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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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c. vomit the hollow rooted h. the plague Pem. The 1. is hot 1° and dry 2° as appeares by its bitternesse Furze-bush Genista spinosa P. In pastures and fields in most places T. Fl from May to October T. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Scorpius Spinosus Theoph. Furze-bush Ger. J. K. as the great small small round codded needle dwarf and scorpion T. is hot and dry V. the seed h. the stone and laske Park The two first open the obstructions of the liver spleen The flowers thereof in a decoction h. the jaundise as also provokes urine and cleanses the kidnies of gravell The others no doubt are participant of the same qualities G Galingale Cyperus P. In fenny grounds naturally gardens T. They flower in August N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Juncus quadratus angulosus Aspalathum GAlingale Ger. J. K. as the English common and round T. the roots are hot and dry 2° V. d. it expells gravell and h. the dropsie Boiled in wine d. it provoketh urine and menses and expells the stone It also h. stingings and bitings of scrpents Fernel The root used in baths h. coldnesse and stopping of the matrix and provoketh termes It causeth blood and digestion and exhilerates causeth a good colour and sweet breath The powder dryeth up all moist ulcers even in the mouth and privities stayeth the humors and healeth them though maligne and virulent Spanish Galingale or Italian Trasi T. the roots are windie V. the milke pressed out of the roots d. h. the breast and lungs and mundifyeth them it h. coughs and c. venery the roots must be beaten and macerated in broth then pressed the same milk or creame d. h. hor and sharpe urine adding seed of pompions gourds and cucumbers The true galingale K. as the greater and the lesse T. are hot and dry 3° and the lesser the hotter V. they h. all cold diseases as collick flatulencies paines of the stomack c. by cold The smell comforts the too cold braine The substance chewed sweetens the breath and h. the beating of the heart They h. flatulency of the womb c. venery and heat the too cold reines Park K. as the lesser Assyrian round rooted sweet and rush nut V. as the rest the roots boiled with bay-berries and d. h. the dropsie so ap with the urine of a boy Alpin The decoction of the roots is used by the Egyptians to warm the stomack Gall-tree Gallae arbor * P. In Italy Spaine and most of the hot regions T. The gall appeareth when the sun entreth Cancer and that in one night N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Quercus Robur Plaecida Gazae Gall-tree Ger. J. K. as the first and second greater and lesser gall-tree T. Gal. The gall called omphacitis is dry 3° cold 2° and a very harsh medicine V. it fasteneth together slack parts it repelleth rheumes and fluxes and dryeth up the same especially those of the gums throat and mouth The other gall is lesse drying and binding being boiled and ap as a plaister it h. the inflammations of the fundament and falling downe thereof It 's boiled in water if there be need of little astriction or binding or otherwise in austere wine if more need require d. in wine or the powder strewed upon meats it h. the dysentery and the coeliack passion They are used in dying and making of inke If burnt they stanch bloud and are of thin parts and drying they must be laid upon burning coales till white and then quenched in vineger and wine Also they are good in laskes d. in wine or water and ap and serve in all cases where there is need of drying and binding Oake apples are much of the same nature yet of lesser force Park The fume of the decoction h. the falling downe of the mother and inflammations Dorst Aeg Galls are dry 3° cold 2° and when unripe repell contract and strengthen Garlick Allium P. It is planted in gardens sc the small cloves T. It is set in Novemb and Decemb or Feb and March N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theriaca rustica Vlpicum Columellae Garlick Ger T. is sharp hot and dry 4° and exulcerateth the skin by raising blisters V. Being eaten it extreamly heateth the body attenuateth thick and clammy humors digesteth and consumeth them It also openeth obstructions h. cold poysons and the bitings of venemous beasts It yeildeth no nourishment and ingendreth sharp and naughty bloud therefore hurteth those that are of a hot complexion but it becometh of good juice boiled till it loose its sharpnesse It h. roughnesse of the throat and old coughs it provoketh urine consumeth wind and h. the dropsie of a cold cause It killeth and expelleth wormes sodden in milke taken by young children It h. cold stomacks and preserveth from contagious aire The fume of the decoction taken brings down the flowers and secundine c. It h. the morphew ring wormes scabbed heads in children dandraf and scurfe mixt with hony and ap With figleaves and cummin ap it h. the bitings of the shrew mouse The wild Garlick K. as the crow and beares gar T. are referred to those of the garden V. the wild is stronger than the garden garlick The leaves of Ramsons stamped are good sauce to eat with fish and with butter in Aprill and May being eaten by labouring men The distilled water d. expelleth the stone and urine The mountain Garlick K. as the great Clusius his great the lesser leek leafed the vipers and broad leafed T. are in a meane between leeks and garlick V. Scorodoprassum attenuates and h. expectoration The last operates as garlick Park K. as the Turkey great Turkey with narrow and bulbed leaves V. Garlick dicusseth the inconveniences c. by minerall vapoures It h. the jaundise cramps piles and cold diseases Gaule tree Myrtus Brabantica P. In fenny countries and many other places T. Fl in May and June the seed is ripe in Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eleagnus Cordi Rhus sylv Plinit Gaule-tree Ger T. the leaves are hot and dry the seed 3° V. the fruit is troublesome to the brain being put into beere whilest it is boiling it maketh it heady The shrub with the fruit laid among clothes keepeth them from moths and wormes Park It 's bitter and harsh drying and discussing and is very effectuall to kill the wormes in the belly and stomack Germander Chamaedrys P. In rocky rough grounds almost every where T. Fl. and flourish from June to August N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Trixago Quercula minor Trissago Teucrium Germander Ger. K. as the great broad leafed small and wild T. that of the garden is hot and dry fere 30. of thin parts and cutting The wild also is hot and dry opening and cleansing the liver and spleen V. boiled in water and d. it delivereth the body from all obstructions and cutteth clammy humors it h. coughs and shortnesse of breath the strangury and dropsie The leaves stamped with hony and strained and
coltsfoot gentian privet nutmeg palma Christi elder and sarsaparilla and are to be gathered betwixt S. James's and S. Laurences day In the fourth degree Southernwood calamint capers cinnamon white hellebore marjerome hore hound wild cresses rosemary turbith and spike and are to be gathered partly in Aprill partly in September 2. To Taurus which is a terrestriall feminine signe cold and dry sympathetick to the neck and throat Thus in the first degree Betony miltwast germander ground ivy the root of white lillies mints daffodill polypody roses rosemary valerian and violets and mollifie the tumors of the jawes and spleen In the second degree Maiden haire winter cherries columbines ivy Solomons seale oake tree and misletoe of the oake and help wounds In the third degree Buglosse our Iadies thistle hounds tongue agrimon●e the lesser docke organie stone parsley oake tree cinquefoile sanicle figwort tormentill perwinkle and silver weed and are traumatick In the fourth degree Mouse eare great burdock wild betony great celandine ash tree mallowes lungwort scabious and ground ivy and have antipathie with the sublunaries which are under Libra and Scorpio but sympathetick with those that are under Cancer and Sagittarius 3. To Gemini which are a masculine signe airie hot and moist possessing the shoulders Thus in the first degree Aniseed marsh mallow buglosse borrage fennell hyssop stone parsely selfe heale and wall rue In the second degree great burdock buglosse ferne white line tree turneps c. In the third degree Chickweed wake Robin mace and dead nettle In the fourth degree Sorrell germander cammomill celandine mugwort and rubarb and they have an antipathie with the sublunaries of Capricorne and sympathie with those of Libra and Aquarius 4. To Cancer which is a feminine signe watery cold and moist sympathetick to the breast and lungs as also to the ribbs and spleen and cureth the diseases thereof Thus in the first degree Chickweed cabbage thistle the flowers and fruit of beanes ladies bedstraw turneps rampions sage figwort In the 2d degree Strawberry tree cones of the firre tree and pine comfrey nightshade turpentine misletoe In the 3d brooklime foxgloves cudweed rushes cresses seed of stone parsley purslain willow saxifrage and stone crop In the 4th degree water lillie piony housleek corall and are antipathetick to the sublunarys of Sagittarius and sympathetick to those of Yaurus and Libra 5. To Leo which is a masculine signe fiery or hot and dry governing the heart and stomack Thus in the first degree Basil saffron cypress tree carnations hyssop lavender water plantaine sundew sea bindweed and tyme. In the 2d degree Wild angelica tway hlade centorie galingale gentian and devills bit In the 3d degree stinking mayweed carrot mints garden cresses penny royall crowfoot nettles In the 4th degree Birch tree box broom and bay tree the 1. are to be gathered the Sun being in Pisces the Moon in Cancer The 2d sort in the beginning of May before Sun rising or in the end of Aug or the Sun being in Taurus and the Moon in Gemini The 3d the Sun being in Leo and the Moon in Virgo and the last ouadrature or for refrigeration the Sun being in Taurus and the Moon in Gemini The 4th the Sun being in Pisces the Moon in Aquarius or both 6. To Virgo which is a feminine signe earthy cold dry sympathetick to the liver intestines and belly Thus in the first degree Sorrell wood sorrell burdock succory plantain peare tree and and wild sage In the 2d degree white beetes medlar Solomons seale and briar bush In the 3d birthwort bugle flea bane selfe heale and oake tree In the 4th Carduus benedictus small centorie black alder tree adders tongue sloe tree with all its parts fruit flowers tormentill bistort 7. To Libra which is a masculine signe airie hot and moist sympathetick to the reines bladder Thus in the first degree All sorts of daisies bugle feaver few cowslip goats beard water parsnep In the 2d degree Marsh mallow cammomil mistetoe martagon mallow line tree vervain silver weed In the 3d degree Calves snout mugwort nut tree and wall rue In the 4th degree Chickweed great celandine black mints scabious figwort and housleek 8. To Scorpio which is a feminine signe watery cold and moist and sympathetick to the genitors Thus in the first degree Crosse wort hawthorne service tree as also all simples of the 1. degree of Cancer gathered in Oct. In the 2d degree Ash-tree all sorts of apples and plumtree In the 3d Barberrie tree box feaver few sopewort hereto belong all herbs of the 2d degree of Cancer In the 4th Great red beetes mercurie daffod ill ribes 9. To Sagittarius which is a masculine signe hot and dry sympathetick to the loines c. Thus in the first degree Comfrey onion radish figwort flowers of line tree sesamum and vervaine In the second degree Garlick wild angelica henbane lovage and leaves of willow tree In the third degree Red beete asarabacca celandine saffron ferne ground ivy madder divells bit and turmerick In the fourth degree Gum thistle oresses and white vine 10. To Capricorne which is a feminine signe terrestriall or earthy cold and dry sympathetick to the knees and nerves Thus in the first degree Marigold black cherries elecampane mulberry tree bramble bush and whorts In the second degree Black berries mullein and garden endive In the third degree Acorus wake Robin shepheards purse comfrey gourds galingale garden mallow and all kinds of sowthistles In the fourth degree Hellebore henbane mandrake monkes hood herb true love savin night shade and staves acre 11. To Aquarius which is a masculine signe aerious hot moist sympathetick to the legs Thus in the first degree Angelica wild carrot fig tree flowers of the ash tree ground ivy wall nut tree melilot sanicle Solomons seale and perwinkle In the second degree larkspur cummin dodder of time cranes bill clot-bur rose root wall rue wild sage and white nettle In the third degree Agrimonie mouseare clurie mercurie saxifrage and dragon In the fourth degree The leaves of asarabacca motherwort hemlock and medlars 12. To Pisces which are a feminine signe aqueous cold and moist and sympathetick to the feet Thus in the first degree long birth wort cabbage gourds elecampane myrobalans navew water-lillie purslain and turneps In the second degre Artichocks calves-snout blew bottle and golden flower gentle In the third degree Nigella garden and wild poppy and sowthistle In the fourth degree Hemlock henbane monks-hood horned poppy and white mightshade II. The occult Qualities are found out by Peiralogie or experience which is most sure and safe II. Next follow those things which are more remote that concerne plants and other medicinalls as commonly to be compounded therewith As 1. The Topologie or place of gathering them Thus 1. Herbes are to be gathered in mountaines hills and plain places in those that are highest especially and
seedeth in June to the end of Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Polyspermon Cassani Bassi All-seed or Arrach wild T. Gal. is moist 2° cold 1° see orach Col. K. as the great common wild narrow leafed and wild Arrach with so much seed that it is called All seed V. The common wild Arraches are neere as cold as the garden sorts but more drying serving chiefly for inflammations being applied outwardly thereunto applied they coole apostumes h. S. Anthonies fire and such like maladies so Park applied they dissolve tumors with vineger nitre ease paine of the Goute and cure scabbed nailes Almond tree Amygdalus P. Hot regions any where if planted T. Fl. with the Peach the fruit is ripe in Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nuces graecae Caton the fruit amygdalum Almonds Ger T. the sweet dried are moderately hot the bitter are hot and drie 2° and fat V. the sweet are nourishing grosse when fresh and bind the belly The milke h. the lask the bloody flixe and plurisie opening concocting and cleansing they h. the chest and lungs and raise up rotten humors taken before meat they stop the belly with barley water h. feavers the oyle of the sweet Almonds h. all aches and plurisies d. after phlebotomy and stone of the kidnies it lubrifies the ureters opens the belly h. collick and womens throwes smoothes the face and clenseth the skin Bitter Almonds attennuate and open the liver and spleen h. pain of the side open the body provoke urine bring downe the menses h. strangury with a looch clense the lungs and with starch stay haemoptysis 5 or 6 taken fasting keep from drunkennesse they mundify the skin ulcers with hony h. the bitings of mad doggs and ap with vineger h. head-ach cough and shortnesse of wind the oile d. is diuretick so ap Diosc the gum healeth bindeth h. haemoptysis paines of the stone sharpnesse of urine decoct with licorish and tetters dissolved in vineger Park V. the oile with powder of sugar candy h dry coughs and women after travel the powder of the cakes smoothes the skin the bitter with amylum and mints h. haemoptysis Aloes Aloe P. India Arabia Aegypt Asia Spaine and nigh the Sea T. It is alwaies green Fl in the summer months N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Amphibion Sempervivum Sedum Aloes Ger J. K. as the common and prickly T. the juyce is hot 2° drie 3° very bitter emplasticke and something binding ap V. it purgeth the belly comforteth the stomack it purgeth more if not washed if so it more strengthneth the stomack and purgeth choller out of the next passages it preserveth from putrefaction killeth wormes h. stinking breath and openeth the piles taken in a small q. it c. monthly courses and openeth obstructions drach 1. taken It helps wounds clenseth ulcers as in the fundament c. it s put into medicines which stanch bleeding h. the eyes troubled with roughnesse and itching with vineger oyle of roses ap it h. the head-ach and with wine the falling of the haire with wine and hony it h. swellings and ulcers of the mouth with hony the spots coming of stripes the juyce aloë succotrina purgeth phlegmatick cold and cholerick humours in plethorick bodies drach 2. taken in a stewed prune expell superfluous humors h. the jaundise and all fluxes of blood so ap Lignum aloes T. is moderately hot and drie of somewhat subtil parts taken it h. moist stomacks and weake livers the dysenterie and plurisies is cordiall chewed it perfumes the breath if burnt the roome Park V. the leaves of the herb h. scalding the juyce ap with oyle of wormewood to the navill kills wormes The American T. is bitter and sharpe the juyce h. wounds and old sores with wormewood the wounds of Serpents the fume taken h. the French disease Anemonie Anemone P. They grow not wild in England or rarely T. Fl in Jan to the end of April N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Herba venti Ranunculus sylvarum Leimonia Th. Anemonie Ger J K. as the purple double scarlet great double of Bythinia and single chesnut broad leaved double yellow storcks-bill Matthiolus's white three leafed poppy wind flower T. are all sharpe and binding V. the juyce snuffed up into the nose mightily purgeth the head the root chewed is an apophlegmatisme In collyries it easeth inflamed eyes the juyce clenseth corrosive ulcers the leaves and stalkes boyled and eaten cause milke provoke termes ease the leprosie in bathes The other Anemonies of Johns K. as the broad leaved skarlet the skarlet with the large flower broad leafed of Const small leaved with the sanguine flowre small leaved skarlet light purple small leaved whitish small leaved striped flesh-coloured small leaved double crimson and double darke purple Anemonie T. are hot and biting the juyce h. scarres of the eyes Trallian the flowers beaten in oyle ap cause haire to grow and agree with the 1. The wilde Ger J. K. as the yellow white double white wood and double purplish wood Anemonie T. V. agree with the garden Anemonies Col. the root chewed purgeth water and phlegme very forcibly therefore h. the Lethargy by spitting Park the leaves are used in the ointment martiatum h. cold distempers Anet Anethum P. Gardens and other places T. Fl and seedeth in Aug N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Anetum Dill So called by all Anet Ger. Gal. T. is hot fine 2di drie 〈…〉 the decoction of the dried tops 〈…〉 causeth milke h. windinesse 〈…〉 rine increaseth sperme and stayeth the hicket so smelled to or ap with wormewood wine Gal. the seed burnt and ap to moist ulcers healeth them as in the secret parts the oyle in which it is boyled is digesting and anodyne causeth sleepe concocteth humors and provoketh lust the fume of dill boyled in wine h. the suffocation of the mother Park T. it 's hot 3° drie 2° green drie 3° digesting V. boyled and d. it h. pains swellings stops the flux vomiting h. windinesse of the mother and much d. h. venery Angelica Angelica P. In gardens sc the 1. the rest in fields c. T. Fl in July and Aug. the roots perish after the seed N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 radix Spiritus S the last archangelica Angelica Ger J K. as the garden wilde and great wilde Ang T. especially that of the garden is hot drie 3° opening attennuating digesting and hydrotick V. the root of the garden Angelica h. poyson plague and all infections by cotrupt aire chewed in the mouth and that by urine and sweat it h. pestilent fevers drach 1 of the powder d. with thin wine the distilled water of card b. or of tormentil vineger or treacle it openeth the liver and spleen draweth down the termes and expelleth the secundine the root d. in wine h. the cold shivering of agues the root green h. the asthma by expectoration it h. surfeting loathing of meat c. concoction
diureticall and h. those that are hydropick nephritick troubled with the strangury or bruised it moves the courses d. or ap the fume taken by the mouth with dried turpentine h. the cough it s used also in perfumes Park Acorus taken with wormwood wine h. cold stomacks ap h. tumors Arrow-head Sagittaria P. In the ditches as neere Oxford c. T. Fl in May and June N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Magopistana Lingua serpentis Arrow-head Ger K. as the great small narrow-leaved T. are cold and drie V. like plantaine in faculty and temper Lugd. cold and moist but they are rather cold and dry and astringent like plantain so the seed given in wine h. fluxes spitting of bloud the fretting in the gutts distillations bloudy urine and consumptions the seed d. h. the dropsie and falling sicknesse the powder of the leaves kills wormes and ap h. sores inflamed Arsmart Persicaria P. Moist plashes almost every where T. Fl. from June to Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hydropiper the 2d plumbago the 4th noli me tangere Arsmart Ger. J. K. as the common dead or spotted small creeping and codded Ar. T. Gal. it is hot and drie yet not so hot as pepper the dead is cold and something drie V. the leaves and seed wast all cold swellings it dissolves the congealed bloud of bruises bruised and ap to a fellon for an houre it h. the paine and laid under the saddle refresheth the tired horse The dead Ar. ap h. inflammations green wounds boyled with oyle olive wax and turpentine The 4th Lob. is venemous Trag. a vomitorie yet doubtfull Park V. the milde h. putrid ulcers ap and killeth worms The root ap h. the tooth-ach the juyce dropped into the eares killeth wormes therein and fleas Col. the water ap with aqua vitae h. goutes and aches Artichocke Cinara P. A fat ground set with ashes T. 'T is planted in Novemb. the slips in Aprill N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Scolymus Diosc Cactos Theoph. Artichocke Ger K. as the great red great white and wild Art T. is cacochymick and of cholerick juyce V. the nailes and middle pulpe with pepper and salt boyled with fat flesh c. lust so the ribbs are windy It stayeth the gonorroeha the budds steeped in wine and eaten provoke urine and lust the root h. the smell of the armeholes decoct in wine and d. the pith being taken out for it expells stinking urine The Jerusalem Art T. are windy V. and become meate yet of evill juyce boyled and stewed with sack and butter with a little ginger or baked in pies with marrow dates ginger raisins of the sun sack c they cure torments of the belly And as Artichocks are thought to be hot and dry 2° the infusion of the budds provokes urine Asarabacca Asarum P. In shadowie places and Gardens T. It 's alwaies green Fl in the spring N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nardus rustica Perpensa Asarabacca Ger K as the common and Italian T. the leaves are hot and drie purging with astriction the roots are more hot and drie of subtil parts they procure urine the menses are stronger then the roots of Acorus V. the leaves by vomit bring out phlegme and choler and move the belly more forcibly then the roots the roots h. stopping of the liver gall and spleen wens hard swellings and long agues and in a greater q. operate as the leaves drach 1. of the root poudered d. in ale or wine if grosse c. vomit if fine it's diuretick or drach 3. or 4 if infused in whay or honied water or 9 leaves stamped it also h. the sciatica dropsie and quartan agues given as a vomit Pem d. it h. the green-sicknesse and asthma ap it h. wounds cold headaches and drieth up milke it 's not to be given to weake bodies or women with child Park K. as the Virginian and bastard V this attennuats and clenseth Ash-tree Fraxinus P. Moist as about meadowes the 2d on mountains T. Leaves and keyes in Ap and May. the 2d Fl in May berries in Sep. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ornus orneoglossum sc the wilde the seed lingua avis Ash-tree Ger T. the leaves and barke are drie and moderately hot the seed hot drie 2° V the leaves d. and ap h. bitings of vipers and stop the belly so the barke boiled in water and vineger they stay vomiting ap to the stomack boiled in wine and d. they open the liver and spleen and corroborate them 3 leaves d. in wine every morning make leane the keyes provoke urine increase sperm and cause lust poudered with nutmeggs and d. the shavings of the wood d. are deadly lee made of the ashes of the barke h. the scurse and rough skin The wild ash V. the leaves boiled in wine h. pain in the side stoppings of the liver dropsie and tympany Park the oile of the wood m. with water of violet fl h. pimples Aspen-tree or Poplar Populus P. Meadowes ditches and by water sides T. The buds in March and beginning of Apr then to be gathered N. The 1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 farfarus the 2d 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the 3d 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lybica Plinii Aspen-tree or poplar Ger J K. as the white black aspen Indian lesser leav'd white Poplar T. Gal. the white clenseth and is of a waterie warme and thin earthy substance V. Diosc drach 1. of the barke d. h. the sciatica and strangury the leaves d. c. women to be barren the juyce dropped into the eares h. their paine the rosin of the black poplar budds is hot and drie of thin parts attenuating mollifying and anodyne so the leaves yet more weake and with the young buds h. paines of the gout ap with May butter as an ointment the ointment of the budds h. all inflammations bruises and falls Park V. the water dropping from the black poplar h. warts and pushes the seed d. h. the falling sicknesse Asphodill Asphodelus P. In France Italy Spaine naturally and in gardens here T. Fl in May and June beginning below N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Albucum that of the water is called Pseudoasphod Asphodill Ger J K. as the white branched red yellow dwarfe Asph T. are hot and dry ferè 3° V. Diosc Aet the roots eaten provoke urine and the termes especially being stamped and strained with wine and d. drach 1. d. in wine h. paines in the sides ruptures convulsions and old coughs the roots boyled in dreggs of wine h. phagedens all inflammations of the duggs or secret parts and ease the fellon ap as a pultis the juyce of the root boyled in old sweet wine with a little myrrh and saffron makes an excellent collyrie for the eyes Gal the ashes of the rootes m. with ducks grease h. the alopecia and c. haire drach 1. taken in wine h. burstings in broth the biting of venemous beasts and c. vomiting The juyce of
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
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
windinesse of the matrix and corroborates Musked Cransbill T. is cold dry and astringent V. it operates as Dovesfoot it h. green wounds and hot swellings Crowfoot Cranes-bill K. as the common small duskie and long rooted T. are referred to the former V. they are not in use Fuch yet the blew flowred healeth wounds Candy Cransbill K. as the common and bastard T. are referred to the Doves-foot V. it 's excellent for wounds Wild Crans-bills K. as the spotted bloudy unsavorie field and violet T. V. are not used but may be referred to the other of their kind The other Crans-bills K. as Pennies bulbous knotty silver leased mountaine T. V. are not discovered Park K. as the red and purple T. are drying binding and a little hot V. they h. inward and outward wounds and drank h. bleeding vomiting fluxes and the stone The Mallow leafed and rocky V. as the rest The unfavorieh the mother The doves cr h. the chollick Cresse Nasturtium P. Gardens the Winter Cr. by pathway sides T. The 1. fl in June and July so the water Cr. the rest in May. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Winter Cresse Barbarea Cresses Ger. K. as the garden Spanish and stone T. The herbe of garden Cresses is sharp and biting very hot and dry the seed fere 4° V. it h. the scurvy the seed stamped with hony h. hardnesse of the milt with Vineger and barley meale parched it h. the sciatica hard swellings and inflammations With brine it h. tetters ripens fellons and raiseth up tough humours of the chest with things appropriate Diosc It hurteth the stomack and troubleth the belly It expells wormes and floures killeth the foetus in the wombe and c. lust d. it h. bruises and c. sweat Indian Cresses T. V. are not discovered but may be referred to the rest Sciatica Cresses T. are hot 4° and like the garden cr V. the roots ap with swines grease h. the sciatica laid to 4. houres bathing the place after with warme water anointing it with oile Bank cresses K. as the common and Italian T. the seed is like that of the garden fiery and attennuating the seed h. rheums taken as alohoch it h. coughs the yellow jaundise and sciatica with hony d. it h. poyson ap with water and hony it h. cankerous apostumes behind the eares and inflammations of the paps and testicles drach 1. of the seed of the Italian bank cresses d. in a decoction of grasse roots clenseth the reines expells the stone Dock-Cresses T. are hot and somewhat abstersive V. it h. ulcerated brests yet is cacochymick Water Cresses K. as the common and Italian T. are hot dry V. d. in wine or milke it h. the Scurvy eaten three times a day for the space of 30 days it provoketh Urine h. the stone and green sicknesse and expells termes Winter Cresses T. are hot and dry 2° V. the seed h. the strangury The juice with wax oile and Turpentine as an unguent mundifieth ulcers Boiled with Scurvy-grasse it h. the Scurvy Park The garden cr h. Lethargies sc the seed The wild as the rest Turkey Cresses T. are hot V. ev acuate flegme Recch K. as the Cresse of Peru. T. is hot and dry fere 4° and sharpe V. it h. cold stomacks and the cough ap it h. hot tumors with cold remedies Crosse-wort Cruciata P. In moist and fertile medows T. Fl. all the Summer long N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Diosc Trag. Crucialis Cruciata herniaria Thalii Crosse-wort Ger. T. is dry and binding V. it healeth and closeth wounds inward or outward the decoction being drank it h. those that are bursten d. and ap as a pultis Park it stops the bleeding of wounds Cam. it h. to expectorate flegme out of the chest and h. the obstructions thereof and of the meseraicke veines and decoct in wine h. the appetite ap it h. moist sores clensing and healing them So Croll Lob. it 's bitter and abstersive Trag. The distilled water h. poyson and the plague so the powder Cam. It 's effectuall for all purposes for which the greater Gentian is Crow-foot Ranunculus P. Pastures medows almost every where T. Fl. in May so the Candy and single and double of Asia N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it 's called Pes galli and Coronopus by some Crow-foot Ger. J. K. as the common right of the followed field white mountaine that of Illyria round rooted golden-haired frog grassie winter Portugall globe rough white floured mountaine and rough purple fl double double wild and double white T. are biting as the other Crowfeet V. the chiefest vertue is in the root which stamped with salt h. plague sores ap to the thigh attracting the malignity of the disease Stamped with Vinegar ap it takes black scars out of the skin Asian Crowfoot K. as the double red double Afian scarlet double buttoned scarlet Asian of Tripolie branched red and white fl and with yellow striped flowers T. V. they are referred to the other Crowfeet whereof they are thought to be kinds Marsh Crowfoot K. as the great and lesser common and jagged T. as the rest it is biting exulcerating hot dry 4° V. The leaves or roots of all the the Crowfeet stamped ap c. blisters and remove excrescencies ap to the Plague sore it extracts it's venome and draweth it to any part Stamped with salt and ap to the finger it h. the tooth-ach It 's used by beggers to deforme their leggs That of Illyria taken contracteth the sinewes The other Crowfeet K. as the broad leafed candy plantain leafed mountaine with the lesser flower and bigger rue leafed columbine and small rough leafed T. V. are to be referred to the former Water Crowfoot T. V. is hot and like to the common Crowfoot Park K. The marsh as the French round leafed true Sardinian water Ivy leafed and with Alecost leaves V. as the rest The wood K. as the single white and yellow c. ap h. hard tumors The field V. as the rest So also the Mountain the roots ap to the wrist h. fevers Crown-imperiall Corona imperialis P. Gardens when Planted naturally in Persia T. Fl. in Aprill and March the seed is ripe in June N. Lilium Byzantinum Persicum Crown-imperiall Ger. K. as the common and double T. V. are not yet discovered Park the whole plant and every part thereof as well roots as leaves and floures do smell somewhat strong as it were the savour of a Fox which yet is not unwholsome but rather may perswade that it may be usefull Cuckow-flower Cardamine P. Almost every where except the Alpish T. Fl. in Aprill and May. N. Flos cuculi The double is called Sisymbrium alterum Diosc Cuckow-flowers Ger. J. K. as the common Ladies smocks double flowred three leafed mountain impatient and dwarf daifie leafed Lady-smocks of the Alpes T. are hot and dry 2° V. they are referred unto the water cresses Park V. the small operates as the rest and is thought
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
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
a drop at a time put into the eyes h. the web and any dimnesse thereof It mightily provoketh the termes d. in wine the privities being fomented with the same Tree-Germander K. as that with broad leaves the Hungarian great Austrian dwarfe rocke Spanish and rough headed T. V. are referred to the garden ger yet they are weaker and lesse used Water germander T. is hot and dry bitter harsh and sharpe V. It clenseth the intrals and old ulcers m. with hony It provoketh urine and menses purgeth rotten matter out of the chest h. old coughs paine in the sides of cold and inward ruptures Decoct in wine and d. it h. bitings of serpents and poyson Stamped and ap with vineger and water it h. the gout Scordium laid among raw flesh preserveth it a long time from corruption d. with wine it openeth the stoppings of the liver milt kidnies bladder and matrix provoketh urine h. the strangury and exhilerateth drach 2. of the pouder taken in meade stop the bloudy flixe and comfort the stomack Hereof is made diascordium serving for the purposes aforesaid as also against the pocks measles purples or any pestilent sicknesse before it hath universally possessed the whole body Park K. as the jagged leafed thorny of Candy mountaine rock greater and smaller bastard V. d. it h. poyson all diseases of the braine goute and kills wormes That of the mountain stops fluxes Tree germ is hot 2° dry 3° of thin parts Recch The sweet of Mexico T. is hot 4° and dry V. and h. the spleen Gessemine Jasminum P. It 's fostered in gardens T. Fl in July and August N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jeseminum Gesseminum Gessemine Ger. K. as the white great white yellow and blew T. The herbe especially the flowers are hot initio 2di V. the oile made of the flowers wasteth away raw humors and h. cold rheumes but in those of a hot constitution it causeth head-ache and the smell causeth the nose to bleed It is usefull after baths to supple and warme the body The leaves boiled in wine untill soft and ap as a pultis h. cold swellings wens and excrescencies Park K. as the single Spanish and sweet yellow Indian V. The leaves clense the skin and h. tetters the oile h. stitches Turn It h. moistnesse and salt phlegme and old men of a cold complexion it h. aches c. by cold humors ap it h. cold superfluities and spots so the Arabian Gilloflowers Leucoium P. They grow in moist gardens T. Fl from spring to the end of summer N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Viola alba Wall flower Viola lutea Gilloflowers Ger J K. as the violet coloured double stock and thorny T. V. they agree with the wall-flowers though inferiour and not used in physick yet some use them to c. lust Camerar a conserve of the fl of stock gilloflowers given with the distilled water thereof h. the apoplexie and palsie The sea stock gilloflowers K. as the white purple broad leafed yellow and small yellow T. V. are not used in physick Wall-flowers K. as the common double and wild T. the whole shrub is of a clensing facultie and of thin parts V. the yellow is most used in physick The juice mixed with some unctuous thing to the forme of a liniment h. rifts of the fundament The herb boiled with white wine hony a little allom h. hot ulcers and cankers of the mouth The leaves stamped with a little bay salt ap to the wrists h. the shaking fits of agues A decoction of the flowers with the leaves mollisieth schirrous tumours The oile h. the palsie and gout Also a strong decoction of the flowers d. moveth the courses and expells the dead child Sea Gillo-flower or Thrift T. V. Is not used in physick Park Wall-flowers V. the conserve of the fl h. the apoplexie and palsie The oile h. straines Schwenckf The fl of the bulbous leucoium d. in wine h. stitches in the side Ginger Zingiber * P. In Spaine Barbary and the Canarie Ilands T. Fl. in heate of summer and looseth the leaves in winter N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Zinziber Gingiber Ginger Ger. T. is hot and dry 3° V. Diosc It 's exceeding good in conditures It healeth digesteth and looseth the belly corroborateth the stomack and h. scotoma's and answereth the effects of pepper Being canded it's hot and moist and c. venery and being dried it 's hot and dry as aforesaid Park K. As the brasill with a black root and the orientall V. it h. digestion and dissolveth winde and being dry it bindeth the belly Col Being ground on a whetstone and m. with salt in white wine and the eyes annointed therewith after residence it h. the web it h. all cold griefes as also the cough and toothache Parac The distilled oile h. ulcers Gladdon stinking Spatula faetida P. Gardens woods and shadowy places T. Fl in August the seed is ripe in September N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Xyris Spurgewort Gladdon stinking Ger. T. is hot and dry 3° V. The roots as of the other Irides are hot and extenuating h. the cough digest and consume grosse humors purge choller and tough flegme c. sleepe and h. gripings in the belly The root hereof h. the Kings evill and buboes d. in wine it provoketh the termes so used in a bath As a pessary it hasteneth the birth in plaisters it covereth bare bones with flesh boiled soft and ap The roots ap h. hard tumors and the Kings evill with hony it draweth our broken bones The meale h. rifts of the fundament and openeth the haemorrhoides the juyce as an errhine causeth sneezing and attracteth filthy excrements It h. all evill affections of the breast and lungs taken in sweet wine with spikenard or in whay with a little mastick The root of gladdon h. wounds and fractures of the head and attracteth splinters The seed mightily provoketh urine d. in wine it h. convulsions ruptures the sciatica strangury and flux of the belly removing the cause Park It h. the poyson of Serpents The juyce of the leaves roots h. the itch so Trag. And blemishes of the skin Boiled with vineger and ap it h. the tumors of the spleene and stops the gonorrhoea Dorsten The juyce ap h. the lepry Glasse-wort Kali P. In salt marshes almost every where T. It flowreth and flourisheth in the summer N. Kali Salicornia and Salsicornia The ashes Soda The salt Sal Alkali Glasse-wort Ger. J. K. as the common snaile and small T. Is hot and dry so the ashes yet more hot and dry sc 40 and caustick V. A little quantity of the herbe taken inwardly mightily provoketh urine and expelleth the dead child it purgeth forth watery humors and h. the dropsie a greater q. is deadly The sume hereof driveth away serpents The ashes are mixed with those medicines that h. scabbs and filth of the skinne Serap It consumeth excrescencies in ulcers Axungia vitri the flower of crystall or sendever doth wonderfully dry
Aurum comicum Plauti Lupine Ger. J. K. as the garden yellow blew and the great blew T. They are bitter and of an earthy substance not easily digested V. Being boiled and seasoned with salt they are eaten with pickle before they be steeped in water and have their bitternesse they clense wast and kill wormes taken with hony water and vineger or ap also ap it h. the morphew sore heads small pox wilde scabbes gangreens venemous ulcers by clensing consuming drying without biting Taken with rue pepper it scoureth the liver and spleene it moveth the courses and expells the dead child ap with myrrhe and hony The meale wasteth without biting h. spotts c. by dry beating chaeradas and phymata boiled in water and vineger or oxymel and operates as the decoction Boiled in raine water till they yeeld a creame they clense and beautify the face The root boiled with water and d. is diureticke Lupines made sweet m. with vineger and d. h. the loathsomenesse of the stomack and c. appetite Boiled in the strong lye which barbers use with wormewood centorie and bay salt they stop gangreenes and h. atrophicke members and stay the ambulative nature of phagedens ap hot with stuphes of cloth The decoction with the root of black chameleon thistle ap cureth the scabs that are in sheep Croll The decoction thereof expells the pox c. Dorst Aeg. Lupine is hot dry abstersive dissipating and drying without biting Taken with fennel seed it h. paines and winde of the intestines the decoction thereof with solatrum in wine h. the shortnesse of breath and heat and mollifyeth the belly ap it h. marisca's Park K. as the great white V. as the rest The juice mixt with the gall of a goat the juice of limmons and a little alumen saccharinum h. nodes impostumes The burning of the husks drives away gnats The wild are stronger for all purposes and more eflectuall M Madder Rubia P. In gardens and clifts of rocks the second in moist meadowes T. Fl. from May to September the roots are gathered in Autumne N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Erythrodanum Rubia tinctorum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nicandri MAdder Ger. J. K. as the red wilde sea small Candy and dwarse T. The root is cold dry somewhat binding and withall having divers thin parts and a little sweetnesse with a subsequent harsh tast yet is it doubted of by some whether it bind or open V. The decoction of the root h. burstings bruises wounds stoppeth bleeding h. inflammations It is used in vulnerary potions and h. wounds of the chest and intralls Jo. Spiring The decoction given with triphera magna stops the reds haemorroides and bloudy flix so it apeareth to be astringent it is also by some used in compositions against untimely birth Diosc thought it diuretick and that it would expell the menses and secundine and cause bloudy urine but this rather ariseth from the colour of it Thus it is evident that it doth not vehemently either bind or open Plin. The stalkes and leaves are used against serpents the root boiled in meade and d. openeth the liver spleen and kidnies and h. the jaundise and provoketh urine It h. the lothsomenesse of the Kings evill ulcers of the mouth there being added to the decoction a little allome and hony of roses The Synanchica Dalechampii dryeth without biting h. the squinancy d. and ap Lonic T. It 's hot 2° dry 3° V. with vineger it h. the itch Ern. The distilled oile h. the epilepsie apoplexie losse of speech 1 or 2 drops being put upon the tongue d. it h. the swelling of the spleen and quartan agues Park K. as the smooth leafed V. It h. the sciatica The seed taken with vineger and hony h. hard spleenes The small K. as the spiked headed and purple flowred T. V. are weaker Madwort Alyssum P. It 's often sowen in gardens the seed comes from Italy T. Fl and flourisheth in May the seed is ripe in August N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lunaria aspera Gesn Lutea vel Graeca Madwort Ger. K. as that of Gal and Diosc T. Gal It 's meanly dry digesting and scouring V. Taken it h. those that are bitten of a mad dogge it h. the morphew and sunburning c. Park K. as that of Columna V. that of Diosc d. stoppeth the hicket if there be no ague so also smelled to They also h. wounds inward outward digest clotted bloud and h. cancers and filthy ulcers Mallow Malva P. In gardens almost all the wild in untild places T. Fl. in July and Aug. the second yeare N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That of the garden is called Rosa ultra marina The marsh Althaea Bismalva Mallow Ger. The hollihocke K. as the single garden jagged strange double purple and double scarlet tree with double flowers T. is moderately hot and moist but not so much as the wild it hath a clammy substance especially the seed and root V. The decoction of the flowers especially those of the red boiled in red wine stops the courses The roots leaves and seeds operate as the wild which are more commonly used Wild Mallowes K. as the field dwarse French curled vervaine and Spanish T. are moderately hot and moist of slimy and glutmating juyce better than those of the garden moderately nourishing causing grosse bloud and loosening the belly V. The leaves h. the stinging of scorpions bees wasps c. Diosc being anointed with oile and the leaves stamped they hurt not at all The decoction with their roots d. h. against poyson it being vomited up again The leaves boiled soft ap mollifie tumors hard swellings of the mother hathed the fume being taken The decoction in clisters h. roughnesse fretting of the guts bladder fundament The roots of the Vervaine Mal. h. the bloudy flix inward burstings being d. with wine and water Note the French Mal. is the wholsomest to be eaten Marsh Mal. K. as the common water tree shrubby and hemp leafed T. is moderately hot but dryer than the rest the roots and seeds are more dry of thinner parts digesting and mollifying V. The leaves digest h. paines and concoct Mixed with fomentations and pultises ap they h. paines of the sides of the stone and bladder and in a bath h. all paines so the decoction of the leaves d. and expelleth the stone as also the roots seeds The decoction of the roots h. the bloudy flix by mitigating the frettings thereof and more effectually there being added the roots of bistort tormentill the flowers and rinds of pomegranats c. The mucilage of the roots is mixed with anodyne remedies Boiled in wine and the decoction d. it h. the stone bloudy flix sciatica cramps and convulsions The roots with the leaves of the common Mallowes and of violets boiled in water till soft then adding a little fennugreek and lineseed in powder the root of black bryony and barows grease
refresh the rage of lust The seed is of like operation with that of cucumbers Bor. Cent. 4. Obs 70. The continuall use hereof h. the consumption Mercury Mercurialis P. In untilled places by hedges in the shadow T. Fl. in June and July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the second Pes anserinus Tota bona Bonus Henricus Mercury Ger. The English T. is moderately hor and dry clensing and scouring V. The leaves boiled with other pot-herbes eaten loosen the body Bruised and ap they scour green wounds and old ulcers mundifie and heale them French Mercury K. as the male and female T. Is hot and dry 2° Gal. Clensing and digesting V. It 's used in clisters to scour the guts Taken it purgeth out flegme and choller Diosc The decoction purgeth forth watery humors The leaves stamped with butter and ap to the fundament provoke to the stoole the bruised herb ap as a pessarie clenseth the mother and h. conception Acost The juice m. with that of hollihocks and purslaine and anointed or bathed on the hands defendeth them from burning Wild Mercury K. as the dogs and male childrens with the female T. are thought to agree with the other Johns V. It 's reported by the Ancients that the male phyllon c. generation of boies and the female of girles At Salamantica they use their decoction against the bitings of mad dogs The Moores at Granado use them in womens diseases Dorst The common is hot and dry 1° Aver It consisteth of contrary substances c. stiptick sharpe and aqueous being fresh it gently purgeth and is therefore used in the beginning of severs before digestion The leaves ap h. the strangury and warts The seed d. with wormewood h. the Kings evill Heurn The Mercurialate hony purgeth melancholly Park K. as the wild called Quick in hand V. The common Mercury purgeth choller and water d. with myrrhe or pepper it h. the strangury and diseases of the reines and bladder So Hipp. As an errhine it h. catarrhes Matth. The seed d. h. the jaundise The last is emeticke Mezereon-tree Chamelaea Germanica P. In moist and shadowie woods in the East countries T. Fl. in spring the fruit is ripe in Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It 's thought to be Cneoron Theoph. Mezereon-tree Ger. T. is in all parts extream hot the fruit leaves and rinde are very sharpe and biting inflaming the throat V. The leaves vehemently purge flegme choller waterishhumors it is very dangerous to be taken inwardly inflaming like the sea Tithymale It may be used in stead of the spurge olive prepared like it One or 2. berries of it being eaten c. abstinence from drinking by reason of the heate Senn. The leaves macerated in vineger or the juice of quinces are given in powder from gr 5. to 10. with mastick and spike Mac. The antidote is organie Jo. Terra Le●nia and milke with butter Park It 's to be given to strong bodies and not without correctives Milke-wort Polygala P. In woods and fertile pastures T. Fl. from May to August N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Flos ambarvalis Dod Crucis Gesneri Milke-wort Ger. K. as the creeping blow red white purple T. Gal. they may serve in stead of Glaux Johns V. a handfull hereof steeped all night in wine and d. in the morning will effectually purge choler Black milk-wort Glaux T. is dry 2° V. The seed is like that of the lentils but not so astringent it stops fluxes dryeth the moisture of the stomack and engendreth milk Schwenckf The skie coloured ap h. inflammations and lenifieth tumors That of Matth. is astringent Park K. as the greater and lesser T. V. as the rest That of the sea K. as the small and Venetian of Alpinus T. V. is galactogenetick Bauh The first is hot and moist Millet Milium P. In light and loose mould and moist T. It 's to be sown in Aprill and May. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Paspale Hipp. Meline Varronis Millet Ger. T. Gal. is cold 1° dry 3° of thin substance The meale m. with tarr h. the bitings of all venimous beasts ap Of this is made Ambrose his syrup against agues which is diaphoreticke and quencheth thirst and is thus made take unhusked mill q. s boile it untill it be broken then take unc 5. of the decoction to which adde unc 2. of the best white wine give it hot to the patient well covered Millet parched and put into a linnen bagge ap h. the tormina or any paine c. by cold Turky millet Sorghum T. is like to panick V. The bread thereof is oligotrophick Weck The common stops the belly and provokes urine Park Matth. The stalkes of the Indian millet h. kernells under the eares being burnt and taken Milt-wast Asplenium P. On old stone walls and rocks the rough on heaths T. It continueth green all the yeare N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Scolopendria Ceterach Mula herba Lonchitis Milt-wast Ger. J. K. as the common rough great rough and the bastard T. Are in a meane and of thin parts V. Diosc The leaves boiled in wine and d. for 40 dayes h. the spleen strangury yellow jaundise and stone h. the hicket and hinder conception Bor. Cent. 2. Obs 53. a ptisan hereof h. the dropsie Lonic T. It 's hot 1° and dry 2° V. decoct in wine it h. the Kings evill and the quartan ague It purgeth melancholy and dissolveth clotted bloud The distilled water thereof comforts the heart Aeg. it lessens the reines Col. it 's hot and dry 1° Park K. as the small V. the rough h. wounds and inflammations Matth. drach 1. of the dust of the leaves m. with drach sem of amber powdered and taken with the juyce of purslain h. the gonorrhoea d. it h. melancholy and the French disease Mints Mentha P. In gardens almost every where T. They flower and flourish in summer N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Yerva buena Hisp Mints Ger. J. K. as the red garden curled speare heart and balsam mint T. Is hot and dry 3° somewhat bitter harsh is inferiour to calamint it exhilerates the mind and provoketh appetite V. It 's very wholsome for the stomack and staieth the hicket vomiting and the chollerick passion taken with the juice of a soure pomegranate Gal. With water and vineger it h. the vomiting of bloud Plin. In broth it stayeth the flowers and whites sc the first ap to the temples it h. the head-ach It h. watering eyes breakings out of the head and infirmities of the fundament With meade it h. the eares Taken inwardly it defends from serpents ap with salt it h the bitings of mad dogs It keepeth milke from curdling d. and hindereth generation by condensating the sperme Diosc ap it hindereth conception Garden Mint d. doth calefie the stomack expell superfluous humors and c. digestion Water Mint or horsemint K. as the common water calamint horse party coloured small mountain and turnep rooted horsemint T. is hot
the root h. the white morphew ap after rubification Onion asphodill T. Gal. operates as Aron and hath an abstersive quality the root doth attenuate and open V. the young springs h. the yellow jaundise Gal the ashes of the bulbe h. the scalld head Bauh the root and fl of the first ap with wine h. the bitings of serpents the joyce of the root put into the opposite eare h. the tooth-ache Oile being heated at the fire in the excavated root thereof h. burnings and kibes and paine of the ears Avens Caryophyllata P. High mountains thick woods shadowy places T. Fl. in May till Aug the seed is ripe in July N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sylvat Sanamunda Herba benedicta Nardus rustica Avens Ger J K. as the common mountaine fine leaved red fl mountaine and dwa 〈◊〉 T. the root and leaves are manifestly d●y something hot and scouring V. decoct in wine and d they h. crude stomacks the collick bitings of venemous beasts stitches and pains of the sides stoppings of the liver and scoure the intralls and with wine h. the wind the leaves and roots d. h. clotted bloud the roots in Autumne dried kill moths are odoriserous and operate as Cinquefoile Park the root thereof d. h inward wounds fluxes and ruptures The infusion of the root d. in the morning prevents the plague or any poyson Matth the mountaine Avens operate as the first and more speedily Schrod it 's hot and drie 2° a little astringent discutient cephalick and cardiack B Balme-Aple Balsamina P. Hot Regions Gardens Italy T. It 's to be sowen in April in horse-dung N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pomum Hierosol Viticella Caranza BAlsame-apple Ger T. the apples and leaves are much drying moderately cooling or hot 1° drie 2° V. the leaves h. green wounds bruised and ap d. with wine they h. the collick burstings and convulsions The leaves of the male poudered and d. in wine h. those that are deeply wounded and the collick the oile of the fruit h. green wounds cramps and shrunk sinnes ap and pains of child-birth the hemorrhoides and all other pains of the fundament The leaves d. in wine h. ruptures The female is neer the first in temperature the oyle of the fruit h. inflamed wounds and consolidateth it h. ulcers of the duggs and privities with a pessarie The apple ap h. wounded and pricked sinews scalding and scarres ap and d. and barrennesse bathed and ap Park The oile h. scarres proceeding of wounds pains of the stinging of bees and consumes moisture Balsam-tree Balsamum * P. In Egypt and the Indies T. It 's green all the yeare N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The liquor opobalsamum the fr. carpobalsamum the wood xylobalsamum Balsam-tree Ger. T. balsam is hot and drie 2° with astriction V. naturall balsam taken fasting in the morning with rose-water or wine the q. of 5 or 6 drops h. rhose that are asthmatick it h. paines of the bladder and stomack and comforteth the same it h. stinking breath and the shaking fits of the quotidian ague also it cureth consumptions and clenseth the wombe being used as a pessarie the stomack being annoinred therewith it h. digestion preventeth obstruction and windinesse it h. hardnesse of the spleene pains of the reines and belly c. of cold and all aches ap with a linnen cloth also it dissolveth oedematous tumors and strengthneth the members it comforteth the braine h. palsies convulsions and all griefes of the sinews ap and speedily cureth green wounds Balsam-tree of Hispaniola yeeldeth a ●uyce which being boyled in water to the thicknesse of hony h. wounds and ulcers stops bleeding and is more effectuall then the true balsam the water which issueth out of the branches being cutt off is vulnetary and h. all cold diseases being drunk some few daies together The balsametree of Clusius called Molle by the Indians T. is astringent hot and compounded of diverse faculties V. the berries sod in water make a most wholsome drink vineger and hony The leaves boyled and the decoction d. h. all cold diseases the white gum being dissolved in milke ap h. the web of the eyes and cleareth the sight the decoction of the barke used as a bath h. the paine and swellings of the leggs This tree is of such estimation among the Indians that they worship it as a God according to their savage rites and ceremonies Park V. the liquor of the first h. all poysons and infections all agues arising from obstructions and all diseases of cold and wind and the cough The Indian is as the first Barbery-bush Berberis P. Deserts Woods borders of fields T. It hath leaves in Aprill Fl and Fr in Sept N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Crespinus oxyacantha uva crespina Barbery bush Ger T. the leaves and berries are cold and drie 2° Gal of thin parts cutting V. the leaves season meat as sorrell The decoction h. cholerick agues heat of the bloud and liver so the berries h. hot laskes bloody flix and bleeding The green leaves made into a sauce as sorrell h. hot stomacks burning agues and appetite lost the conserve of the fruit more effectually The roots steeped certain daies in strong lie of the ashes of ash-tree colour the haire yellow Johns the bark of the roots h. the jaundise Park the juyce stopps womens courses taken with Southernwood water and sugar it killeth wormes it h. haemoptysis fastneth the teeth stopps rheumes gleweth wounds the inner bark d. h. the jaundise Barley Hordeum P. Loose and drie ground almost every where T. It is to be sowen in March it 's ripe in Aug N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 these barleyes are called distichon and polystichon Barley Ger K. as the common and beare Barley T. is cold and drie 1° abstersive and drying more then bean meale V. Diose it cleanseth provoketh urine c. windinesse and hurteth the stomack the meale boyled in hydromel with figgs h. inflammations with pitch rofin and pigeons dung it softneth and ripeneth hard swellings with melilot and poppy seeds it h. pain in the sides ap with line-seed senugreek and rue it h. winde in the gutts with tar wax oile and the urine of a boy it doth digest soften and ripen hard swellings in the throat as the Kings evill boiled with wine myrtles the barke of the pome-granate wilde pears and the leaves of brambles it h. the laske the ale or beere made of it boyled to a salve and ap h. pains of the sinews and joynts or for old and new sores take strong ale lib. 2. one oxe gall boyle them gently with stirring adde vineger lib. 1. olibanum unc 1. fl of camomill and melilot an unc 1. rue finely poudered unc sem a litle hony and a small q. of the pouder of cominseed boyle them to an unguent and ap it h. old and new sores also the meale boyled in water with garden night-shade the leaves of garden poppy the pouder of senugreeke lineseed and
a litle hoggs grease h. all hot swellings and the dropsie The naked Barley Ger V. boyled in water h. burning choler also in vehement fevers adde the seeds of white poppy and lettuce to cause sleep and for shortnesse of breath adde figgs raisins of the sun licorise and anniseed boyled with whay the leaves of sorrell marigolds and scabious it h. the thirst and inflamed livers d. 1 and last in the day Wall-barley and burnt stamped and ap c. haire to grow French barley Pem h. severs of choller diseases of the brest sharpnesse of the throat and c. milke outwardly it mollifieth Park Way barley makes haire grow the caustick is hot 4° Barth Ang the ptisan of barley quencheth thirst and h. the feverish heat of the body also it nourisheth and comforteth the same Fuch Diose the best is white and the ptysan thereof h. the roughnesse of the throat Cam Matth. it h. the plurisie tabes and marasmus and those that are hectick especially with the seeds of gourds cucumbers c. Barren-wort Epimedium P. In moist meadowes and shadowy places T. Fl in Aprill and May and unto the middle of Aug. N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Epimetrum Epipetron Barren-wort Ger Gal T. is moderately cold with a watery moisture as yet not used in physick Park it keepeth womens breasts from growing over great being made into a cataplasme with oyle and applied Plin Diosc Gal the root maketh women barren taken inwardly as also the leaves poudered and taken in wine for some time so Bauhinus Basill Ocymum P. Gardens The wild in gravelly watery ground T. Fl in June and July by little and little N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Basilicum The wilde Acin●s Basill Ger Johns K. as the great citron bush and Indian T. Gal is hot 2° with superfluous moisture ap it doth digest distribute and concoct V. Diosc if much eaten it dulleth the sight mollifieth the belly breedeth winde provoketh urine drieth up milke and is dyspeptick The juyce with fine meale of parched barly oile of roses and vineger h. inflammations and the stingings of venimous beasts The juyce d. in sack h. the head-ach ap clenseth the eyes and drieth them The seed d. h. melancholy short windednesse and strangury and is a sternutatory The smell h. the heart and head The wild K. as the stone Fish Austrian field and wild Basill of the Alpes T. the seed of these wild Basils is hot and drie V. ap with wine the herbe h. paine of the eyes the juyce mundifieth them and h. catarrhes instilled The stone Bas stoppeth the laske and courses ap it h. inflammations these have moderate heat and astriction and cure the contrary diseases The cow-basil is not used in physick Ephemerum or quick fading Fl boyled in wine h. the toothach gargled Pem. Basill d. provoketh the termes expells the birth poyson h. swounings and c. venery ap it h. the lethargy iaundise and dropsie put into the eares with goose grease it h. the paine in young children with hony ap it h. spotts in the face the dose is from 1 ser to 43 gr Park the seed kills wormes lessens the spleen and with oxe gall h. scarres The broad leafed wild as the rest h. cramps hoe swellings and lasks Bauh Trag the first h. the flegme of the lungs being hot resolving and incisive Batchelours buttons Lychnis hortensis P. Gardens for ornament T. Fl in June and July N. Batrachion rapum D. Anthonii the double Batchelours buttons Ger J K. as the red white and degenerate with green floures T. V. are not yet discovered Double batchelours buttons K. as the double crowfoot double white double wild T. doc bite as the other crow feet doe V. the root applied doth exulcerate and attract the humours yet Dod. they are not so hot and dry as crow-foot Bawme Melissa P. Gardens Mountains woods T. Fl June July and Aug So the Assyrian N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Melites Aprastrum Citrago Melissophillum Bawine Ger J K. as the common Turky bastard with white and with purple Fl the smiths bawme smooth Molucca and thorny T. is hot and dry 2° Gal like hore-hound V. d. in wine it h. the bitings of venimous beasts melancholy and comforteth the heart the common d. h. the mother the juyce glutinateth wounds so the herbe with aqua vitae the hives of Bees rubbed with it draw others it h. the infirmities of the heart cold and moist stomacks c. concoction and openeth the braine d. in wine and ap it h. the bitings of mad doggs and d. it h. the tooth-ach the orthopnoea and eyes the leaves with salt h. the Kings evill hard swellings and the gout Smiths bawme h. greene wounds and ruptures and stayeth the whites Pem. d. it expells poyson and the plague it hurts hot and dry bodies the dose poudered is scrup 1 or 2. Park K. as the unpleasant and Assyrian great and prickly V. killeth wormes and h. the jaundise Sim Seth taken before sleep it c. pleasant dreames Plin d. in wine it h. the tormina Schrod its hot 2° drie 1° Bay-tree Laurus P. Gardens Hot regions In France Spaine c. T. It 's green Winter and Summer Fl in spring N. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Laurea Laudea veterum the wild Tinus Bay-tree Ger Gal T. the berries and leaves are hot and very drie yet the berries most the bark is more bitter and astringent V. the berries with hony h. ptysicks and consumptions of the lungs asthma's all rheumes about the chest and d. in wine h. the bitings and stingings of venimous beasts cure poyson and clense the morphew the juyce h. pains of the eares and deafnesse dropped in with old wine and oile of roses with ointments it h. wearinesse heateth and discusseth and inwardly quickneth the berries also h. cramps and convulsions the diseases of the stomack liver spleen and bladder warme a cold stomack concoct raw humors h. appetite open the liver and spleen and bring down urine the menses and secundine the oyle h. scabbs bruises spotts and congealed bloud and discusseth The leaves bathed h. the mother and bladder and ap h. the stinging of Bees with barley meale parched and bread they h. all inflammations and d. h. paine of the stomack and c. vomit The berries stamped with scammonie saffron vineger and oyle of roses m. to a liniment and ap h. the megrim 2 leaves eate first h. drunkennesse the barke of the root d. in wine h. urine breaks the stone and driveth it forth openeth stoppings of the inward parts and killeth the Foetus it h. the dropsie jaundise and floures stopped The wild K. as the common and Portingale T. V. are not discovered Cherry bay T. V. the fruit is good to be eaten c. not discovered Orange-bay T. V. the fruit is usually ●aten the rinde being taken off and is of easie concoction Green it h. fluxes ripe it looseneth the belly The decoction of the leaves h. swollen leggs and