meate and before it cause other meats to descend as Peaches the kernel is sweet the leaves not yet used Park V. apricocks have no use in Physick Matth the oyle of the kernells h inflamed piles tumors hoarsness and pains of the eares unc 5. d. with unc 1. of muscadell h. the stone and collick Arch-angell Lamium P. By hedges walls waies borders of fields T. Fl all summer chiefly the beginning of May. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vrtica iners mortua Archangelica Arch-angell Ger J K. as the white yellow red Hungary hedge Hungary with the variegated floure T. they are hotter and drier then nettles nigh to hore-hound V. stamped with vineger ap as a pultis they h● wens hard swellings the Kings evill inflamed kernels under the eares and ●awes neck arme-holes and slankes so bathed being decoct the white flowres conserved and taken stay the whites the distilled water c. a good colour mirth and refresheth the vitall spirits Park also the Spanish V as the rest h. obstructed and hard spleenes d. and ap it h. the gout and draweth out splinters and stopps bleeding ap to the neck Aromaticall reed Acorus P. The 1 in gardens planted the 2d in Arabia T They put forth their leaves in spring N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Calamus Aromaticus to which Acorus is a substitute Aromaticall reed Ger K. as the true acorus and true aromaticall reed of the antients T. Diosc the roots are hot Gal. Plin hot and dry and of subtill parts V. the decoction of the root of calamus d. provoketh urine h. pain in the side liver spleen and brest convulsions gripings and burstings and h. strangury provokes the courses d. or the fume taken the juyce with hony h. dimme eyes the hardnesse of the spleen and all infirmities of the blood the root boiled in wine stamped and ap to the secret parts h. all swellings and hardnesse thereof scr 2. ss of the root d. in unc 4. of muskadel h. bruises by falls the root is alexipharmick and in lohocks h. the chest opprest with cold humors Johns the root preserved h. the stomack prevents contagion by the aire Diosc the best acorus is well compact white within full The true calamus Dios d. is
the obstructed spleen the fruit is cold h. fevers 't is called Guayava and groweth in the West Ind. Park a decoction of the berries with cumminseed hyssop origanum euphorbium and hony h. rheumes The oyle h. all griefes of cold and wind ap bruises scabbs and pains of the eares That of Alexandria h. urine and the termes Strawberry bay Johns T. the fruit is like that of the Strawberry tree Beade-tree Zizipha * P. In Italy Spaine and Germany T. Fl in Italy and Spaine in June the fruit is ripe in September N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Zizyphus Sycomorus Ital Bellon Beade-tree Ger K. as the common and that of Cappadocia T. Avic the flowers of the first are hot 3° and dry fine primi the second is cold and drie V. the floures of the first open the obstructions of the braine The distilled water kills nitts and lice m. with white wine ap it preserveth the haire from falling the fruit is troublesome to the stomack dangerous and deadly The decoction of the barke with fumitory and mirobolans h. agues c. by flegme The juyce of the uppermost leaves with hony h. poyson Rhas the tree is hot and dry and operates as aforesaid Matth H. the leaves and wood are deadly unto beasts the poyson thereof is h. by the same remedies that Oleander is That of Cappadocia worketh as the first but the decoction thereof h. the heate of urine and diabetes the running of the reines and exulcerations of the privy parts a looch made of it or the syrupe h. haemoptysis or spitting of bloud c. by distillations of sharpe and salt humors Manard Beades of the roots of S. Elen T. V. the powder h. griefes of the stomack stone and ischury the smell doth corroborate and strengthen Park V. the water of the Beade tree given to doggs in their meat presently killeth them The beades of S. Hellen radix Sanctae Helenae T. are dry initio 2di and hot fine V. the pouder sprinkled on the body bindeth the skin and strengthneth the members Bauh they are hot fine 2di and drie 1° or a little more Beane Faba P. Gardens and fields commonly T. Fl in April and May is ripe in July and Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The black it s called Faba veterum graec Beane Ger K. as the great garden wilde T. before ripe it 's cold moist when dry binding and windy of light substance cleansing and flowly descending V. if parched they loose their windinesse and are of hard digestion and grosse juyce when green they are excrementitious boyled with vineger and salt taken they h. bloudy flix with laskes and vomiring they raise phlegme out of the chese and lungs and ap h. the gout boyled with water and m. with swines grease The meale with oxymel ap h. the fiery heat of bruises and wounds and pultised h. the privities and papps inflamed and drieth up milke tempered with the meale of fenugreeke and hony it h. black spotts c. by beating wasteth kernells under the eares with rose leaves frankincense and the white of an egge it h. watering eyes the pin and web and hard swellings tempered with wine the suffusions and stripes of the eyes the beane chewed without the skinn and ap to the sore head h. rheumes boyled in wine it h. the inflammation of the testicles the skins ap hinder haire with barley meale parched and old oyle ap they h. the Kings evill and decoct die wooll beanes ap without the skins stop the bloud The black beane is not used Kidney beane Ger J K. as the white black red pale yellow Italian with a small white fruit and small red fr narrow leafed of Brasile party coloured and purging of America T. Diosc doe more loose the belly then peason are lesse windy and of good nourishment hot and moist V. eaten before ripe they are not windy loose the belly and provoke urine when ripe they are unwholsome Park the distilled water of bean husks h. the stone and urine fried beans eaten with garlick h. coughs the ashes of the husks with hoggs grease h. old pains and gout the lesser bean operates as the 1. The Molucca beane h. the braine Bears-breech Branca ursina P. Moist and stony places and gardens T. Fl in summer the seed is ripe in Autumne N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The smooth melamphyllos Bears-breech Ger J K. as the garden and prickly T. the garden Bears-breech is between hot and cold somewhat moist mollifying and digesting and h. in clysters the root Gal is more drying V. Diosc the roots h. burnings ap and luxations and d. provoke urine stop the belly h. burstings crampes and consumption of the lungs the ptysick spitting of blood bruises and straines as the greater comfrey a plaister of the root h aches and the numnesse of the hands and feet Park the root outwardly ap h. the goute Ger it helpeth in clysters against sundry maladies Crescent T. it 's hot and moist 1° the leaves applyed with axungia helpe cold apostumes and with oyle the deseases of the Spleen Beares-eares Auricula ursi P. In Gardens when planted there T. Fl. in Aprill and May. N. Lunaria arthritica paralytica Alpina Sanicula Bears-eares Ger. K. as the yellow purple red scarlet blush coloured bright red stamell T. are drie and very astringent V. it healeth all inward and outward wounds of the breast and enterocele d. often it 's of the vertue of sanicle The root of Damasonium taken poudered drach 1 or 2 h. those that have devoured the sea hare taken too much opium or have been bitten by a toad d. with Daucus seeds it h. the tormina and bloudy flix the convulsion and affects of the wombe the herbe staies the flux moves the courses and ap as a pultis asswageth oedematous tumors Johns Park Beares eares h. the palsie and trembling of the joynts prevent paines in the head and giddinesse The leaves of Cortusa are a little hot Cam the oyle thereof is excellent for wounds Matth Beares eares refrigerate dry glutinate and restraine Bauh Gesn being chewed they h. the tooth-ach Beech-tree Fagus P. Plaine open and forrests T. Fl in April and May the fruit is ripe in Sept. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is called Oxya and Scissima Beech-tree Ger T. the leaves doe coole the kernell of the nut is somewhat moist V. the leaves ap h. hot swellings blisters and excoriations and chewed h. chapped lips and paine of the gums The kernells h. paine of the kidnies coming of the stone earen and bring forth the gravell Crescent The water in the hollownesse of Beeches h. scurfe tetters in man and beast and scabbs ap Park the juyce of the young leaves is cooling and binding the water that cometh out of the tree bored h. tetters and sore mouths Matth the ashes ap h. the stone the reines the leaves corroborate Beete Beta P. Moist and fertile Gardens the white nigh the sea T. It 's
to be sowen in the spring is ever green N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The white is called Sicula and Sicla Beete Ger J K. as the white red and red Roman T. the white is temperate in hear and moisture the other are drie and all abstersive the white cold moist and nitrous so clensing and an errhine V. boiled and eaten it looseth the belly and is of little nourishment the juyce put in the nostrills purgeth phlegme out of the head The great Beet with vineger oyle and salt is a good sallad The Ro be et boyled and eaten with oyle vineger and pepper is a good salled also Pem the juyce provoketh urine openeth the liver and spleen h. venime vertigo's and head-ach the red stopps flu●es ap h. bleans in the skin kibes cankers and scurse Park K. the prickly stalked and candy as the rest h. inflammations Bell-flower Campanula P. The 2 first in Gardens the rest in sandy places T. Fl From May to Aug. N. Rapunculus and Rapuntium Bell-floure Ger. K. as the Peach-leafed steeple milky round leafed yellow little white and little purple T. these especially the 4. last are cold dry V. of the nature of Rampions whereof they are kinds Park the roots of the wild bell-flours K. as of the wild field and time leased V. with vineger oyle and pepper h. the stomacke eaten and cause appetite milke in Nurses sc the greater roots and beaten with the meale of Lupines h. spots so the water They may also be used in gargles for the mouth Bettony Betonica P. Shadowy woods borders of pastures c. T. Fl. in June and July the second in Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vetonica cestron that of the water Clymenon Betony Ger. T. is hot and drie 2° Gal. cutting V. it h. deseases of the head of a cold cause and the falling sicknesse it clenseth the lungs and chest h. obstructions of the Liver Milt and Gall and the yellow Jaundise It c. a good appetite h sower belchings and the strangury pain in the Kidnies and the Bladder it breaketh and expelleth the stone it h. ruptures cramps and convusions the bitings of mad dogs and serpents and poyson d. and ap it h the sciatica A conserve of the flowrs h. the head-ach drach 1. of the root d in honyed water causeth to vomit grosse humours The powder of the leaves d. in wine h. the spitting pissing of bloud and all inward wounds the pouder with meate loosneth the belly gently and h. the epilepsie with madnesse and head-ach and all paines of the head it killeth wormes h. agues clenseth the mother and cureth bruisings Water Bettony T. is hot and drie V. the leaves scoure and clense mundify ulcers that are foule especially the juice boyled with hony the juyce ap h. red faces and deformity Pem the 1. h. the dropsie m. with hony the cough and thin rheume and wind collick d. Ap. it draweth out splinters h. biles The juyce instilled helpe the paine of the eares Park with axungia it h. plague sores d. with pennyroyall and mede it h. agues Bezar-tree Moringa * P. It groweth in Malabar T. The time is not observed N. The Arabians and Turkes call it Morian the Persians Tame Bezar tree Park T. the seeds are sharp the roots alexipharmick as effectual as unicornes horn bezarstone or any treacle V. the natives use it against all kindes of poysons and bitings of venimous creatures even of that most venimous serpent called by the Portugalls Culebras de Capillo d. and ap it also h. the winde collick and leprosie it being used many have been cured thereof it is mixed also with those medicines that purge melancholy All which is also affirmed by Bauhinus Binde-weed Volubilis P. Almost every where the blew in Syria T. Fl from may to Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Of the Prickly Sarsa parilla that of the Sea Soldana Binde-weed Ger J K. as the great smooth small lavender leafed silver-leased and black T. are hot and drie V. the juyce of the black much openeth the belly the stamped leaves ap dissolve wast hard swellings the rest are not used in physick Blew bind-week K. as the common round leaved and small T. is hot and dry 1° Serap 3° V. it purgeth thick phlegmatick and melancholicke humors expelleth wormes and troubleth the belly Rough bindweed K. as of Peru the common that of Portugall and Germany T. the roots are hot and drie of subtill parts and decoct c. sweat V. the roots h. old paines of the head and joynts and cold diseases and such as are cured by sweating if there be no ague joyned the leaves d. h. poyson Sea bind-weed Soldanella K. as the common mountaine and small mountaine T. is hot and drie 2° the 2d bitter and astringent V. it mightily purgeth waterish humors openeth the liver and h the dropsie d. in fat broth the pouder in weak bodies must be mixed with aniseed cinnamon ginger and sugar The leaves of the mountaine bind-weed ap to the navill draw out hydropick water so in other parts and h. wounds the whole herb troubles the stomack Purging bindweed Scammonium K. as the Syrian that of Valentia and the French T. it 's the strongest purger that is moderately hot and dry V. it purgeth choller water and flegme and hurteth the stomack and fretteth the intrailes it openeth the vaines hurteth the heart if much taken c. swounings vomiting bloody flix and tenesmus except boyled in a quince with the mucilage of psyllium pulpe of prunes mastick or m. drac 2 of aloes with scr 1. thereof or give the quince in which it was roasted the dose is from gr 5 to 12. Park Great binde-weed K. as the blew with a triparted leafe and red V. the first purgeth phlegme and melancholy killeth flat wormes The small purge and dissolve K. as the mallow leafed purple and Arabian Birch-tree Betula P. Woods fenny grounds in most places T. The catkins 1 thē the leaves in Aprill later N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Betulla Semos Semuda Theoph Birch-tree Ger T.V. is not yet used Park the juyce of the leaves while they are young or the distilled water of them or that which cometh out of the tree being bored with an auger d. for some time together breaketh the stone in the kidnies or bladder and is also good to wash sore mouthes a lie made of the ashes of birch-tree barke is effectuall for the same Col the leaves are cooling the barke and catkins hot the inner barke h. the wombe Birds-eyne Paralysis P. Moist and squalid grounds T. Fl from Aprill to Aug. N. Sanicula angustifolia paralytic a alpina Birds-eyne Ger K. as the red and white T. V. as of other primroses So T. they are drie and astringent and a little hot cephalick and neurotick and h. the palsie the roots decoct h. the stone an oinment of the leaves hoggs grease h. wounds wrinkles
spots sunburning the juyce of the root purgeth the brain and helpeth the megrim the leaves d. h. the brest Birds-foot Ornithopodium P. In divers parts of England as Hamstead and black heath c. T. Fl. from June to the midle of September N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Diosc quorundam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pes avis the knotted herniaria Birds-foot Ger. J. K. as the great and small T. V. are not used in meate or medicine yet c. milke in beasts Park T. they are a little drying and binding V. they are good to be used in traumatick potions and h. wounds ap Lugd. the lesser breaketh the stone in the kidnies driveth it forth the decoction being taken and h. ruptures d. and applyed to the part all which is affirmed by Bauhinus of the tuberous birds-foot of Delechampius called herniaria Birds-nest Nidus avis P. The north parts of England T. Fl. in June August then seedeth N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Coagulum terrae Plin. orobanche Gesn Birds-neest Ger. T. V. is not used in Physick Bauh the taste of the root and whole plant is bitter and very ungratefull to the pallate and as yet it s not discoursed of as to any known vertues Birth-wort Aristolochia Saracenica P. Fat and campion soiles T. Fl. in May June and July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 terrae malum pistolochia Birth-wort Ger. J. K. as the long round climing Saracens small and Virginian snake-root T. are hot and drie 3° and cleansing V. drach 1. of the long birthw d. with wine and ap h. against serpents d. with myrrh and pepper it expells what is in the matrice the flowers and dead child so also as a pessarie so the round as the 1. it also h. stuffings of the lungs the hicket shiverings of agues hardnesse of the milt burstings cramps convulsions pain of the sides d. in water it plucketh out thornes and splinters and in plaisters and pultises scales or bones it h. corruption mundifieth ulcers and filleth them with flesh ap with ireos and hony The branched birthw Gal is more sweet and weaker d. in water it h. bruises The round doth beautify cleanse and fasten the teeth rubbed with the powder The root of the Virginean Pistolochia is aromatick and h. the bitings of Adders or Vipers chewed ap and swallowed Johns it also h. the plague small pox measles and such like maligne and contagious diseases Pem the round root purgeth flegme and choler attenuateth h. the intestines the falling sicknesse killeth wormes and drieth scabbs ap with hony it h. ulcers of the mouth and adding aloes lime and chalke it h. the polypus note it s not to be given to women with child Park K. as the running bushy and ever green bushy rooted V. the 1. h. the falling down of the mother as a pessary Col it h. windinesse it h. the nerves with syrupe of vineger the water h. ulcers Bishops-weed Ammi P. The first groweth by hedge sides T. Fl in June and July the seed is ripe in the end of Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ameos cuminum Aethiopicum regium Bishops-weed Ger J K. as the common Candy and small Bish T. the seed is hot and drie fine tertii V. it h. gripings of the belly in making of urine and the bitings of Serpents taken in wine and bringeth downe the floures ap with hony it h. spotts c. by stripes so also the seed of Sison being hot and dry 3° of thin parts and diuretick The seed of Ameos d. in wine h. against all poyson pestilent fevers or the plague and is used in the correcting of Cantharides pounded hony being added to the herbe it scattereth congealed bloud and h. markes caused by stripes being applied as a plaister Park d. and ap it abateth an high colour and maketh it pale and the fume thereof taken with rosin and raisins clenseth the mother The Aegyptian or Arabian seede is said to provoke venery Gal Diosc Ammi T. is hot and dry 3° of thin parts a little bitter and sharp therefore digesting and opening c. Bitter-sweet Amara dulcis P. Moist nigh ditches rivers hedges c. T. Fl. in Iuly the berries are ripe in Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Strychnodendron Solanum lignosum Bitter-sweet Ger. T. the leaves and fruit are hot and dry clensing and wasting V. the decoction of the leaves opens the liver and gall d. and h. the yellow jaundise The juyce h. fallings from high places and bruises dissolveth clotted blood and healeth Trag. the wood sliced and boiled with wine gently purgeth by urine and siege those that have the dropsie or jaundise Diosc so also that with white flowers drach 1. of the fruit d. with unc 3. of white wine for 40. dayes h. the spleen and dyspnoea and clenseth woomen brought to bed Park V. a drink made of the wood h. putrid seavers and agues the berries ap h. fellons Col. it helpeth ruptures and wounds the leaves ap with bacon h. fellons Bladder-nut Nux vesicaria P. Kent and many other places T. Fl. in May the nuts are ripe in Aug. and September N. Pistacium Germanicum Staphylodendron Plin. Bladder-nut Ger. T. is superfluously moyst V. It troubles the stomack and is somewhat binding so not to be eaten it 's not used in physick yet some use it to provoke venery Park and others to cure the stone Col. but it hath diverse evill qualities whereby it is lothsome and overturneth the stomacks of those that eate it Bauh some affirme that being planted in gardens it driveth away venimous beasts Blew-bottle Cyanus P. The 1. groweth in gardens the rest in corn-fields T. Fl from May to harvest N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the common Flos frumenti and Baptisecula Blew-bottle Ger J K. as the great common double double purple broad leafed creeping small creeping purple violet and variable T. the common is something cold V. it h. inflammations of the eyes the rest are not sufficiently known as to their faculties Park V. the powder of the dried leaves of the great blew-bottle d. h. inward bruises and broken veines taken in plantaine great comfrey or horse-taile water and resists poyson and infection and fevers taken in wine the juyce h. wounds ap So the lesser Blite Blitum P. Gardens and fields and wast places T. Fl all summer long seed in Aug and Sept N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Of the black Sanguinaria and Blitum nigrum Blite Ger. J. K. as the great white great red small white and small red T. is cold and moist 20 of little nourishment V. it looseth the belly yet not vehemently not being nitrous or sharpe Park it is more hurtfull to the stomack head and eyes then other herbs being insipid and provoking castings Col it causeth fluxes and gripings of the belly being much eaten yet the red is used to stop fluxes of bloud in man or woman The white blite with much seed which by
some is called allseed is a very acceptable baite unto fishes Note all blites hurt the eyes Lonic the red ap h. inflammations and cornes Bauh Plin d. in wine it h. against Scorpions Matth the black refrigerates humects and is emollient Bloud-wort Lapathum sativum sanguineum P. In gardens and diverse other places T. Fl in June and July the seed is ripe in Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lapathum nigrum rubrum Sanguis draconis herba Bloud-wort Ger T. is cold and drie Park it is an excellent herbe to be eaten the seed is much commended for any flux in man or woman being inwardly taken so likewise is the root being of a stiptick quality Col it comforteth the liver The seed decoct in wine or water h. wambling pains of the stomack the root boyled in vineger h. scurfe Borage Borrago P. Gardens and there it encreaseth very much T. Fl in summer till Autumne be far spent N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Corrago Porrago Borage Ger K. as the garden white floured and never-dying T. it is evidently moist not so hot but in a meane betwixt hot and cold V. the flowers in sallads exhilerate and comfort the heart The leaves boyled in pottage loosen the belly and in honied water h. hoarsnesse and rough throats The leaves and fl in wine h. melancholy A syrup of the fl exhile●ateth purgeth melancholy and h. the phrensie so a conserve of the fl a syrupe of the juyce with the powder of the bone of the stags heart h. swouning the cardiack passiō melancholy and epilepsie The root is not used in medicine the leaves eaten raw c. good bloud in them that have been lately sick Pem it h. fevers cooling and opening Park the seed c. milke Aemil Macer it h. the memory and clenseth the lungs Box-thorne Lycium * P. In Cappadocia and Lycia c. T. Fl in Feb and March The fr is ripe in September N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pyxacantha Buxea spina Box-thorne Ger J K. as the common and Spanish Box T. Gal the juyce is drying and compounded of diverse kinds of substances one of thin parts digesting and hot another earthy and cold so binding it 's moderately hot and therefore used for severall purposes V. Diosc the juyce cleareth the sight it h. the festered sores of the eyes the itch and inveterate distillations of humors it h. runnings of the eares ulcers in the gums and almonds of the throat as also against the gallings of the lipps and fundament Park K. as the Italian the yellow grain of A vignon the 1 and 2d of Candy the supposed Indian and Lycium like Egyptian tree V. the juyce stopps all fluxes Box-tree Buxus P. Barren ground and gardens c. T. Fl in Feb and March the seed is ripe in September N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The lesser is called Chamaebuxus Box-tree Ger T. the leaves are hot dry astringent and of a lothsome smell V. it 's not used in medicine yet some Empericks use the wood against apoplexies c. The bastard dwarfe box chamaebuxus fl coluteae T. the leaves are bitter and hot V. it 's not used in physick nor the faculties yet known Park V. some use the wood of the first in stead of guajacum against fluxes and the French pox Fernel the leaves purge unc 1. decoct in whay or drach 1. of the pouder d. in broth Given to horses they h. the botts with penny-royall they h. the bitings of doggs Bramble or blackberrie bush Rubus sylvestris P. In hedges the 2d in gardens planted T. Fl in May and June the fruit is ripe in August and September N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sentis Vepres Batus Cynosbatus the fr Mora bati Bramble-bush Ger J K. as the common the raspis stone black-berry and knot-berry bush T. the young budds of the bramble bush the fl and leaves and unripe fruit are very dry and astringent V. chewed they h. inflammations of the mouth and almonds of the throat and stay all fluxes so decoct with hony they h. the eyes hanging out knots in the fundament and ap stay the haemorrhoides The indurate juyce of the stalkes leaves and unripe fruit is more effectuall The ripe fruit is sweet temperate and wholsome it hath astriction so helps the stomack dried unripe too many eaten c. head-ach the root is binding and of thin substance and wasteth the stone in the kidnies The berries and flowers provoke urine and decoct in wine h. the stone the leaves boyled in water with hony allum and white wine ap h. sores in the mouth and privities and fasten loose teeth The Raspis is thought to be like the bramble in temperature and vertues but not so much binding or drying Diosc it operates as the bramble The fruit h. weak stomacks Park the berries of the first h. against poyson the juyce with mulberies h. the stomack and heart burning with hypocistis and hony The leaves poudered h. ulcers Bread of India Jucca P. All the tract of India T. It 's green all the yeare N. Hiucca Hiurca Manihot the bread thereof Cazavi Indian bread Ger T. it is hot and dry 1° the poysonous juyce being pressed forth it 's drie in the middle of the 2d Park bread made of the root the juyce being pressed out and the root poudered then with water made into cakes is of good nourishment yet exasperating the throat except eaten with liquors to mollify it the juyce ●aw is poysonsome but halfe boyled away wholsome Terent it's aromaticall and h. ulcers Brook-lime Anagallis aquatica P. River sides and watery ditches T. Fl and seed in June July and Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Becabunga Berula Cepaea Brook-lime Ger J K. as the common great long leaved round leaved the 4th of Lobel and that of the garden T. it 's hot and drie yet not so much as water-cresses V. eaten in sallads it h. the scurvy used as water-cresses and scurvy-grasse yet weaker Boyled and ap it h. swollen leggs and the dropsie The leaves boyled strained and stamped with the powder of fenugreek line seed the root of marsh-mallowes and hoggs grease unto the forme of a cataplasme ap h. any swelling in the leggs or armes and preserve wounds from apostumation The leaves stamped strained and d. in wine h. the strangury and griefes of the bladder and eaten with the tendrels of asparagus oyle vineger and pepper h. the strangury and stone Park K. the long chick-weed leafed V. as the rest They break the stone provoke womens courses and expell the dead birth and fried with butter and vineger and ap warme h. S. Anthonies fire also it h. scabbs in horses Broome Genista P. Dry sc the 1 and 2d the rest in hot regions T. Fl in Aprill and May Seedeth in Aug. the Rape in June N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Spartum Broom-rape is called Rapum genistae Broome Ger J K. as the common rape long floured great floured and branched the Spanish
and h. the strangury Diosc so the leaves and berries and provoke termes h. the head-ach and yellow jaundise The roots gently raise up tough and grosse flegme sticking in the lungs and chest and concoct the same Park the roots and leaves are hot 2° drie 1° the young shoots are more bitter then asparagus yet eaten like it open obstructions and provoke urine The roots d. and ap h. broken bones and luxations ap as a pultis Col the juyce of the leaves taken with sugar h. the spitting of bloud and clenseth the wombe and h. the stinke of the mouth The pouder of the roots with anniseed and fennel seed d. h. winde Butter-burre Petasites P. In moist grounds almost every where T. Fl in April the leaves continue till winter N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Iphium Theoph Persolata Plin as 't is thought Butter-burre Ger T. is hot and drie 2° of thin parts V. the roots stamped with ale and d. h. pestilent and burning fevers coole and abate their heate poudered and d. in wine h. the plague c. sweat and drive from the heart all venome and ill heate it killeth wormes and h. the suffocation of the mother ap it h. all filthy ulcers d. it provoketh urine and the termes Park the root taken with zedoary and angelica h. the suffocation of the mother decoct in wine h. shortwindednesse The pouder h. blemishes in the skinne Col the oile of the root ap h. shaking fevers and coldnesse of the joynts it h. farcian in horses d. and ap Butter-wort Pinguicula P. It groweth in Yorkeshire c. T. Fl from May to August N. Sanicula Eboracensis Diapensia Consolida quinquefolia Butter-wort Ger. is hot and dry 3° V. the inhabitants of York-shire annoint the duggs of their kine with the juyce thereof being bitten of venemous creatures or chapped and say it rotts sheep feeding on it Park it h. ruptures in children and healeth green wounds used as an ointment it helpeth the hands chapt by the wind The people in Wales make a syrup thereof as of roses with which they use to purge themselves and their children and put into broth it purgeth flegme effectually The herb made into an ointment with butter h. obstructions of the liver C. Cabbage Brassica capitata P. Gardens a fat and well manured soile T. It is sowen in spring or Sept removed in Ap N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Caulis capitulatus Sambusium Cresc CAbbage Ger K. as the white red and open Cabbage T. as Coleworts are drying and binding sc the substance the juyce is nitrous and clensing and the 1 looseth the belly and is of little nourishment Park V. they are to be eaten with fat meat Eaten they dry up milk in nurses breasts as some think Matth but they rather increase milke the seed grossely bruised and boyled in flesh broth h. the collick d. and easeth all pains and gripings stone in the kidnies A lohoc of the pulpe of the boyled stalkes with hony and almond milke h. the consumption and lungs Cacao-tree Cacao * P. In the West Indies in hot and shadowie places T. As soon as it is touched by the sun it withereth N. Cacavate the confection thereof Chocolate Cacao-tree Col K. as the common and broader T. the kernells of the fruit are of different parts first they are very cold and dry so should be restringent and obstructive yet they so farre participate of heate and moisture that if they be well ground and mixed their restringency and obstructivenesse will be corrected V. the confection of chocaletto being taken alone or relented in milke c. venery procreation and conception and facilitates delivery preserves health and impinguates it h. digestion consumption and cough of the lungs the plague of the gutts and other fluxes the greene sicknesse jaundise and all manner of inflammations and oppilations it h. the morphew clenseth the teeth and sweetneth the breath provokes urine cures the stone and strangury expells poysons and preserves from all infectious diseases Bauh Benz. the Indians use it with pepper for drinke but it 's better for hoggs then men Calamint Calamintha P. Mountains in the shadowy and gravelly parts T. It bringeth forth fl and seed from June to Autumne N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Calamintum montanum Calamintum Calamint Ger J K. as the common the more excellent and field T. the Mountain calamint is hot biting and of a thin substance drie 3° Gal it digesteth or wasteth thin humors and cutteth the thick V. d. with meade it manifestly heateth provoketh sweat consumeth superfluous humors and h. the shiverings of agues so the sallet oyle in which it is boyled chafed on the body decoct and d. it provoketh urine menses and expelleth the dead child so ap it h. those that are bruised also cramps convulsions orthopnoea's and the cholericke passion It h. the yellow jaundise openeth the liver and gall and clenseth d. and ap it h. the bitings of serpents and spotts and clenseth the skin it killeth wormes d. with salt and hony and those of the eares dropped into them the juyce as an errhine stopps bleeding the root used in cute with mirtle seed gargarized h. the squinancie Ap. it h. the sciatica eaten it h. the leprosie drinking whay after it of it is made diacalaminthe which doth wast crudities and c. menses Park K. as the greatest and small V. ap as a pessarie it provoketh the courses and the birth ap it h. the spleen the decoction with sugar h. old coughs Col it preserves meate Calathian violet Pnemonanthe P. Medowes untilled places T. Fl in Aug and Septemb N. Viola autumnalis Campanula Autumnalis Calathian violet Ger T. is hot in faculty somewhat like gentian but far weaker V. it h. pestilent diseases and the bitings and stingings of venimous beasts Park it serveth in stead of the greater gentians It resisteth putrefaction and h. against faintings and swounings The roots taken with mirrhe rue and pepper h. the bitings of mad doggs c. in wine they h. those that are liver-grown and dejected appetites and steeped in wine h. those that are wearied by travell and lame in their joynts and have stitches in their sides taken in the distilled water of the herb it h. all agues as a pessary it draweth forth the dead child the juyce h. wounds tumors Caltrop Tribulus P. In myrie lakes and ditches T. Fl in June July and August N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tribulus marinus Saligot Caltrops Ger J K. as the water small water and small froggs lettuce T. is cold and moist the land Caltrops are more earthy V. the herbe used as a pultis h. all inflammations boyled with hony and water it h. cankers of the mouth sore gumms and the almonds of the throat The bread of the kernells bindes the belly The fruit d. green in wine h. the stone and resisteth poyson so ap the leaves d. h. all inflammations of the mouth and ulcers corruption of the
prickly Cedar K. as the Cyprus like V. the berries with hony h. the cough and the mother d. in wine stopps fluxes h. cramps and is little inferiour to the first Celandine Chelidonium P. In untilled places among brambles in the shade T. Fl from Aprill to a good part of Summer N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hirundinaria Scrophularia Ficaria Celandine Ger J K. as the great and great with more cut leaves T. the great is manifestly hot and dry 3° and clensing V. the juyce of the herbe doth sharpen the sight especially if boyled with hony The root h. the yellow jaundise without agues opening the liver and gall The root chewed h. the tooth-ache boyled with anise-feed in white wine it openeth the stoppings of the liver and h. the jaundise Cut in pieces and given to hawkes it cureth their wormes Clus the juyce of the great Celandine dropped into small green wounds presently cureth them Small Celandine T. is hot and dry more biting than the greater nigh to the crow-foot V. it blistereth the skin and drawes off corrupt nailes the juyce of the roots m. with hony ap As an errhine it purgeth the head of filthy humors The root and graines h. the piles the juyce with wine bathed Park the greater h. the dropsie itch● and sores in the leggs d. and the plague ap it h. creeping sores with oile of Cammomill the pains of the belly ap it h. spotts the lesser h. the Kings evill and wennes Centorie Centaurium P. A fat soile and sunny bankes pastures and fields T. Fl in summer the roots are to be gathered in Autumne N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The lesser is called Fel terrae Multi-radix Centorie Ger J K. as the common great and whole leafed T. is hot and dry 3° of a mixt taste V. drach 2. of the root taken h. burstings spitting of bloud cramps shrinking of sinews dyspnoea's and gripings of the belly The herbe mightily gleweth wounds Diosc The root in the fore mentioned cases if no fever is to be given with wine else with water Gal the juyce of the leaves operates as the root and is used in stead of Lycium Small centorie K. as the common and yellow T. is hot and dry 2° and bitter the yellow is hot and dry 3° V. decoct in water and d. it openeth the liver gall and spleen it h. the yellow jaundise and long agues it killeth wormes clenseth scoureth and attenuateth it purgeth choller and thick humors and h. the Sciatica Stamped green ap it h. wounds old ulcers The juyce in collyries h. the eyes m. with hony clenseth them d. it h. the infirmities of the sinews drach 1. of the pouder of the leaves of the yellow centorie d. once in 3 daies with auniseed or carraway seeds in wine h. the dropsie and green sicknesse The juyce of the red floured is bitter purgeth choller and h. the liver Park K. as the Pyrenean great great of Portugal and great yellow V. d. it h. the dropsie sc the root and pleurisies coughs and strangury and eyes ap the lesser d. h. the green sicknesse and collick provokes the courses and birth Charlocke Rapistrum P. Follow fields ditch bankes among corne T. Fl from March till summer N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lampsana Matth Chadlock Charlocke Ger J K. as the wild chadlock and water chadl T. the seed of these wilde turneps and water chadlock are hot and drie as mustard-seed Gal these being eaten c. evill bloud Diosc they warme the stomack and nourish somewhat Park K as the white wilde one grained and Spanish one grained V. not used Gal the seed is abstersive and somewhat digesting Chaste-tree Agnus castus P. It groweth naturally in Italy and hot regions T. It putteth forth leaves in May fl in Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Salix marina Vitex Chaste-tree Ger J K. as the common and that with cut leaves T. the leaves and fruit are hot and dry 3° of thin parts and wasting winde V. it c. chastity by exiccation of the sperme used any way The seed d. h. windinesse of the stomack openeth the liver and spleen drach 1. d. in wine h. dropsies the leaves stamped with butter ap dissolve the swellings of the genitors The decoction of the herbe seed h. the pain inflammation of the matrice used as a bath The seed d. with penniroyall bringeth down the menses so also in a pessarie or sume In a pultis it h. the head-ache phrensie and lethargie with oile and vineger being bathed The sume thereof chaseth away serpents and ap h. their bitings The seed ap with water h. the rifts of the fundament with the leaves it h. luxations and wounds Park the seed d. h. the bitings of venimous beasts causeth milke in womens breasts and provoketh urine Made into a pultise with vine leaves and oile ap it h. agues and wearinesse the seed with barley meale mollifieth with hony h. sore mouthes Cherry-tree Cerasus P. Gardens old broken walls shadowie places and fields T. Bloomes in Aprill the winter ch Fl in Aug and hath fruit N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That of the winter is called Solanum halicacabum Cherry-tree Ger K. as the common English Spanish late ripe cluster double fl bearing fruit double fl barren birds red grape common black and dwarfe ch T. those that are somewhat sowre are the best the wild little sweet ones the worst they soon putrifie and are of evill juyce and c. wormes agues and feavers they are all cold and moist V. the Spanish cherries are like to these in faculty yet putrifie not so soone The Flanders or Kentish when ripe are better yet watery cold and moist and quench thirst h. hot stomacks and agues loosen the body and nourish nothing at all The late ripe or morell ●h are drie being dryed and binding they h. the stomack and stop the belly All are cold and moist and eaten before meat loosen the belly hurt rheumatick bodies and cold stomacks The black strengthen the stomack are better than the red and dried stop the laske The distilled water of cherries h. hot stomacks and the falling sicknesse d. with wine The gumme of the cherry-tree d. in wine and water h. the stone lubrifying the passages and h. the sharpnesse of humors also it h. old coughs the sight and appetite and causeth a good colour Winter cherries K. as the red and black T. the 1. is cold drie and of subtile parts the leaves are of the temperature of garden night-shade V. the fruit bruised and infused in white wine 2 or three houres then boiled and strained and d. with sugar and cinnamon h. the stopping of the urine stone and gravell dysury and sharpnesse of water c. h. the yellow jaundise If old d. a greater q. Cherry bay T. V. the fruit is good to be eaten the rest not used Recch the barke of the sweet cherry tree of India d. h. the dysentery the
by some to be a good substitute when water-cresses are wanting and h. the scurvy Those of the mountaine K. as the three leafed and small T. are sharpe and reduced to the first Bauh That which is called Odontis is commended against poyson Cucumber Cucumis P. In gardens in horsedung T. They are to be set in Aprill N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The wild is called Asininus cucumis and Anguinus Cucumbers Ger. K. as the common adders and Spanish T. are all cold and moist 2° of little and bad nourishment quickly putrifie The seed is not so cold clensing and opening V. the seed openeth the liver and bladder and helps the chest and lungs inflamed ap it smootheth the skin and maketh it faire The Cucumber eaten h. hot stomacks The seed strained with milke or sweet wine and d. looseth the belly and h. exulcerations of the bladder The fruit sliced and boiled with mutton and oatemeale and eaten thrice a day for three weeks h. sauce flegme copper faces and fiery noses with pimples and rubies washing the face with the following liquor Take a pint of strong white wine vineger of Orrice roots powdered drach 3. Brimstone finely powdered unc sem Camphire drach 2. stamped with 2. blanched Almonds 4. Oke apples cut and the juice of 4. Limmons shake them together and set them in the sunne 10. dayes use it daily without wiping the face It also cureth all deformities of the skin Wild cucumbers T. the leaves roots and rinds are bitter hot and clensing The juice is hot 2° of thin parts V. the juice elaterium purgeth choller flegme and water by stoole and vomit the dose is from 5 gr to 10. of the dryed juice scr sem it h. the dropsie shortnesse of winde so the juice of the root as an errhine it h. red eyes with milke Park It h. cold diseases d. and ap Cudweed Gnaphalium P. Mountaines hills and barren places T. Fl. from June to September N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Centunculus Tomentitia Cottonaria Herba impia Camaexylon Cud-weed Ger. J. K. as the English common sea white and purple mountaine bright red mountaine rocke live for ever small wicked lions small lions long leafed and small broad leafed T. are astringent and drying V. boiled in strong lee it clenseth the haire from nits and lice in ward-robes it keepeth from moths Boiled in wine and d. it killeth the wormes and h. the bitings of Venemous beasts Dryed and the fume taken by a funnell as tobacco it h. coughs of the lungs paine of the head and clenseth the inward parts Golden Cudweed Elyochryson T. Gal. Cutteth and attenuateth V. Diosc The tops d. in wine h. the dysury stingings of serpents sciatica and d. in sweet wine dissolve congealed bloud Laid among cloths it prevents moths Park K. as the greater Germane and small leaning V. as the rest h. all fluxes dranke in red wine and bruises the leaves ap h. the tenesmus and ulcers The herb impious d. in wine and milke h. the mumps So that of the mountaine Cullions Testiculus Odoratus P. In dry pastures or heaths T. Fl. from August to September N. Orchis Triorchis Tetrorchis Cullions Ger. The sweet K. as the common triple Frizland and liege ladie traces T. are of the nature of dogstones V. the sappy roots of Lady-traces eaten or boiled with milk and d. cause venery strengthen the body h. consumptions and hectick fevers Park K. as the greater and lesser yellow with smooth eaves and small creeping V. the roots of these Orchides are effectuall above all other to c. venery Recch Lady-traces of Mexico T. the root is sweet and a little bitter V. it c. venery and discusseth hot tumours d. and ap And h. the heat of the blood Bauh the root of the first boyled with wine and hony h. putrid ulcers of the mouth So Dod. Cumfrey Consolida major P. Watery ditches and fruitfull meadows T. They Fl. in June and July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Solidago Symphytum Pecton Alum Osteocollon Cumfrey Ger. J. K. as the purple flowred with the knobbed root and borrage flowred T. the root is cold and clammy and infipid V. the roots stamped and the juiced with wine h. spitting of bloud and inward wounds and burstings so applyed The roots boiled and d. cleanse the brest from flegme and h. the lungs with sugar The slime of the root d. with a posset h. wrenchings of the back and gonorrhoea's Four of the rootes stamped with knot-grasse and the leaves of Clar●y of each an handfull strained adding a quart of muskadell the yelks of three eggs and powder of three nutmegs d. first and last h. the gonorrhoea and all pains and consumptions of the back The syrrup stops bloud h. the heat of agues sharpnesse of humours ulcers of the lungs and cough also ulcers of the kidnies flux of the matrix inward hurts and ruptures is thus made take unc 2. of the roots of great comf unc 1. of Lycorise 2 handfull of Folefoot roots and all unc 1. sem of Pine-apple kernels 20 jujubes unc 2. of Mallow seed unc 1. of the heads of poppy boile all in a s q. of water to a pint to the liquor strained adde unc 6. of white sugar as much of hony boyle it to a syrrup The root stamped and ap h. inflammations of the sundament and flowing of hemorrhoides Park unc 2. of the juice d. h. the lethargy ap it represseth the growing of the duggs h. gangreens and pains of the joynts Pem. The distilled water h. outward sores It hurts those that are bound in the body Cumin Cuminum P. It groweth in putrified and hot soiles T. It 's to be sown in the midst of spring N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyminum Carnabadium Cassi Bassi Bauhini Cumin Ger. T. Gal. The seed of the garden Cumin is hot and dry 3° and binding Diosc V. the seed h. windinesse of the stomack belly guts and matrix it helpeth frettings of the belly d. used in clysters or applyed with wine and barley meale as a pultis pultis so also boiled with wine it h. blastings swellings of the genitors and consumeth windie swellings in the joynts Taken in broth it h. cold lungs and such as are oppressed with raw humours it stoppeth bleeding at the nose with vineger being smelt unto Made into a sacculus with bay salt heated and ap warme being sprinkled with wine vineger it h. stitches and the plurisie Wild Cumm K. as the common codded and horned T. V. are to be referred to the first yet not used in physick Park It h. the collick boiled in wine d. and h. those that are bitten with serpents the seed taken in broth h. short windednesse and old coughs the seed bruised fried with a hard egge and ap to the nap of the neck h. the old headach and stops rheume The powder ap warme to the eyes with wax h. the rheume and rednesse of the eyes ap it c.
hot and dry fine 2di V. it h. old swellings of the almonds upper parts of the throat It clenseth slimie flegme sticking in the jawes and h. swellings there gargarized with hony of Roses It operateth as Scabious h. stinging of venemous beasts poysons and pestilent diseases so Fuch Morescot Weinrich Erast Gebelk Tabern and wasteth plague sores ap The decoction d. h. paines of the matrix and expelleth wind Park K. as the common and red Hungarian Scabious V. it is bitter and more effectuall than scabious d. or ap It h. fevers bruises dissolveth clotted bloud d. and ap it ki●ls wormes and h. the scurfe and itch Docke Lapathum P. In meadows and by river sides T. Fl. in June and July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rumex Oxylapathum Hippolapathum Lapathion Docks Ger. J. K. as the sharpe pointed small sharp and roundish leafed wild T. are of a mixture betwixt cold and heate dry almost 3° especially the seed which is very astringent V. the powder of any docks d. in wine stoppeth lasks and the bloudy flix and easeth paines of the stomack The roots boiled till soft and stamped with axungia ap h. the itch soabs and manginesse Water dock K. as the great and small T. are cold and dry Park K. as the English mercury and strong scented sea dock V. the seeds of most of them are drying and binding h. all lasks fluxes subversion of the stomack through choller and haemoptysis The sorrell are more cold than the rest the bloud-wort more drying The roots open coole and clense and h. the jaundise English Mercury T. the root is dry clensing and softning Dodder Cuscuta P. It groweth upon sundry kinds of herbs T. It flourisheth chiefly in July and August N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cassitas Plin. Cassutha Dodder Ger T. is of the temper of the herbe on which it groweth it 's dry 2° and hot it clenseth with a certain astriction especially that which groweth upon the bramble it h. the infirmities of the liver and spleen V. Dodder opens the liver and spleen purgeth flegme choller and superfluous humors out of the veins it provoketh urine openeth the kidnies and h. jaundise it h. lingring agues bastard and long tertians and quartans properly in children it also strengthneth the stomack Epithymum or dodder of time is hotter and drier than Epilinum or dodder of flax sc 3° it h. all infirmities of the Milt obstructions and hard swellings old head ache Epilepsie madnesse c. of melancholy and the spleen it also h. the French disease contagious ulcers and scabby evill It purgeth melancholy and flegme that which groweth upon savorie and scabious is more weake Dodder which groweth upon flaxe boyled in wine or water and d. openeth the liver gall milt bladder kidnies and veines and purgeth choller by siege and urine that which groweth on brambles h. old agues and jaundise Epiurtica provoketh urine and opens obstructions c. Park Dodder sympathizeth with the herbe on which it groweth and is more effectuall than the herbe it selfe Pem that of time h. the cramp and quartane agues with lapis lazuli Dodder distilled and the water d. h. the liver and lungs expells the stone and termes and ap h. the eyes Croll The decoction thereof h. the tartar of the stomack Senn. It h. diseases arising of flegme and choller De Dond the juyce with the acerose syrupe h. fevers Heurn It 's corrected with aniseed and d. with wormewood Doggs-bane Apocynum P. Italy Syria and those Easterne countries T. They bud in May fl in September N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cynomoron Cynocrambe Doggs-bane Ger J. K. as the climing and broad leafed T. they are of the poysonous nature of Thora which killeth whatsoever creature eateth it except preserved by the use of Anthora V. the leaves mixed with bread and given to doggs presently take away the use of their limbs and procure sudden death Park K. as the greater and lesser American T. it is not meanely hot V. ap it disperseth tumors and is not inwardly to be used Aeg. It 's hot without drinesse Doggs-stones Cynosorchis P. In moist and fertile meadows T. Fl from Aprill to September N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Testiculus canis Caninus Doggs-stones Ger J. K. As the great white spotted marsh and lesser Austrian T. are hot and moist the greater is windie and causeth lust The second is more hot and dry and h. venery so Serapias stones and are more dry V. Diosc The greater eaten c. generation of males and d. in goates milke c. lust So the rest which are juycie which is every other yeare by course Park K. as the great purple greater pale purple fl and smaller with the greater lesser and Hungarian souldiers Cullious V. the firme roots cause lust Doggs-tooth Dens Caninus P. In green and moist grounds and gardens T. Fl. in Aprill or the midst of March. N. Dentali Satyrium Erythronium quorundam Dogs-tooth Ger. K. as the common and white T. are very hot and excrementitious V. the powder thereof taken in pottage killeth wormes drank with wine it h. the collick So Clus it strengthneth and nourisheth the body and d. with water h. the epilepsie Park the root is thought to be more venereous than the fatyrions Cam. Matth. Some use the roots for all purposes for which the hermodactile serveth which is neither assented to or condemned by the forementioned authors having had no experience thereof Dragons Dracunculus P. In gardens and marsh places T. The berries are ripe in Autumne N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dracontia Serpentaria Colubrina Bisaria Dragons Ger. J. K. as the great small water and spike dr T. is more biting and bitter than Aron hot and of thin parts with some astriction V. the root doth scoure the entr●lles and attenuate It h. malignant ulcers the black and white morphew tempered with vineger The leaves cure ulcers and wounds the fruit is more strong and h. the polypus the iuice clenseth spots in the eyes Gal. The root twice or thrice sodden expels cla●●r●ie humors out of the chest and lungs Diosc The root of the lesser dragon evacuateth humours out of the chest The juice of that of the garden dropped into the eyes h. scoroina's the distilled water h. pestilentiall fevers or poyson d. with treacle or mithridate The smell of the flowers is hurtfull to women newly conceived with child Bauh It doth incide digest and open Matth. It h. cold stomacks c. appetite dissipateth flatulencies roborates the members provoketh urine and the termes and is an apoflegmatisme Dragon tree Draco arbor * P. In the Iland Madera and Insula Portus S. T. It flourisheth all the yeare N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the gum and Sanguis draconis Dragon tree Johns T. the Sanguis draconis which is thought to proceed from this tree is astringent It stops the courses fluxes dysenteries haemoptysis and fasteneth loose teeth smiths use it to varnish over their works to give
inflammations of the mouth and almonds of the throat and uvula gargarized The tender leaves of the tree with parched barley meale h. hot swellings scaldings bitings of a mad dog and glew ulcers The pith dryed is good to put into issues to keep them open See Blochwit Water Elder K. as the common and rose T. V. are not discovered Park As the first Pem. The flowers c. sweat their water opens the liver spleen and reines and h. tertian agues and melancholy unc 3. taken fasting The Jewes eares with columbine leaves boiled in ale h. sore throats and steeped in plantaine water ap h. inflamed eyes The water cleareth the skin and h. the paine of the sides The oile h. paines of the joynts Park K. as the red berryed V. the decoction of the berries coloureth haires black The juice of the leaves is an apophlegmatisme and with hony h. the paine of the eares The flowers in clysters h. the winde and collick Elecampane Helenium P. In fruitfull meadowes and shadowie places T. Fl. in June and July the roots are gathered in Autumne N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Inula Enula Campana Scabwort Elecampane Ger. T. is hot and dry 3° when green it 's full of superfluous moisture V. It h. short breath old coughs and orthopnoea's given in a lohoc The root preserved taken after supper h. digestion and keepeth the belly soluble The juice boiled killeth wormes and chewed fasteneth the teeth The root h. poyson bitings of serpents ruptures cramps and convulsions An ointment of the decoction or powder with hony h. old ulcers It h. the sciatica The decoction d. provoketh urine h. burstings and luxations The root taken with hony clenseth the breast ripeneth tough flegme c. expectoration h. coughs and shortnesse of breath comforteth the stomack and h. digestion so the roots condited Boiled soft and mixed with fresh butter and powder of ginger ap it h. the itch scabs and manginesse Pem. the canded roots h. the winde of the stomack and stitches in the sides caused by the spleen wheesing in the lungs mother plague and putrifyed fevers d. in ale it cleareth the sight Note it must not be given to hot and dry bodyes The dose of the root powdered is from 20. graines to 30. The decoction ap h. sores and cankers Park The roots condited h. melancholy The decoction of the root killeth all wormes whatsoever The distilled water cleareth the skin Fuch Plin. Eaten fasting it fastens the teeth Elme-tree Vlmus P. Almost every where T. The seed falleth in Aprill N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The seed is called Samarra Elme-tree Ger. J. K. as the common narrow leafed witch-hasell or the broadest leafed and smooth leafed elme T. The leaves and bark are moderately hot and clensing with clamminesse V. the leaves h. green wounds and the barke ap The leaves stamped with vineger take away scurfe Vnc. 1. of the thicker barke d. in wine or water purgeth flegme The decoction of the leaves barke or root h. broken bones bathed The liquor in the blisters ap h. pimples spots freckles and beautifyeth the face It healeth green wounds and cureth ruptures newly made being laid on with spleen wort using a trusse Park K. as the lesser V. it operates as the rest the leaves d. in malmsie with pepper h. old coughs The decoction of the barke or root h. shrunk sinewes the scum c. haire The barke applyed with brine h. the gout Endive Endivia P. Gardens the wild in barren grounds T. It 's sown in spring it seedeth in harvest N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Intybus Scariola Seriola Lob. Park Endive Ger. J. K. as the garden succory and endive with the thornie T. are cold and dry 2° somewhat binding something bitter clensing and opening Garden endive is colder and not so dry or clensing V. the herbs green cool hot livers h. the stopping of the gall yellow jaundise lack of sleep stopping of urine hot burning feavers so the syrrup the distilled water is used in potions cooling and purging and with that of plantain and roses injected with a syringe h. excoriations in the passages of the urine The herb eaten in sallads especially the white comforteth the weake and cooleth the hot stomack The leaves of succory bruised and ap h. inflamed eyes Pem. The distilled water h. sharpnesse of urine so the seed and h. the syncope it hurteth the palsie cold stomacks The dose is drach 1. Ap. it h. the gout fretting ulcers and hot tumours Wild succory K. as the common yellow and wild endive T. agree with the garden sorts V. the leaves boiled in broth h. weake and hot stomacks and operate as the first Gum succorie chondrilla K. as the blew that of Robinus yellow Spanish rushy sea swines male swines and wart succory T. are like the common but dryer V. the roots with hony and nitre made into trochisks clense the morphew sun-burnings spots in the face The gum smootheth the haires of the eye-browes and is used in stead of mastick Powdered with myrhre made into a pessarie it brings down the termes The leaves of wart succorie powdered and d. to the quantity of a spoonfull take away warts and such excrescencies Park K. as the small garden endive and succory with red fl c. V. the last boiled and d. purgeth forth flegme and choller The distilled water h. cachexies ap it h. inflammations Gum succory h. laskes The bulbed h. the Kings evill Eye-bright Eufragia P. In dry medowes grassie waies and pastures T. Fl. in Aug till Sept. and must then be gathered N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ophthalmica Ocularia Eufrasia Luminella Eye-bright T. is more hot than dry V. taken alone or with other things it preserveth and restoreth the sight the powder being taken with fennell seed mace and sugar Stamped and ap to the eyes or the juice with white wine dropped in or the distilled water cleareth the sight Three parts of the powder with one of mace m. h. all hurts of the eyes and comforte the memory halfe a spoonefull being taken every morning in whitewine Pem. To cleare the sight take rose water and celandine an unc 1. of tutty powdered drach 1. m. and wash the eyes Park K. as the great red wooddy greater purple broad leafed and yellow with the lesser V. being infused in wine or beere it h. the eyes effectually Bauh It h. the inflammation of the eyes and grief thereof e. by crude humors Trag. decoct in wine it h. the jaundise F Fellwort Gentiana P. In shadowie woods and mountaines T. Fl. in August the seed is ripe in Sept. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Basilica Serap Ciminalis centauria radix Aloe Gall. FEllwort Ger. J. K. as the great great purple blew flowred crosse wort and spotted of Dr Pennie T. the root is hot and clensing bitter attenuating purging and opening V. it h. cramps and convulsions ruptures bad livers and stomacks and h. against poison and broken windednesse Drach 1. of the root
powdered with a little pepper and herbe of grace h. against the stingings of venemous beasts bitings of mad doggs or any poison The decoction d. h. stoppings of the liver crudity of the stomack and digestion it scattereth congealed blood and h. all cold diseases of the inward parts Park or outward English felwort or hollow T. V. is not discovered but may be referred to the first Bastard Fellwort K. as the spring large floured Alpish of the spring time and the bastard T. are in tast and forme like the greater gentians V. they operate as the rest but lesse effectually Park Hollow root ap clenseth purgeth and dryeth Park K. as the smaller vernall autumne and centory like leafed V. the roots d. in wine h. lamenesse The water h. agues killeth wormes and c. courses the juice h. ulcers and heat of the eies Fennell Foeniculum P. Gardens and hot countries T. Fl. in June and July the seed is ripe in Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Marathrum The gyant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Fennell Ger. K. as the common and sweet T. the seed is hot and dry 3° V. the powder of the seed d. for certain daies fasting preserveth the sight The green leaves eaten or seed d. in a ptisan c. milke in womens breasts so the roots and h. the dropsie boiled in wine and d. The seed d. h. the pain of the stomack desire to vomit and breaketh wind The herbe seed and root h. the lungs liver and kidnies opening and corroborating The seed and herbe of the sweet fennell operate as the anise-seed Pem. The herbe is not so hot as the seed It provoketh urine h. the stone and hicket swelling of the spleen jaundise gout cramps and shortnesse of breath it causeth a good colour and attenuateth fat bodies Note ithurts hot bodies Hoggs fennell K. as the common sulphurwort dwarfe and great peucedanum T. these especially the yellow sap of the root is hot 2° dry initio 3ii V. the juice of the root taken alone or with bitter almonds rue h. shortwindednesse paines of the belly winde of the stomacke wasteth the spleen and purgeth flegme and choller it expelleth urine the birth and secundine and h. paines of the kidnies and bladder Mixed with oile of roses or vineger ap it h. the palsie cramp sciatica and cold diseases It helpet● ruptures and exomphalos The decoction of the root operates as the juice but not so effectually The powder of it clenseth and healeth old sores and ulcers and extracts things fixed in the flesh mixed with oile of roses it causeth sweat being annointed therefore it h. the French pox The congealed liquor with oile of roses ap h. the lethargy frensie dizinesse falling sicknesse palsie cramps and all infirmities of the sinewes with vineger and oile Smelt to it reviveth those that are strangled with the mother Taken in a reare egge i th coughs dyspnoe●'s and gripings c. by grosse humors It wasts the spleen cutting digesting and attenuating it opens the matrix and facilitates the birth Held in the mouth it h. the mother Fennell gyant K. as the common small and Aesculapius his alheale T. these with their gums are hot 3° and dry 2° V. the pith Gal. is astringent and h. the haemoptysis and flix As an errhine it stops bleeding d. in wine h. bitings of vipers and rosted with pepper and salt eaten c. lust The seed is hot and attenuating and h. agues mixt with oile and the body anointed therewith Drach 1. of the juice of ferula bearing sagapenum purgeth grosse flegme and choler h. old and cold diseases as the epilepsie apoplexy c. cramps palsies and shrunk sinews short breath long cough and paine of the side brest Sagapenum steeped in vineger ap wasteth mollifyeth all hard swellings The juice of ferula g●lbanifera galbanum d. in wine with myrrhe h. all poyson The q. of a beane taken in wine h. womens travell The perfume h. risings of the mother and falling sicknesse It mollifieth attracteth splinters wasts cold humors and operates as Sagapenum Park The seed of the common boiled in wine and d. h. the bitings of serpents and poison The juice cleareth the eyes so the distilled water The juice dropped into the eares killeth the wormes thereof The wild is stronger and h. the stone The decoction of the seed of the round-headed coloureth the haire yellow Hoggs fennell K. as the Italian V. as the rest the juice in wine ap h. paine of the eares and tooth-ach Scorching fennell K. as the true Spanish and carrot leafed V. scr 2. of the barke of the root or scr sem of the juice d. with meade strongly purgeth choller upwards and downwards It h. asthm●'s Ap. it digesteth and draweth and h. blemishes of the skin and paines of the joynts Fenugreek Foenum graecum P. Gardens it 's sown in fields beyond the sea T. It may be sown untill Aprill N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Carphos Plin. Si liqua Columel Silicula Varronis Fenugreek Ger. J. K. as the common and wild T. it doth manifestly heat it is hot 2° dry 1° The meale mollifyeth and wasteth V. the juice of the herb boiled and taken with hony purges all corrupt humors in the intestines and easeth paine being slimy and warme It clenseth and raiseth humours out of the chest with a little hony with more in old diseases without a fever boyling it with fatdates using it long before meat It h. inflammations that are lesse hot by wasting them the meale boiled with mead ap h. all inflammations and kneaded with niter and vineger h. hard spleens The bath of it h. impostumes ulcers or stoppings of the matrix the juice of the decoction clenseth the haire h. dandriffe and achores as a pessarie with goose grease it openeth the mother The green herb stamped with vineger h. feeble parts without skin and ulcerated The decoction h. ulcers in the low gut and bloudy flix The oile scoureth haires and the scars of the privities The seed decoct in wine and d. with vineger expells all evill humors Boiled in wine with dates and hony unto a syrrup it clenseth and h. paines of the breast The meale boiled in mead dissolveth all hard swellings so also m. with the roots of marsh mallows and line-seed The decoction used as a bath with wine h. griefs in the lower parts of women or the fume taken The decoction of the seed h. scurfe Pem. Its mucilage ap h. paines of the eyes Park The seeds buried till they sprout eaten c. to grow sat Aeg. It is hot loosens the belly taken before meate Week The oile with that of myrtles ap h. the cicatrices of the genitors Fenny-stones Orchis palmata P. In fenny grounds and moist shadowie woods T. They flower and flourish about May and June N. The 1. is Cynosorchis Dracuntias Lob. The three last Palma Christi Fenny-stones Ger. J. K. as the marsh dragon marsh handed handed marsh creeping greatest handed satyrion T.
moist place then boiled and strained make an excellent ointment for scabbs c. so Bauh Matth Solenand and Dod drach 1. of the root d. killes wormes Filbeard-tree Avellana P. In orchards gardens and hedges T. The catkins fall off in March the fruit is ripe in August N. Corylus Nux Prenestina Heracleotica Filbeard-tree Ger J K. as the common that of Constantinople with the wild hedge-nut T. Dod The filbeard nuts green are drier than wallnuts when dry they are colder Ger the catkins are cold dry and binding and h. the fluxe V Col the skins that cover the nut kernells taken in wine to the q. of drach 1. stay womens courses especially those of the red filbeard so drach 2. of the shells d. in red wine stop laskes with the milke of the kernells and catkins an electuary of the parched kernells h. old coughs and d. with pepper h. catarrh●● a decoction of the inner rinde made in small ale d. first and last 9 dayes h. the strangury too many eaten cause head-ache except eaten with raisins Park being parched they are lesse hurtfull to the stomack being lesse oilie and windie Firre-tree Abies P. High mountains in Italy France c. T. The time of the Firre-tree agreeth with the Pine N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It s rosin is called Lachryma abietis Terebinthina Veneta Firre-tree Ger J K. as the male and female T. The barke fruit and gum are of the nature of the pitch-tree and his gumms V. its rosin sc the turpentine looseth the belly expelleth choller clenseth the kidnies expelleth urine and the stone taken with sugar and the powder of nutmeggs it h. the strangury gonorrhoea and the whites It healeth green wounds being washed in plantaine and rose water with the yelke of an egge the powder of olibanum and mastick with saffron Park T. the cleer turpentine is hot and dry 2° and very clensing V. It is excellent in salves for green wounds clensing and sodering them together Recch The Firre of Mexico T. is hot and dry 3° the rosin is hot 4° discussing and corroborating Flag Gladiolus P. In meadows and watery places T. Fl from May to July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ensis The corne Flag Segetalis Victorialis rotundus Flag Ger J K. as the French corne-flag Italian and water sword fl T. the root of corne flag doth draw wast consume and dry and is of a subtile digesting quality V. The root stamped with the powder of frankincense ap draweth out splinters stamped with the meale of darnell and meade ap it h. hard swelings Some affirme that the upper root causeth lust and the lower barrennesse the upper root d. in water h. the enterocele in children stamped with hoggs grease and wheaten meale they h. the scrophula the seed d. in goats or asses milke h. paines of the collick Ordinary flagge T. the roots are hot and dry 2° V. It bindes strengthens and condenses it h. fluxes and stops the courses Park The distilled water of the yellow water-flag h. watering eyes being dropped thereinto and ap h. blemishes in the body it h. inflammations and cancers and foule ulcers in the privities Lonic T. It 's of the same faculty with acorus Lugd. Ap. it draweth out the menses the upper root c. venery Dorst The water h. burning fevers the root d. h. coughs and poyson Flax. Linum P. In fruitfull and moist soiles the wild in gravelly places T. Fl in June and July the seed ripens in the mean time N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Linum sativum the wilde Sylvestre Flaxe Ger. K. as the garden T. The seed is hot 1° in a mean between moist and dry as others of superfluous moisture and windie though parched V. It hurteth the stomack is of hard digestion of little nourishment provokes urine loosens the belly and if parched stoppeth it Diosc Line-seed operates as fenugreeke wasteth and mollifieth hot swellings d. and ap Boiled with hony oyle and water it h. spots and blemishes and foule skinnes with salt-peter and figgs with hony and water cresses it brings off ill favoured nailes with hony it expectorates flegme and h. coughs Baked with pepper and hony it causeth lust the oile mollifieth hard swellings ap extendeth shrunk sinews and easeth paine d. it h. paine in the side and collicke with aniseed and line-seed boiled in water ap it h. the angina Line-seed boiled in vineger ap h. the dysentery and pains of the belly stamped with the roots of wild cucumbers it draweth out things fixed in the body the bath h. inflammations of the matrix poudered with fenugreeke and boiled with mallowes violet leaves smallage and chickweed untill the herbs be soft then stamped with axungia to the forme of a pultis ap h. all paine softneth cold tumors suppurateth apostumes and prevents ranklings applied warme evening and morning Wild flaxe K. as the wilde white thin leafed wilde broad leafed dwarfe millmountaine the third broad leaved and yellow floured T. V. are referred to the garden flaxe and are seldome used in physicke or surgerie Toad-flaxe K. as the great sweet purple variable of Valentia white purple creeping yellow soure-leaved creeping golden star-fashioned golden bushie sparrowes sparrowtongue and bastard toad-flaxe T. They are of the temper of the wilde snap-dragons whereof they are kindes V. the decoction h. the jaundise and deformity of the skinne being bathed therewith d. it openeth the liver spleen and h. the jaundise and the dysurie openeth the passages Col Park Lineseed taken with raisins opens the liver with water myrrh olibanū wine it h. wateringeyes the oyle with rose water h. burnings The wild resolves and lenifieth Common toad flax V. h. the dropsie and stone and d. looseth the belly h. the jaundise expells poyson the menses and dead child ap it h. red eyes the juyce h. ulcers and spots of the skin Park K. As the broad leased blew and narrow leased with yellow fl V. the wild in most things is like that of the garden and in many things more effectuall by reason of its bitternesse the decoction with the fl resolveth tumors lenifyes inflammations stiffe arteries and swellings in the groin The last is used to loosen the body Toad-flax K. as the greater of Hungary base white mountaine Spanish upright and bastard V. as the rest Schenck pag. 738. The distilled water of the fl of flax taken with sugar expelleth the pox so Holler Mac the oile is emetick Flea-bane Conyza P. In Spain Italy France Germany England c. T. Fl in July and August N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The blew fl is called Amellus montanus Columnae Dentelaringes Flea-bane Ger. J. K. as the great small middle dwarfe great jagged-leaved watersnipt Austrian hoary hairy of the Alpes and blew flowred T. is hot and dry 3° V. The leaves and flowers h. the strangury jaundise and griping of the belly taken with vineger they h. the epilepsie the fume of the decoction h. paines
of the mother the herbe burned driveth away flies gnats fleas and venimous things Park K. As the great mountaine of Germany and sweet purple V. The leaves h. the hurts of all venimous creatures small swellings and wounds the decoction d. c. the termes opens the liver and h. laskes the last h. the tooth-ache so that of the sea Reech K. As that of Mexico T. is hot and dry 3° and sharpe Fleawort Psyllium P. Gardens the first in fields neare the sea T. Fl in June and July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pulicaria Herba Pulicaris Fleawort Ger. K. as the common and never dying T. Gal Serap the seed is cold 2° temperate in moisture and drinesse V. The decoction of the seed d. purgeth choller cooleth hot diseases and quencheth thirst Stamped boiled in water and ap with vineger and oile of roses it h. all swellings in the joynts S. Anthonies fire and violent impostumes Strewed in chambers it expelleth fleas Pem its mucilage with rose and barley water the syrrup of violets and roses h. hoarsnesse pleurisies and purgeth choller With marmemelade of quinces poppy seeds and sugar candy it h. catarrhes the seed torrified and taken with plantaine water h. fluxes and coughs ap it h. the sciatica and with populeon the piles and tenesmus It h. rough haire so Coles Park ap with oile of roses and vineger it h. sore nipples Jo. The antidote is Andromachus's treacle and vomiting with juniper water Flix-weed Sophia Chirurgorum P. By high wayes in obscure places almost every where T. It floureth and seedeth from June to October N. Pseudonasturtium Sylvestre Sophia Paracelsi Thalictrum Flixweed Ger. T. it drieth without any sharpnesse or heate V. The seed d. with wine or smithes water stoppeth laskes and all issues of bloud The herbe bruised and put into unguents healeth ulcers old sores and wounds Col The herb d. consolidateth bones and killeth wormes so the water and syrupe Park It 's no lesse effectuall than plantaine or comfrey for the purposes aforesaid Floure-gentle Amaranthus P. Gardens the floramore in a bed of horse-dung T. Fl in Aug and flourish till the frosty weather N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The golden is called Cona aurea Chrysocome Stoechas citrina Floure-gentle Ger. K. As the purple scarlet floramore branched and velvet T. are binding cold and dry V. they stop all kinds of bleeding and laskes Park K. as the greater and lesser purple variable carnation golden and candy T. the three first are hot and dry but the other sorts are accounted cold and dry V. they all h. rheumatick bodies the first cause urine and ap comfort cold parts and preyent moths These are called helychrysum and aurelia Golden flower-gentle Ger. J. K. as the common broad leased round headed and wild T. V. d. kill wormes and nits applyed Flower-deluce Iris. P. In gardens moist meadowes by brinks of rivers T. The dwarf fl in Aprill the greater in May the bulbous in June N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Radix marica Of the water flag Pseudoacorus Flower-deluce Ger. K. as the common and water flag T●the green roots of Fl. deluce are hot fere 4° dryed hot and dry 3° and burning the mouth The root of the bastard Fl. deluce is cold and dry 3° and astringent V. the root of the common Fl. deluce stamped with a little rose water ap h. bruises The juice purgeth choller and watery humors d. in whay it h. the dropsie The roots dry attenuate thick humors and in a lohoch h. shortnesse of breath old coughs c. They h. evil spleens cramps convulsions bitings of serpents gonorhoea's d. with vineger with wine provoke the courses The decoction mollifyeth the matrix and openeth it Boiled and ap it mollifies the Kings evill and hard swellings Johns The roots of ordinary flaggs are hot and dry 2° they excell acorus bind strengthen and condense and h. fluxes and the courses Floure-de-luce of Florence K. as the common white great of Dalmatia and small twice flowring violet Austrian and Germane T. the roots are hot and dry fine 2di V. the juice mightily purgeth choller and water and d. in whay h. dropsies evill spleens cramps convulsions bitings of serpents gonorrhoea's d. with vineger and with wine provoke the courses Variable Flowredeluces K. as the common Turkey sea wild Bizantine narrow-leased grasse narrow leafed many flowred white dwarfe red flowred dwrafe yellow dwarfe and variegated dwarfe T. are referred to the other V. the oile of the flowers and roots an q. v. made as oile of roses strengtheneth the sinewes and joynts h. cramps of repletion peripneumonia's The fl of French Fl. deluce distilled with diatrion santalon cinamon and the water d. h. dropsies Bulbed Floure deluce K. as the broad leased onion changeable many branched changeable yellow ash-coloured and whitish T. are referred to the kinds of asphodills V. unc 6. of the herbe with goats suet as much oile of alcanna lib. 1. stamped mixed and ap h. the gout The decoction of the root with meale of lupines h. freckles and the morphew in the face Velvet Fl. deluce T. V. is not discovered Park The root of the greater with the fl is sternutatorie and emetick Spanish nut K. as the common and small Ger. T. V. is eaten in fallads to c. lust Park The bulbous K. as the great of Clus and blew English T. V. are uselesse Flower of Constantinople Lychnis Chalced. P. Almost in all gardens T. It flourisheth in June and July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theoph. Schwenck Flos Constantinop Hierosol Creticus Aldrovandi Flower of Constantinople Ger. T. V. it serveth for ornament and is not used so Park Bauh It s faculty is not found out it having no physicall use but the root which in taste is a little sharp is thought to be hot 1° Park K. as the single and double nonesuch T. V. as the first are not used Lob. It scoureth wooll like sopewort Schwenckf It 's of no savour and neglected as to use Fluellin Veronica P. In corne fields especially amongst Barley T. Fl. in August and September N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the 1. The male Betonica Pauli Fluellin Ger. J. K. as the female and sharp pointed T. Col. is bitter cold and dry V. it is astringent It h. the dysentery and hot swellings spreading cankers and corrosive ulcers d. and ap it h. inflammations of the eyes boiled and applyed as a pultis The leaves sodd in the broth of a hen stay dysenteries Paul The female Fluellin openeth the obstructions of the liver and spleen expelleth urine and the stone and clenseth the kidnies and the bladder Drach 1. of the powder of the herbe with so much treacle h. pestilent severs Male Fluellin K. as the common little smallest shrubby tree upright and leaning T. are in a meane between heat and drynesse V. the decoction d. h. all fresh and old wounds clenseth the bloud h. the kidnies scurvie spreading tetters fretting sores small
pox and measels The water distilled with wine till red h. old coughs ulcers inflammations drynesse of the lungs Park K. as the greater spiked fl and germander like V. the male h. infectious diseases d. in wine paines of the head jaundise stone fluxes of bloud The female h. fluxes cankers d. and ap The juice h. the polypus Bor. The water h. the dropsie Fooles-stones Orchis morio P. In pastures and fields seldome manured T. Fl. in May and June the stones are to be gathered in Sept. N. The last is called Orchis Anthropophora Oreades Fooles-stones Ger. J. K. as the male female and lesser spotted T. are hot moist V. these are thought to have the vertues of dog-stones whereunto they are referred Park K. as the male Neopolitan V. this with the rest operates as dog-stones Fox-gloves Digitalis P. In barren sandy grounds almost every where T. They flower and flourish in June and July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Alisma Damasonium Caesalp Viola calathiana Plin. Fox-gloves Ger. J. K. as the purple red white yellow and dusky T. Col. Are bitter hot dry and clensing V. boiled in water and d. they cut thick flegme and naughty humours opening the liver spleen and inward parts and d. with meade clense the breast ripen clammy flegme they may be used in stead of gentian Park The leaves ap h. green wounds the juice clenseth and dryeth old sores and h. the Kings evill or the herb ap Two handfulls of the herb taken with unc 4. of polypody of the oake bruised and d. in ale effectually h. the epilepsie Fox-stones Testiculus Vulpinus P. In moist meadowes woods and fertile pastures T. Fl. from May to the end of Aug. N. Orchis Serapias The birds Ornithophora Fox-stones Ger. J. K. as the butterfly satyrion gnat humble bee waspe bee fly yellow small yellow birds spotted birds souldiers souldiers cullions spider small gnat narrow leased satyrion T. V. are referred unto the dog-stones yet they are not of any great use in physick Park K. as the greater gnat and purple birds flowered V. These with the rest are not so effectuall for venery but serve to discuss swellings and clense foule ulcers and fistula's and h. inflammations of the mouth phagedens and lasks Fox-taile grasse Alopecuros P. In moist furrowes of fertile fields T. Towards the latter end of summer N. The first is called Gramen Phalaroides The rest Alopecuroides Fox-taile-grasse Ger. J. K. as the great small great bastard and small bastard T. V. are not yet discovered or the nature or vertues of the Foxetaile so Turn Park It is not used in medicine but serveth only to be worne as a toy in the hat Frankincense tree Arbor Thurifera * P. It groweth in Arabia T. It is gathered in the dog dayes N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thus sc the rosin and Olibanum Frankincense-tree Ger. T. Gal. Thus is hot 2° dry 1° with some small astriction the white is manifestly astringent so the rind and dryeth exceedingly being of more grosse parts than Frankincense and not so sharp so h. the spitting of bloud swellings in the mouth collick flux arising from the stomack and bloudy flixes The fume is dry 3° it doth also clense and fill up the ulcers of the eyes like unto myrrhe Diosc saith if it be drank by one in health it puts him into a frensie yet few consent hereunto Avic it strengtheneth the wit and understanding but taken often it c. headach and if too much be taken with wine it killeth Park it h. the gonorrhoea and melancholy It h. the cough and thin rheumes and the Pleurisie taken with the conserve of roses The sume h. the piles tenesmus and cough With mirrhe and the white of an egge ap it h. paines of the head and in salves it incarnates Friers cowle Arisarum P. In Italy and Tuscany T. They flowre with the Dragons N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aris Plinti Aron parvum Cornarii Friers cowle Ger. J. K. as the broad and narrow leafed T. it agreeth with wake-Robin yet is more biting V. It is not much used in Physick but it 's reported that it stayes phagedens and that being put into collyries it h. fistula's Diosc Being put into the secret part of any creature it rotteth the same so Cam. Park It 's milder than arum It h. hollow ulcers clensing and healing them Bauh It h. burnings Amat The Germanes use it against the plague yet it 's not acknowledged by Clus Fritillarie Fritillaria P. It groweth in gardens and meadowes T. It flowreth in March and Aprill N. Lilium variegatum Flos meleagris Dod. Fritillarie Ger. J. K. as the lesser darke yellow and early white with the checquered and changeable checquered daffodill T. V. serve onely to adorne and beautify the garden and are not yet used in medicine Bauh The smell of the black Fritillarie is unpleasant and stinking and neere unto that of stinking Gladdon The white is not yet written of as to any physicall use so Clusius and Bauhinus Frog-bit Morsus Ranae P. It floateth in ditches and standing waters T. It flowreth and flourisheth most part of the yeare N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nymphaea parva alba minima Park Frog-bit Ger. T. V. It 's thought to be a kind of pond-weed or rather of water Lilly and to have the same faculties that belong unto it Park As the lesser sorts of water lillies it cooleth yet lesse than the greater sorts Schwenckf It hath the taste of ducks meate and the same vertues Fumitorie Fumaria P. In corne fields vineyards and manured places T. It flourisheth from May to the end of summer N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Fumus Terrae Offic. Capnos Plin-Calchocrum Fumitorie Ger. J. K. as the common white broad leafed fine leafed and yellow T. is cold and something dry opening and clensing by urine V. it h. those that have filth growing on the skin or have the French disease It opens the liver and spleen purifieth the bloud and h. quartane agues either the syrrup decoction or distilled water thereof taken Boiled in whay it h. in the end of the spring and in summer time those that are scabbed It provoketh urine opens the liver strengtheneth the stomack and looseneth the belly Diosc The juice with Gum Arabick h. the eies troubled with haires they being first plucked up The decoction d. expelleth by urine and siege all hot and hurtfull humors and digesteth the salt and pituitous Bulbous Fumitorie K. as the great purple great white Bunnikens and small Bunnikens holwort T. hallow root is hot 2° and dry 3° binding clensing and somewhat wasting V. it h. long swellings of the almonds in the throat and haemorroides m. with unguentum populeum drach 1. d. purgeth forth flegme Park K. as the climbing round rooted with with green fl and green fl hollow root with the Indian and knobbed Indian fum V. Trag. The juice d. with the powder of the root of esula
and h. scabbs and manginesse the foule parts being bathed with the water in which it is boiled Park K. as the great small white and joynted T. All clense without manifest heat V. The juyce opens the liver and spleen and h. the hardnesse thereof The sope hereof ap to the feet h. those that are speechlesse The powder of the rest K. As the prickly Columna's Neapolitan Egyptian and Arabian V. Alpin Purgeth choller Goats-beard Tragopogon P. The 1 in gardens the other in fertile pastures T. They fl and flourish from May to Septemb. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Barba hirci Coma. Goats-beard Ger. K. as the purple and yellow T. Are temperate between heat and moisture V. The roots boiled in wine and d. h. pains and pricking stitches of the sides Boiled in water till tender buttered and eaten they h. the appetite warme the stomack h. consumptions and strengthen those that have been sick of chronicall diseases Park The distilled water of the 1. and blew h. old sores and wounds ap The root is more bitter and binding than that of the yellow The other K. as the summer and the greater with jagged leaves V. Trag. The distilled water h. impostumes plurisies griefes of the stomack and liver and h. the stone Goats-rue Galega P. In Italy and gardens planted T. Fl in July and August N. Ruta capraria Herba Gallic a Fracastorii Goats-rue Ger. T. it is in a meane between hot and cold V. It h. poyson d. and killeth wormes so ap fried with lineseed oile and ap to the navill A spoonefull d. in the morning with milke h. the epilepsie Boiled in vineger and d. with treacle it prevents the plague eaten in sallads with oile vineger and pepper it preventeth venemous infirmities and c. sweat Ap. it h. the bitings or stingings of venemous beasts unc sem of the juyce d. h. cramps convulsions and the diseases aforesaid The seeds feed fowle exceedingly The leaves boiled and ap h. the stinging of waspes and bees Park The juyce taken with treacle the powder of the roots of tormentill with carduus b. water and bole Arm prevents infection it 's cordiall ap it h. the collick and gangrenes Goats-stones Tragorchis P. In fat clay ground T. They flower in May and June N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Testiculus hircinus Goats-stones Ger J K. as the greatest the male female and small goats-stones of Holland T. V. They are referred to the Fooles stones yet they are seldome or never used in Physick Park K. as the ordinary and lesser truer V. Lugd Dod The roots of these with the rest are better than the other orchies for the purposes aforesaid Goats-thorne Tragacantha * P. In Candy Arcadia Achaia c. T. It flowreth and flourisheth in the summer N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Spina hirci The last Poterion Goats-thorne Ger J K. as the common small and the burnet g. T The plant is dry without biting it conglutinateth the sinews especially the roots being boiled in wine and d. The gum dragagant is emplastick some what dry and allayeth the sharpnesse of humors V. The gum in a lohoch h. the cough roughnesse of the throat hoarsenesse and all sharp and thin rheumes and distillations being laid under the tongue it h. the roughnesse thereof d. with cute or the decoction of licorice it h. the heat of urine it is also used in medicines for the eyes The gum steeped in rose water untill it be soft m. with other things serveth to make the usuall artificiall beades Diosc The best gum is that which is diaphanous thin smooth unmixt and sweet of smell and taste Park The gum dissolved in sweet wine and d. h. the gnawings of the bowells and frettings of the urine especially with burnt harts-horne m. with milke it h. spots in the eyes and itching and scabbs of the eye lidds It stops the flux used in clysters so the thorny Burnet Goldilocks Adiantum aureum P. In moist places in rotten trees and crannies T. They flourish especially in the summer time N. Muscus capillaris Polytrichum aureum Goldilocks Ger. T. are temperate in heat and cold Park Yet they dry rarifie and digest V. Golden maiden-haire h. to expectorate tough flegme from the chest and lungs like the rest being boiled and d. It also provoketh urine and h. to expell the stone it 's profitable for those that are splenetick and epileptick The lye thereof bathed h. the haire c. as the rest Gold of pleasure Myagrum P. In sundry places of England T. Fl in May and June the seed is ripe in September N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pseudomyagrum Matth. Sesamum Tragi Gold of pleasure Ger. T. is hot and dry 3° V. Diosc The oilie fatnesse of the seed polisheth the skinne and maketh it smooth Ruell The juyce h. ulcers of the mouth Park K. as the wilde round podded like and the greater one grained T. Gal. The seed is emplasticke V. The oile is hot and c. thirst d. It serveth in Germany for poor mens tables and rich mens lamps and with the lye of ashes to make sope The wild is like the first Golden-rod Virga aurea P. In Woods frequently T. They flower and flourish in the end of Aug. N. It 's thought to be Leucographis Plinii Golden-rod Ger. K. as the common and Arnold's T. is hot and dry 2° and clenseth with a certaine astriction V. it provoketh urine wasteth the stone so Fum. in the kidnies and expells them and purgeth raw humors out of the ureters It 's vulnerary and operates as Saracens consound The distilled water d. for some dayes together worketh the same effect It excells for stopping of bloud in sanguinolent ulcers and wounds Park K. as that with dented leaves V. Golden rod decoct and d. h. inward bruises so ap it stops bleedings fluxes and the courses and h. ruptures and fastens the teeth also it 's used in lotions for ulcers in the mouth or privities Gondell of Italy Cymbalaria Italica P. In gardens and other shadowie places on thatch c. T. Fl. in the beginning of summer N. Vmbilicus Veneris offic Lonic Linaria hed fol. Columnae Gondeli of Italy Johns T. is cold and moist repelling scouring and wasting Park V. it's thought to be a fit substitute for umbilicus Veneris and hath some astriction Matth. It stops the whites being eaten often in sallads after the manner of the Italians A conserve of the leaves or a syrrup of the juice may serve instead thereof also it cureth wounds and stops bloud the juice being ap and also ripens apostumes Goose berry bush Grossularia P. In gardens and diverse places T. The leaves appeare in Aprill the fruit is ripe in June and July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theoph. Vva crispa Spina Spinella Goose-berry bush Ger. T. the berries before they be ripe are cold and dry fine 2di and also binding V. the fruit is used in stead of sauce and in broths in stead of varjuice
the tormina and dysury The knots d. h. the strangury Sea dogs-grasse and sea couch grasse T. V. operate as the Dogs-grasse so the upright Dogs-grasse and Lady-lace Dew grasse cocks-foot common and with creeping roots T. are astringent drying in taste like the Dogs-grasse V. Apul. A plaister made hereof with hogs grease and the leaven of houshold bread h. the bitings of madde doggs The eare being ap diverteth the defluxions or flowing of humors Manna-grasse or rice-grasse V. In pultises it discusseth the hard tnmors or swellings in womens breasts Cocks-foot doggs-grasse operates as the other doggs-grasses The other Cyperus grasses K. as the great narrow leafed bastard long bastard round bastard and millet cyperus T. In taste seem to be cold and astringent V. as yet they are not used in physick Mountaine haver and capon-taile grasse T. V. are not discovered Cotton-grasse T. V. d. sodden in wine h. the tormina of childing women Water gladiol T. V. is not used Park K. as the corne grasses sc the close eared rush leafed white wheate grasse c. the darnell field oaten wood and Mountaine oaten millet quakers Fox-taile bastard-fox taile cats-taile cyperus kneed reed smooth wood hairywood prickly headed and rush grasses are not of any known use in physick Pem. Couch-grasse h. the haemoptysis or spitting of blood Medow grasse V. the seed thereof ap discusseth flatulent swellings and obdurate tumors in the body The panick grasse hurteth sheep The curled panick grasse is said to operate as quich-grasse Crested and spiked grasse come neer the temper of the other field grasses The variable spiked causeth milke in beasts The Canary grasse T. is drying and repressing V. it stops the fluxibility of humors The seed makes bread of little nourishment The juice h. diseases of the bladder and is the substiture for millet in somentations and plaisters The bastard doth not much differ from the true The knobbed couch-grasse V. is better than the common It h. inflammations the seed h. laskes and vomitings The root is cold and dry with a little mordacity and tenuity of parts the seed is colder and dryer and somewhat harsh The herbe is cold 1° moderate in moisture and in drynesse The distilled water d. killeth wormes Cocks-foot grasse V. bruised and ap it stayes bleeding the spike being put into the nose causeth it Aegyptian cocks-foot grasse V. ap h. wounds The root and seeds d. provoke urine expell the pox c. h. fevers and cause sweate Haver grasse V. it dryeth without sharpnesse V. it h. the aegilops The seeds d. inebriate The ashes of the stalkes h. the gout Decoct and ap it h. nodes joynt swellings The herb boiled in wine with dryed roses h. a stinking breath in water with the root of wild oats hony aloes h. the polypus The cyperus grasses with the rush-like grasses of the marshes waters c. and the marsh reed grasses T. V. are not of any known use Common cotton grasse V. Cord. decoct in wine and taken warme h. the griping paines of the belly Their woolly heads serve for the stuffing of beds The water grasses V. serve only for the food of beasts The roots of the sea quich grasse operate as the ordinary sort All the sorts of unsavory Cyperus T. are defective in heat and drynesse V. and not used for any purpose in physicke so also water gladioll The fresh water excrescencies or water weeds Plin. bound to the body and kept moist h. the bruises ruptures and contusions thereof Silkegrasse Smith V. The Virginians use the roots thereof being bruised and ap to cure wounds Lob. The root of grasse is sweet and subacerbe of a meane slender and somewhat inciding substance which without heat openeth the intralls expells impurities and detergeth Apul. The root conglutinateth ulcers Gromell Lithospermum P. The two first grow in untilled places the rest on sands T. Fl. from the 12. day of June untill Autumne N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gorgonium Aegonychon Leontion Diosporon Gromell Ger. J. K. as the great and small purple flowred and bastard T. the seed is hot and dry 2° V. The seed concused and d. in white wine breaketh the stone and expelleth urine Park K. as the greater creeping small wild small with tufted tops small corne and Germane grom T. the two first are hot and dry 2° V. these are most used the rest are lesse effectuall They h. the strangury The seeds boiled in barley water with the foure greater cold seeds and d. in the morning h. the stone Matth. drach 1. sem of the greater and lesser drach sem of spleen wort drach 2. of white amber powdered and d. for diverse dayes together in the juice of plantaine purslain and lettuce h. the gonorrhoea drach 2. of the seed d. h. the delivery of women Ground-pine Chamaepitys P. They grow in Kent very plentifully and in gardens T. They flower in June and often in Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ibiga Ajuga Iva arthritica Moschata Ground-pine Ger. J. K. as the male and small French bastard Austrian T. are hot 2° dry 3° V. The leaves tunned up in ale infused in wine or sodden in hony and d. for 8. or 1° dayes h. the jaundise sciatica stoppings of the liver and difficulty of making water it opens the spleen and expells the menses Stamped green with hony it h. wounds and malignant ulcers dissolveth the hardnesse of womens breasts and h. poison and bitings of venemous beasts The decoction d. dissolveth congealed bloud and with vineger expelleth the dead child it clenseth the intralls h. the infirmities of the liver and kidnies and yellow jaundise d. in wine it provoketh the menses and urine boiled in meade and d. it h. the sciatica in 40. dayes It is an antidote against Wolfes-bane The powder taken in pills with a fig mollifyeth the belly wasteth the tumors of the paps h wounds and putrified ulcers ap with hony sc the 1. the other two operate not so effectually The Austrian is thought to be much better Many flowred Ground-pine and stinking Anthyllis l. with the sea pimpernell T. are in a meane between hot and cold V. halfe an ounce of the dryed leaves d. h. hot urine the strangury and purgeth the reines Taken with oxymel it h. the falling sicknessed first and last Park The first clense impure bloud and open the belly and h. all diseases of the mother d. and ap it h. all diseases of the joynts and cold griefes of the braine so the pills thereof and h. the dropsie The stinking d. and ap stops desluxions Ground-sell Senecio P. It groweth almost every where T. Fl almost every month in the yeare N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Erigerum Herbutum Ground-sell Ger. J. K. as the common and 1 and 2d Cotton gr T. It hath mixt faculties it cooleth and withall digesteth V. The leaves boiled in wine or water and d. h. the pain of the stomack of choller The leaves and fl
last V. The fl decoct h. paines in the body stone sight and goute The white berries h. agues and thirst Hellebor Helleborus P. On mountains where Gentian growes T. Fl in May and June the black sooner N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Veratrum album Sanguis Herculeus Hellebor Ger. K. as the white and timely white T. the root is hot and dry 3° V. the root of the white c. vomit and expelleth superfluous humors h. the epilepsie phrensies sciatica dropsies poyson and all cold diseases of hard curation and is to be used only in hard and strong bodies The root cut small and put into ●istula's doth mundisie them and remove callous matter hindering curation that so it may be healed by sarcotick remedies sc the black The powder c. sneezing and purgeth slimie humors The root d. in the weight of two pence h. agues It killeth mice and rats made up with hony wheat flower Plin. It h. the lowsie evill The wild Hellebore K. as the white and narrow leafed wild T. are thought to be hot and dry V. Their faculties are referred to the first whereof they are kinds The decoction d. opens the liver and h. the imperfections thereof The black hellebore of Diosc T. V. is referred to the black which is of greater force Black hellebore K. as the true wild great oxe-heele and setterwort T. is hot and dry 3° hotter than the white V. It purgeth phlegme choller and melancholly it helpeth those that are furious pensive leprous melanchollick epileptick or are sick of a quartan ague The dose is s●r 3. it is given with wine of raisins or oxymel with aromaticall seeds and is made stronger by adding gr 1. or 2. of scammonie The first of these kinds is best then the second The rest are of lesse efficacy The roots h. the morphew spots tetters ●ing-wormes leprofie and scabs The roots sodden in pottage with flesh open and h. the dropsie The root of the bastard hellebore or beares-foot d. in wine operates as the true black hellebore and killeth wormes powdered and drach 1. d. in wine Boiled in water with rue and agrimonie it h. the jaundise and purgeth forth yellow superfluities The leaves of bastard hellebore dryed and the powder taken in a figge or raisin or strewed upon bread spread with hony and eaten killeth wormes Hart. The essence of black hellebor h. the goute Park K. as the fennell leafed bastard that of Matth and sanicle-like black Hel. V. It h. the liver old pains of the head consumptions aches and paines of the teeth and deasnesse ulcers ap it 's corrected by quinces sc the white The black put into the eares of beasts h. their poysonous diseases Helmet-flower Napellus P. In gardens the wild almost every where T. Fl. from May to September N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Toxicum Napellus verus Helmet-flower Ger. J. K. as the blew violet ooloured purple of Newburg large floured and that with a nodding head T. are all hot and dry 4° and most venimous V. they are deadly both to man and beast being eaten the 〈◊〉 and tongue presently swell the eyes hang out the thighs are stiffe and witts depart The autidote is the flye that feedeth on the leaves or take of torra lemnia unc 2. bay berries and mith idate an unc 2. of the flies that feed on the herbe 24. of hony and oile q. s m. The juyce of it poysoneth arrowes Park The wholsom Helmet fl Anthora is an antidote kills wormes h. the collick and plague and is cordiall Hugo S●ler The quantity of a beane of the root is a hydragogon Hemlock Cicuta P. About walls in shadowie places and fat soiles T. They flourish and seed in September N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The last of Ger. is thought to be Phellandrion Plinii Hemlock Ger. J. K. as the common broad leafed stinking and gyant T. Gal. is cold 4° V. It is not to be used inwardly or outwardly Ap. it causeth the parts to pine away The wild and water hemlocks K. as the thin leafed wild and wild water common hemlock T. V. They are like the common hemlock and not used in physick Lonic The dryed juice is used in collyries to ●ase paine Ap. it h. phagedens and S. Anthonies fire as also all inflammations and h. venery Park K. as the foolish V. ap it represseth the swellings in womens breasts and repells milke the rosted root ap h. the gout Trag. The antidote is vineger d. Hempe Cannabis P. In fat dunged plaine and moist soiles deeply digged the wild in barren hils T. Sown in March and Aprill The first is ripe in August the second in July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Water hemp is called Eupatorium Cannabinum Hempe Ger. J. K. as the male and female T. the seed is dyspeptick and of ill juice hurtfull to the stomack and head V. It consumeth wind if much eaten it dryeth up the sperm The juyce of the herbe dropped into the ears h. their paine proceeding of obstruction The pulp of the seed pressed into liquor and d. h. the yellow jaundise without an ague opening the gall and concocting choller through the whole body Matth. The seed given to hens causeth them to lay eggs more plentifully Wild hemp K. as the common bastard and small bastard T. V. are referred to the manured hemp yet not used in physick where the other may be had Water hemp K. as the common and common Dutch T. The leaves and roots are bitter hot and dry 2° scouring opening and attenuating They expell grosse humors by urine and purifie the bloud V. The decoction of them especially the last d. h. scabbed and filthy skins and opens the liver spleen and gall and h. the jaundise The herb boiled in wine or water h. tertian fevers The leaves ap and the decoction d. h. all wounds both inward and outward The second h. poyson Gesn A pugill of the fibers of the root boiled in wine and d. purgeth and c. vomit It workes like white hellebore but more gently and safely Park T. The manured is thought to be cold and dry so Trag. Lonic others count it hot and dry as Gal. Matth. Ruel Fuch and Lugd. V. The emulsion of the feed h. lasks and the collick The juice d. kills wormes and ap h. the gout burnings Lob. The wild h. nodes Henbane Hyoscyamus P. The black almost every where the white in gardens T. They spring in May st in Aug. the seed is ripe in October N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Apollinaris Faba suilla Jovis The last Nicotiana Petum Henbane Ger. J. K. as the black and white lesser white white of Candy and that with a reddish flower T. are cold 4° V. They cause sleep and are anodyne h. sharpe and hot distillations stop bleeding and ap h all inflammations The leaves stamped with the ointment of populeon ap h. the paine of the gout swellings of the privities and the tumors of womens
Horne-beam tree Carpinus P. In North-hampton shire and Kent T. It springs in Aprill the seed is ripe in Sept. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theoph. Ostrya Theoph. Zugia 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Horn-beame tree Ger. T. V. Is not of any physicall use so Cam. Matth. but serveth only for the use of husbandry Park It serveth for mills and other smaller workes c. being hard strong and durable so Trag. c. Horse-foot Cacalia P. In the Austrian and Syrian Alpes c. T. Fl. about the same time that coltsfoot doth N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Diosc cacanum Gal. Horse-foot Johns K. as the hoarie and smooth leafed T. The root moderately dryeth without biting it 's of a grosse and emplastick substance V. Being steeped in wine and taken it h. the cough and roughnesse of the arterie or hoarsenesse like gum dragagant being chewed and the juice swallowed it operates as liquorice Park Diosc The peare-like graines beaten and m. with a cerote make the skin smooth Plin. And stay the falling of the haire so Col. Horse-taile Equisetum P. The finest leafed groweth in wet grounds c. T. They flower from Aprill to the end of summer N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cauda equina Salix Asprella Ephedra Horse-taile Ger K. as the great naked corne water wood female and Italian rushy T. Gal. is bitter yet binding and mightily dryeth without biting V. Diosc Stamped and ap it doth perfectly cure wounds even of the sinewes cut in sunder It cureth wounds of the bladder and bowels and h. ruptures and burstings the herb d. with water or wine h. the bleeding at the nose and other fluxes of bloud it stoppeth the courses and bloudy flix c. so the juice and more effectually The herb with the roots boiled in wine h. ulcers of the kidnies bladder the cough and difficulty of breathing Park K. as the barren finest leafed stinking greater meadow and mountain horsetaile of Candy V. The smoother is better than the rough and the leafed than the bare decoct in wine and d. it h. the strangury and stone The distilled water d. two or three times in a day h. the paines of the entralls and h. the cough c. by distillation The juice ap h. inflammations and eruptions in the skin Lugd. It doth inspissate the body Schw The naked h. the scurvy Horse-tongue Hippoglossum P. On the Alps of Liguria and on the Mountains of Austria T. Fl. in May the fruit is ripe in Autumne N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Bonifacia Vvularia Bislingua Horse-tongue Ger. K. as the male female and Italian T. is hot 2° dry 1° V. the roots of double tongue or horse-tongue boiled in wine and d. h. the stangury provoke urine h. hard travell of women and expell the secundine c. So also drach 6. of the powder of the root d. in wine and bring down the termes Plin. unc sem of the powder of the root d. in wine c. speedy delivery Bapt. Sard. It h. diseases of the mother a little spoonfull of the powder of the herb fruit or root being taken d. in flesh broth for certain dayes h. ruptures Park T. it 's thought to be hot and dry 2° It h. sores of the mouth and dryeth filthy ulcers ap Hounds tongue Cynoglossum P. In untild grounds by high wayes almost every where T. They flower in June and July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lingua canis Limonium Aetii Hounds-tongue Ger. J. K. as the common first and second Candy and small green leafed T. the herbe but especially the root is cold dry V. The roots rosted in the embers ap h. haemorroides and wild fire The juice boiled with hony of roses turpentine to the forme of an unguent h. wounds and deep ulcers Diosc The leaves boiled in wine and d. mollify the belly and stamped with old swines grease h. falling away of the haires c. by hot humors also they h. scaldings and bitings of mad dogs Vigon The juice with syrrup of roses and oxymel of squils h. the French pox Hieron Brunfels It mundifyeth ulcers Park K. as the greater mountain party coloured fl and blew V. The root h. rheumes House-leeke Sedum P. On walls and tops of houses and about rubbish T. Fl in June or August the smaller in June or July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Herba Jovis Semperflorium Apul. Aithales House-leeke Ger K. as the great tree and great narrow leaved T. The great house-leeks are cold 3° and a little dry V. They h. S. Anthonies fire shingles creeping ulcers and inflammations c. by rheumes and fluxes they h. inflamed eyes ap as also burnings and scaldings ap with barley meale dryed it h. paines of the goute It h. hot laskes d. with wine and kills wormes The juyce with a pessary stopps fluxes in women c. by heat The leaves held in the mouth quench the thirst in burning fevers The juyce m. with barley meale and vineger h. S. Anthonies fire all hot burning and fretting ulcers scaldings burnings hot inflammations and the goute of a hot cause The juyce with garden night-shade and the budds of poplar boiled in hoggs grease maketh a most excellent populeon The juyce h. cornes ap the skinne of the herbe being emplastred every day and night The decoction or juyce d. h. the bloudy flixe and cooleth the inflammation of the eyes being dropped in and the herbe bruised ap The lesser house-leekes K. as the common white floured small summer small large floured small prick-madam scorpion Port-land and small rock sengreene T. are all cooling like the greater and serve for the same use Prick-madam is used in sallads and h heart-burnings The other small sengreenes or house-leekes K. As the small water 1. small of the Alpes and 4th white of the Alpes and long leaved rocke s T. V. The 3. first are cold and operate as the other of the smaller sort The two last are rather hot and attenuating but none of them are commonly known or used in physicke Sea h. See in Aloes Water house-leeke T. Is cold V. It stopps bloud coming from the kidnies keepeth green wounds from inflammation and h. S. Anthonies fire and hot swellings ap and operates as the first Recch K. That of Mistica T. Is sharpe V. It h. all paines The juyce c. vomit Croll The juyce of the lesser house-leeke h. the scurvy and stomacace Park K. as the great English sea and woolly V. h. all inflammations the juyce d. in a posset h. agues ap it h. the headache and stingings The small stone-crop c. as the first Wall pepper exulcerates The mountainous as the 1. so the Water housleeke of Egypt Hyacinth Hyacinthus P. In gardens being planted some neer rivers T. The 3 first fl in the midst of Jan and the rest in spring N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vacinium Lilium purpureum D. G. Hyacinth Ger J K. as the starry sc the common white floured two leaved lilly leaved that
of Constantinople Somers greater starry summer and lesser and that of Peru. T. V. are unknown Clus The lilly leafed eaten by cattle c. their heads to swell and then kill them being of a maligne and poysonsom quality Autumne Jacinth K. as the small and great T. V. are not written of English Jacinth K. as the hare-bells white blew orientall many flowred 1. and second reddish purple and white orientall winter orientall with leaves on the stalke double flowred orientall the greater dusky flowred Spanish and lesser with the tuberous rooted Indian Jacinth T. doe lightly clense and bind The seeds are dry 3° the roots 1° and cold 2° V. the root boiled in wine and d. stoppeth the belly provoketh urine and h. the venemous biting of the field spider so the seed and more effectually stoppeth the laske and bloudy flix d. in wine it h. the falling sicknesse Diosc The roots stamped and ap with white wine hinder the growth of haires The seed d. with southernwood in wine h. the jaundise Faire haired jacinth K. as the common and white that of Constantinople faire curled haired branched blew and great grape-flower T. V. Vhe faire haired operates as the English Musked Grape flower K. as the yellow ash-coloured T. V. They may be referred to the Jacinths whereof they are kinds but as yet are not of any known use The two feigned plants K. as the false bumbast Jacinth and flower of Tigris T. V. are not yet discovered or are rather adulterine and supposititious The woolly bulbus T. V. is of no use Park K. as the Barbary early blew starry Turkey and ash-coloured T. V. The roots and leaves are cold and dry Weck The seed d. in wine h. the Kings evill Col The tuberous root d. h. the jaundise Hyssope Hyssopus P. In gardens the hedge hyssope in moist places T. Fl from June to the end of August N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hyssopum Hedge Hyssope Gratiola Hyssope Ger. J. K. as that with blew flowers and reddish white flowred thinne leafed and dwarfe narrow leafed T. is hot and dry Park 30. V. A decoction made with figgs and gargled in the mouth and throat ripeneth and breaketh the tumors and impostumes of the mouth and throat and h. the difficulty of swallowing c. by cold rheumes the same made with figges water hony and rue and d. h. the inflammation of the lungs old coughs shortnesse of breath and the obstructions of the breast The syrupe or juyce taken with the syrupe of vineger purgeth by stoole clammy flegme and driveth forth wormes if eaten with figgs The distilled water d. operates as the rest but not so speedily Hedge hyssope K. As the common broad leaved and grasse Poley T. Are hot and dry and the 1. only is used in medicine V. scrup 1. taken mightily purgeth waterish grosse and slimie humors and chollerick so eaten in a sallad or the decoction d. Boiled in wine and d. it h. all fevers and dropsies and such like diseases proceeding of cold and watery causes The extraction given with the powder of cinamon and a little of the juyce of calamint h. tertian and quotidian fevers Park Common hyssop in ptysan's expectorates flegme ap with sugar it h. green wounds and with hony salt and cummin-seed it h. the bitings of adders decoct with oile and ap it h. the itching of the head the oile h. numnesse it h. wind and agues K. As the tufted c. The hedge hys kills wormes h. ulcers prevents putrefaction and opens obstructions I. Jacke by the hedge Alliaria P. It groweth by garden hedges by walls c. T. Fl chiefely in June and July it 's used as sauce in Aprill N. Rima Maria. Pes asininus Alliastrum Gesn JAcke by the hedge Ger. T. is hot and dry fine 2 di much lesse than garlick V. The leaves stamped serve for sauce with salt fish The leaves also are boiled in clysters against the paine of the collick and stone they easing paine and wasting the wind Bor Cent 1. Obs 22. Also it 's effectuall against the plague Park It warmeth the stomack and c. digestion the juyce thereof boiled with hony is thought to be as good as Erysimum hedge mustard for the cough to expectorate flegme d. and ap it h. the mother the leaves h. ulcers of the leggs Mac. It h. gangreens and the sphacelus Trag. It h. the sciatica or hip-gout in clysters as an errhine it h. the lethargy S. James's-wort Jacobaea P. Every where in untilled places somewhat moist T. Fl In July and August and are then carried away N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Diosc quorundam Herba S. Jacobi Flos. Cineraria Argentea S. James his wort Ger J. K. as the common narrow leafed broad leafed and sea ragwort T. Is hot and dry 2° bitter and clensing V. It h. green wounds and filthy tetters it clenseth and healeth them the juyce being tempered with hony and may butter and boiled to a salve Boiled in hoggs grease to an ointment it h. old aches and paines in the armes hipps and leggs The decoction gargarized wasteth and healeth inflammations and swellings of the throat the leaves stamped small and boiled with some hoggs grease unto the consumption of the juyce adding some mastick and olibanum then strained and ap h. the sciatica Prosper Alpin The Aegyptians use its decoction against the stone and to helpe old obstructions especially those of the wombe also coldnesse strangulation barrennesse and inflation thereof brings down the courses the bath of the leaves and flowers h. those that are troubled with the mother Park K. as the Hungarian round leafed hoary lesser sea and broad leafed sea rag-wort V. It stops catarrhes and rheumes falling on the eyes nose or lungs The juyce h. fistula's Col It h. the squinancy and Kings evill and the staggers in horses Bauh It operates as Groundsell It h. wounds inflammations and fistula's Jewes-thorne Paliurus * P. It groweth in Lybia c. T. It budds in the spring continues not green N. Rhamnus tertius Diosc Christ's thorne where with he was crowned Jewes-thorne Ger. T. the leaves and root doe evidently binde and cutt V. The seed h. the stone and removeth tough and slimie humors out of the chest and lungs Diosc The decoction of the leaves and roots stops the belly provokes urine and h. the poyson and bitings of serpents The root stamped and ap consumeth the phymata and oedemata The seed is a remedy for the cough Park T. V. It 's like the Bucks-thorne Aet The fruit h. the excretion of the breast and lungs Gal The leaves h. fluxes the fruit incideth so Bauhinus Platerus c. Indian hop-like purger Carlo sancto * P. It groweth in Mexico T. The time is not observed N. It hath not any Synonymous names Indian purger Park T. is hot and dry initio 2 di V. The barke of the root being a little chewed is an apophlegmatisme by which catarrhes and distillations are
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lenticula Lentils Ger. K. as the great and little T. Gal. They are in a meane between hot and cold yet dry 2° Their skin is astringent the substance of an earthy juice somewhat harsh V. The first decoction d. with salt and pickle doth loosen the belly The second bindeth and h. laskes especially if boiled with red beets myrtles the pills of pomegranats dryed roses medlars service berries unripe peares quinces plantain leaves galls or the berries of sumach The meale of lentils mixt with hony doth mundifie ulcers and rotten sores it c. flesh and is good to put to digestives for green wounds The skins being taken off they are more nourishing and lesse binding They are of thick and bad juice stop the belly cause melancholly and if much eaten c. the leprosie They li. the dropsie H. They hurt the sight stop the menses c. sad dreames hurt the head sinews and lungs 30. of them shelled and swallowed h. the overcasting of the stomack Boiled with parched barley meale and ap they h. the gout with hony fill sores breake aschares clense ulcers and boiled in wine wast wens hard swellings of the throat with a quince melilot and oile of roses they h. the inflammation of the eyes and fundament which if great they must be boiled with the rinde of a pomegranate dry rose leaves and hony If sea water be added they h. eating sores that are mortifyed also pushes shingles S. Anthonies fire and kibes ap and also womens breasts in which the milke is curdled Sea Lentill Johns K. as the narrow and cut leased T. V. May be eaten as Sampire 'T is thought to be diureticall Park They hurt dry constitutions those that have the courses stopped The decoction with rose leaves and quinces h. ulcers Leopards-bane Doronicum P. In gardens and wild on high mountaines T. They flower in June and July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Myophonon Thora Leopards-bane Ger. J. K. as the small and great with the cray-fish winged narrow leased large flowred and the greatest woolfes-bane T. are cold V. They are mixed with compound medicines that h. paines of the eyes and being green h. their inflammation It killeth all fouresooted beasts in the compasse of one day yet the root h. stingings of scorpions Gesn drach 2. of the powder being taken h. the vertigo and epilepsie or mixed with gentian the powder of misle-toe and astrantia Schwenck The root is sweet and temperate Senn. The antidote is milke and mithridate c. Park K. as the fained of Matth. V. Theoph. Plin. It 's good against scorpions taken in warmed wine resisting the poyson Lettuce Lactuca P. In manured fat moist and dunged ground T. It 's to be sown at the first spring and that very thin N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pythagoreorum Chas Arab. Lettuce Ger. K. as the garden curled cabbage small curled Savoy and Lumbard lettuce T. Is moderately cold and moist V. It cooleth the heate of the stomack h. the heart burning and choller quencheth thirst and c. sleep and milke in dry bodies tempering the heat and drynesse and hindereth in cold bodies It maketh a pleasant sallad being eaten raw with vineger oile and a little salt if boiled it is of easier digestion and more nourishment Taken before meat it whetteth the appetite taken after it preventeth drunkennesse staying the vapors Gal. It neither bindeth nor looseth the belly yet the contrary is sound true by experience Being ap outwardly it h. all inflammations burnings and scaldings ap with salt before the blisters appeare The juyce too much used quencheth the naturall sperme but procureth sleep Wild lettuce K. as the greatest smelling of opium the wild with the divided lease T. are cold fine 3tii V. Diosc Some mix the juyce thereof with opium The juyce d. in oxycrate q. ob 2. or scr 1. purgeth watrie humors and clenseth the ulcer in the eye argemon and h. the darkenesse of sight Stamped ap with womens milk it h. burnes and scalds it 's hypnotick and anodyne moves the courses and h. the stingings of scorpions and the bitings of spiders The seed d. like the garden lettuce h. venery Lambs lettuce or corne sallad T. Is cold and something moist like the common and in stead thereof in winter and the first spring it servely for a sallad herbe used as the rest Park The juice ap with oile of roses to the fore head h. the paines of the head ap to the testicles it h. the colts-evill and with camphire it restraineth lust H. but it 's hurtfull to those that are asthmaticall Mac. It tempereth adust humors Pem. The first is cold and moist 1° or 2° ap it h. lust Park K. as the sharpe pointed garden lettuce Gal. Serap It yeildeth good nourishment The juice with oile of roses ap c. sleep and h. the head-ach c. of heat as also the colts-evill and heate of urine The wild K. as the purple fl T. V. as the rest Lillie Lilium P. In gardens planted naturally in Italy Persia c. T. Fl. from May to July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rosa Junonis Lillies Ger. The white lillies K. as the common and that of Constantinople T. is hot and partly of a subtile substance The root is dry 1° and hot 2° V. The root of the garden lilly stamped with hony conglutinateth the sinewes cut in sunder and consumeth achores and the scurfinesse of the beard and face Stamped with vineger the leaves of henbane or the meale of barley it h. the tumors of the privities It c. haire in burned and scalded places m. with oile or grease and ap Rosted in the embers and stamped with some leaven of rie bread and hogs grease it breaketh pestilentiall botches and ripeneth buboes coming of venery The flowers steeped in oile olive and shifted two or three times during summer and set in the sun h. the sinues and hardnesse of the matrix Jul. Alex. The distilled water thereof d. c. speedy deliverance and expelleth the secundine The leaves boiled in red wine and ap h. old wounds and ulcers The root stamped strained with wine and d. for two or three dayes together expelleth the pestilence The juice m. with barley meale and baked in ●akes and eaten for a moneth h. the dropsie Florent The root being curiously opened and any colour that is not caustick being put in causeth the flower to be of the same colour Red lillies K. as the common gold red fiery red bulbe hearing that with bulbs growing along the stalkes and small red T. Gal. The flower is partly of thin partly of an earthy essence The roots and leaves dry and clense and moderately digest and wast V. The leaves of the herbe ap h. the stingings of serpents The same boiled and mixed with vineger h. burnings green wounds and ulcers The roots rosted in the embers and stamped with oile of roses h. burnings and hardnesse of the matrix Stamped with hony it cures
the wounded sinews and members out of joynt and h. the morphew wrinkles and deformities of the face Stamped with vineger the leaves of henbane and wheat meale it h. hot swellings of the secret parts The roots boiled in wine ap h. cornes d. with mead they purge out unprofitable bloud Mountain lillies K. as the great and small T. V. are not yet used in physick The other Lillies K. as the red of Constantinople the Byzantine purplish sanguine coloured the light red and vermilion Byzantine many flowred T. V. are of as little use as the former The narrow leafed reflex lillies K. as the red the yellow mountain with the spotted flowers and unspotted T. V. are thought to agree with the other lillies The Persian lilly T. V. serveth for ornament to the garden but is as yet of no known physicall use Lilly in the valley K. as the common and red T. are hot dry ● The flowers distilled with wine and d. the quantity of a spoonfull restore speech unto those that have a dumb palsie h. the apoplexie and gout and comfort the heart strengthen the memory and h. inflammations of the eyes being dropped thereinto The flowers being put into a glasse and set in a hill of ants close stopped for one months space there shall be a liquor that appeaseth the pain of the gout being applyed Water lilly K. as the white yellow small white and dwarfe T. The roots and seed dry and bite V. That with yellow fl stoppeth the laske bloudy flix and gonorrhoea That with white flowers is of greater force and stoppeth the whites d. in red wine they clense the morphew h. the alopecia steeped in tarre and the morphew in water sc the white for the first and the black root for the other Theoph. Stamped and ap they stop bleeding The flowers of the white h. the infirmities of the head c. by heat The root of the yellow h. hot diseases of the kidnies and bladder and the gonorrhoea The root and seed of the great water Lilly d. h. venery or the powder taken in broth drying the sperme The conserve of the flowers operates as the former and h. burning feavers The oile of the flowers refrigerateth causeth sleep and preventeth venereous dreames the temples of the head palmes of the hands the feet and breast being anointed for the one and the genitors for the other The green leaves of the great water Lilly ap to the back h. the gonorrhoea being renewed thrice a day The yellow Lilly with the day Lilly T. Is referred to the Asphodills V. Diosc A pessary of the root with hony brings forth water and bloud S tamp●d with the leaves and ap it h. hot swellings inflammations and burnings Park K. as the water lilly of Aegypt c. T. V. the leaves and flowers are cold and moist Limon-tree Malus Limonia * P. In the sea coasts of Italy and Spain c. T. It 's alwayes green and bearing fruit N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Limas Limera Hisp The first notes the fruit the second the tree Limon tree Ger. T. The pap is soure cold and dry with thinnesse of parts V. The distilled water of the whole fruit drawen out by a glasse still h. tetters and blemishes of the skin and maketh the face faire and smooth d. it provoketh urine dissolveth and expelleth the stone Vnc. 2. of the juice mixt with the spirit of wine or aqua vitae d. in the fit of an ague h. the shaking and h. the ague at thrice using the patient being covered warme to cause sweat so unc 1. sem of the distilled water taken The seed killeth wormes the syrrup h. burning fevers and infectious diseases so Vntz. For. Val. de Tar. Joub Aug. Tab. Pisan Ficin It comforteth the heart cooleth the inward parts cutteth and attenuateth Park The rind and juice come neer unto the property of the Citron but it 's weaker to resist poyson venome or infection yet the juyce being sharper cooleth more The juyce of unripe Limmons d. with malmesy expelleth the stone killeth wormes A peece of gold being steeped 24. houres in the juyce thereof and it d. in wine with the powder of Angelica roots h. those that are infected with the plague The distilled water killeth lice the juice used at sea preventeth the scurvy and h. thirst Riol The syrrup h. putrefactions and distempers of the bloud Col. The juyce taken every morning with white wine sugar strengtheneth the heart stomack and head it h. melancholy The rind h. the stench of the mouth The juice h. staines in linnen Line-tree Tilia P. In gardens and woods T. Fl. in May the fruit is ripe in Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Philyra Teia Hisp Linden-tree Line-tree Ger. K. as the male and female T. The barke and leaves are of a temperate heat somewhat dry and astringent V. The leaves boiled in smiths water with allome and a little hony h. sores in childrens mouths The leaves boiled till tender and stamped very small with hogs grease the powder of fenugreek lineseed h. hot swellings and c. maturation of impostumes ap very hot The flowers h. paines of the head of a cold cause dizzinesse apoplexie epilepsie and not only the flowers but the distilled water also Theoph. The leaves are sweet and are fodder for cattle but the fruit can be eaten of none Park The coales make gun-powder being quenched in vineger they dissolve clotted bloud The juice of the barke steeped ap h. burnings The distilled water of the barke h. against fretting humors that c. the bloudy flux The coales h. the haemoptysis Lions-leafe Leontopetalon * P. Among corne in Italy Candy c. T. It flowreth in winter as affirmeth Pet. Bellon N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pes Leoninus Brumaria Lions-leafe Ger. Gal. It 's hot and dry 3° and digesting V. Diosc The root taken in wine h. the bitings of serpents and easeth the paine It 's used in clisters for them that are troubled with the sciatica so Trag. Plin. Bauh Park The root ap h. the sciatica also it cleanseth and healeth old filthy ulcers Rauwolf The inhabitants of Aleppo use the powder of the old and greater roots thereof to take spots out of their garments by rubbing them therewith Liquorice Glycyrrhiza P. In Germany France Spain and in gardens when planted T. Fl. in July the seed is ripe in September N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dulcis radix Liquiritia Herba Scythica Liquorice Ger. K. as the hedghog and common T. The root is sweet temperate hot somewhat binding and moist the bark is somewhat bitter and hot V. The root h. the hoarsnesse and roughnesse of the throat and breast openeth the lungs ripeneth the cough and expectorateth flegme so the Rob or juice and the ginger bread made of the juice with ginger other spices h. all infirmities of the lungs and breast The juice h. the heat of the stomack and mouth d. with wine and raisins it h. the
infirmities of the liver and chest sores of the bladder and diseases of the kidnies Being melted under the tongue it quencheth thirst h. the stomack and green wounds applyed so the decoction of the roots being fresh The powder of the dryed root ap h. the web in the eye and ulcers of the mouth It h. hoarsnesse difficulty of breathing inflammations of the lungs the pleurifie spitting of bloud consumption and rottennesse of the lungs and all infirmities of the chest it h. inflammations tempereth the sharpnesse of humors concocteth them and c. easy spitting The decoction h. the kidnies bladder exulcerated the strangury all infirmities proceeding of sharp salt and biting humors Theoph. With this and mares milke cheese the Scythians were reported to be able to liue 11. or 12 dayes With hony it h. ulcers Sala The essence h. the diseases of all the cavities of the body c. by sharp and salt humors In a lohoch with rose water and gum-tragacanth it expectorateth flegme and h. thin distillations The English is lesse astringent Col. Liquorice boiled in fair water with some Maidenhaire and figgs makes a good ●rinke for those that have a dry cough to digest flegme and to expectorate it it h. the ptysick consumption and all griefes of the breast and lungs It 's also used against colds in cattell Liver-wort Hepatica P. In shadowie and moist places on rocks c. T. It bringeth forth its stars and leaves in June N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lichen The nouble Herba trinitatis Trifolium nobile Liver-wort Ger. K. as the ground small with starry and round heads and stone Liv. T. Stone liverwort is cold dry somewhat binding V. It h. inflammations of the liver hot and sharpe agues and tertians of choller Diosc ap it stops bleeding h. inflammations tetters and ringwormes It h. the yellow jaundise and inflammations of the tongue Noble Liver-wort K. as the common red and that with double flowers T. are cold and dry with astriction V. They h. the weakenesse of the liver c. by heat cooling and strengthening it Bapt. Sard. A spoonfull of the powder of the root d. certain dayes together with wine or broth h. the enterocele White Liver-wort K. as the common and double flowred grasse of Parnassus T. Is dry and of subtile parts V. The decoction of the leaves d. doth dry and strengthen the moist stomack stoppeth the belly and h. desire to vomit Boiled in wine or water and d. especially the seed provoketh urine and breaketh and expelleth the stone Brunfels It h. all hot impostumes Park The first h. the gonorrhoea and whites the rest are for pleasure Loose-strife Lysimachia P. In moist meadowes and by water sides T. Fl. in June and July often untill Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Salicaria Coroneola Loose-strife Ger. J. K. as the yellow small yellow yellow with branched flowers tree primrose spiked codded rose-bay narrow leafed blew hooded wild and small purple willow herb T. The yellow which is most usefull is cold dry and very astringent V. Diosc The juice d. h. the bloudy flix it h. green wounds and stoppeth bloud so also as an errhine so Fuch The smoke of the burned herb driveth away serpents and killeth gnats Plin. It dyeth the haire yellow d. it h. the dysentery Made into a salve it cooleth and healeth wounds As a pessary it stoppeth the termes The others have not been experimented Park K. as the round headed yellow V. as the first the juice h. sore mouths and the secret parts The small purple fl V. as the first so the codded and is hot and dry 2° The distilled water of the spiked h. hurts of the eyes scars and the quinsey Lovage Levisticum P. In gardens where it groweth very much T. Fl. in July and August and then seedeth N. Ligusticum Siler m●ntanum Lovage Ger. The common T. Is hot and dry 3° V. The roots h. all inward diseases and expell ventosities especially of the stomack the seed warmeth it and h. digestion Ant. Musa The Gennes did formerly use it in their meates as we doe pepper now The distilled water cleareth the sight and taketh away all spots lentills freckles and rednesse of the face if they be often washed therewith Bastard Lovage with the horse fennell T. This plant with his seed is hot and dry 3° V. The seeds of Siler d. with wormwood wine c. the menses h. suffocation of the matrix and cause it to returne to its naturall place The root stamped with hony and ap h. old sores and covereth bare bones with flesh It 's diuretick and h. paines of the intralls of crudity It h. concoction consumeth winde and h. the swelling of the stomack the root is not so effectuall as not being so hot and dry Senn. It c. sweat h. the womb and c. the termes Crescent It 's hot and dry 2° diuretick extenuating and opening and h. the griefes of the stomack Park K. as the Germane V. The first d. h. agues The last h. the quinsey and eyes Penot The salt h. the stone Lung-wort Pulmonaria P. Vpon old trees rocks and shadowie places T. It flourisheth especially in the summer time N. Lichen The golden Corchorus Dalechampii Lung-wort Ger. J. K. as the tree sea with the round leafed oister weed sea thongs sea wracks jagged grasse sea girdle sea ragged staffe and hairy riverweed T. Lung-wort is cold and dry V. The powder d. with water h. inflammations and ulcers of the lungs bloudy and green wounds ulcers in the privities and stoppeth the reds and all fluxes of choller upwards or downewards Fried with eggs as a tansie and eaten it strengtheneth the weaknesse of the back The powder with salt given to cattle h. their cough and broken-windednesse French Lung-w K. As the broad-leafed narrow leafed with the golden mouse-eare T. are temperate and a little astringent V. The decoction or the distilled water of the first d. and ap mundifies and h. green wounds it h. inflammations and hot distempers of the heart stomack and liver The juyce dropped into the eares h. them if troubled with a pricking paine or noise Trag The water operates as that of succory Pen The 2d h. whitelowes and diseases of the lungs Cam The 3d. if the Costa of Camerarius h. the pthisis given in conserve syrupe or powder or used in broths The other Lung-wort or cow-slipps of Jerusalem K. as the spotted and buglosse Cowslipps T. Is of the temperature of great comfrey yet the root is more drying and binding V. The leaves are used among pot-herbes The roots are thought to h. the infirmities of the lungs and ulcers thereof and to be of the like force with the great Comfrey Park Cowslips of Jer. boiled and d. h. the haemoptysis Cam The 1. is binding abstersive and glutinating Lupine Lupinus P. In a sandy and bad soile hardly in tilled places T. They are planted in Aprill and have fruit 2 or 3 times N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
and bloudy flix It h. those that are troubled with the green sicknesse or dropsie in the beginning and h. a weak and cold liver The seed killeth wormes and expelleth them as worme-seed doth Park K. as the small purple sweet and fennell leased V. It h. inflammations it purgeth choller and flegme It h. putrefaction and obstructions day agues and the cachexy Mayden haire Adiantum P. Vpon wals in stony shadowy and moist places T. They are green winter and summer without flowers N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Polytrichum Callitrichum Crinita Capillus Veneris terrae Cincinnalis Maiden-haire Ger. K. as the true Assyrian rue T. the true doth dry attenuate wast and is in a mean between heat and coldnesse Mes It 's of unlike parts some watry earthy and binding others hot and thin so when green it looseth the belly else bindeth it and h. fluxes V. d. it breaketh the stone and expelleth it It raiseth up slimie humors out of the chest and lungs by spitting in a lohoch It wasteth the Kings evill and other hard swellings and c. haire to grow Wall rue Ruta muraria sive salvia vitae is not much unlike to black maiden haire it h. the cough short windednesse and stitches or paines in the sides boiled it concocteth raw humors sticking in the lungs h. paine of the kidnies and bladder gently provoketh urine and expelleth the stone It h. ruptures in children the powder being taken for 40 dayes so Matth. English or common maiden-haire Trichomanes mas T. V. Gal. hath all the faculties belonging to black maiden haire V. decoct in wine and d. it helpeth those that are shortwinded and the cough it ripeneth tough flegme and avoideth it by spitting The lye wherein it hath been sodden or infused in is good to wash the head causing the scurfe and scales to fall off and haire to grow in bare places Brunfels Vigon It h. the spleen the juyce with southernwood and cresses c. h. the alopecia Riol The syrrup of it h. diseases of obstruction Park K. as the forreigne V. It h. the diseases of the spleen and causeth a good colour Col. It h. diseases that breed by the obstruction of the liver or spleen They h. the bitings of venemous creatures The leaves of wall rue m. with a little salt peter and the urine of a young child take away the shriveled wrinklings of womens bellies after their deliverance if washed therewith May-weed Cotula P. In corne fields neer unto pathwaies c. T. Fl. in July and August N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Parthenium Fuch Virginea May-weed Ger. K. as the common and yellow with the wild mountaine Cammomil T. are thought to be hot and dry and like after a sort to Cammomil yet not at all agreeing with mans nature V. It h. the mother and c. blisters Hort. San. The leaves stamped and ap h. the hardnesse of apostumes d. it c. vomiting Avic The smell h. cold windinesse of the head Col. It 's often used with good successe for the same purposes that Cammomil is especially the ordinarie sort and are both put into clisters Park K. As that with a strong and no scent V. It 's used to dissolve wind and tumors and ease paines and aches in the joynts c. especially the stinking sort which is the best Mede-sweet Vlmaria P. It groweth in the brinkes of ditches and meadowes T. Fl. in June July and August N. Barba capri hirci Regina prati Medesusium Cordi Mede-sweet Ger. T. is cold and dry with astriction V. The root boiled or powdered d. h. the bloudy flix and all fluxes of bloud The flowers boiled in wine and d. h. the fits of a quartan ague and exhilerate so the smell and delighteth the senses The distilled water of the flowers dropped into the eyes h. the burning and itching thereof and cleareth the sight Park K. as the common and greater V. They are likely to be of the faculty of Burnet yet Trag. they are more hot and dry it h. the collick ap it h. phagedens and sore mouths Cam. The seed d. c. the head-ach Medlar-tree Mespilus P. In orchards and hedges and are better if grafted T. The fruit is ripe in the end of October N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sicanion Medlar tree Ger. J. K. as the manured the other garden the Neapolitan and dwarfe T. The medlars are cold dry and astringent so the leaves the dwarf medlar is dry sharpe and astringent V. They stop the belly especially when green The fruit of the three grained Medlar is more wholesome for the stomack Being preserved with sugar or hony it 's gratefull to the taste They are good for women with child strengthening the stomack stopping the lothsomnesse thereof The stones of medlars powdered and d. breake the stone expell gravell and provoke urine Senn. They are most fit for bilious stomacks Park they operate as services but more effectually The decoction h. defluxions in the mouth the courses and piles and ap h. the stomack and wounds Melilote Melilotus P. In pastures and among corne T. Fl. in July and August N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Trifolium odoratum equinum ursinum Corona Regia Melilote Ger. K. as the Assyrian Italian Kings and Germane claver T. Gal. is hot and dry 1° and astringent wasting and ripening is also diaphoretick V. Boiled in sweet wine untill it be soft adding the yelk of a rosted egge the meale of fenugreek and lineseed the roots of marsh mallowes and hogs grease stamped together and used as a pultis it doth asswage and soften all manner of swellings especially about the matrix fundament and genitors With the juyce hereof oile wax rosin and turpentine is made a melilote plaister which is healing and drawing The herbe boiled in wine and d. provoketh urine breaketh the stone and asswageth pains of the kidnies bladder and belly ripeneth flegme and c. it to be easily evacuated The juyce dropped into the eyes cleareth the sight consumeth disolveth and h. the web pearle and spots in the eyes Melilote with water h. the melicerides and the running ulcers of the head ap with chalke wine and galls It h. paines of the cares the juyce being dropped in m. with wine and head-ach ap with vineger and oile of roses Pem. ap it h. wens also inflammations and paines in the side Park The flowers with Cammomil in clysters expell winde ap it h. the apoplexy The Egyptian h. the mother The Indian as the first The Italian is the best Melon Melo P. It groweth in hot regions T. It 's sown in Aprill the fr. is ripe in August N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Melopepon Musk Millon Melon Ger. K. as the muske sugar peare-fashioned and Spanish T. The meat of the musk melon is very cold and moist V. It 's harder of digestion than the cucumbers if it remain long in the stomack it putrifyeth and c. pestilent fevers The Spaniards and Italians eate them to
sage with the Syrian sage leafed mullein T. are dry and operate as sage V. Diosc The leaves stamped and ap as a pultis h. burnings scaldings Bor. Cent. 1. Obs 27. The leaves of mullein bruised and ap h the stingings of serpents Park K. as the black and jagged V. d. It h. the cramp with sage marjerome and cammomile fl ap The distilled water of the flowers h. hot gouts the powder h. the collick Mustard Sinapi P. It groweth wild in most places T. It may be sown in the spring it 's ripe in July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aristoph Thlaspi Plinii Saurion Mustard Ger J. K. as the garden field white and small wilde T. Gal. The seed is hot and dry 40. it doth attenuate and attract V. the seed pounded with vineger is a good sauce with grosse meats peptick corroborating the stomack and provoking appetite It h. those that are short winded and stuffed in the breast with tough flegme from the braine Chewed in the mouth it h. the tooth-ach A gargarisme made with the seed hony vineger h. the swellings of the uvula and almonds of the throat d. with water and hony it provoketh the termes and urine The seed used as an errhine is ptarmick and h. women sick of the mother Ap. with figgs it h. the epilepsie and lethargy also the sciatica and all paines of a cold cause It is mixt with drawing plaisters and consumeth nodes It h. those that have lost their haire and taketh away spots c. by bruises The seed of the white mustard is used in antidotes as in the Electuary de ovo c. Treacle mustard K. as the common mithridate knaves Bowyers Grecians clownes buckler and small buckler T. The seeds are hot and dry fine tertii V. The seed eaten purgeth choller provoketh the termes and breaketh the inward apostumes In clysters it h. the sciatica and operates as the other mustard feed H. too much taken it c. a hypercatharsis and is hurtfull to women great with child Candy mustard K. as the common and small white flowred T. The seed is hot and dry fine 2di Treacle mustard K. as the round leafed Hungary churles peasants of Narbone yellow white Clusius his small and small rock T. Is hot and dry fine 2di sc the seed V. the seeds are sharpe and biting breake inward impostumes bring down the flowers kill the foetus and h. the sciatica They purge choller upward downward unc 2. sem being taken They are m. in counterpoysons as treacle mithridate c. Wooddy mustard K. as the hoary small thorny bushy and Ivy. T. V. They may be referred to the kindes of thlaspies Toures mustard K. as the common great gold of pleasure and treacle wormseed T. are hot and dry 3° V. Diosc The oilie fatnesse of the seed of the third levigates the skin Ruel The juice h ulcers of the mouth The seed of the last stamped and d. killeth and expelleth wormes Park The common is antepileptick Pem. It h. the malignity of mushromes and venime agues palsie epilepsie and c. lust and concoction ap it h. cold tumors Park The distilled water is cosmeticall The Arabian h. flegme The rest as treacle Mustard Myrtle-tree Myrtus P. It groweth naturally in Italy in fertill places T. Fl. with the rose the fruit is ripe in Autumne N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The berries Myrtilli offic Myrtle-tree Ger. J. K. as the common great Spanish strange white berried little and wild Spanish T. it consisteth of contrary substances having a certaine subtile heate with a predominant earthinesse so dryeth much The leaves fruite buds and juice doe bind both d. and ap V. they stop the haemoptysis and all other issues of bloud The bath hereof h. the reds and whites The fomentation stops the haemorrhoides they h. laskes and the bloudy flix ap with barley meale they quench the fiery heat of the eyes ap they h. all inflammations in the beginning and paines by strokes or straines They are wholesome for watery stomacks The fruit and leaves dryed provoke urine The decoction bathed h. luxations ruptures and the outward parts exulcerated it h. tetters scoureth dandriffe and the sores of the head it maketh the haires black and hindreth their falling d. fasting it prevents drunkennesse and h. the poyson of any venemous beast so the dryed juice of the leaves Lonic T. the berries are cold and earthy V. the syrrup thereof h. old coughs the exulceration of the lungs and strengthens the stomack Lugd. d. in wine it h. the biting of the scorpion the decoction of the leaves h. purulent eares being instilled The leaves stamped and ap with water h. parts ●hat are troubled with fluxions The powder of the dryed leaves sprinkled on the body restraineth sweat h. the falling down of the matrix and diseases of the fundament The oile that is made of the berries by expression is drying and astringent Mac. The berries colour the haire black Riol The oile anointed h. diseases of the rarity of the skin as immoderate sweating with the powder of dryed roses Weck Wild Myrtle h. the strangury head ach and Kings evill Col. The fr. h. the trembling of the heart and stinging of serpents d. it h. a stinking breath and ulcers with wine Aquapend The oile is anodyne and h. luxations Park K. as the greatest open laurell strange broad leased close and double fl V. ap it h. S. Anthonies fire and d. prevents the danger of mushroomes The excrescence is strongest and operates as Acacia N Navell-wort Vmbilicus Veneris P. The first groweth on stone walls the 2d 3d and 4th on the Alpes T. They flourish in winter and fl in the beginning of Spring N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acetabulum Herba coxendicum NAvell-wort Ger. J. K. as the small first and second and the Italian bastard with the wal jagged water penny-wort T. is moist and somewhat cold and binding V. It cooleth and repelleth scoureth and consumeth Water penny-wort is hot and ulcerating like crowfoot The bastard Italian partakes with the true in cold and moisture V. The juice of wall penny wort h. all inflammations and hot tumors as the erysipelas or S. Anthonies fire it h. kibed heeles being bathed therewith and the leaves ap The leaves and root eaten break the stone provoke urine and h. the dropsie The water penny-wort is dangerous and noisome unto sheep and other cattell that feed thereon That of the sea K. as the common and one summers navell-wort T. is diuretick not much hot but exceeding dry V. It provoketh urine and digesteth the sliminesse in the joynts Diosc drach 2. d. in wine expell much urine out of their bodyes that have the dropsie ap h. the gout Park K. as the spotted and small red flowred T. V. are cold and moist like house-leek That of the wall h. hot stomacks and livers The distilled water h. sore kidnies paines of the bowels piles gout sciatica and Kings evill