THE GARDEN OF HEALTH, Containing the sundry rare and hidden virtues and properties of all kinds of Simples and Plants, together with the manner how they are to be used and applied in medicine for the health of man's body, against divers diseases and infirmities most common amongst men. Gathered by the long experience and industry of WILLIAM LANGHAM, practitioner in Physic. Imprinted at London. 15●●. To the Reader. IN this book are contained very many & strange effects and operations of all sorts of simples, gathered by the long experience and travail of the Author, so that for variety of things therein handled, it may be compared with any that are written of the like argument. All which simples with their uses are easily known, being plainly described in this book, and are gotten without any great cost or labour, the most of them being such as grow in most places, and are common amongst us. But for thy better direction, thou shalt understand (good Reader) that all the simples (except Oak, which being omitted in the right place, is set in the end of the book) are set down in order of the Alphabet, so that thou mayest without any difficulty find them by the titles of the pages: and to every simple is annexed a brief Table of the effects thereof. There are moreover two general Tables: the one at the beginning of the book, containing all the simples in order, with numbers directing to the several places where they are to be found: the other at the end setting down the names of the diseases and other operations, having those simples which afford any remedy for the same, added unto them in order so plainly, as thou canst not err therein. ¶ A Table of all the Simples contained in this Book. A. ACatia. Pag. 1 Acorus. Pag. 2 Adders tongue. Pag. 4 Agnus castus. Pag. 5 Alecost, Costmary, or Maudlinwort Pag. 6 Alehoofe, Ground ivy, Gilrumbith ground, or Tudnoore. Pag. 8 Alkakengie. Pag. 10 Allder ibid. Alysander. Pag. 11 Allgood. ibid. Alleluya, Claver, sorrel, or sorrel de Bois. Pag. 12 Almonds. Pag. 13 Aloes. Pag. 19 Amaradulcis. Pag. 23 Amoniacum. ibid. Anemone. Pag. 25 Angelica. ibid. aniseeds. Pag. 28 Apples. Pag. 31 Arach Pag. 34 Aron, or wake Robin. Pag. 35 Achangel. Pag. 37 Asmart, or Cyderach. ibid. Artichoke. Pag. 38 Ash. Pag. 39 Assafoetida Pag. 42 Auens, or herb Benet. Pag. 43 Asarabacca. Pag. 45 B. BAytree Pag. 46 Barbary. Pag. 52 Barley Pag. 53 Basil. Pag. 58 Balm Pag. 60 beans. Pag. 62 Beech. Pag. 65 Beets. Pag. 66 Bengewin Pag. 67 Beronie Pag. 69 Birch. Pag. 78 Bistort. ibid. Blessed thistle. Pag. 79 Bombase Pag. 85 Borage ibid. Box. Pag. 87 Bramblebreer. Pag. 87 Bread. Pag. 89 Broome. Pag. 91 Brookelime. Pag. 94 Brian. Pag. 95 Bryony. ibid. Buckthorne. Pag. 99 Bugle. ibid. bugloss. Pag. 100 Bullfoote. Pag. 102 Burr. Pag. 104 Bursa pastoris. Pag. 108 Burnet. Pag. 109 Butcher's broom. Pag. 111 Butter burr. ibid. C. CAlament. Pag. 112 Calamus aromaticus. Pag. 115 Caltrop. Pag. 116 Camomile. ibid. Capars. Pag. 120 Cardamom Pag. 122 Camepitis Pag. 123 Charlo●e ibid. Carrots ibid. Carway Pag. 125 Cassiafistula. ibid. Cat's tail. Pag. 126 Cedria. Pag. 127 Celondine. ibid. century. Pag. 131 Cetrach. Pag. 134 Cherytree. Pag. 135 chervil. Pag. 137 Chestnuts. Pag. 138 Chickweed. Pag. 139 cinnamon. Pag. 141 Cicory. Pag. 142 Cicers. Pag. 144 Ciperus. ibid. Cipers' tree. Pag. 145 Citrons. Pag. 146 Clary. ibid. Claver. Pag. 147 Cloves. Pag. 149 Coleworts. Pag. 150 Colophony. Pag. 156 Cockle. Pag. 157 Coriander. Pag. 158 Coloquintida. Pag. 160 Columbine. Pag. 162 Comferie. Pag. 163 Coral. Pag. 164 Cornefloure. Pag. 166 Corne-rose. ibid. Cotton weed. Pag. 167 Cowslip. ibid. Cowparsnip. Pag. 169 Crabs. ibid. Crane's bill. Pag. 170 Cresses. ibid. Crowfoote. Pag. 173 Cubebs. Pag. 174 Cucumber. Pag. 175. 176 Cumminseedes. Pag. 177 Currant. Pag. 183 D. DAffadil. Pag. 183 Damsons. Pag. 184 Danewort. Pag. 185 Dandelion. Pag. 187 Darnel. Pag. 188 Dasy. Pag. 189 Dates. Pag. 191 Dead nettle. Pag. 192 Dew. ibid. Daucus. ibid. Diagridium. ibid. Dill. Pag. 193 Dittanie. Pag. 195 Docks. Pag. 196 Dodder. Pag. 199 Dogge-fennell. Pag. 200 Dragagant. Pag. 201 Dragons. Pag. 202 Ducks meat. Pag. 204 Dwarfgentian, or Soap wortgentian. ibid. E. EArth-nut. Pag. 205 Earthbinde. ibid. Eyebright. ibid. agrimony. Pag. 206 Elaterium. Pag. 210 Elecampana. Pag. 211 Eldrens, or Bourtree. Pag. 214 Eldern. Pag. 217 Ellebore white. Pag. 218 Ellebore black. Pag. 220 Eglantine. Pag. 223 Elm. ibid. Endive. Pag. 224 Epithime. Pag. 225 Euphorbium. ibid. Eringium. Pag. 227 Erisimon. Pag. 229 Esula. Pag. 230 F. FEarne Pag. 230 Fenegreke Pag. 231 Feverfue. Pag. 233 Fennell. Pag. 235 Figs Pag. 243 Filipendula. Pag. 249 Fitches. Pag. 250 Fiveleafe. Pag. 251 Flags. Pag. 254 Flax. Pag. 255 Fleawort. Pag. 258 Flower deluce. Pag. 259 Flower amor. Pag. 264 Fluellin, or Veron. Pag. 265 Fox glove. Pag. 265 Frankincense. Pag. 266 Fumiterre. Pag. 268 Furs. Pag. 270 G. GAlbanum. Pag. 271 Gallingale. Pag. 273 Gall, or noble Myrtle, etc. Pag. 274 Gallion. ibid. Garlic. ibid. Gelovers. Pag. 281 Gentian Pag. 283 Germander. Pag. 285 Ginger. Pag. 287 Goosberies', read Goosberies' Pag. 289 Goosefoote. Pag. 290 Gooseheirife. ibid. Goosetansie. Pag. 291 Gouldes. Pag. 292 Gourds. ibid. Grains. Pag. 294 Grass. Pag. 295 Gratiola. ibid. Gromel. ibid. Groundswel. Pag. 296 Guiacum Pag. 297 H. harefoot. Pag. 299 Hearts ease. ibid. Hartshorn planten. Pag. 300 Hartstong. ibid. hazel. Pag. 301 Havergrasse Pag. 304 Hawthorne. ibid. Heath hather. ibid. hay. Pag. 305 Hemlock. ibid. Hemp. Pag. 306 Henbane. Pag. 307 Herb Robert. Pag. 311 Hermodactil. ibid. Heps. ibid. Hypocistis. Pag. 312 Holly. Pag. 313 Holioke. ibid. Horehound. Pag. 322 Houndstong. Pag. 326 Herb Christopher. Pag. 328 Hops. ibid. Horsmint. Pag. 329 Horstaile. ibid. Houseleek. Pag. 330 I IAsmyn. Pag. 333 juniper. Pag. 334 juiubes. Pag. 336 ivy. ibid. K. Knotgrass. Pag. 341 L. LAdies mantle. Pag. 343 Lady thistle. ibid. Lark's spur. Pag. 344 Langdebeef. ibid. Lunaria, or, Moonwort ibid. Laureall. Pag. 345 Lavender. Pag. 346 Lavender spike. Pag. 348 Lavender cotton. Pag. 349 Leeks. ibid. lentils. Pag. 355 Lettuce. Pag. 356 Lentiske, or mastic tree. Pag. 359 Licium. Pag. 362 Liquorice ibid. Lillie. Pag. 364 Lignum aloes. Pag. 368 Lemons. ibid. Liverwort. Pag. 369 Long rape. Pag. 370 Lovage. Pag. 371 Linden tree. Pag. 373 Longwort. Pag. 374 Lupins. Pag. 375 Linaria. Pag. 376 M. MAces. Pag. 376 Madder. Pag. 377 Maiden hair. Pag. 379 Marierom. Pag. 380 Maple. Pag. 322 Marigold. ibid. Marsh mallow. Pag. 385 Meddlers. Pag. 387 Medowort. Pag. 388 Melilot. ibid. Melons. Pag. 389 Meu. Pag. 390 Mints. Pag. 391 Mirhis. Pag. 396 Milfoyle. Pag. 397 Mirabolanes. Pag. 399 Myrtle. Pag. 400 Myrrh Pag. 402 Millet Pag. 404 mistletoe. ibid. Monk's hood. Pag. 405 Mockgelover. Pag. 405 morel. Pag. 405 Morsus diaboli. Pag. 407 Moss. Pag. 408 Motherwort. Pag. 409 Mouseare. ibid. Mugwort. Pag. 410 Mulberry. Pag. 413 Mullin. Pag. 414 Mustard seed. Pag. 417 N. NAuewe. Pag. 423 Nenupher. ibid. Nettle. Pag. 425 Nigella. Pag. 433 Nutmegs. Pag. 435 Nux judica. Pag. 437 Nuxmethel. ibid. Nux vomica. ibidem O. Oak of Hierus. Pag. 437 Oak. Pag. 697 Olive. Pag. 438 Onions. Pag. 444 Orchis. Pag. 450 Opoponax. Pag. 451 Organie. Pag. 452 Opium. Pag. 454 Oranges. Pag. 455 Orpin. ibid. Oats. Pag. 456 P. PAlma Christi. Pag. 458 Pears. Pag. 459 parietary. Pag. 461. 470 parsnip. Pag. 464 Parsley. Pag. 466 Peaches. Pag. 471 Pease. Pag. 473 Pease earthnut. ibid. Peniwort. Pag. 474 Pellitory, or Magistrantia. ibid. Penyroyall. Pag. 477 Peony. Pag. 482 Pepper Pag. 485 Perwinckle. Pag. 489 Pimpernel. Pag. 490 Pine tree. Pag. 491 Pitch tree. Pag. 493 Plane tree. Pag. 494 Planten. Pag. 495 Plum tree. Pag. 499 polypody. ibid. Pomegranate. Pag. 501 Pompions. Pag. 504 Poplar. ibid. Poppy. Pag. 506 Privet. Pag. 509 Pursleine. ibid. Q. QVince. Pag. 512 R. Radish. Pag. 515 Rape. Pag. 521 Raspis. Pag. 522 Read rattle. Pag. 523 Reed. ibid. Reasins. Pag. 524 Restharrow. Pag. 527 Rice. Pag. 528 Rye. ibid. Ribwort. Pag. 530 Rocket. ibid. Rossolis. Pag. 531 Rose. Pag. 532 Rosemary. Pag. 559 Rose campian. Pag. 542 Rosin. Pag. 648 Rhubarb. Pag. 543 Rue. 544 Rush Pag. 558 S. SAffron. Pag. 567 Sagapenum. Pag. 573 Sage. Pag. 574 S. james wort. Pag. 581 S. john's wort. ibid. Sallow, willow, or withie. Pag. 58● Salsa perilla. Pag. 585 Sampeere. ibid. Sanicle. Pag. 587 Saracens consoun. Pag. 588 Satyrion ibid. savoury. Pag. 589 Savin. Pag. 590 Sausalone. Pag. 592 Saxifrage. ibid. Scala coeli. Pag. 594 Sea moss. ibid. Sebestens. ibid. Sene. Pag. 595 Setwall. Pag. 597 Shepherds needle. Pag. 600 Skirwits'. ibid. Skabions. ibid. Sloes. Pag. 602 Smallach. Pag. 603 Smirnium. Pag. 606 Soldanella. Pag. 607 Sorrel. ibid. Sothernwood. Pag. 609 Showbread. Pag. 612 Sowthistle, Pag. 613 Sparewort. Pag. 614 Sperage. ibid. spinach. Pag. 616 Splenwort. ibid. Spurge. ibid. Squilla. Pag. 617 Squinant. Pag. 619 Stavesacre. Pag. 620 Stinking horehound. Pag. 621 Spikenard. Pag. 622 Stichwort. ibid. Stoncrop. Pag. 623 Stecados. ibid. Strawberry. Pag. 624 T. tamarinds. Pag. 627 Tamariske. ibid. tansy. Pag. 629 Tarragon. Pag. 630 Tar. Pag. 631 Tasell. Pag. 632 Thapsia. Pag. 633 Thlaspi. Pag. 634 Thistle, ibid. Throughwaxe. Pag. 636 Thime. Pag. 637 Tithimal. Pag. 640 Tormentil. Pag. 642 Tragium. Pag. 645 Turpentine. ibid. Tutsan. Pag. 649 V Verivice. Pag. 649 Vinegar. Pag. 650 Veruine. Pag. 659 Violets. Pag. 662 Virga aurea. Pag. 665 W. WAll barley. Pag. 665 Walnuts. Pag. 666 Water cresses. Pag. 668 Water betony. Pag. 670 Water pepper. Pag. 671 Water planten. ibid. Wheat. ibid. White Saxifrage. Pag. 677 Wintercresse. Pag. 678 withwind. ibid. woad. ibib. Woodlillie. Pag. 679 Woodbine. Pag. 680 Woodrowel. Pag. 683 Wolfthistle. ibid. Wardens. ibid. Wormwood. Pag. 684 Y. YSope. Pag. 693 The Garden of Health, containing a description of all sorts of Simples, with their several virtues and properties. Abracock. (See Peach idem.) ¶ Acatia, ACatia stoppeth the lask, and the terms, and setteth the lose matrix in the natural place being drunk with read wine. 2 It is good to be laid to serpigo or wild fire, all inflammations and hot tumors, weals, and hot blisters of the mouth, and with eye medicines to heal inflammations, blast and swellings of the eyes being applied. 3 It maketh the hair black being often washed with the water wherein it hath been soaked: The leaves and tender crops of Acatia do settle and strengthen members that are out of joint, if they be bathed in a hot bath, or stew made with the broth thereof. 4 Being ground with vinegar, it abateth the pushes of the lepry. (See Sloes.) 5 In plasters it helpeth swellings, and humours in the eyes wonderfully, drink it for the flux, seeth it in the water of decoction of Pomegranates, or in vinegar, and drink it to kill worms. 6 Use it in a pessary to stop the flowers, to stop fluxes, use subfumigations thereof, or else drink it. Seed distilling use Acatia. 7 It helpeth the holy fire, apostumes and wounds of the eyes, it stoppeth the terms, it healeth creeping sores, the falling of the matrix, it stayeth vomiting, and strengtheneth the stomach, and ceaseth pain. (See Sloes.) Ache 7 Blisters 2 Blasting 2 Eyes apostume 7 swollen 2. 4. 7 Flix 1. 5. 6 Flowers to stop 1. 6. 7 Hair to be black 3 Holy fire 7 Inflammations 2 joints out 3 Lepry 4 Matrix loose 1 Mouth blisters 2 pushes 2. 4 Reins running 6 Seed distilling 6 Stomach weak 7 Swell 1 Tetters 1 Vomiting 7 Weals 1 Wildfire 1 Worms 5 Acorus, or Gladen. Drink half a spoonful of the powder of the Root with white wine, and use it as much in thy pottage to heal the elf cake and hardness of the side. 2 Stamp the root and strain it with some Rew and Mints in Ale, and make possets therewith, and drink the ale of them to expel urine. 3 The broth of the root procureth urine, is good for the pains of the side, liver and breast, the gnawing of the guts, drawings together or burstings, and for women's griefs as Iris is, it wasteth away the milt, and helpeth the strangury, & the bitings of serpents. 4 Drink a scruple of the root against all inward bruises with four ounces of honeyed wine. The root is much used among preservatives and Treacles. 5 The broth is good against the swellings of the stones, and all hardness and gathering of humours being sodden in wine and laid to. 6 The juice driveth away the darkness of the eyes. 7 The root punned with a little Verdigreice, a little of the root of great century and a little honey, draweth forth all kinds of thorns, splints, and broken bones. 8 The root mixed with vinegar and applied, doth consume and waste cold tumors and swellings. 9 The juice rubbed on the place, driveth away and killeth the stinking worms, and moths called Cimici. 10 Half a dram of the seed taken with vinegar wasteth and cureth the hardness of the milce. 11 For the griefs of the liver and milt, bruise one pound of Acorus, and steep it three days in vinegar, then seeth it to the one half, than strain it, and put honey to it, and seeth it again till the vinegar be consumed, and take of this oxymel daily in the morning with the decoction of Acorus. 12 If any bear Acorus about them, they shall not have the bloody flux, nor the cramp. 13 seeth Acorus in water & use for the pleurisy, the griefs of the chest or breast, and of the liver or milt, the strangury and painful making of water. 14 Stamp the root and seeth it in water to the third part, and drink thereof three days, it doth wonderfully bring forth the urine, and healeth the strangury. Note that the same root or herb is not to be used in Agues. Calamus Aromaticus, or the root of Asarabacca may supply the want of it. (See in their places.) 15 For the stitch in the side drink powder of it with a draft of malmsey. 16 Toothache apply a piece of the root to the tooth that acheth. 17 For venom or poison drunk, stamp Gladen that groweth on high ground and Dragons, and drink it with wine. 18 To dry up wounds and to heal them up with clean flesh, although the bone be bore, apply powder of the root with honey. 19 For the dropsy in the belly & feet, and to kill worms, stamp a good quantity of the root and strain it in white wine and drink it. 20 Flux to stop, seeth bramble berries in water of the decoction thereof and use it, but if thou have an ache, bathe in the decoction of it, or wipe thee over with cloth weeted therein. 21 jaundice, bath in the decoction of Gladen and Ciclamen, or stamp them and drink them with water and cover thee to sweat. 22 Flowers to cause, make a pessary of the root, and anoint it with oil de Bay or common oil, and cast thereon powder of walwort, and put it in all night till it provoke it to bleed. 23 Pricks and bones to draw out, stamp the root and apply it. 24 Drink it to heal bruisings. 25 Boil it in water or ale, and strain it with honey, and boil it again, and scum it, and drink it warm in the morning's two hours before meat to purge waterish humours, and for the dropsy. 26 The conserve thereof made with the pap of the roots, two or three times so much honey or rather sugar, comforteth the stomach, and nourisheth and looseth tough phlegm downwards marvelously, and is good for the sickness of the brain, and sinews, and all diseases coming of phlegm, and openeth the natural course and the terms. 27 Stamp the root of Gladen, and drink it with stolen Ale, and the juice of Fumiterie morning and even fifteen days, and use this ointment therewith, stamp snails, and Read dock roots, and boil them with Barrowes grease, and put thereto brimstone and Mercury ana, and anoint any scab therewith, and be whole though it be of seven years continuance. 28 To bring down the flowers seeth Gladen roots in strong vinegar or wine and receive up the fume thereof into the matrix closely, etc. it never faileth, and therefore beware that you be not with child. 29 Face evil coloured distil the roots of Acorus, and of Turnips in a limbeck, and drink thereof five ounces before meat fifteen days. 30 Stinging of serpents, apply powder of the upper parts with wine. 31 To dissolve impostumes under the ear, boil the roots and stamp them with salt, and apply them. 32 Belly bound, drink the juice with the yolk of an egg hot as may be suffered. 33 Milt griefs, drink it with wine, sight to clear put in the juice. Belly bound 32 Blood flux 12 Bones to draw out 23 Brain griefs 26 Breast griefs 3. 13 Bruises inward 4. 24 Burstings 3 Cramp 12 Dropsy 19 25. Ear imposthume 31 Eyes dark 7 Elf cake 1 Face evil coloured 29 Phlegm 26 Flowers to 'cause 22. 28 Flux 20 Guts gnawing 3 Humours waterish to purge 25 jaundice 21 Liver griefs 3. 11 milt griefs 11. 33 milt hard 10 Moths to kill 9 Pleurisy 13 Poison drunk 17 Pricks to draw out 23 Serpents biting 3. 30 Sides hard 1 scabs 27 Stitch 15 Stomach to comfort 26 Stones swelling 5 Strangury 3. 13. 14 Teeth ache 16 Terms to open 26 Tumours to waste 8 Urine to expel 2. 3. 14 Wounds to heal 18 ¶ Adder's tongue. Adder's tongue, stamp it with Swine's grease, and apply it to all swellings, inflammations, ringwormes, and shingles, and to heal all wounds and cuts with speed. 2 It is singular good to heal wounds both inward and outward, and for all burstings and ruptures being sodden in wine and drunk. 3 Seethe it in water, and drink it against all hot fevers, inflammations of the liver, and all inward and outward heats. 3 Stamp it with swine's grease, and use it to all burning and spreading sores, hot swellings and impostumes, and the holy fire. 4 Apply it to a wound either green or dry to heal it speedily, drink the decoction of it to heal all inward wounds and all other griefs. Apply it to the new ruptures of children, and bind it hard with a truss. 5 Seethe it with Salad oil while it is green, and so it helpeth both swellings and sores, wounds, etc. 6 Being wrapped in Virgin's wax, and put into the left ear of a horse, it causeth him to fall as if he were dead, but being taken out, he riseth again. Apost. 3 Bursten 2. 4 Cuts 1. 5 Fevers hot 2 Holy fire 3 Horse 6 Hot griefs 2 Inflammations 12 Liver hot 2 Ring worms 1 Shingles 1 Sickness general 4 Sores 3. 4. 5 Swell 1. 3. 5 Wounds 1. 5 Agarike. (See Larch tree.) ¶ Agnus castus. AGnus castus is a singular good remedy for all such as would live chaste: for it withstandeth all filthy desire to lechery, it drieth up the seed of generation, whether it be taken in powder or decoction, or that the leaves be strawed in the bed to sleep upon, and therefore is called chaste, clean, or pure. 2 The seed drunk dissolveth all windiness in the stomach, entrailss, bowels, and matrix, and all other parts of the body, and openeth and cureth all hardness and stopping of the liver and milt, and is good in the beginnings of dropsies, one ounce being drunk with wine. 3 Taken by itself, or with Peneroiall, it provoketh terms, and so it doth, put in as a pessary. 4 Some mix it with oils and ointments that are made to heat, mollify, and heal the hard and stiff members that are waxed dead, sleepy, benumbed or wearied, it cureth also the cliffs and chaps of the fundiment and great gut being laid to with water. 5 Agnus castus driveth all venomous beasts from where it is scattered or burned. 6 It healeth all venomous bitings being applied, or the seed thereof drunk. 7 It helpeth hardness, stops, apostumations, and ulcers of the matrix, if women sit in the decoction or broth thereof. 8 The leaves with butter do dissolve the swellings of the cods being applied. 9 A branch or rod thereof carried in the hand, defendeth the bearer from chafing and weariness. 10 The seed drunk increaseth milk. 11 With vinegar and oil, it is good for the frenzy and lethargy. 12 The leaves sodden in wine and honey, heal the ulcers and sores of the mouth and gums. 13 For satyriasis or standing of the yard, eat the seeds thereof, or seeth it in wine, and plaster it to the reins and secret parts. 14 Agnus castus sodden in vinegar with Fenell, is good against the dropsy. 15 Sodden in salt water with Sage and Smallage, and the hinder part of the head washed therewith, helpeth the lethargy. 16 Being either drunk or carried about one, it taketh away lust. 17 A plaster thereof applied, helpeth the head ache that cometh of evil humours. (See Tutsan.) Beasts venomous to drive away. 5 Bitings venomous 6 Chastity to 'cause 1 Cod swollen 8 Dropsy 14 Frenzy 11 Fundament chapped 4 Head ache 17 lethargy 11. 15. Liver stopped 2 Lust to abate 16 Matrix sores 7 Members benumbed 4 Milk to increase 10 milt stopped 2 Mouth sores 12 Stomach windy 2 Terms to provoke 3 Weariness to preserve from 9 Yard standing 13 ¶ Alecost, Costmary, or Maudlinwort. ALecost, Costmary, or Maudlinwort, either alone or with Persnipseedes boiled in wine and drunk, cureth the gripings and torments of the belly or guts, and the flux. 2 The conserve of the leaves made with sugar, doth warm and dry the brain, and open the stopping thereof, and helpeth rheums & distillations taken in quantity of a bean. 3 Used in meats, as Sage and other herbs, especially in salads and sauces (for the which it is excellent) it yieldeth a proper sent or taste: Alecost and Maudlin be of equal virtues, they comfort the stomach. 4 The juice drunk killeth worms both small and great: it is good for the cold mother, it strengtheneth the stomach, whether it be drunk or applied, and stayeth vomiting. 5 The herb strawed or burned driveth away serpents, and is good against their poisons. 6 Being sodden in wine and drunk, it is good for them that have drunk Opium, or other venomous things, and for biting of serpents, especially one dram of the powder of the root thereof taken in wine, with the like weight of the seeds of wild Persnips. 7 It hath the nature of Feverfue in all things, and it is good for women to sit in the decoction thereof to provoke sweat, and to draw down the terms, and avoid the pain that cometh by retention of them. 8 The same stamped and applied taketh away hardness and swelling in any place. 9 The flowers of Maudlinwort sodden and drunk, killeth great worms in the belly, causeth sweat, and openeth the obstructions of the liver, milt, kidneys and bladder. The herb sodden in water is good for the hardness and swelling of the belly & matrix. 10 The flowers sodden in lee, and the head washed therewith, taketh away the scurf and scab thereof, and killeth louse: the flowers laid among clotheses, defendeth them from moths. 11 Stamp the herb with Melilote, and apply it but once to cuts of veins to heal them: eat the powder thereof with honey for the griefs of the mouth. 12 It healeth the griefs of the breast & lungs, it breaketh impostumes, draweth evil humours from the head, and is good for the stomach. 13 Use it to draw evil humours from the eyes, and for the griefs of the breast, lungs, stomach, and reins. (See Feverfue.) Belly ache 1 Bladder stopped 9 Brain griefs 2 Breast griefs 12. 13 Cuts 11 Flixe 1 Flowers stopped 7 Hard swelling 8 Hardness 8 Head griefs 12. 13 Impost. 12 Kidneys stopped 9 13 Lice 10 Liver stopped 9 Lungs griefs 12. 13 Milt stopped 9 Mother cold 4 Moths 10 Mouth griefs 11 Obstructions 9 Poison 5 Serpents 5 Scab & scurf 10 Stom. griefs 3. 4. 12 Swell 8 Sweated to 'cause 7. 8 Vain cut 11 Venom 5 Vomiting 4 Urine stopped. 9 Worms 4. 8 Wounds 11 ¶ Alehoofe, Ground ivy, Gilrumbith ground or Tudnoore. Stamp thereof, and put it into the ears to take away their noise and sounding, and deafness. 2 For pain in the soles of the feet, prick the leaves and bind them thereto to have present remedy. 3 The juice put into the nose doth purge the head. 4 For dallying and giddiness in the head, dip silk or wool in the juice thereof with vinegar, and apply it. 5 For all pain in the head, stamp the leaves with the white of an egg, and apply it. 6 seeth it in wine and drink it to expel poison, urine, terms, and the jaundice, and to open all obstructions of the liver & milt: the water thereof doth the like. 7 The leaves sodden in wine or water gargarised, helpeth the exulcerations and griefs of the jaws and mouth, and wash the secret parts of women, and all skabs therewith. 8 The juice thereof is very good to cleanse fistulas and such like, toothache. 9 Boil it with ginger in wine and hold thereof in thy mouth. 10 Eyes web, stamp the herb, flowers, and roots of Daisy one handful, Alehoofe somewhat more, and strain it with Ale or Beer, and then drink thereof. 11 Emerods', stamp Dasie roots, Persley, & Alehoofe with fresh grease, & put thereto a little Turpentine, & apply it. 12 The juice of Alehoofe and of Mouse-eare put into the nose purgeth rheum exceedingly, and taketh away the tooth ache. 13 seeth the juice of it with honey to help any thing that covereth the sight. 14 Mix the juice with honey and oil of Roses, and anoint the temples therewith and foreehead for the head ache, or mix the juice of it with a third part of oil, and put it blood warm into thy ears, to help the head ache, or stamp it with the white of an Eglantine, and apply it all night to thy forehead. 15 Mouth griefs, take honey one spoonful, vinegar two spoonful, water three spoonfuls, seeth them, and put thereto some juice of Ground ivy, and powder of Myrrh, and wash therewith. 16 Teeth ache grievous, anoint them with the juice and pour thereof into the ear on the same side. 17 Wash a handful of Alehoofe and dry it, then stamp it & strain it with one spoonful of thick cream, and anoint therewith burnings, & skaldings, inflammations, and all hot griefs. 18 Head turning or giddy, apply the juice with vinegar. 19 Meigrim, anoint the forehead and nostrils with the juice vinegar and oil, or stamp the leaves with the white of an egg, & apply it. 20 Eyes white spots, put in the juice. 21 Burn white Coprose and dissolve it in the juice, and put three drops into the deaf ear morning and evening daily. 22 seeth it with Swine's grease, and anoint all aches therewith. 23 Tetters or Ringwormes, mix the juice of Ground ivy with vinegar and Alom, and anoint therewith and be whole. 24 Frenzy and want of sleep, stamp Ground ivy and seeth it in water, and stamp it with lettuce and vinegar, and apply it to thy head and thou shalt sleep. 25 Head ache, put the juice of Alehoofe into the nose and be whole. 26 Ears deaf, dissolve burnt Coprose in the juice thereof, and put three drops thereof into your ear at morn & even daily. 27 Ears deaf drop in the juice. 28 Nose stinking, put in the juice of ivy leaves. 29 Ears dull, distil the juice with wine and use it. 30 Liver pains, drink powder of ivy and Endive. 31 Hand dried up or withered, anoint it against the fire with oil of Senuie seeds, or of Colewort seeds, and boil Danewort and Alehoofe a long time in wine, and foment therewith blood warm a long time, and then apply the herbs. 32 Fluxes general, boil Alehoofe & chervil in water, & wash thy feet therewith, if it mend thee not, thou shalt dye. Ache general 22 Ears deaf 1. 21. 26. 27. 29. Emerods' 11 Eyes spots 20 Eyes web 10 Feet soles pain 2 Fistilae 8 Frenzy 24 Fluxes general 32 Hand withered 31 Headache 14. 25 Head giddy 4. 5. 18 Head to purge 3 Hot griefs general 17 jaundice 6 Liver stopped 6. 30 Meigrem 19 milt stopped 6 Mouth griefs 7. 15 Nose stinking 28 Poison to expel 6 Rheum 12 Ringwormes 23 Sight 13 Sleep wanting 24 Terms to come down 6 Tetters 23 toothache 12. 16 Urine to expel 6 ¶ Alkakengie. ALkakengie, read Nightshad, or Winterchery, the leaves are cold as morel, and as good for all such griefs as Morrell serveth for, as Morrell itself outwardly, but not to be eaten. 2 The fruit openeth the stopping of the liver and kidneys, cleanseth the bladder, and provoketh urine. 3 And therefore very good against the jaundice, the ache of the reins and bladder, and provoketh urine, and helpeth the sharpness of the urine, and is good for the gravel and stone. 4 The juice of it and of Morrell is pressed out, and when it is dried, it is kept in the shadow for all purposes aforesaid. The juice of the berries dried in the shadow, is good for the dropsy, the stone, & stopping of the urine. (See Morrel.) Backeache 3 Bladder stopped 2 Dropsy 4 Gravel 3 Liverstopt 2 Stone 3. 4 Reins stopped 2 Urine hot 3 Urine stopped 2. 4 ¶ Allder. ALlder is good against impostumes and swellings in the throat, and kernels, or almonds under the tongue evil as well as the shales or green pills of Walnuts, it dieth black colour. 2 The leaves be much used against hot swellings, ulcers, and all inward inflammations. 3 The same are good to be put into the shoes of them that are surbated and weary, to mitigate the heat and pain. 4 The green leaves with their dew in the mornings, are good to be strawed in chambers to void fleas, the chamber being first swept. The bark with old iron put into water, maketh black as ink. The wood never rotteth in water nor in moist ground, but rather turneth into stone. 5 The juice of the bark is good for a burning. 6 The juice of black Allder which is yellow, being steeped in wine or beer and drunk, causeth to vomit vehemently, & cleanseth the stomach. 7 The same boiled in vinegar and holden in the mouth, suageth tooth ache, and cureth scurf and fretting sores being applied. The leaves cause kine to give good store of milk, if they eat them, for they are good fodder. Black to colour 4 Burn 5 Colouring 2 Feet sore 3 Fleaes 4 Impostumes 1 Inflammation 2 Kernels 1 Milk to 'cause 7 Mouth sores 1 scurf 7 Sores 7 Stomach cleansing 6 Surbated 3 Swell 2 Teethache 7 Throat swollen 1 Vomit to 'cause 6 Weariness 3 ¶ Alysander. ALysander the seeds drunk alone, or with honeyed water provoke terms, dissolveth wind and griping in the body, it warmeth the members that are taken with shaking, and is good for the strangury. 2 The root breaketh and expelleth the stone, provoketh urine, and is good for the pain in the reins, and ache in the sides. The seeds is of like virtue with the seeds of garden Persley, and in all things more convenient and better then common Persley. 3 Alysander drieth sores without any grief, and maketh ripe such as be hard. 4 The seeds provoke terms and urine, and are good against stopping of the breast, and shortness of breath, stamp Alysander, and apply it to stop blood. 5 For the colic, drink powder of the seeds of Alysander, Persley, and Fennell. To provoke urine, heat Alysander on a tile stone, and apply it to the privy parts, and so it voideth the pain. Blood to stop 4 Breast stopped 4 Breath short 4 colic 1. 5 Flowers stopped 1 Palsy 1 Sores 3. 4 Shaking 1 Stone 1 Strangury 1 Urine stopped 1. 2. 5 Windiness 1 ¶ Allgood. ALlgood, or wild Mercury, taken in meats or broths, doth soften the belly, and provoketh to the stool: the green herb stamped and applied, healeth old sores and green wounds, and killeth and bringeth forth worms engendered in the same. 2 The juice of the root with vinegar killeth scabs, and taketh away the filthy spots of the skin. 3 The same is good against venomous bitings: for worms in the ears and spots in the eyes, put in the juice. 4 Face deformed, seeth the root in water, and wash therewith, but beware it come not near the eyes. Belly bound, (See Mallows.) 5 To heal a canker, stamp Mercury, and apply it: warts to kill, rub them with the juice of it. 6 Eyes bruised, apply the juice with the white of an egg. (See Borage.) 7 Headskald, use the juice with other medicines. Wild tetters, fry it with oil Olive and hard Soap, and anoint therewith. Belly bound 1 Bitings venem. 3 Bruises 6 Ears worms 3 Eyes bruised 6 Face deformed 4 Head scaled 7 canker 5 Skabs 2 Skin cleansing 2 Sores 1 Spots 3 Tetter 7 Venom 3 Warts 5 Worms 1 Wounds 1 ¶ Alleluya, Claver Sorrell, or Sorrell de boys. IT is good for sick and feeble stomachs, for it drieth and doth strengthen the stomach, and causeth appetite. 2 It is good for stinking sores, & mouths being washed therewith. 3 It is good for them to eat of it that have the bursting of the guts. 4 The distilled water thereof quencheth thirst, comforteth the heart and liver, and is good for all hot diseases & inflammations. 5 With Alom it is good for all wounds, fistilaes, and sores of the mouth: it is good for all the hot griefs that the Pomegranate is good for, and the juice is good to be put into all cooling ointments. 6 Boil it with the flowers, and by itself in honeyed water or wine, and drink it to suage the hot burning and fretting of the bowels, or seeth it in water, and take it with a glister for the same purpose. 7 The same drunk in time convenient, stoppeth the whites. 8 The flowers or leaves sodden in oil and applied, doth ripen hot apostumes and swellings, and other tumours, and breaketh them, & sometime doth dissolve them clean. 9 Wash thy head with the decoction thereof, and apply the herb unto thy forehead for the swimming and giddiness or turning thereof. 10 The seeds and leaves sodden in wine and drunk, helpeth the diseases of the sides, the falling sickness, the dropsy, the strangury, both in men & women, and purgeth the humours menstrual. 11 Three drams thereof drunk with wine, doth help all venomous bitings, and will not suffer any venom to come within the body, and so it helpeth both tertians and quartaines. 12 It prevaileth much against poison or venom, if 25. grains or seed be drunk: it healeth wounds and kankers, it with the read flowers or Honeysuckles may be used for Fenigreeke. 13 The leaves taken with Oximell, is good against venomous bitings, and so is the decoction thereof with the root being also washed withal. 14 Drink three leaves of it against the fit of the Fever tertian, and four leaves against the Fever quartain with wine. (See Trefoyle.) The leaves and roots are mixed with Treacles, Mithridates, & preservatives made against poison, & the plague. 15 Being roasted in a Dock or Worte leaf, it fretteth away dead flesh of wounds, (See Sorrell, See Aniseedes.) 16 Headache wash thy head with lee made thereof. Appetite to cause 1 Apostume to ripen 8 Bitings venomous 11. 13 Bowels burning 6 Dropsy 10 Falling sickness 10 Fistilae 5 Flesh dead 15 Guts burst 3 Heart to comfort 4 Headache 16 Head giddy 9 Inflammation 4 canker 12 Mouth sores 5 Quarteine 11. 14 Sides griefs 10 Sores stinking 2 Strangury 10 Tertian 11. 14 Whites to stop 7 Wounds to heal 12 ¶ Almonds. 1 ALmonds taken before meat, stop the belly, & nourish but 2 little especially blaunched. Bitter Almonds do open the stops of the lungs, liver, milt, kidneys, & all other inner parts and are good against the cough, shortness of wind, inflammation, and exulceration of the lungs being mixed with Turpentine and licked in. 3 Almonds are good for them that spit blood taken in with five amill. Bitter Almonds taken in with sweet wine, as Bastard, or Muscadele, provoke urine, & cure the hardness of the same, and painfulness in making thereof, and are good for the gravel, and stone. 4 Eat five or six bitter Almonds fasting to withstand drunkenness that day, Apply them with oil of roses and vinegar to the headache, apply them with honey to corrupt and spreading sores, and the bitings of mad dogs. 5 They cleanse the skin & face from all spots, pimples, & lentils. 6 Blanch Almonds and Peach kernels in hot water, and stamp them and strain out the oil, and use it for the thickness of hearing, with tents of fine linen cloth new made every day, and keep them in 24. hours four or five days. 7 Bitter Almonds in a pessary bringeth down the terms, with wine they are good for weals and little sores, the same eaten take away ache, soften the belly, cause sleep, provoke urine, & stop vomiting of blood. 8 Drunk with water, or licked in with honey and milk as an electuary, as much as a hazel nut, they are good for the liver, the cough and the windy colic. 9 Sleep to cause take blaunched Almonds, one quart, hempseed half a pound, thrice washed in fair water, Dates 16. stamp them together with one ounce of Poppyseede bruised, and steep them in good ale three or four hours, then seeth it and strain it, and drink thereof. The gum drunk is good against vomiting of blood with vinegar, it healeth the skirfe and scab of the skin, drunk with sweet wine, or Malmsey, it helpeth the stone. 10 Sweet Almonds do increase the substance of the brain, cause pleasant sleep, and scour the passages of the urine and are good for lean folk, the oil of them is good for a dry cramp. 11 The oil of bitter Almonds is fittest for the worms, running and deafness of the ears. Almonds eaten with figs cleanse the breast and lungs, and do help shortness of wind. Almond milk is temperate in hot diseases. 12 Almond caudles comfort the principal parts of the body, and cause sleep. Almond butter is delicate for a stuffed breast. 13 Almond milk will cut, cleanse and scour gross humours, and may be made in the decoction of hens, partridges, or chickens, to strengthen nature, or with cold herbs, as Cycory, Endive, Violet leaves, etc. to cause sleep. 14 To cleanse the reins stamp Almonds with fine Venice Turpentine clean washed, & eat it for the colic, strangury, and stone: quench gold, silver, steel, or flints in Almond milk, wherein is put powder of Rice, and drink it to stop the flux. 15 Almond broths or cullisses, help shortness of breath, the cough, griefs of the lungs, liver, milt, & kidneys. With Almonds and amill is made march pain, fit for sick folks then for night banquets. 16 Almonds in meats are good for a raw stomach, the iliake and the stone: The juice of bitter Almonds is good for the sciatica. 17 The oil is good for the griefs and ache of the ears, head, hips, and kidneys. 18 Stamp one pound and strain them with a pint of water warm, and as much white wine, and half an ounce of Camphire, and one pint of Magerom water, and keep it in a close glass, and wash the face therewith for the heat thereof. 19 Put oil of roasted Almonds into a read onion and roast it, strain it, & put three drops into the ear cold as often as need is against deafness. For the bloody flux, seeth Germander in read wine, and drink it often daily, and eat parched Almonds after it. 20 For the Sciatica fill pigs cleyes with Almonds and burn altogether on a hot stone, and mix the powder with unguentum Genistae, and anoint therewith. 21 Stamp one pound of blaunched Almonds, & strain them with a pottle of Muscadel, & the yolks of eight eggs newlaid, & put in good store of Sugar, & seeth it a walm or two, & take thereof four spoonfuls morning and evening to help the consumption. 22 For the stone drink two ounces of oil of Sweet Almonds, with as much Aqua vitae. 23 To make oil of Almonds or of Nuts, blanch them, and put them into a pot full of holes in the bottom, and set it over a pot of seething water, and strain out the oil and use it. 24 Use Almonds in medicines for the cough and the lungs, and for the heat of the plague, consumptions, and weakness of the back. 25 Matrix to cleanse, stamp Bitter Almonds and put them in as a pessary, the same in like sort helpeth the mother. To stop a flux seeth Almonds in honey till they be black, and eat them. 26 Stamp Almonds with their skins, and make thereof Almond milk with water of hulled Barley sodden, and eat it with Sugar, and powder of the rinds and scorches of a Pomegranate for the bloody flux. 27 For the cough of children blanch Sweet Almonds & dissolve them in Fennell water, and distil them through a limbeck, & put Sugar to it, and boil it till it be thick, and let them eat it. 28 For the burning sores of the matrix in women with child, stamp Sweet Almonds and boil them in water with the marrow of an ox, and put a little meal to it, and anoint therewith cold, and after wash with the decoction of myrtels. 29 For the griefs of the head and neck, mix oil of sweet Almonds three ounces, with meal of March mallows an ounce & an half, and a sufficient quantity of wax: make it an ointment at the fire, and anoint therewith warm. 30 For the cough and shortness of wind of cold cause in children, anoint their breasts with the oil of Almonds and of Lilies mixed together. 31 For hart burning eat seven or eight Almonds. 32 For worms in children put in a suppositer of bombast dipped in oil of Bitter Almonds, for their cough and rheum, give them milk of blaunched Almonds well sodden in Fennell water. 33 For the swelling of their navel after cutting of it, seeth Spike celtike in oil of Almonds, and a little Turpentine and dip well therein and apply it. For the ruggedness, roughness and hardness of the skin and chaps of their lips and hands, anoint with oil of Sweet Almonds. Ache 16 Aches 16. 17. 29 Backache 17 Bellyache 7 Belly hard 7 Bloody flux 19 26 Blood spitting 9 Breast cleansing 11. 12 Breath short 1 Chaps 33 Cleansing 26 Colic 9 14. 16 Consumption 22 Cough 19 15. 24. 27. 30. 32 Cramp 10 Drunkenness 4 Ears dull 6. 11. 19 Face deformed 5 Fat to be 10 Flowers stopped 7 Fluxes 14. 25. 19 26 Gravel 3 Griefs 1. 15 Hartburning 31 Headache 4. 17. 29 Hotegriefes 11 Iliac pas. 16 Inflamed 28 Kidneysach 17 Leanness 10 Liver griefs 1. 9 15 Lungs griefs 2. 11. 15. 25 Mad dog 4 Miltgriefes 1. 15 Mother 26 Navel swollen 33 Neckgriefes 29 Obstructions 1 Plague 24 Sciatica 16. 17. 20 Shortwinded 11. 15. 30 Sleep to 'cause 7. 10. 12. 13 Skabs 9 Skinnefoule 5. 33. rough 33 scurf 9 Sores 4. 7 Spitting blood 3. 7. 9 Stomach raw 16. weak 13. 16 Stone 3. 9 14. 16. 29 Strangury 14 Urine stopped 3. 10 Vomiting blood 9 Weals 7 Windiness 9 Worms 32 Of the use of Oils dissolve Sugar in water of Violets, Roses, or cinnamon, and put thereto a drop or two of some oil that you mean to try, and make tables either square or round thereof, and minister them artly. Oil of Almonds or of Nuts, blanch them, Almonds. Nuts. and put them into a pot with holes in the bottom, and set it over a vessel of seething liquor, and press out the oil, the press must have two strong cheeks, and between them two plates of iron, hot, but not burning, and the Almonds in a bag of canvas, but if the things to be pressed be of a dry substance, they must be sprinkled with Aqua vitae and first made hot in an earthen pan, as take Almonds iiii. li. do off the pills with a knife, stamp them well in a marble mortar, and sprinkle them with the best Aqua vitae, and Rose water of each an ounce, and heat it so that your hand may not be holden in it, & then press out the oil into a porringer, and wash it if you will in an earthen pan, with rain water till it be white, this cleareth and beautifieth the skin in any place. Take Almonds x. li. cleansed well, powder of read six ounces, Sanders. Cloves. Cloves one ounce, White wine four ounces, Rose water three ounces, let them lie close beaten in a mortar well covered ten days beating them over once every day, than heat it and press out the oil as before, it causeth a comely, read, & beautiful skin. Take Sandrac, white Mastic ana three ounces, Sandrac. gum tragacanth two ounces, whites of new laid eggs two ounces, scraped Almonds vi.li. beat them well together, and cover them close six days, beating it, and stirring it about once every day, than heat it, and press out the oil, it cleareth the skin, and maketh it white and comely, and smooth without danger. Steep powder of Cloves, Cloves. Amber. cinnamon. Storax. Beniamine. Mace. or Cinnamom, or Musk, or Amber, or Storax, or Beniamine, or Maces in Rose water, until it hath received their strength, and dry it again, and steep it of new four or five times, then put thereto four times so many scraped Almonds stamped, then press out the oil, and set it in the sun to purify for a time. The oil of Cloves itself, hath all the virtues of Balm, it healeth fresh and green wounds, it stayeth the issues of blood and water in wounds, it comforteth within the natural parts, it purgeth melancholy blood, it comforteth the heart and head, especially it helpeth the giddiness of the head, and weakness of sight, three or four drops taken fasting in a spoon with some pleasant syrup, dainty thing, or wine, with the broth or cullis of a Capon, it helpeth the colic and suffocation two or three drops taken at once. In tables or lozengings taken morning and evening, strengtheneth the head, & stoppeth rheum, it healeth wounds without stitching. ¶ Aloes. ALoes purgeth cold phlegmatic and chollerik humours, especially from the stomach, and is the chief of all purging medicines which for the most part do hurt the stomach. 2 But this doth comfort, cleanse, and dry up and drive forth all superfluous humours two drams thereof being taken with water, or with Cinnamom, Ginger, Maces, Cubebs, Galingale, Aniseeds, and such like spices, as assuage and take away pain from the stomach, and cause phlegm to be expulsed. 3 It is also good against the jaundice, spitting blood, and all other issues of blood except emerods. 4 The powder thereof strawed on new bloody wounds, stoppeth blood, and healeth the wounds, and laid upon old sores it closeth them up, and is excellent against ulcers of the secret parts and fundament. 5 Boiled with wine and honey it healeth the outgrowing & rifes of the fundament, and stoppeth the abounding flux of the emerods being laid upon them. 6 But received into the body, it causeth them to bleed and break out: with honey it dispatcheth all dead blood of bruises. 7 It is good against all inflammations, hurts and skabs of the eyes, and the running and darkness of the same. Mixed with oil of Roses and Vinegar, and laid to the forehead & temples, it suageth the headache. Mix it with wine, and rub the head often therewith to keep the hair from falling. 8 Apply it with wine to the sores and pustules of the mouth, gums and throat, and the kernels under the tongue. 9 Apply it outwardly to stop bleeding of wounds, and to cleanse and heal them. Mix powder of Aloes Cicatrine with juice of coleworts, and make pills thereof as big as Beans, and take them to bedward three at once, to avoid all pain of the head. 10 Temper it withoyle of Roses, to provoke sleep. Mix it with Malmsey and apply it, to join together again the skin that covereth the knop of boy's yards. 11 For agnayles cut them off and apply Aloes. For rifts and hard lumps of the fundiment apply Aloes. Eyes skabd, bleared & itch in the corners, use Aloes, burn it in a burning hot vessel, and stir it often with a feather till it be all alike roasted, and so it is a good medicine for sore eyes. 12 Mix it with Dragon's blood and Myrrh, to heal stinking sores & old sores. With Myrrh it keepeth dead bodies from putrefaction & corruption. Mixed with the white of an egg it stoppeth bleeding both of the emerods & of any cut or wound. 13 It is evil for them that are of a hot nature, but good for them that are moist and cold. 14 Aloes Cicatrine is the best being bright & brittle. A little of it tempered with Rose water, and put into the eyes that are dropping and watery, cureth them. Mixed with Saffron and Myrrh and made into pills, it is the most excellent medicine against the plague. 15 With honey it taketh away the marks of stripes, and doth cleanse sores and ulcers. It is not good to be taken in Winter but in the Spring and Harvest. 16 The weight of a French crown mixed with Meed, and drunk in the morning doth purge choler and phlegm. The course Aloes is to be given half an ounce at once to Horses and great beasts tempered with ale. Drink a little Aloes with warm water to avoid vomiting. 17 For rubbing and itch by night, purge and bleed, and anoint with Aloes and Myrrh dissolved in water of Hony. For imposts of the yard, and wind in the bottom of the belly, let blood, and anoint with Aloes dissolved in wine: and for the wind foment with water of the decoction of Aristolochia rotunda. 18 For the Fever quarten take Aloes often, for loss of speech in sickness mix it with water, and role it in thy mouth. 29 For swelling of the belly, mix Myrrh, Aloes Epatica and Saffron with the juice of Beans and apply it, or take four penny weight of Aloes Cicatrine, with fair water first sodden & sweetened with Sugar. Apreseruative, take Aloes Cicatrine two ounces, Saffron five drams, read Myrrh four drams, make them into powder, and take thereof three penny weight with one spoonful of water of Scabious, & another of water of Wormwood before meat every month once. 20 To draw an Earwig out of the ear, put in powder of Aloes with vinegar. 21 Mix powder of Aloes Cicatrine with white wine, and let it stand all night, than strain it, and put thereof into the eyes to destroy the pearl and web, apply it with honey to the griefs of the gums and the exulcerations of the yard. 22 Headache, temper two parts of Aloes with a third part of mastic, and some juice of Wormwood, and make pills thereof as much as Peason, and take five or seven of them to bedward. 23 canker, mix powder of Aloes, quick Lime, and Orpiment, & use it till the dead flesh be eaten out, and then temper Ceruse with oil, & use it till it be whole. Sores, temper Aloes with yolks of eggs and apply it: it killeth worms, in the body. 24 Liver and milt griefs, take Aloes Epatica, with the juice of Smallage warm. 25 Worms, take powder of Aloes with honey, or mix it with the juice of Wormwood, & strike it on a read leather three fingers broad, and apply it to the navel three days. 26 Warm as much Aloes Cicatrine on a knives point as a Bean, make it into three pills with a little Read rose water, and take it with the pap of an Apple and Sugar, and within half an hour take a draft of possit ale to purge well: Headache and watching use powder of Aloes with oil of Roses, or take three pills as much as Beans made with the juice of coleworts. 27 Eyes dim and bloodshotten, apply Aloes with the white of an egg: Eyes itch put in Aloes with Fennel water being kept in a latin basin fifteen days. 28 Eyes ache and bloody, apply Aloes with a little Opium and woman's milk that suckleth a boy: Stomach griefs use Aloes: Belly bond mix Salgem Aloes; the gall of a Bull and oil together, and anoint the fundament to have present help. 29 Conception to cause, sit over the fume of Aloes: Drink Aloes Epatica with Sage and Sugar, to restore the liver. Worms to kill roast a penny weight in an Apple, and eat it fasting three mornings, or use the powder thereof with Myrrh. 30 A powder incarnative to be cast into wounds, take Myrrh three drams, Aloes four drams, Frankincense two drams and use it, for the hicket and loathing Aloes helpeth the stomach above all other things: Scab of salt phlegm anoint with Aloes, unquenched Lime and common oil. 31 Worms to kill apply a plaster of Aloes and Fenigreke on leather to thy navel, fundament sores use Aloes: Stomach to cleanse and to kill worms, take one dram of Aloes Cicatrine with honey. 32 Wounds to heal use powder of Aloes Sarcocol, & Sanguis Draconis. Worms to kill, make pills of Aloes and powder of Wormwood, and role them in butter, and swallow them down: Fundament fallen, cast on powder of Myrrh, Aloes, Gauls, and Frankincense of each like much. 33 Ears deaf put a little Aloes into hot water, or white wine, and drop it in and provoke sneezing with powder of Euphorbium: Colic, apply a plaster of warmed honey & Aloes. 34 Lice, Crablice, and Worms to kill, anoint with Aloes and Rose water. Privities ulcers, and to incarnate fresh wounds, use Aloes with burned Dill: Eyes dull and watering, put in Aloes with Rose water. 35 Worms, stamp Aloes with Bitter Almonds, and apply them to the navel, or apply it with Honey and vinegar, or Honey and an Ox gall. The juice of Broome with oil and Aloes killeth louse: Stomach pain, take every day two scruples of pills of Aloes washed, 36 Or take Aloes washed half an ounce, Honey Rosat, three ounces, seeth them in two pound of water to the one half, and strain it, and drink thereof every morning two ounces: Eyes tears and itch, steep Aloes epat. in Wine and Rose water, and wash or foment therewith. 37 Yard apostumed, anoint with Aloes dissolved in Wine. Crablice to kill, mix powder of Aloes Ceruse with oil of Roses or Swine's grease, and anoint. 38 Head whirling noise, and pain of the eyes, take pills made with Aloes half an ounce, mastic x. grains, as much as a small Beane, and take every night five of them: Eyes web, temper powder of Aloes Cicat. with White wine, and let it stand all night, and in the morning strain it and put it into the eye. 39 Headache great and heavy, mix powder of Aloes, Olibanum, mastic Ana, with vinegar and whites of eggs, and apply it with stuphes to the temples. 40 Liver and milt stopped, take as much Aloes as a Bean every other day with the juice of Smallage and some mastic or gum Arabik, or Aniseeds. 41 Swelling of blood letting, apply Aloes with yolks of eggs with vinegar, it killeth scab and itch: with juice of Burr, being taken inward, it helpeth the Gout: Ears noise, drop in a little Aloes with warm water, and provoke sneezing with Euphorbium. 42 Worms boil Aloes with Coloquintida and butter, and strain it, and anoint the stomach and belly therewith against the fire, or apply Aloes with the juice of Wormwood, or read leather to the navel, or drink powder of Aloes and Myrrh, or of Aloes, Myrrh, and Brimstone. 43 Face Saseflegme, mix the juice of Wormwood, & Read Docks with Aloes and anoint. 44 Ears worms, put in the juice of Wormwood and Horsemint with vinegar and Aloes. Belly bond anoint with the gall of a Bull or Ox, Aloes, Salt, and oil Olive by the fire. 45 Blood to stop, mix Aloes with mastic, Hare's hair, and the white of an egg, and apply it: Purgation, mix one ounce of Aloes, with one dram of Turpentine, the gall of a Bull or Ox, 46 and anoint the breast to purge upward, and the navel to purge downward, and three fingers lower to provoke menstrewes. Agnayles 11 Belly bound 28. 44. swollen 19 (see P.) Blood to stop 4. 9 13. 45 Bloody flux 3 Bruises 6 Chollik 18. 33 Conception 29 Crablice 34. 37 Ears dull, 33. noise, 38. 41. worms 44 Eyes dull, 27. 34. ache, 27. bloody, 27. itch, 27. 36. pearl 21. running, 14. 43. 36. web 38 Emerods' 5. 13 Face sausflegme 43 Fever quarten 18 Fundament fallen 32. rifts 5. sores 31 Gout 41 Headache, 7. 9 22. 26. 39 (see Purge.) noise 38 Hair falling 8 Hicket 30 Horses 16 jaundice 3 Inflammations 7 Itch 41. (see Scab.) canker 23 Kernels 8 Lice 34. 35 Liver griefs 25. 29. 40 Loathing 30 Milt griefs 24. 40 Mouth sores 8. 21 Palsy 18 Plague 14. 20 preservative 20 Privities sores 34 Purgation 1. 2. 9 16. 19 26. 36. 38. 39 40. 44. 45. 46 Scabs 7. 30. 41 Sleep to 'cause 10. 26 Sores 4. 12. 15. 23. 34. old 4. 12. 15 Speech lost 18 Spitting blood 3 Stomach griefs 28. 30. 35 Swell 40 Throat sores 8 Vomiting 16 Worms 24. 29. 31. 35. 42 Wounds 4. 9 13. 30. 32. 34 Yard griefs 10. 17. 21. 34. 37 ¶ Amaradulcis. AMaradulcis, or Woodnightshade, the decoction thereof in wine drunk, openeth all the stops of the liver, and is good against the jaundice coming of obstruction. 2 For all inward bruisings, dislocations, ruptures and hurts, of the inner parts, for it dissolveth the congealed blood, & bringeth it forth with the urine 3 And it doth cure and heal wounds and stripes. 4 Chop one pound of the wood thereof, put it into an earthen pot, with a pottle of white wine close covered, saving a hole in the midst of the lid, stopping it close round about with meal and water, and seeth it to the third part or more, and drink thereof first and last morning and evening for the jaundice that have continued long, and for old rotten Fevers. bruises 2 Bursten 2 Fevers old 4 jaundice 1. 4 joints out 2 Liver stopped 1. 4 Wounds 2 ¶ Amoniacum. AMoniacum, take one dram of it to lose the belly, and to drive forth cold slimy phlegm from the farthest parts, for shortness of breath, the stopping of the breast, the falling evil, the gout, the sciatica, headache, griefs of the brain, sinews, and extreme parts. 2 Mix it with honey & lick thereof to cleanse the breast, and 'cause easy spitting, or take it for the same purpose with the decoction of hulled Barley. 3 Take a little of it at once against the hardness and stopping of the milt, to expel a dead child, and the urine, but being taken too much or too often, it causeth one to piss blood. 4 Steep it in vinegar, and apply it to the swellings and hardness of the liver and milt. 5 Mix it with honey or pitch, and apply it to dissolve hard lumps or swellings, the knots that come of the gout in the joints and extreme parts, and to consume all cold tumours and wens. 6 Put it into all ointments and plasters that are made to chafe & warm, to suage pain, to soften and draw. 7 Apply it with oil Cyprus and Nitrum, to the Sciatica, and upon all pain and weariness of any part. Put it into collyries & eye medicines, to clear the sight, and avoid webs. Melt it with Assafoetida wax & oil, and apply it to the milt to make it soft and nesh. 8 For dazzling and all diseases of the eyes and head, take one dram with honey, mix it with honey, & anoint the gout to avoid the knots thereof. 9 It healeth skabs and roughness of the face. For worms take pills thereof made with honey, and dissolve it in vinegar, and apply it to the navel. To make the teeth fall out, anoint therewith and the juice of Henbane. 10 Milt griefs, apply it with Assafoetida dissolved in vinegar, and put thereto wax and powder of cost and of Wormwood, or only with Assafoetida and wax. The perfume thereof is good for the Lethargy. 11 Make pills thereof with the juice of Wormwood and Arsmart, and use them to kill worms in the belly. Roast the root of Monks Rhubarb, and mix it with Amoniake, and anoint skrophules therewith, and also apply it plasterwise. Ache 6. 7 Belly bound 1 Brain griefs 2 Breast stopped 1. 2 Breath short 1 Cold griefs 6 Dead child 5 Eyes dull 7 Face deformed 9 Falling evil 1 Giddiness 8 Gout 1. 5. 8 Hardness 5. 6 Headache 2 Kernels 11 Knots 5. 8 Lytargie 10 Liver griefs 4 Milt griefs 3. 10. hard. 8. 10 Sciatica 2. 7 Sinews griefs 2 Skrophules 11 Swell 5 Teeth to fall 9 Urine stopped 3 Wens 5 Weariness 7 Worms 9 11 ¶ Anemone. ANemone, the root chewed, draweth much moisture into the mouth. 2 The same boiled in wine prepared called Passum, and laid upon the eyes, cleareth the sight, and voideth the webs and spots. 3 The leaves and young branches boiled with clean husked Barley, causeth abundance of milk: the same put in as a pessary provoketh terms. 4 The juice of the root put into the nose purgeth the brain, and skowreth away filthy sores and leapries. Brain cleansing 1. 4 Eyes dull 1. 4 Flowers stopped 3 Headache see Brain Leaprie 4 Milk to 'cause 3 Sores 4 ¶ Angelica. ANgelica is good against all poison and venomous bitings, so that it is better to have it & Magistrantia, Lovage, Gentian, Elecampana, Aristolochia, & Petasites, than all Arabike and foreign wares. 2 It is called the root of the holy Ghost, and of all heal: it expelleth poison and rotten blood, and warmeth the body. 3 Half a dram of the root, with one dram of treacle drunk with three or four spoonful of the water thereof, and the body well covered to sweat, and forbearing other things three hours after it, driveth forth the plague, and delivereth the sick body, if no Treacle can be had, take a whole dram of the powder of the root. 4 The root smelled unto being steeped in vinegar, and a little of the vinegar drunk fasting now and then in the plague time, preserveth the body from the plague. 5 The water or powder of the root delivereth the body from torments coming of cold, the pleurisy, ruptures, griefs of the lungs, whereof come grievous coughs, the dropping of the urine, the strangury, the stopping of the flowers, swellings and windines, and such like, and so doth decoctions and potions made with the root thereof sodden in wine or honey. 6 Put the water into hollow teeth for their ache, and into the ears for their ache. 7 Put the juice or water into the eyes to clear them and sharpen the sight, and to take away the webs & mystinesse: put the juice, water, or powder into old and deep ulcers, to cover the bore bones with flesh. 8 Apply the water to the gout, sciatica, or any ache or bruises, to dissolve humours that are gathered together: mix the powder with pitch, and apply it to all venomous bitings. 9 The seeds have the same virtues that the roots have: the roots, seed or water, is excellent good against all inward diseases: it scoureth the gatherings of the pleurisy when it beginneth: it helpeth corrupt lungs, it is good against the colic and strangury, it provoketh terms, it helpeth inflammations and swellings. 10 Drop the juice of the root into the eyes to quicken the sight, and to cleanse them from all filth, and put it into teeth that ache to avoid the ache. 11 The water or powder is excellent good against rotten ulcers and kankerous sores to cleanse and heal them: put a piece of gold into the juice of Lemons 24. hours, and drink it with a little wine and powder of the root of Angelica, to help the plague though all hope were passed. 12 The root taken fasting, or but holden in the mouth, preserveth the body from all infection of the plague or poison. 13 If any be infected, let them drink one dram of the powder straightways in Winter with wine, and with water of Scabious, or of Carduus benedictus in Summer, or with Rose water, and cover him well to sweat both for the plague and poison. 14 The leaves stamped with Rue and Honey, are very good for the bitings of mad dogs, serpents, and vipers, if shortly after the hurt taken, the party drink of the wine wherein the leaves or root have been sodden. 15 For the pestilence, any sudden pestilent ague, or too much sudden sweeting, drink half a dram of the powder of the root with one dram of Treacle, and three or iiii. spoonful of water of the root, and cover thee well to sweat three hours. 16 It is good for all inward diseases, especially such as come of cold cause, and for women in travel, it expelleth wind. 17 The root or seed may be sodden in wine or water as the disease requireth, and so it healeth all inward ulcers, bruises, and congealed blood, and strengtheneth the stomach. 18 The powder of the root is good against all swooning passions of the heart, it is gathered in Autumn, and kept two or three years, it cleanseth the lungs, breast, guts, reins and bladder. 19 The herb sodden in water, healeth all inward wounds, strengtheneth the heart, and drieth up all superfluous moisture, as the dropsy and tympany. 20 It helpeth against vomiting and weakness of the stomach, and being sodden with Rue, honey and wine, it delivereth from the bitings of serpents, snakes, etc. and also any prick or wound. 21 It quencheth all carnal rage of youthful lust, if one eat half a dram of it: it hath many other virtues, for the which few herbs are to be compared unto it. 22 toothache put in a piece of the root, breath stinking of garlic chaw it, it may be used for like purposes as Carduus benedictus. 23 Powder of the leaf or root cleanseth and healeth rotten ulcers, kankers and sores, and covereth the bones with flesh, (See Blessed thistle.) Swooning and all passions of the heart, drink two ounces of Angelica water, with a little cinnamon water, and one scruple of powder of the root sundry mornings. Ache 8 Back 19 Belly ache 5. 16. 10 swollen 6. 19 Bitings venomous 1. 8. 14. 20 Bladder griefs 6. 10. 18 Breast griefs 5. 10. 19 Breath stink 22 Bruises 2. 8. 17 Bursten 17 Chollike 5. 10. 6. 16 Cold griefs 16 Cough cold 6 Deliverance 16 Dropsy 19 Ears ache 6 Eyes dull 7 Flesh to grow 7 Fevers, (see Plague) Flowers stopped 6. 10 Gout 8 Heart weak 18. 19 Inflammations 10 canker 11. 13 Lungs griefs 5. 10. 19 Lust to avoid 12 Mad dog bitten 14 Plague 3. 4. 11. 12. 13. 15 Pleurisy 5. 9 Poison 1. 2. 12. 13. 15 Pricks 20 preservative 4 see Plague Reins griefs 19 Sciatica 8 Serpents 20 Sickness general 6. 9 16 Snake 20 Sores old 7. 11. 23. Stinging. (see By't) 14 Stomach weak 17. 20 Strangury 6. 10 Swell 10 Swooning 18 Teethache 6. 10. 22 Timpany 19 Venom 18. 14. 20 Ulcers old 7. 11. 23 Vomiting 20 Urine stopped 6. 10 Windiness 6. 16 Wounds 20 inward 19 20 ¶ Anniseedes. ANniseedes dissolve windiness, belching, and blasting of the stomach and belly, and helpeth their griping and torments, stoppeth the lask, provoketh urine, and voideth the stone, and the hycket or yexing, being taken dry or with wine or water. 2 It cureth the bloody-flixe, stoppeth the whites, is good for the dropsy, openeth the pipes of the liver, stauncheth thirst, and is good against all poison, and stingings of scorpions, and bitings of all venomous beasts. 3 The seeds eaten plenteously provoke lust, and do breed milk. 4 chew the seeds to make the breath easy and sweet, dry the seeds and mix them with honey, and use the same to cleanse the breast: mix them with honey and bitter Almonds to cure the old cough. 5 Let children that be in danger of the falling evil, use to hold the seeds in their hand, to avoid the peril of that disease: mix the seeds with honey, vinegar and hyssop, and gargoyle therewith for the squyncy and swelling in the throat. 6 Bind the seeds in a linen cloth, and smell to them to keep thee from evil dreams, starting in sleep, and to 'cause quiet rest: smell to the perfume of it to cure the head ache, put it into the ears with oil of Roses to cure their inward hurts & wounds. 7 Drink it with Ptisane, or clear temperate wine to open the stopping of the reins and matrix, use it in Ptisands for the Fever quotidian bred of phlegm. 8 Drink it with good white wine and sugar for the colic, windiness of the guts, and to stop the whites. 9 Make powder thereof with Fenell seeds, Galinggale, Spikenard, Tamarisk, Nutmegs & Cardamom, and mix it with wheat flower water and read wine, and make cakes thereof, and bake them and eat them daily for the running of the reins, wasting of nature, moist dropsies coming of wind and cold, the tympany and swelling of the belly, and be purged once a month with convenient Electuaries. 10 The same eaten or drunk, are good for the sight, the lungs, reins, stomach and bladder. 11 Use them in bread either broken or whole for the colic and stone: mix powder of Anniseedes and Cumminseedes with wax, and apply it to blackness that cometh of bruises. 12 Use to eat the seeds to heat the liver, and to help digestion. seeth them in wine, and drink it with cinnamon and mastic against grievous belchings of a cold stomach. 13 Seethe them in water with Heart's tongue, and drink it for the stopping of the liver and milt, for the dropsy and the whites. seeth powder of the seeds in a bag in wine, & apply it hot to the matrix to cleanse it, and to bring down the terms. 14 Take the seeds with Castory for the swelling of the stomach and bowels: eat or drink the seeds with vinegar and honey to help the strangling of the mother. 15 seeth them in wine, and drink it for the impostumes of the stomach, and the cough: drink the powder of them with wine against poison, with oil of Roses it helpeth the pain of the ears. 16 The fume thereof received into the nose helpeth the head ache: the best of them come out of Candie, and are clean and well smelling. 17 Anniseedes help the stops of the liver and milt, break wind, cause urine and sweat, and loosen the belly. 18 seeth one ounce with three sticks of bruised Liquorice, and two handful of Honeysuckle leaves in a quart of water to a pint, and drink thereof fasting for phlegm and stopping of the stomach. 19 seeth a handful of the seeds in a quart of Malmsey with a handful of unset Hyssop, till it be thick, and spread it on a toast of bread of Wheat with some butter, and apply it in a linen cloth to the stomach for the cough, but for a stitch apply it without butter. 20 Drink powder of Liquorice and Anniseedes with possit ale made with Sack and Ale, for the stuffing of the lungs every morning. Drink powder of Anniseedes and Cummin seeds five days morning and evening with wine to help for the windiness and colic of the belly. 21 To purge the stomach, seeth aniseeds & polypody ana three ounces in a quart of water to the one half, than strain it and sugar it and drink it. 22 To avoid windiness, thirst, oppilation of the liver and milt, to provoke lust, urine and terms, to clear the sight, and to cleanse and comfort the stomach, use Anniseedes. 23 For the dropsy, fill an old cock with polypody and Anniseedes, and seeth him well, and drink the broth, it helpeth also the colic. 24 To increase milk, use powder of the seeds: for windiness in the belly, drink powder of the seeds of anise, Fennell, and Cummin with wine first and last: for the hicket, or yexing, smell to dried Anniseedes: 25 For the Emerods', burn the seeds and apply them with honey: for the falling sickness, use Anniseedes and Rue in thy meats: mouth stink, wash it with the decoction of Anniseedes: heart cardiake, mix the juice of Betony with Treacle, powder of Cloves, Cummin, and anise ix days. 26 Vomiting of hot cause, eat Anniseedes fasting. Stomach slimy, and to help digestion, in Winter eat Anniseedes upon tostes of bread dipped in wine. 27 Belly ache and chafing of the liver, and to help digestion, use Anniseedes any way. Chollike and Nephretyke, drink powder of the seeds with the juice of Perslie: for the dropsy, use much water in the wine decocted with Anniseedes, or drink powder of the seeds of anise, Fennell, & Peony. Gout, stamp Sage leaves with Anniseedes, and seeth them in wine, and apply it. 28 Pipes stopped, seeth Anniseedes and Liquorice in running water to the one half, than strain it and drink it at even hot, and at morning cold. 29 A bag of aniseed, Salt, and Darnell, drieth up rheum. 30 Stomach rising, seeth long Pepper, Grains, Saffron, Ginger, Anniseedes and Liquorice, with Sugar in good Ale till it be thick, and drink thereof and be whole. Ache 28 Backeache 27 see stone chol. Belching 1. 12 see stom. Belly gripping 18. 27. (see wind swollen 8. 14. 24) Bound 17. windy 18. 14. 21. 24. (see stomach.) Bitings venom. 3 Black spots 11 Blasting 1 Bladder griefs 10 Bloudy-flixe 2 Breast cleansing 4. 20. 29 Breath short 4. 20. stinking. 4. 25. bruises 11 colic 8. 11. 21. 23 Cough old 4. 15. 19 Digestion 12. 26. 27 Dreams evil 6 Dropsy 2. 8. 13. 23. 27 Ears hurts 6. 16 Eyes dull 10. 22 Emerods' 25 Falling evil 5. 25 Fever quot. 7 Phlegm 18 Flux 1 Flowers stopped 14. 22 Gout 28 Hart cardiac 26 Headache 6. 16. rheum 29 Hyckit 1. 24 Impost. 15. 18. 21 Liver cold 12 stopped 2. 17. 20. 13. 22 Lungs griefs 2. 10. 11. 20. 29 Lust to 'cause 3. 22 Matrix cleansing 14. stopped 7 strangled 14 Milk to 'cause 3. 23 Milt stopped 13. 17. 22 Nature lost 8 Obstruct. 2 Pipes stopped 28 Poison 2. 15 Purgation 21 Reins running 8 stopped 7 10. 27 Rheum 29 Sleep to 'cause 6 Squyncy 5 Starting 6 Stinging 2 Stitch 19 Stomach griefs 12. 14. 18 22. 26. Impost. 15. 18. 21. rising 30 purging 21. 26. weak 22. 26. windy 1. 10 Stone 11. 27 Sweat to 'cause 17 Thirst 2. 22 Throat swollen 5 Tympany 8 Vomiting 26 Urine stopped 1. 17. 22 Whites to stop 28. 13 Windiness 8. 17. 22 ¶ Apples. APples: abhorring meat, make a syrup with the juice of sour Apples and of a Pomegranate and Sugar and use it. Cut Apples thin as a penny, and seeth them in a pan with Virgin's wax, and eat it as hot as may be suffered to stop the bloody flux. 2 Mix Chalk with the juice of Wildings or Crabs, and apply it to take away any pain of burnings, and bledders, or blisters. 3 Roast Frankincense in a read Apple, and apply it to the tooth ache. For horcenesse roast a great Apple, and slice it hot into a dish of water, & eat it to bedward, & cover thee well to sweat. 4 Stomach hot griefs, use confections of Apples with sugar. Pair Apples and slice them and fry them with virgin's wax, and eat it hot to cure the flux diaria. 5 Cough, eat roasted Apples with vinegar and Sugar-candy. Worms, roast one penny weight of Aloes cicat. in an Apple, and eat it three mornings. 6 Ears worm, make a ripe well smelling Apple hollow, and apply it to the ear, and the worm will come into it. Fluxes, apply plasters of sour Apples to the reins and navel. Fevers continual, use bitter sweets. 7 Bloody-fluxe, roast as much wax as a bean in an Apple, and eat it. seeth Apples to pap, and to vi. li. of it, put iiii. li. of honey, and seeth to perfection and use it. 8 Eyes heat and running, cut off the paring thick and apply the inside to bedward to help it speedily. Cough, roast Butter, English Saffron, and as much Sugar-candy as a Nutmeg in a great Apple, and eat such a one morning and evening. 9 Eyes to comfort, distil a peck of rotten Apples, and use the water. Roast iii or iiii. grains of Olibanum in a well smelling Apple on the embers, and eat it to break the imposthume of the pleurisy, or any other with speed. 10 seeth the inward yellow bark with wood, bone, or horn with Alum to colour it yellow. Face and nose-red, distil the blooms in Balnio Mariae, and wash with the water morning and evening daily. Distil it when it is full blown. 11 To ripen an apostume, roast an Apple in the embers, and mix it with butter and honey, or the yolk of an egg sodden, and apply it. 12 For griefs of the breast and breast bone, take out the core of a ripe Apple, and fill it with powder of Liquorice, and Galingale, or cinnamon and Honey, all well mixed together, and roast it and pill it and eat it as often as need is. For the chincough and other like, and for pain in the breast, roast salad oil in a great Apple in the embers, and apply it flat on the breast as often as need is. Liver hot, seeth the juice of Apples both sour and sweet, with almost twice so much sugar into a syrup, and take a little of it fasting daily with lukewarm water. 13 Apples do cool and comfort the stomach, especially such as are sourish, & astringent of taste. 14 And they may be used in hot Agues, and other heats of the stomach against thirst, but otherways hurtful to the stomach, causing windiness and blast in the belly. 15 Sour Apples boiled and eaten cold after meat, loosen the belly gently. Apples eaten before meat, do nourish very little, because they be waterish. 16 The leaves are good to be applied to hot tumours and apostumations in the beginning, and to wounds to keep them from evil heat and swelling. The leaves, flowers, and buds of every Appletree, but especially of the Quincetree, do stop and bind. 17 The tart and sour Apples do bind, but the ripe Apples are of a contrary. They that are taken at the spring engender choler, hurt all the sinews, and breed inflammations and hot burnings. 18 All Apples hurt the sinews, the unripe are very noisome, if a man eat, so that he fill himself with Apples, they engender the stone. 19 But they are good for them that swoone, and have a weak heart. The pap of an Apple with Rose water applied to the eyes, doth quench their burning, and taketh away their redness. 20 Apples be good in winter, and provoke urine: eat them with a little salt. 21 Tarts of Apples with Anniseedes, make a sweet breath: a cold roasted Apple eaten to bedward, looseneth the belly. Eat Apples with Comfects, Biscuits or Carwayes after meat. 21 To keep Apples long, lay them in honey, so that they touch not one another. Put frozen Apples into cold water, and they will come to their own nature again. Apostume 11 Belly bound 15. 17. 21. lose 17 biles 11 Blisters 2 Bones to colour 10 Bloody-fluxe 27 Breast griefs 11. 12. Breath stink 21 Burn 2 Chincough 12 Cough 5. 8. 9 12 Ears worms 6 Eyes griefs 8 heat 8. 20 running 8 read 20 Face read 10 Fevers 7. 14 Fluxes 4. 6 Heart griefs 19 Hot griefs 14. 16 Horcenesse 3 Impostume 9 Liver hot 12 Loathing 1 Nose read 10 Pleurisy 9 Stomach hot 4. 13 weak 1 Swell hot 15 Swooning 19 Tart 7. 21 Teethache 3 Thirst 14 Voice lost 3 Vein stopped 20 Wood to colour 10 Worms 5 Wounds 16 ¶ Arache. ARache used in pottage, openeth the belly. Take the seed with honeyed water to open and comfort the stopping of the liver and the jaundice. Apply the bruised leaves to inflammations and hot swellings at the beginning, namely that Arache of the Garden, & the wild Arache at the going away of the same swellings. 2 Apply it with honey, vinegar, and salt Peter, to the wild fire, & to the gout: but the much use of Arache bringeth many infirmities. Stamp it with honey & apply it to the gout. 3 Apply the juice to the holy fire, & other inflammations to cease and qualify them. 4 Apply the herb to the privy places of women to amend the evils within, and to cease the pain forthwith. Use the herb in pottage to loosen the belly, and to cool it and assuage divers swellings. 5 Stamp the herb and apply it to draw out splent, prick, or nail, and to heal the wound. Boil it with honey, and apply it to rough nails, to loosen them without pain. 6 seeth the seeds, and drink the broth for shortness of breath, to expel worms, and to cause vomit. Eat the herb for the heat of the liver. 7 Make pottage of Mercury and Arache, and eat them often for costynesse and pinching pain of the bladder. Use pottage of Beets, Arache and Mercury, to be delivered of the Ague in short time. The seeds purge the body both ways. 8 Stamp the leaves, and apply them to kernels and freckles. Apply plasters thereof to curdled milk in the breasts, being sodden in water, and drink that juice of Arache with thy broth. 9 To cause an easy vomit, and to cleanse the stomach, seeth the seeds in water without salt, and put thereto a little oil of nuts, and eat some course meat, and fill thy stomach, and then take the medicine, and labour a little. The seeds stamped, sodden and drunk, taketh away the Fever quartain. The seeds drunk with honeyed water, healeth the King's evil. Belly bound 1. 4. 7 Bladder griefs 7 Breasts sore 8 Breath short 6 Fevers 7 quartain 9 Frecles 8 Gout 2. 3 Holy fire 3 jaundice 1 Inflammation 1. 3 Kernels 8 Kings evil 9 Liver hot 6 stopped 1 Matrix and griefs 4 Nails rough 5 Pricks 5 Purgation 7 Swell hot 1. 4 Vomit to 'cause 6. 7. 9 Wildfire 2. 3 Worms 6 Wounds 5 ¶ Aron, or wake Robin. ARon, or wake Robin, the virtue is in the seed, root, and leaves. Applied with the dung of Oxen or Kine, it helpeth the gout in the feet. The whole herb is good to cleanse the breast. The root is gathered and laid up as the roots of Dragons and Showbread. 4 The juice in a pessary provoketh the terms. For the inflammation of the ears, boil the knots and leaves in wine with common oil, and put Cummin seed to it, and apply it plaster wise. 8 For the Emerods' and Fig in the fundament, boil it with Mulline in wine or water, and use it. 12 For old apostumes, stamp the herb with old Swine's grease, and apply it hot. For the scrofules, stamp the herb with Squilla, and old Boar's grease, and apply it. 16 To cleanse the face and skin, make fine powder of the knots of it, and mix it with Rose water, and dry it in the Sun, and do so four or five times, and then wash with the same powder & Rose water. Powder of the seeds mixed with oil, and dropped into the ear helpeth the soreness thereof. 20 The juice healeth the polip in the nose. And mixed with clean honey, it cleanseth the darkness of the eyes, and sodden with oil and applied hot, it cureth the Emerods. 24 The root, especially of that kind that hath the spotted leaves, either dry or green taken one dram at the lest, is a most present remedy against all poison and the plague: some put thereto as much Treacle. A spoonful or more of the juice of the herb drunk, hath the same properties. Put a little vinegar, and it will not blister the tongue. 28 The like is to be understanded of the root. 32 Take one dram of the powder, with two drams of sugar for the hickit or yexing, to cut gross humours, to cleanse the lungs, to help the cough, to purge the stomach of phlegm and melancholy. 36 The root either green or dry stamped and taken, doth mightily purge women after their childbirth. It doth the like unto cattle. 40 The juice or the distilled water hath the like effect, which also helpeth the swelling of the cod, being drunk two or three ounces at once with a little vinegar. There is no better medicine against the plague sore & Carbuncles, than the fresh leaves stamped and applied. 44 And the same either green or dry, doth help old and rotten sores of the feet. The water and juice purgeth & healeth all manner of sores. The leaves and roots sodden in wine or oil, and used in insessions, healeth the Figs of the fundiment, and the falling down of the same. 48 Some women put the leaves among their Cheese to kill the worms thereof, and to keep it from corruption, and to make it last long. 52 Stamp half a pound of the sodden or roasted roots, & seeth them with i li. and a half of honey, and use it to help them that can not draw their breath. 56 Dangerous coughs, catharres, and rheums, griefs of the breast, and cramps: for it ripeth and consumeth all gross humours, and scoureth all the inner parts. Seethe it with Rose leaves, oil, and wine, and Cummin, and apply it to heal the swellings of the tongue & ears. 60 Skin to cleanse, stamp the root, and anoint therewith. kernels, or Kings evil, stamp it with Boar's grease, and apply it. Apostumes old 12 Breast griefs 1. 32. 52 Breath straight 52 Carbuncle 40 Catharre 52 Cod swollen 40 Cheese rennites 48 Coughs 52 Cramps 52 Ears griefs 4. 20. 56 Eyes dull 20 Emerods' 8. 20 Face foul 16 Feet gout 1 Flowers stopped 4 Fundiment fig 8. 44 fallen 44 Gout 1 Hickit 32 Kernils 12. 60 Kings evil 60 Lungs griefs 32 Nose polip 20 Plague 24 Plague sore 40 Polyp 20 Poison 24 Purgation 24. 28. 32. 36 Rheum 52 Skrophules 12 Skin foul 16. 60 Sickness general 56 Sores old 40. 44 Swell 56 women's griefs 36 Worms 48 ¶ Archangel. ARchangel: Emerods', cast Brimstone upon hot coals, and lay blind Nettles thereon, and sit over the fume thereof, and do so thrice, and be whole. 2 To heal a fistula, seethe it in Wine or ale, and use the decoction, and apply the herb. Drink the root thereof with wine and pepper, to cure the ache of the reins. To stop the whites, seethe read Archangel in drink, and drink it morning and evening. The white is for a man. 3 Wits lost, cut the hair from the mould of the head, and apply it, and sleep and be whole. 4 Bruise Archangel white and read with salt, and apply it to hard wens, botches, and apostumes. In virtue it is much like the other nettles. The leaves of white Archangel stamped with salt, healeth bruisings, burnings, wens, swellings, gouts and wounds, sores and fistulas. 5 The white flowers stamped and applied, helpeth the shingles. The root stamped with salt, draweth forth thorns and pricks. 6 The herb stamped with salt, helpeth the swelling of the throat, and the biting of a dog, (See Nettle. Dead Nettle.) Apostumes 4 Backeach 2 Botches 4 Burn 4 Bitings 6 Bruises 4 Emerods' 1 Fistula 2. 4 Mad dog 3. 6 Pricks 5 Shingles 5 Sleep 3 Sores 4 Swell 4. 6 Venom 6 Wens 4 Whites 2 Wits lost 3 Wounds 4 ¶ Arsemart, or Cyderach. ARsmart, or Cyderach, stamp the green herb, and apply it to green or fresh wounds to cool and comfort them, and to keep them from impostumation & inflammation. The juice dropped in doth the like. 2 Ears deaf, put in the clear juice. Ears worms, drop in the juice with as much vinegar warm. 3 Liver stopped, drink two drams of Arsmart with a little vinegar. Flowers stopped, stamp it with wine, and apply it to the matrixe: Worms to kill, stamp it with Rue & Wormemood, and fry them with butter, or grease, and apply them to the stomach. 4 Ears worms, put in the juice. Worms to kill, use the juice. 5 Woman's belly great, not being with child, seethe Arsmart, Rue and Hyssop, ana one handful in a quart of Ale to the one half, and drink thereof first and last. 6 Gout, mix the distilled water with the gall of an Ox, & a little oil of Spike, & anoint therewith blood warm, and apply a blue cloth on it. 7 Apply a handful of Arsmart weeted in water to a wound or sore, and after bury it in a moist ground, and as it rotteth, the sore will heal miraculously. 6 Anoint an ache with a spoonful of Aqua vitae, and two spoons full of the distilled water morning and evening, five or six days, to heal it for ever. Ache 8 Apostume 2 Belly great 5 Ears deaf 2 worms 2. 4 Flowers stopped 3 Gout 6. 8 Inflammation 2 Liver stopped 3 Sores 7 Women 5 Worms 3 Wounds 1. 7 ¶ Artichoke. ARtichokes eaten raw, do amend the savour of the mouth. And the heads sodden tender and boiled after with vinegar and butter, and seasoned with salt, are greatly commended. Some eat them raw with Pepper and salt, and fine powder of Coliander seed cast upon them. 2 Steeped, or rather sodden in wine and eaten, they provoke urine. 3 Sodden in water and eaten, they strengthen the stomach. 4 Boil them with flesh broth, and serve them with a sauce of butter, or oil, or salt and vinegar. 5 Boil the root after the pith is taken out in wine and drink it, to avoid rank smell of the arm pits. 6 Steep the young shells or nuts in strong wine and eat them, to provoke urine. Boil the root, the pith taken out in water, and drink it to strengthen the stomach, and to confirm the place of conception, and to make it apt to conceive men children. 7 The first springs or tender imps sodden in good broth with butter, stayeth the voluntary course of the natural seed both in man and woman. 8 It delighteth to grow in earth mingled with ashes. 9 The root maketh urine sweet, and cleanseth out melancholy & phlegm which aboundeth. 10 The root sodden in wine to the third part and drunk after the bath, or after supper or dinner, cleanseth the urine abundantly, and purgeth the reins and bladder, and so healeth the stinking of the whole body. 11 To cause urine, and to help the Gomer passion, seeth Artichokes in wine and drink it. 12 Make holes in Bays and put in the seeds, and wrap them in dung & set them in the ground and they will be passing well smelling and pleasant, or steep the seeds three days. Appetite 3. 6 Back griefs 10 Bladder griefs 10 Breath stink 1 Conception 6. 7 Gomer passion 11 Lust to 'cause 2. 3. 6. 7 Matrix griefs 6 Reins running 11 Stinking sweat 5. 9 10 Stomach bad 3. 6 Urine stink 9 10. stopped 2. 6. 9 10 ¶ Ash. ASh: milt pain, seeth the rind in wine, and drink it fasting, six or seven days, and anoint the place with Dealthea. 2 Ears deaf, mix the sap of green Ash burned, Aqua vitae, and the juice of Houslecke ana one spoonful, with a spoonful of the grease of an Eel that is read beneath the navel, and put thereof with tents into the ear. 3 Plague: distill three ounces of the sap, with as much white wine, and drink every three hours, and at the end of xxiiii. hours thou shalt be cured. 4 Bitings or stingings of Serpents, stamp the leaves and apply them, or drink the juice. Vomit to stop, seeth the tender leaves in strong vinegar, then stamp them and apply them to the stomach or belly. For weals and blisters in the face, stamp the fresh leaves in the midst of the spring, let them stand to mollify five days, then distill them in Balneo Mariae, and wash therewith three weeks & be whole. 5 For the Megrim and Toothache, mix ashes of the bark with spittle and apply it: Wind in the guts: drink the read seed with wine. 6 Ears pain, put in the sap of burned Ash. 7 And with the grease of an Eel, and oil of Bitter Almonds for deafness. 8 Stomach griefs general, drink powder of the seeds of Ash, Flax, and Cummin of each like much with hot water or hot wort. 9 Milt griefs, seeth a bough in wine or water, and use it. 10 Green sickness, seeth powder of the Keys with Betonie, read Sage, read Mynts, and Magerom in running water from a pottle to a quart, and drink thereof a good draft with Sugar warm morning and evening. 11 Blood to stop, smell to Moss that groweth at the root of an Ash tree. 12 Fever Quarten, seeth the middle bark of an Ash with Centory, Rue, and Wormwood in water or wine a long time, then strain it and drink it with clarified honey. 13 milt griefs, take fair Barrows grease and ashes of Ash, of each two pound, seethe them in a gallon of running water to the one half, than strain it, and let it stand all night, than fleet of the grease, and strain it often, and keep it in boxes, and anoint therewith, and seeth a good quantity of the roots of young Ash plants with as much Wormwood in a gallon of wine, to the one half, and drink thereof at evening hot, and at morning cold. 14 Ears sounding, bore a hole in the midst of an Ash in May, and put a reed in it, and let it stand four or five days, and gather the water, and receive up the fume, and also dip tents therein, and put them into the ear: Milt heard seeth the bark in wine and drink it. 15 Matrix grinding, seeth Asshen ashes in water, and dip a cloth therein, and apply it all over the belly. A precious water for sores: mix fine ashes of green Ash with fair water, and stir them often daily, & to the clearest of it put a little vinegar and Alum, and seeth it & keep it to wash sores withal. 16 Emerods' to stop, use powder of Acorns, Ash keys, & a little Bole Armoneak in warm broth or drink, or rear eggs. 17 To break a bile or sore within one hour & without pain, put ashes of the inner bark of green Ash into a clout like a nut, and moisten it in hot water, & bind it to the place: proved. 18 Black jaundice, drink the sap with a good draft of Ale and some Saffron two hours before meat, and there will rise shortly blisters all over the body, and when they are ready prick them and let the humour come out. 19 Liver and milt griefs, stamp the inner bark of green Ash, and strain it with white wine, and seeth it till the third part be wasted, and drink it with Sugar Candy. 20 Ears ache and dull put in the sap. 21 Teethach and hollow, put in treacle, and then put in a stick of Ash burned at the end hote burning. 22 Worms, seeth the rind of a Pomegranate, and Ash roots in wine and drink it, the same helpeth the Tenasmus. 23 milt griefs, seeth the rind in Wine and drink it. 24 Burn, boil thick Cream, and the Mossy bark of an Ash, till it come to an oil, and so keep it for that use. For the swelling of the stomach and to cause appetite, stamp the roots of Ash and of Fennel of each like much, and drink it with wine. 25 For the stone, drink powder of the bark of a young Ash that beareth keys in winter and summer, and use it also in broths. Ears deaf, put in the sap of green Ash with honey. 26 seeth the rind in wine, and drink it for the torments of the milt: no Serpent will come near the Ash tree, nor the shadow of it. 27 Ears dull and for worms in them, put in the sap with honey three hours, then turn it down and do so often. 28 For Festers, Mermoles, sores of the yard, and all other sores, take Ash that beareth no keys for a man, but for a woman that which beareth keys, burn the bows to ashes, and with clear well water make strong lee therewith, and put thereto a third part of strong vinegar, and anoint the sore therewith whatsoever it be, and lay Diaculum above it, it healeth all sores. 29 The bark sodden in wine is good for all griefs of the milt. 30 The leaves and bark boiled in wine and drunk, do open and comfort the liver and milt, and healeth the diseases of the sides, and so will they do, being boiled in oil and laid to. 31 The leaves and bark with the tender crops taken in the same manner, are good for the dropsey, for they purge the water: It is good for fat and gross folks, to drink three or four leaves with wine daily to make them lean. 32 The juice of the leaves, crops, and bark drunk in wine, preserveth from all venom and venomous bitings. 33 Lee made with the ashes of the bark, cureth the white scurf & such like roughness of the skin. 34 The seed provoketh urine, increaseth natural seed, and moveth Venus, especially being taken with a Nutmeg. 35 The leaves of the wild Ashtree boiled in wine and drunk, are good against the pain of the side and the stopping of the liver, and slake their bellies that have the dropsy. 36 Distil the bark of Ash and drink the water for the jaundice and the stone. If a man or beast be bitten of any venomous beast, let them drink the juice of Ash tops with good wine if they have no Fever, or else with wine delayed with water and stamp the young sprigs and apply them to the biting: the same drink is good for the dropsy. 37 Milt swollen, drink daily in a cup of Ash. 38 To become lean, drink the juice of Ash leaves now and then with wine. 39 Leapry, anoint with ashes of the bark mixed with water. Appetite 24 Apost. 17 Belly ache 5 bile 17 Byting venom. 4. 32. 36 Blisters to make 4. 17 Black jaundice 18 Blood to stop 11 Burn 24 Dropsy 31. 35. 36 Ears dull 2. 7. 20. 25. 27 noise 14. pain 6. 20 Emerods' 16 Face deformed 4 Fatness 31. 38 Festers 28 Fevers quarten 12 Green sickness 10 Grossness 31. 38 Head Megrim 5 jaundice 36 Lean to be 31. 38 Leapry 39 Liver griefs 19 30. 35 Lust to 'cause 34 Marmol 28 Matrix grinding 15 Milt griefs 1. 9 12. 19 23. 26. 29. 30. 37 Plague 3 Poison 32 Seed to increase 34 Sides griefs 30. 35 Skin deformed 33 Sores 28 Stomach griefs 8. swollen 24 Stone 25. 38 Teethach 5. 21. hollow 21 Venom 32. 36 Vomiting 4 Urine stopped 34 Weals 4 Windiness 5 Worms 22 Yard sores 28 ¶ Assafoetida. ASsafetida, is good to be smelled unto against the suffocation of the mother. 2 Teethach and hollow, fill them with Assafoetida. 3 Flowers to cause, stamp it with a warm pestle, and put thereto Ellebore black or white, and make it a suppositer and put it in, if this serve not, then use Verdigriece. 4 Fever quarten, mix it with Rue and Pepper of each two drams, temper them with honey, and take as much as a Chestnut two hours before the fit. 5 Matrix falling after childbirth, lay one ounce on a pan of Charcoal, and sit over it as warm as you can suffer three or four times, and then steep. 6 Taken with a rear egg to bedward, it openeth the liver, and helpeth shortness of breath: mother suffocat. apply it to the navel. 7 The fume thereof taken at the nose is good for the Lytargie. (See Lacerpitium) for it is of the same operation. Breathshort 6 Fever quarten 4 Flowers stopped 3 Lytargie 7 Liver stopped 6 Matrix fallen 5 Suffocat. 1 Teethach and hollow 2 ¶ Auens, or herb Benit. AVens, or her be Benit: Fistula if it be outward put in the juice, if it be inward drink it. 2 To avoid moles and spots of young children which they have in their mother's bellies, gather the roots and leaves in March, or May, stamp them and distil them through a limbeck, and wash therewith often. 3 Fevers, stamp Auens, Feverfue, and yarow ana one handful, and strain it with ale, and drink it two hours before the fit. 4 Bones broken, drink the juice of Comfety morning & evening three days, ●xfor want thereof Sana●●●da, then drink Auens, Plantine, and Brusewort morning and evening daily as long as need is: Yard canker, wash it with the juice of Auens. 5 For all superfluities gathered about the heart, liver, stomach and sides, stamp Auens and Feverfue, and stre●e them with stolen ale, and drink it morning and evening. 6 Speech lost by the palsy, drink Auens, or Baldemonye with warm water: Fever hot: stamp it with read Wormwood ana one handful, and strain it with a pint of white wine, and drink it at two or three times. 7 Ache, seeth Auens and 〈…〉 in water, and wash therewith four or five times. 8 Drink the decoction of the root for all inward wounds, griefs of the breast and sides, and all crudity, and wash wounds therewith. 9 Ache and gnawing of the joints, fry it with sheeps suet and oil, and apply it. 10 Skabs dry, seeth it with Mouseare ana like much in running water, and wash therewith. 11 Megrim, seethe it with Bay leaves ana an handful in a quart of good white wine, & apply it. 12 The powder thereof drunk with white wine warm, helpeth much against the Fevers: it helpeth wounds and Kankers being drunk. 13 seeth it in wine or water, or both, and drink it to dissolve congealed and bruised blood, and to cure all inward wounds and hurts, and also wash outward wounds therewith. 14 seeth the root in wine and drink it to comfort the stomach, to 'cause digestion, to open the liver, and to cleanse and purge the breast from all gross phlegm. 15 Drink the dried root with wine against poison, and the colic, and to comfort digestion. 16 The root put into wine giveth it a pleasant taste and smell, refresheth the heart, causeth mirth, openeth the liver, helpeth the stomach that is hurt with cold and gross humours: and the root sodden in wine cleanseth and scoureth wounds, Fistulas, and Kankers, and the foul spots of the face being washed therewith, and helpeth the pain of the breast and sides. The root must be gathered at the Spring time. Ache 9 7 Bones broken 4 Breast cleansing 14. 16 Breasts griefs 8. 16 Bruises 13 colic 15 Crudity 8 Digestion 14. 15 Fevers 3. 12. hot 6 Face-spot 16 Fistula 1 Head 11 Heart griefs 5 joints griefs 9 canker 12. 16 Liver griefs 5. 14. 15 Mirth to 'cause 16 Moles 2 Palsy 6 Poison 15 Purgation 14 Sickness general 5. 8. 14. 16 Sides grief 5. 8. 10 Speech lost 6 Spots 2. 13 Stomach griefs 5. 8. 14. 16 Skabs dry 10 Wounds 9 12. 13. 16 Yard canker 4 ¶ Asarabacca. ASarabacca: Fever quarten, take one dram of the powder with white wine, one hour before the fit, to purge it: dropsy, an excellent remedy. 2 Infuse one ounce in a barrel of sweet wine three months, than strain it, and drink of the wine morning and evening daily. Fever quarten: hill thee warm in thy bed an hour before the fit, & drink a glass full of Malmsie or Muscadel with half a Wall nut shell full of the powder of it, and cover thee well to sweated, and stamp Sage, Rue, and Bursa pastoris with white vinegar, and apply it to thy wrists xxiiii. hours, and do so thrice and be whole. 4 Or stamp the green leaves, and seeth them a little in wine, and drink it two hours before the fit, and lie on thy belly, it causeth vomit, and dissolveth the Fever. 5 The root boiled in wine, provoketh urine and is good for the strangury, the cough, shortness of breath, difficulty of breathing, convulsions, cramps, and shrunk sinews being drunk. 6 And also is good against venom and venomous bitings, the dropsy and the Sciatica. Drink it with honeyed wine to drive down the flowers, seconds, and other superfluities of the matrix. 7 The leaves stamped and strained with wine and drunk, causeth to vomit up tough phlegm and choler. The leaves stamped and applied help the headache, inflammations of the eyes, breasts that are full of milk to dry it up. 8 The wild fire especially at the beginning, drink the juice of six leaves with a pint of Whey especially of Goat's milk in the morning in Summer to cast forth yellow choler and unnatural phlegm. 9 Steep thirty green leaves in new wine all night, than strain it, and drink it in the morning to bring forth abundance of humours from the breast. 10 The wine being powered into a close pot with a piece of fat pork and sodden, and the pork eaten and the wine drunk, or the wine may be drunk after the pork, simply diluted or steeped all night with the leaves & not sodden with the pork but strained and drunk after it. 11 It helpeth in this manner the jaundice, the fever tertian, the beginning of dropsies, tympanies, 12 Quotidians, Green sickness, Quartens, Worms and smelling of the stomach, for all which there is no better remedy. 13 The juice strained with Mill called Misselio and strained with a little rosewater, cleareth the sight. Make powder of the roots with Cinnamom, Sugar, and Aromatik spices, and take one dram of it to provoke vomit and to purge choler and phlegm both upward and downward. 14 Seethe the root in wine with honey, and drink it to cleanse the lungs, and for the cough, and shortness of breath. 15 Give the roots to Sheep and great cattle to eat with salt to help them against their griefs: Use it also sodden in wine with honey for the dropsy, obstructions of the lungs, 16 Liver, kidneys and bladder, and to cleanse them and the matrix, and to expel the terms, seconds and dead births both in men & beasts. 17 seeth the root in lee, and wash the head therewith to help the brain and memory. Bitings venomous 6 Brain to comfort 17 Bladder stopped 15 Breasts sore 7 Breath short 5. 14 Cough 5. 14. cramp. 5 Dead birth 16 Dropsy 1. 6. 11. 15 Eyes dull 13. inflamed 7 Fever quarten 1. 2. 4. tertian 11. quotidian 12 Flowers stopped 6. 16 Headache 7 Green sickness 12 jaundice 11 Kidneys stopped 15 Liver stopped 15 Lungs 14. 15 Matrix stopped 6. 16 Mad 17 Memory 17 Milt stopped 15 Obstructions 15 Purgation 13 Sciatica 6 Seconds 6. 16 Sinews 5 Sheep 15 Stomach 12 Strangury 5 Tympany 11 Venom 6 Vomit 1. 4. 7. 8. 9 13 Urine stopped 5 Wildfire 8 Worms 12 ¶ Baytree. BAytree, seeth the leaves with Sage in white wine, and drink it with gross powder of Bays before the fit to help the Fever. seeth Sage and Bay leaves ana one ounce in three pints of Ale, with three ounces of sugar, and one spoonful of pepper to a pint, and strain and drink it before the fit against the Fever. 2 Sleep to cause, apply powder of Bay berries to thy head. Gout, boneshaw and swellings, seeth the leaves of Bays and ivy with oil Olive, and take out the leaves, & anoint with the oil. 3 Powder of Bays, Tormentill & Myrrh, ana like much eaten fasting, purgeth the head, voideth all humours & raw meats, and suffereth no corruption in the body nor stomach. If a man drink it and brook it not, he shall die: but if he brook it, he shall live. 4 Ache in the back, kidneys, or limbs, drink powder of nine Bays morning and evening. 5 For one that is stricken with the Fairy, spread oil de Bay on a linen cloth, and lay it above the sore, if it be beneath the heart, to keep it downward, and none upon the sore, for that will drive it into every part of the body: but if the sore be above the heart, apply it beneath the sore, and to the nape of the neck. 6 Face to be white, anoint with fresh Barrowes grease, the white of an egg, and a little powder of Bays. Windiness, make powder of Bays and Ants eggs, and use it. Yexing, or hickit, when it cometh of cold, anoint it with oil de Bay warm. 7 Ears deaf, put in oil de Bay with as much unguentum Agrippae. Chollike and stitch, drink powder of Bays & Ginger, and also use it in meats. 8 Fever shaking, mix powder of Bayes Pepper, and Peniroyall, of each one and twenty grains with scummed honey, and take a spoonful morning and evening. Teethache, boil four Bays in wine, and hold thereof in thy mouth. 9 For gripping and wring in the belly, seeth Bays and Ote bran in wine, and apply it, also drink the wine. 10 Sickness of the flank, drink three or four Bays with white Wine, or Ale. For griefs of the lungs, liver, and milt, drink powder of Bays, Fenigreeke, and Pepper every morning one spoonful. 11 Cough & griefs of the breast, boil powder of three Bays with honey and wine, and drink it when thou goest to bed. Skin to be white, mix Swine's grease unsalted with the white of an egg half sodden, beaten them well together with a little powder of Bays, & anoint. 12 Flowers to cause, drink powder of 36. Bays with wine. Kidneys and reins griefs, stamp the leaves well, and boil them in wine, till it be thick, and then pun them again, & apply them. 13 Bladder pain, boil the leaves in water and apply them. Itch, stamp the roots with salt and bread, and anoint therewith. Headache, make powder of Bays, half a dram of Scamony, and Saffron one dram, mix them with vinegar of Roses and anoint therewith. Bowels or guts pain, seeth the leaves in water and drink it. 14 Plague, drink one spoonful of powder of the ripe Berries & some salt with vinegar and water warm in a hot Fever, but in wine in a cold Fever, and cover thee well to sweated and sleep and be whole. 15 The Baytree is not stricken with lightning nor evil from heaven. The branches defend from moths, worms and corruption both clotheses and books. The Berries taken with wine is good against all poison, venom, and venomous bitings. 16 The powder of them mixed with honey or some syrup, and often licked and kept in the mouth, is good for them that wax dry and are in a consumption, and for difficulty of breathing and overcharged with phlegm in the breast. 17 The decoction thereof in wine, or the juice thereof dropped into the ears, helpeth their deafness and noise. The Berries are good in medicines to refresh them that are tired and weary, for cramps and drawings of the the sinews. 18 Moist and dry scurviness, being applied with oil or ointments serving to that use. The oil of Bayberies' is of the same virtue, and also serveth against bruises & blue marks. 19 The bark of the root drunk with wine, provoketh urine, breaketh the stone, and driveth it forth and the gravel also, and openeth the stopping of the liver, milt, and all other stops of the inner parts. 20 Wherhfore it is good against the jaundice that is inveterate and rooted, the hardness of the milt, the beginning of the dropsy, and to provoke terms. 21 Plant no Baytree near a Vine. Anoint all cold aches with oil de Bay, & Aqua vitae. The broth of Bay leaves is good to sit in for the diseases of the mother & bladder. 22 The green leaves stamped, heal the stingings of Bees and Wasps. The same with parched Barley and bread, suage all inflammations and hot burnings. 23 But if they be drunk, they make all that is in the stomach to go forth by vomit. Bays are good in an electuary with honey or sodden with malmsey against the consumption, shortness of breath, and all rheums that fall upon the lungs. 24 The bark of the root breaketh the stone, and is perilous for women with child, half a dram thereof drunk with wine is good for the griefs of the liver. The oil of Bayes is good for the head ach, the Morphue, the singing in the ears, and it causeth vomit. 25 The Berry is a remedy against all poison. The oil de Bay is best that is fresh and bitter and sharp: it hath power to soften and to open the breath holes of the veins, it driveth away weariness. 26 There is no better remedy against the diseases of the sinews, colds, falling down of humours, ache in the ears, diseases of the kidneys that come of cold, than this oil is, if it be laid too, but if it be drunk, it provoketh vomit, it is good also for the ache of the liver, 27 The Megrim that cometh of cold cause, the pain of the milt, of the great gut, and of the mother, and for the scales and skurfes, worms, scabs, weals, and plookes. 28 The powder of the Berries licked in with honey, or the pap of raisins, are good against the consumption, straightness of breath, all griefs of the breast coming of rheum, and for the torments of the belly. The berries bruised are good against the stingings of Scorpions. 29 The berries being clean husked, powdered, steeped in wine and drunk, purgeth women after their childbirth, and taketh away their torments. The juice of the berries taketh away filthy scurf, and with old wine and Rose oil, it helpeth the ache and deafness of the ears. 30 The oil is good for all cold aches, the Sciatica and cold Agues. Hair falling, anoint with oil de Bay. Ears deaf and noise, put in the juice of the leaves. Rheum, cough, and hoarseness, take up the vapour of Bays in water. 31 Vomiting and loathing, stamp Bayes, Mastic, and Cummin ana one ounce, with the juice of Rue, and apply it to the stomach with tow. Chollike, Iliac, and windiness of the stomach, apply Bay leaves and Cummin to the stomach. 32 Stone to break, use the rind and Berry. To cleanse the Matrixe, to void the pain thereof, and to cause conception, stand over the fume of powder of Bays laid on hot coals, it causeth deliverance. 33 Gout, seethe the leaves in water, and mix it with purslane water, and wash therewith. Fever quotidian, take two penny weight of the powder of the berries with a soft egg, or broth before the fit. 34 Heart griefs, seethe Bays in white wine and drink it. To make oil de Bay, grind the leaves very finely, and temper them with common oil, and heat them over the fire often: but seethe it not, and when it is green, use it. 35 Breast encumbered, take half a spoonful of powder of Bays with pottage, or drink to cleanse and purge downward marvelously. Fevers, use powder of Alysander, Bayes, and Time in broths. 36 Cough of cold, anoint the chest with oil de Bay. Head rheum, apply powder of Bayberies', and of pennyroyal. Chollike and Iliake, drink powder of nine or twelve Bays with wine. Eyes griefs, seethe Bay leaves in wine and Foment therewith. 37 Flowers to stop, lay Ginger, Bay leaves, and Savin on coals, and receive up the fume thereof through a funnill. 38 Matrixe fallen out, drink powder of Bay leaves, Heart's horn, and Myrrh ana like much, with Wine or Ale. Palsy universal, eat oil of Bays with crumbs of bread hot. 39 Bay: Reins ache, boil the leaves in wine, till they be coagulated, and apply it by itself, or fried with oil. Ache in the stomach and small guts: Mix two parts of Bays, and one part of Cummin with Hony, and plaster it to thy stomach. 40 Head apostume, apply powder of Bays and Cummin to the head. Flanks griefs general, drink powder of nine leaves morning and evening. 41 Itch, mix powder of Frankincense, with oil of Bay, and anoint therewith. To make oil of Bay, stamp the leaves, grind them, and let them stand two or three days, then seethe it and strain it, and that which is above, is the oil. 42 Sinews shortened, seethe a black sheeps head with Bay leaves, Sage, and Camomile stamped, till it be well sodden, than strain it, and anoint therewith. 43 A green ointment, take Bay leaves, Rue, and Wormwood ana one pound, sheeps tallow three pound, mix them well, and put thereto three pints of Salad oil, and let it stand two days, than heat it, and stir it till the herbs be somewhat hard, than strain it and use it. Oil of Bays, stamp the green Berries, and seethe them, and strain it and use it, or stamp the berries & leaves, & strain it, and keep it in a glass: or stamp the ripe and fresh Berries, and press out the oil: it is good against the Iliake, colic, and Sciatica. Make oil of ivy Berries in like sort, which is good in cold causes, especially against cold joint aches. Aches 4. 21. 30 Backache 4. 12. 26. 39 (See stone.) Bellyache 9 10. 14. (See chollik.) Byting venomous 15 Bladder grief 13. 21 Boneshawe 2 Breast griefs 11. 16. 23. 28. 35 Breath short 16. 23. 28 Bruises 18 Chollik 7. 9 10. 27. 28. 31. 39 Conception 32 Consumption 16. 23. 28 Cold griefs 26. 30. 36 Cough 11. 30. 36 Cramp 17 Deliverance 32 Dropsy 20 Ears deaf 7. 17. 29. 30. ache 26. 29. noise 17. 24. 29. 30 Eyes griefs 36 Face to be fair 6. 11 Fairies 4 Fevers 1. 14. quotidian 33. shaking 8. 30 Flanksicke 10 Flowers stopped 12. 20. 29. to stop 37 Gout 2. 33 Gravel 19 Heart griefs 34 Head griefs 3. 13. 24. 27. rheum 36. 40 Hair falling 30 Hicket 7 hoarseness 30 Hot griefs 21 jaundice old 20 Ilyak pas. 31. 39 Inflammations 22 Itch 13. 41 Kidneys griefs 12. 26 Liver griefs 10. 19 20. 24. 27 Loathing 31 Lungs griefs 10. 23 Lust to 'cause 34 Megrim 27 Milt griefs 10. 19 20. 27 Morphue 24 Mother griefs 21. 27. 29. 32 fallen 37. Moths 15 Obstruction 19 Oil to make 34. 41 Palsy 38 Plague 14 Poison 15. 25 Pose 40 Purgation 3. 35 pushes 27 rheums 23. 20. 30. 36. 40 Sinews grief 17. 26. 42 Sciatica 30 Skin cleansing 6. 11 Sleep to 'cause 2 scabs 27 Skall 27 scurf 27. 29 Stomach ache 39 weak 31. Stitch 7 Stone 19 24. 32 Stinging 22. 28 Swell 2 Taken 4 Teethache 8 Venom 15 Vomit 23. 24. 26 Vomiting 31 unguentum 42 Urine stopped 19 weariness 17. 25 Weals 27 Women 29 Windiness 6. 31 Worms 15. 27 Yard erect 40 Yexing 7 ¶ Barbary. BArberie: the green leaves are good in meats for sauce, as Sorrel to refresh and 'cause appetite, and is good for them that be hot and vexed with the burning Ague. 2 The fruit stop the lask and all superfluous fluxes of women, and all unnatural flux of blood. The root steeped in lee, maketh the hair yellow being often washed therewith. 3 The conserve thereof is good against all fluxes both read and white, it stoppeth the terms and comforteth the stomach and liver, and so doth the water of the flowers and leaves distilled in May. 4 The ripe fruit stamped and applied, breaketh and healeth all hot apostumes, and taketh away the pain. The root plucketh out pricks. 5 Chollik, take half a glass or less of the juice of the ripe Berries, with as much powder of read Coral as will lie on two groats, and drink it. 6 seeth Barberies in Whey, and drink it for the heat of the liver. To heal an old flux of the mother, and to scour the matrix, drink the juice of Barberies: but for that flux and all others, drink the Barberies themselves. Drink the juice with Rose water to quench thirst. 7 Heart faint, make pottage with Barberies and Barley meal, and eat them. Stomach chollerik and thirsty, and to stop the flux, and cause appetite, eat as much as a Walnut of conserve of Barberies. 8 jaundice yellow, seeth as much of the Bark as a Walnut in a pint of water bound in a cloth, and cool it, and drink it morning and evening a good draft, and use also thereof in thy drink. 9 Set a quart of the Berries on the fire till they be soft, than strain them and put thereto thrice their weight in Sugar, and seeth it till it be incorporated, and use it. Appetite 1 Apost. hot 4 Bloody flux 2. 6 Chollik 5 Fever hot 1 Fluxes 2. 6 Heart faint 7 jaundice 8 Liver hot 6 Matrix flux 6 Pricks 4 Stomach hot 7 Thirst 7 Whites 2. 3. 6 ¶ Barley. BArley: Bake a cake of Barley flower, and vinegar, burn ●t to coals, and rub the teeth therewith to cleanse them. Mix new Pigeons dung and Barley meal, with vinegar, and apply it to the Shingles three days, and then renew it if need be. 2 Boil Barley and Lycoras in water, and use it to help the Fever and impostumes of the breast and short ribs. The meal mixed with vinegar and eggs and applied to impostumes, letteth them from growing any further. 3 A plaster of the meal with Turpentine, honey and Lily roots, softeneth and ripeneth impostumes. For Felons and rancklings, seeth meal of linseed and Barley in Ale, and apply it. 4 Headache: Mix Barley meal with Hearts grease, and the juice of Sorrell, and apply it to the temples. 5 Breast griefs, make pottage with Barley meal, Balm, Mint and water, and use it. Cod's swollen, fry Barley meal with honey, & apply it. Chafing of the flank, or shares: Anoint with oil of Roses, and the meal of beans, Fitches, and Barley. 6 To open a wound that is closed, and too soon whole. Take honey, and the whites of eggs of each like much, and a little Barley meal, and anoint therewith three or four times a day. 7 For a swelling, fry Barley meal and powder of Cummin with honey, and apply it. seeth Barley with ten times so much water of an Eastern spring, with a slow fire twelve hours, till it have the colour of Beer, and drink thereof four ounces at once against choleric heat, obstructions to move sweat and urine, to 'cause sleep, to allay thirst, to nourish, for all griefs of the breast, and for Burning agues, to sweat take it warm, to lay thirst, take it cold sometimes with Sugar, sometimes without. 8 It helpeth the heat and redness of the urine and the cough coming of heat. 9 Cough, make pottage with Barley and butter and eat it: and drink Barley water with Liquorice. 10 To dry up a rheum, seeth ashes of Barley chaff in water, and set thy feet and legs over it, and cover thee well to sweat, and after wash thy legs and hands up to the knees and elbows, and dry them, and lie down in thy bed warm, and put a tent of Labdanum into thy nose, etc. 11 Burning or scalding, apply Barley meal with the juice of Purcelaine. 12 Gout, apply Barley meal, with the juice of Nightshade or vinegar. Headache: apply Barley meal with Frankincense, and the white of an egg two days with a paper, it helpeth the Megrim. 13 To make hairs grow where thou wilt, burn Barley bread with Salt, and pun it with Barrowes grease, & anoint. 14 Apostumes hot and Feverous, apply a plaster of Barley meal, Mallows, whites of eggs, and fresh grease. Nose bleeding, stamp Ribwort, and houseleek with Barley meal, and apply it about thy neck. 15 Paps with curdled milk, apply Barley meal with vinegar. Emerods', steep crumbs of Barley bread in woman's milk or Goat's milk, with the yolk of an egg and Saffron, and apply it to void the pain. 16 Headache of choler, drink water sodden with Barley, & hold Sugar Candy in thy mouth. 17 For griefs of the liver, and the jaundice, eat the pap of Barley sodden with water & butter, & drink Barley water to restore the taste. 18 Liver inflamed, drink Barley water. Belly loose, use pottage of Barley, and Barley water. Bloody flux, drink Barley water. 19 Loins ache, use Barley pottage with butter. Loins apostumed, stamp Barley meal three ounces, Figs two ounces, and the juice of Mallows six ounces, and apply it. 20 Fevers, use Barley water to bedward, and apply as much butter as a bean to thy navel. Face swollen, seeth clean Barley into pap, and apply it hot. 21 Cod and yard swollen, boil Barley meal and Cummin, and apply it. Freckles, seeth flower of beans, and Barley in woman's milk, and apply it. 22 Shingles, apply Barley meal with doves dung and vinegar. Eyes watering, stamp Camphire with Barley meal, the yolk of an egg, and a little vinegar, and apply it. Eyes hurt or bruised, seeth Read Roses in water, and stamp them with Barley meal, and the yolk of a raw egg, or apply Barley meal with the juice of Mallows and the yolk of an egg. 23 For the Host: Mix Barley meal and Salt ana with Butter, and make pellets thereof, as much as half a Walnut, and eat two of them in the morning fasting. 24 Breast griefs, seeth Barley meal in water, and put Fresh butter to it, and eat it often. 25 Breast phlegm: seeth Isope, fat Figs, Lycoras, and Barley in water, and drink it. 25 For griefs of the liver, and swelling of the right side, apply a plaster of Barley meal, vinegar, & the juice of Houseleek, and morel, and anoint the side with the juice of pennyroyal. 27 Cod swollen, melt sheeps suet in Read wine, and put thereto Barley meal, and apply it. Fever quarten: on the sick day eat a hot cake of Barley meal, and drink thereto a good draft of Read wine, before the sit. 28 And then stamp four Plants of Plantine with their leaves, and stream them with White wine, and four spoonfuls of cold water, and drink thereof before the fit take thee. 29 Knees-ach, fry sheeps tallow with Goat's dung, and Barley meal, and apply it. Apostume to break, apply Barley meal with honey, and the juice of Smallach or of Wormwood. 30 Use Barley meal in all medicines for Apostumes and Impostumes. 31 Chollik and Iliac: apply a plaster of Barley meal, Wormwood, vinegar & honey. Teeth to be white: rub them with Barley meal, honey and salt. Legs swollen: Mix the juice of walwort with Wax, vinegar and Barley meal, of each like much, and apply it. 32 Morphue, use a bath of Barley chaff, and make fine powder of Barley meal, Fenegrek, and Boras of each like much. Mix it with the juice of an Onion, and clear honey, and anoint therewith. 33 Chollik: seeth meal of linseed, and Barley, with oil of Camomile, and apply it hot to the navel. Yard-ach and swelling, seeth Barley bran with wine and honey, and apply it. 34 Wild fire and creeping ulcers, and all burnings, fry Barley meal with oil, and apply it. 35 Boil Barley meal, with Figs in honeyed water, to dissolve swellings, both hot and cold, and with Pitch, Rosin, and Pigeons dung, to ripen all hard swellings, with Tar, oil and wax, and the urine of a child to digest and rypen the hard swellings of the neck, called Strumae. 36 The same with Melilot, and the heads of Poppy, suageth the ache of the side, and with linseed, Fenegrek & Rue, and it is good to be laid to the pain and windiness of the belly and guts. 37 Barley given with Myrtles or wine, or wild tart Pears, or with Brambles, or with the rind of a Pomegranate, stoppeth the running of the belly. Plasters made with Barley meal: is good against the scurf and leapry. 38 The same mixed with vinegar, or Quinces, suageth hot inflammations of the Gout. Boiled with vinegar and Pitch, and applied to the joints, it stayeth the falling down of rheum and humours into them. 39 The bread thereof doth not nourish so well as the bread of Wheat or Spelt: the greatest and whitest is the best. 40 Take Barley hulled one pound bruised, seeth it in ten pound of water in a vessel of earth or tin close stopped to the one half, cool it, and seeth it and drink thereof to quench hot burning choler in vehement Fevers. 41 You may put to it the seeds of white Poppy and lettuce, not only to cool, but also to 'cause sleep. 42 And to cleanse the lungs, shortness of breath, & hoarseness: Put in Figs, Lycoras, Reasins of the sun, aniseeds, and a little Isope with Sugar, and seeth all, and let it stand close covered till it be cold, than strain it and use it. 43 seeth Barley meal, linseed, Fenegrek, and the juice of Rue with Malmsey, and apply it warm to the belly, to void the swelling and pain of the guts. seeth the meal with vinegar, to suage the hot burning Gout, & all hot Inflammations of the body. 44 seeth the Meal in honey with Rosin, and the juice of Celandine, to heal old rotten sores. With oil & meal of Fenegrek, to suage the swelling of the stomach. 45 Temper the meal with honey and Poppy, to help the swelling heat of the privities and pain of the side. seeth Barley with Fennell, and sup it to increase milk greatly. With Rosen & doves dung, it ripeneth all hardness. With melilot and Poppy heads, it suageth the pain of the side. 46 Give Barley half sodden to Hens to make them lay eggs the oftener and greater. 47 Lie three days & three nights in thy bed covered with sodden Barley, to cure the Dropsy perfectly, though the belly be greatly swollen. 48 seeth Barley, dry Beans, and Lycoras, cut small, of each like much, in water: and drink thereof first and last five days or more, to destroy any Impostume, and to cast it out. 49 Mix ashes of burned Barley with burned Roch Allom and use it to galled Horses backs: and for Fistulas, and to eat out dead flesh, but as it shall heal, put in more Barley and less Allom. 50 Burn Barley bread with Salt, and mix it with Boar's grease, and anoint what place thou wilt, and hairs will grow there. 51 seeth strong Ale with a gentle fire till it be thick, and use it to old rotten sores and aches. Ache 51 Apostumes 2. 3. 14. 29. 30. 34. 35. 45. Backeache 18. 19 51 Belly-ache 36. see chol. 51 lose. 18. 37. swollen 43. 44. 47 Bloody-flixe 18 Breast griefs 5. 7. 23. 24. 42. Impost. 2 Breath short 42 Breast sore 15 Burn 11 Chafing 5 Chollike 30. 33. 36. 43 Cod swollen 5. 21. 27. 33. 45 Consumption 7 Cough 9 hot 7 Dropsy 47 Eyes watering and hurts 22 Emeralds 15 Face swollen 20 Felons 3 Fevers 2. 20. hot 7. 40. quarten 27 Fistula 4 Phlegm 25 Fluxes 18. 37 Frecles 21 Gout 12. 38. 43 Hardness 3. 5. 35. 45 Headache 4. 12. 16 Hair to grow 13. 50 Hens to lay 46 Horcenesse 42 Horseback sore 49 jaundice 17 Iliake passion 30 Impostume 48 Inflammation 43 joints griefs 38 Kernels 35 Knees-ache 29 Leapry 38 Liver griefs 17. 18. 25 Loins apost. 19 ache 18 Lungs griefs 23. (see breast) Milk to increase 45 Morphue 32 Neck swollen 35 Nose bleeding 14 Obstructions 7 Pusands 2. 7. 40 Ranclings 3 Rheum 10. 38 Shingles 1. 22. 34 Side-ache 36. 45. 46. swollen 25. 2 Scalding 11 scurf 38 Sleep to 'cause 7. 41 Sores 6. 44. 51 Stomach swollen 44 Swell 7. 34. 43. 44. 45 Sweat to 'cause 7 Taste lost 17 Teeth foul 1. 31 Thirst 7 Throat kernel 35 Urine hot 8 stopped 7 Wild fire 34 Wounds 6 Yard swollen 21. 33. 45 Bearefoote, (See Ellebore.) ¶ Basill. BAsill: speech lost, mix the seeds with wine, and drink, and hold thereof in thy mouth. Short wound, drink half an ounce of the juice, with half a scruple of Saffron. Swooning, sleep Basill in wine or Rose water, and drink it. 2 Worms to kill, drink the juice with Goats' milk. Fever quarten, certain, and quotidian, the stitch, and stopping of the urine, stuff a Hen with Parsley and Basill, and the substance of a raw egg, and bake her in paste, and eat thereof daily, and no other meat. 3. Masels and Carbuncles, fill the places with Basill leaves. The smell of Basill comforteth the brain, but it hurteth a weak brain. The seeds are gathered in july. 4 The leaves sodden and drunk, do take away the swimming of the head, and so doth the herb steeped a night in wine and drunk, The herb sodden in wine, doth cause a pleasant smell, heateth a cold stomach, and helpeth digestion. 5 The powder of the herb drunk with the juice of Sloes eight days together, doth help an outward rapture. 5. seeth the herb in water, and foment the matrixe therewith, to cleanse it and draw down the terms. To 'cause deliverance, and bring down the secondines, drink the juice of Basill. 6 seeth Basill in wine and oil, and apply it to the fundament to ease the often desire to go to the stool. 7 Boil it in rain water, and drink it with a little powder of the juice of Sloes, to help the flux coming of cold. sneezing to cause, put the seeds into the nose. Warts to rise up by the roots, mix the seeds with shoemakers black, and apply it. Belly bound and windy, drink the seeds. 8 Drink the seeds in wine to avoid all melancholy sadness, and to cause boldness and mirth. 9 Basill helpeth the stomach, digesteth hard meats, and is good for the heart and liver. Lungs inflamed, stamped Basill with Barsey meal and vinegar, and apply it outwardly. 10 Brain and nose stopped, and to purge and stay rheums, smell to Basill. Eyes misty and running, drop in the juice, or eat the herb. Use dry Basill in thy meats, and wines, and drinks. 11 seeth it in wine, and use it against shortness of breath, the old cough, to expel gross humours, urine, and terms, morning and evening as Peniroyall. Headache stamp it and apply it. Use it in sessions for women's griefs, as Peniroyall and Mints, etc. 12 seeth it in wine with Spikenard, and drink it against dropsies; winds, flegmes, coldness of the heart, and hardness of the stomach. Smell to it to comfort the brain and heart: but the use of it in meats decayeth the sight. It is not much to be used inwardly nor outwardly. 13 Drink Basill with vinegar to void windiness, to stop vomiting, to provoke urine, and for the Dropsy and jaundice. 14 Cough old, take it with wine. Eyes pain, stamp it with wine, and apply it. Eyes dull, and rheumatic, and running, drappe in the juice. 15 Swooning and faintness, smell to the herb with vinegar. Frenzy, smell to the herb to provoke sleep. If thou be'st hurt with a scorpion, eat Basill the same day, and it shall not hurt thee. 16 Basill softeneth the belly, moveth the spirits, expelleth urine, and breedeth milk. The seed drunk, is good for them that are puffed up, with wind, that breed melancholy, and cannot make water. 17 The seeds or leaves put into the nose, cause sneezing: but when thou sneesest, shut thine eyes. Eat Basill, and no venomous thing shall hurt thee that day. 18 To heal a straining, boil it tender with vinegar and oil, and anoint or bathe the place therewith. Chollike, seeth it in wine, and apply it. Belly bound 6. 8. 16 Bitings venomous 15. 17 Brain stopped 10. to comfort 3. 12 Breach short 1. 11 Bursten 5 Carbuncles 3 colic 18. (see wind Cough old 11. 14 Deliverance 5 Digestion 4. 9 Dropsies 12 Eye-ache and griefs 10. 14 Fevers general 2 Phlegm 12 Flowers stopped 5. 11 Flux of cold 7 Giddiness 4 Heart griefs 9 12. 13. 15 Head swimming 4 Liver griefs 9 Lungs inflamed 9 Masels 3 Melancholy 8. 16 Milk to 'cause 16 Mirth to 'cause 8 Mother cleansing 5 Nose stopped 10 Rheum 10 Seconds to cause 5 sneezing to 'cause 7. 17 Speech lost 1 stitch 2 Stomach cold 4 weak 9 12 straining 18 Swooning 1. 15 Tenasmus 6 Venom 15. 17 Vomiting 14 Urine stopped 2. 11. 14. 16 Warts 7 Windiness 8. 12. 13. 16 Worms 2 ¶ Balm. Drink it in wine against all venomous bitings and stingings, and to comfort the heart, and expel melancholy and sadness: it is good for all things that Horehound is good for, but it is much weaker. Be hives being rubbed therewith, it keepeth the Bees together, and causeth other to come to them. 2 The common Balm is good for the strangling of the mother, being eaten or smelled unto. 3 The juice put into green wounds doth glue and heal them up. 4 seeth Balm in white wine, and drink three or iiii. morning's together to purge the breast, to help the shortness of wind, to comfort the heart, to drive away dampish heaviness, to help the falling sickness, and all other diseases. 5 To provoke terms, sit over the fume thereof. 6 Teeth aching, wash with the juice or broth of it. 7 Use it in glisters against the bloody flux. 8 Use it with honey in an Electuary for the gnawing of the belly & shortness of wind. 9 Apply it with salt to hard kernels and wens. 10 It skowreth fores being applied, & suageth the pains of the joints. 11 Chop it small, and steep it 12. hours in white wine, and distil it in a glass for the torments of women, the strangling of the mother, wring at the heart, etc. iiii. spoonful at once. 12 Wash the mouth therewith for the ulcers thereof. 13 Drop thereof into the eyes to clear them. 14 seeth Balm with Cammomile flowers in a bag, in wine or water, and press it, and apply it hot to the pains of the matrix, to make it tarry in the place, and put it in to keep it from falling down. 15 The water thereof healeth all skabs, bushes, and venomous bitings of serpents, spiders, and mad dogs. Balm steeped in troubled wine, bringeth it to clearness, and laid upon meat, it keepeth it from flies. 16 Nothing doth more comfort the heart, than the decoction thereof, or the water. Borage water and fine musk sodden in a clean vessel and drunk when the heart is weak, it helpeth the hickit. 17 Stamp it and apply warm to the squinsy. 18 Drink it in wine against vomiting and the colic. 19 Stamp it with nuts and honey, and apply it to clear the sight. It sharpeneth the wits and memory. 20 Distil it against melancholy, with Borage, bugloss, and Hyssop, and use it. 21 Make Ale or Wine thereof as of Sage, for the griefs of the lungs and chest, and to 'cause a good colour: but there would be put one ounce of good Liquorice shaven to it. The distilled water serveth for the same purposes. 22 Eyes to be clear, & to avoid fumes from the brain, stamp Balm, & Rosemary ana one handful, strain them with a quart of Ale, and drink thereof morning & evening. 23 Seeth of each one handful with a quart of milk, as it cometh from the Row, and drink thereof hot morning and evening daily with some of a grated Nutmeg every day a quart as hot as may be suffered, and anoint with the ointment of Lavender: it avoideth the causes of headache, and helpeth the grief. 24 To preserve from sweat, steep Balm, Rosemary, and Borage 12. hours or more in Ale or Beer, and drink thereof morning and evening. 25 For giddiness of the head, stamp it with oil and apply it: and do the same for the eyes. 26 For the coming out of the matrix, drink the powder of it with wine, and for the prefocation, drink the distilled water of it. 27 Urine dropping, seeth with water-mints in good wine, and drink it, and apply the herb to thy bladder. 28 For them that have utterly lost their hearing, drop it into their ears. 29 For the boneshawe or cold gout at the bone, which destroyeth the marrow, drink the juice of it with half as much Feverfewe with stolen Ale ix. days, & stamp the leaves of Poplar and Feuerfew with clarified butter and old oil Olive, and apply it six times. 30 Ache, shred Broome flowers, Balm, and Feverfewe ana one handful, and seethe them in a little May butter, and keep it, and anoint therewith by the fire, and be whole. Falling sickness, drink Balm water with Treacle to cure it. Ache 30 Belly gnawing 8 Bitings venomous 1. 15 Bloody-fluxe 7 Boneshawe 29 Breast to purge 4 Chest griefs 21 colic 18 Colour to be good 21 Deafness 28 Eyes to clear 13. 19 22. 25 Falling sickness 4 Heart to comfort 1. 4. 16 Heart wring 11 Headache 23 Head giddy 25 Hickit 16 jointe pains 10 Kernels 9 Matrixe pains 14. 26 Melancholy 1. 4. 20 Mother 2 Mouth ulcers 12 Scab 15 Sores 10 squinsy 17 Sweat to preserve from 24 Teethache 6 Terms to provoke 5 Vomiting to stop 18 Urine dropping 27 Wen 9 Wind short 4. 8 Wit to sharpen 19 women's torments 11 Wounds green 3 ¶ beans. Beans, put the flowers into a close glass in the hot Sun, and it will turn to an oil, good for the saulsflegme. 2 Ranker, apply Beane meal with yolks of eggs. Felon ache, seeth Beans till they be tender, and grind them to apply them. 3 Sinews rankling and swelling, seeth Beane meal long in white wine till it be thick, and put thereto some honey, and apply it till it be whole. 4 Wounds to heal, mix read Coleworts, Garlic, Bean flower, the white of an egg, and fair grease, and heat it, and apply it. 5 Paps ache, and all other ache, apply Beane meal with yolks of eggs. 6 Stone, stamp young green Beans as small as Peason, and distil them, and drink the water. 7 Cod swollen, seeth Beane meal with honey and Cummin, & apply it. 8 Face or skin to be white, do off the husks of Beans & steep them in vinegar or wine 24. hours, then dry them in the sun, and mix their powder with a Lily root, and temper them with water luke warm, & wash therewith to be ward to void all slime and spots. 9 colic, drink the distilled water of Beane cod, iii or iiii. times. 10 Skin to cleanse, wash with Beane flower and water. 11 Whites to stop, seethe it in the milk of a Cow to pap, and put thereto clarified honey, cloves, mace, and saffron, and eat thereof warm as often as need is. 12 Bloodyflux, boil powder of parched Beans in ale with sugar, & drink it as hot as may be suffered. 13 Hair not to grow, mix the bran of Beans with a child's urine, and anoint. 14 Swell, seethe Beane flower in vinegar, till it be thick, and apply it hot. 15 Stomach hot, mix the meal of Beans & linseed, with the white of an egg, and apply it cold to the stomach. 16 Hairs to void, use Beane meal in stead of soap daily. 17 Coughs, use meal of parched Beans. Fundament fig, make powder of beans, Geniper berries, and Pepper, of each like much, and drink it morning and evening. 18 Apost. to ripen, apply Beane meal with honey upon unwashed wool. 19 Emerods', sit over the smoke of Beane straw ashes. 20 Cod swollen, apply Beane meal with vinegar cold, or stamp green Beans with honey, and apply them cold. 21 Eyes bruised, apply Beane meal with woman's milk. Skull broken, take the seeds of Planten three ounces, of sharp leaved Dock iiii. ounces, meal of black Beans, as much as you will, stamp them well, and seeth them in very strong wine, and apply thereof morning and evening. 22 Cold apost. of the cod, apply Beane meal with the pulp of raisins, honey & powder of Cummin. Distil the flowers before they be yellow, in Balneo Mariae, and drop thereof into the eyes that are read & dropping at night. 23 Breath stinking of Garlic, eat raw Beans. 24 Hair not to grow, seeth them in water, & wash daily therewith, or stamp the husks or skins of green Beans, and apply it. 25 Flux, seeth green Beans, pods and all in water & vinegar, & eat them al. 26 Skin to be fair, wash with water of the blossoms. Flux to stop, dry Beans over the fire, & seethe good store of the flower of them with a quart of Ale, and eat thereof hot at night. 27 Hair not to grow, apply Beane flower. Head giddy, and dasling of the eyes, bruise hulled Beans with the white of an Egg, and apply it. Nose bleeding, put in powder of hulled Beans. 28 Flux, seethe Beans in vinegar, and eat them, or apply them to the navel. 29 Cod swollen, apply Beane flower with the juice of walwort and common oil. 30 Lust to abate, and to prevent the growing of hairs in boy's genitors, apply Beane meal. 31 Breast swollen, apply Beane meal with whites of Eggs. 32 Gout with swelling, mix iiii. ounces of Beane flower with the yolks of Eggs, and apply it. 33 Glandules, kernels, and scrofules, bake Beane flower with the juice of Coriander, and apply it. 34 Beans green and unripe eaten, do lose the belly, and therefore are to be eaten with Cummin. Dry beans bind the belly, especially eaten with their husks, and nourish but little. 35 The meal applied, dissolveth all swellings and tumours, and is good for the ulcerations and inflammations of the paps and genitors sodden with wine. 36 Bloody-fluxe seethe Beans with their husks in water and vinegar, and eat them, it stayeth all fluxes and vomiting. 37 The flower by itself or with Barley meal applied, suageth inflammations & bruises and their marks. With meal of Fenigreeke and honey, it taketh away the swelling of the paps with curdled milk, & the inflammation thereof, and swellings, impostumes, and swellings behind the ears. 38 But with Roses, Frankincense, and the white of an egg, the eyes that fall outward, and swellings, both windy and others. 39 The same knodden with wine, helpeth pearls & stripes of the eyes. Beans chewed without any husk, and applied to the forehead, stoppeth the humours that fall into it. 40 Half a Bean without the husk, stoppeth bleeding that cometh by the sucking of a Horseleech, being applied to the place. 41 Beans sodden in water, and applied with swine's grease, easeth the gout. 42 The leaves are good for the bruising and wounds of the sinews, especially the meal sodden with honey and vinegar. 43 With Fenigreeke and honey it healeth felons and pushes. 44 With white Frankincense, the white of an egg, and rosewater, sore swelled and dropping eyes. 45 With oil and vinegar applied hot, it suageth swollen cod. 46 Strained twenty times with cold milk, it cleanseth the face being washed therewith at night and in the morning with cold water and milk, and so it keepeth it from sun burning, taking withal one dram of Aloes put into two or three raisins to open the liver, and to withstand flushings into the face. Aches 5 (see gout) Apost. 18. 22. 37 Belly bound 34 Black spots 37 Blood to stop 40 Bloody-fluxe 12. 36 Breasts ache 5 swollen 31. 35. 37 Breath stink 23 Bruises 37 (see eyes) Chollike 9 Cod swollen 7. 20. 22. 39 35. 45 Cough 17 Eyes bruised 21. 39 falling outward 38 pearls 39 read 22. running 22. 44. swollen. 44 Emerods' 19 Face cleansing 18 (see skin) sun burned 46 Felons 2. 43 Fluxes 25. 26. 28. 34. 36 Fundament fig 17 Glandules 33 Gout 32. 41 Headache 39 broken 21 giddy 27 Hair not to grow 13. 24 27. 30 to avoid 16. 24 Inflammations 37 canker 2 Kernels 33 Lust to abate 30 Nose bleeding 27 pushes 43 Rancklings 3 Sinews griefs 3. 42 Skin cleansing 8. 10. 26. 46 Skrophules 33 Sun burning 46 Stomach hot 15 Stone 6 Vomiting 36 Whites 11 Wounds 4 ¶ Beech. BEeche, the leaves are very good to be laid to the beginning of hot swellings, blisters, and ulcers. 2 The water found in the hollowness of Beech, doth cure naughty scurf and wild tetters or skabs of man or beast, of horses, kine, or sheep being washed therewith. 3 The nuts are sweet and good to eat, and do serve for almost all purposes the Pineapple kernels do serve for. 4 The leaves chewed are good for the diseases of the goms & lips. 5 The nuts burned and mixed with honey, is good for a scaled and scurvy head when the hair goeth off being laid to. 6 The same is good for the stone. 7 The leaves, bark, buds or cups, sodden in read wine or running water, and sitten over stoppeth the terms, & putteth back the matrix and fundament that are fallen: and the decoction thereof in clean read wine with Cinnamon and Sugar, is good to the same effect. Blisters 1 biles 1 Fundament fallen 6 Flowers to stop 7 Gomes griefs 4 Head clean. 5 scales & skurf 5 Hair falling 5 Lips griefs 4 Matrix fallen 7 scurf 5 Stone 7 Swell hot 1 Ulcers 1 ¶ Beets. Beets, the juice put into the nose cleanseth the head, it suageth the ache of the eyes, it cleanseth the head from lice and nits, and restoreth hair, it destroyeth biles and botches. 2 The overmuch use of it nourisheth evil humours in the body. 3 Seethe white Beets in water, and wash running sores therewith. Put the juice of the root into the nose to purge the head. 4 Roast the root in the embers and eat it, to take away the smell of Garlic, Onions, or Leeks. 5 If one have drunk a Horseleeche or Bloodsucker, let them drink the juice of Beets, with some brine and vinegar to kill it. 6 Head ache, megrem, and swimming, put the juice of the bark of the root into the nose: and for the tooth ache, put it into the nosestrell on the same side that the ache is on bloodwarme by itself, with cows milk or woman's milk. It causeth sneezing, and so is good for the jaundice. 7 Belly bound, strake a little salt on a Beete root, and put it into the fundament, and so to avoid head ache that cometh of costiveness. 8 Head ache of murr or rheum, put the juice of a green root with a tent into the nose, the white foam being scummed off. Beets engender good blood. 9 The white Beete purgeth and cleanseth all evil humours. 10 seeth white Beets in water and wash the head therewith, to void the dandruf & scales. 11 Use the herb but little inwardly, especially raw, because it breedeth evil humours. 12 seeth it with mustardseed to help griefs of the milt. 13 Apply the juice of it to the holy fire. Put iii or iiii. drops of the sodden root into the ears to void their pain. 14 Take the juice with the seeds of Cummin, or Dill, to void the gripings of the belly. 15 Draw up the juice with oil of bitter Almonds into the nose, to purge the head. 16 Rub the juice on the gums to cease the raging pain of the teeth. 17 The young plants eaten with vinegar, provoke appetite, slake thirst, and repress choler in the stomach. 18 The ashes of the root with honey, restoreth hair, and keepeth the rest from falling. 19 The root of Black or read Beets put into the nose, being first bruised, cleanseth the brain. 20 The broth of the root and leaves skowreth away scurf, scales and nits of the head, and suageth the pain of kibed heels, and it helpeth frecles and spots, if they be first rubbed over with salt peter natural, and so it helpeth the falling of the hair, it helpeth running sores which spread abroad and waste up the flesh as they go. 21 Sodden in water it helpeth the bursting out of weals, burnings, inflammations, and such like. Drink the juice of white Beets to cleanse the stomach, put the juice with honey into the nose to cleanse the brain, and to help the head ache, and into the ears to void their pain and noise. 22 Stamp the leaves and apply them to spreading sores, scales and scurf. Eat white Beets with vinegar and mustered, to help the obstructions of the liver and mist. Appetite 17 Apostume 1 Bellybound 7. 9 21 gripping 14 Brain (See head) Biles 1 Breath stinking 4 Burn 21 Choler 17. 21 Ears ache 13. 21. noise 21 Eyes ache 1 Face deformed 20 frecles 20 Head ache 1. 6. 7. 8. 21 cleansing 13. 15. 19 21. megrem 6 scales 10. 20. 22. scurf 10. 20. 22. swimming 6 Hair falling 1. 18. 20 Holy fire 13 jaundice 6 Inflammation 21 Kibes 20 Lice 1 Liver stopped 22 milt stopped 22 nits 1 Obstructions 22 Purgation 9 21 pushes 21 Rheum 6 sneezing to 'cause 6 Sores spreading 20. 22 Stomach griefs 17. 21 Teeth ache 6. 16 Thirst 17 Weals 21 ¶ Bengewin. BEngewin, or Lacerpitium, stop it in a glass, and set it into a dounghill fifteen or twenty days, and then strain it, and use it as a singular and dainty oil. 2 Toes stink, and face chaps, rub the place with the powder of it or of Myrrh. 3 Dissolve it in water, and drink it to cure the hoarseness that cometh suddenly. 4 Sup it with a rear Egg to cure the Cough. 5 Take it with some broth against an old pleurisy. It cureth the jaundice and dropsy taken with figs. 6 It is good against cramps and shrinking of the sinews and other members one scruple being taken. 7 With Pepper and Myrrh it expelleth the terms, seconds, and dead birth. 8 And taken with honey and vinegar, or with syrupus Acetosus, it is singular against the falling sickness. 9 Taken with the kernels of raisins, it helpeth the flux that cometh of weakness of the stomach called Celiacus morbus. 10 Being drunk with Wine, Pepper, and Frankincense, it driveth away the shake of Agues. 11 Make thereof an Electuary with Pepper, Ginger, and the leaves of Rue with Hony. It is a singular medicine against the Fever quarten. It is called Antidotum ex succo Syreniaco. It is good against all venomous bitings and poisoned darts and weapons to be taken inwardly, and also applied to the wounds. 12 It is very good against all wounds and bitings of dogs, mad beasts, and serpents and stingings. 13 Being streaked on the eyes with Honey, it quickeneth the sight, and taketh away haws and webs in the eyes at their first coming. 14 Being put into aching, hollow, and corrupt teeth, it taketh away their pains, and so it doth being sodden with Figs and Hyssop in water, and holden in the mouth. 15 Apply it with honey to stay the falling of the Vuula. 16 Gargoyle it with Hydromel or Meade, to cure the squinsy. 17 Gargoyle it with vinegar, and keep it in the mouth, to make the Horseleeches to come out of the weasand or throat. 18 Apply it with Rue, Niter, and Honey, to break the pestilential Apostumes and Carbuncles 19 And likewise to Corns or agnailes, being first scarifyed with a knife to take them away. 20 Apply it with Coprose, and Verdigreece to all superfluous outgrowing of flesh, and the polyp in the nose, and all scurvy manginess. 21 Apply it with vinegar, pepper, and wine, to cure the noughty scurf of the head and falling of the hair. 22 Boil it in vinegar with the pill of a Pomegranate, to take away all outgrowing of the fundament. 23 Boil it in oil, and anoint kibed heels therewith, being long bathed first with wine. 24 With vinegar, it healeth foul scurf of the skin. Use to eat thereof to have a good & fresh colour: with a soft egg it helpeth the cough. 25 Take half a scruple for the bowing back of the head, drink it with vinegar against clodded milk in the breasts: with oxymel for the falling sickness. 26 It is melted with bitter Almonds, or Rue, or hot bread, to make drinks of it. Magistrantia may be used for it. To make the oil of it see Almonds. Agnailes 19 Bitings venomous 11 12 Breasts sore 25 Carbuncles 18 Chaps 2 Corns 19 Cough 4. 2 Cramp 6 Colour bad 24 Dead birth 7 Dropsy 5 Eyes griefs 13 Falling evil 8. 25 Feet stink 2 Fevers cold 10 quarten 11 Flesh superfluous 20 Fluxes 9 Flowers stopped 7 Fundament griefs 22 Head bowing 25 scurf 21 Hair falling 21 Horcenesse 3 Horseleeche 17 jaundice 5 Kibes 23 Mad dog 12 Mandge 20 Nose polip 20 Plague sore 18 Pleurisy 5 Poison 11 Polip 20 Seconds 7 Sinews 6 Skin grief 20. 24 scurf 20. 24 squinsy 16 Stomach weak 9 Teethache 14 Throat griefs 17 Venom 11 Vuala fallen 15 Wounds 11 ¶ Betony. BEtony, ache or gout, put a spoonful of honey with ix. corns of Pepper into an egg shell full of the juice of Betony, and drink it with a draft of wine. 2 To be delivered of a dead child, drink the juice of Betony & Nep with Ale. 3 Eyes dull, put in the juice of Betony to stop the tears, and drink Betony three days after with hot water. 4 Stamp Betony, & apply it to the forehead of them that are frantic, or possessed with devils: proved. 5 For all gouts and headache, seethe Betony well, and drink the broth, and apply the rest to the place. 6 Headache, seethe Betony, Vervin & Wormwood in water, and wash therewith, and grind the same herbs with some of the water and wheat bran, and apply it hot to the mould of the head thrice and be whole: proved. 7 For the head ache and broken bones, drink the juice, and apply the dross to the place, to draw out the bones, and heal the wound. 8 Head megrim, seethe Betony, Vervin, Horehound, and Hyssop in white wine, and wash the head therewith, and apply the herbs as hot as may be suffered. 9 Head ache of cold phlegm, seeth Betony in wine with a third part of water, and apply it. 10 Head noise, pain and turning, drink powder of the leaves dried in the shade, or rather eat it with slices of bread steeped in wine first and last to restore the brain. 11 Sleep to cause, apply Betony to the head. 12 Vomit to stop, make a confection of powder of Betony one ounce, and honey iiii. ounces, and take thereof every morning fasting. 13 Brain to restore, use powder of it in thy pottage. Head ache, make lee of Betony, and wash the head therewith thrice a week. 14 Ears ache, put in the juice with oil of Roses. 15 Ears deaf, put in the juice of Betony and Horehound. 16 Eyes smarting, wash them with the juice of Betony, and white wine. 17 Nose bleeding, put in powder of Betony, with as much salt as can be taken up with three fingers. 18 Teeth ache, seeth Betony and wild Gourds in wine or vinegar, and hold it hot in thy mouth. 19 Palsy and loss of speech, drink three drams of Betony with goats milk three days. 20 For vomiting, stopping of the breast, and shortness of breath, drink one dram and a half of powder of Betony, with a goblet full of water fasting. 21 Stomach gnawing, use Betony and Wormwood with warm water and sugar. 22 Spitting blood, drink the juice with goats milk, or use the powder withhold wine. 23 Breast to cleanse, and to purge phlegm, drink the powder with warm water. 24 Milt griefs, seethe it in wine, and drink it. Back or reins griefs, drink it as before for head ache, 25 Bladder pain, seeth the root of Smallage in water, and drink it with powder of Betony. 26 To cause deliverance speedily, drink powder of Betony. 27 Mad dogs biting, stamp green Betony and apply it. 28 Fistula, stamp it with salt, and put it in, and apply the herb. 29 Treacle for the mother and all poison, take powder of Betony one ounce, of Centory iiii. ounces, of Rue two. ounces, mix them with clarified honey, and keep it, and use it. 30 Blood to stop, stamp it with salt & put it in. 31 Emerods', drink the juice of Yarow, Betony, and Mouseare often. 32 Flowers to cause, drink the juice with good ale. 33 Head ache, mix the juice of Betony, Mints, & smallage, with as much vinegar, & put thereof into the ear, and apply the dross thereon, proved: or stamp Camomile & Betony, and seeth them in sour ale, and apply it hot: or drink powder of Betony with fair running water, sugar, and nutmegs, proved. 34 Back ache, stamp Betony, Egrimony, and Mugwort, of each like much with Galts grease & vinegar, and apply it. 35 Eyes web, drink it with water 9 days. 36 Eyes bleared, & sore, put in the juice. Mouth bleeding, drink powder of Betony and Peniroyall three days. 38 Teeth worms, seeth Betony in wine or vinegar, and hold thereof hot in thy mouth. 39 Hart Cardiak, mix the juice with Treacle and powder of Cloves, Cummin, & anise, and use it 9 days. 40 Venom or poison, seeth powder of Betony with read wine, & drink it. 41 Wounds and bruises, stamp it with stolen Ale and swine's grease, and apply it. It draweth out broken bones and healeth well after. 42 Head ache, seeth three handful of Betony in a pottle of wine to a pint, and wash the head therewith, and apply the herb. 43 Eyes tears, seeth Betony and Fenell roots, & wash therewith. 44 Eyes stripes, stamp Betony and apply it. 45 Eyes dim and blemishes, seeth Betony, or the root thereof, and wash therewith. 46 Eyes cloudy & blind, drink one dram of Betony with water. Eyes watery, eat Betony. 47 Eyes cloudy, stamp Rue and the flowers of Betony, and strain them with morning dew, and put it in. 48 Ears pain, deaf, and other impediments, put in the juice of Betony warm. 49 To help digestion and withstand vomiting, use Betony with honey. 50 rheums, ache, and to expel the stone of the reins and bladder, drink Betony with Wine, Hony, and Pepper. 51 Yard pain and swelling, seeth Betony in wine, and apply it. 52 To cause deliverance without peril, seeth Betony in wine, and take one dram, and look there be no pears in the house, for they are hurtful, and suffer not the matrix easily to open. 53 Gout pain, seeth Betony, and drink it and also apply it. 54 Fever quotitian, stamp Betony two drams, Planten one dram, strain them, and drink it before the fit. 55 Fever quarten, take iiii. drams of Betony, with wine, water, and honey, before the fit. 56 Fistula, stamp Betony and apply it. 57 Glandules, scrofules, and kernels, stamp the root with doves dung, and grease, and apply it. 58 Bones broken, apply Betony to draw them out. 59 Eyes bruised, stamp it and apply it. 60 Eyes dim, or blemish, seethe it in water, and wash therewith. 61 Eyes bloody & cloudy, drink one dram of the powder with the water thereof. 62 Eyes tears, eat Betony. 63 Gout, drink a little dishfull of the juice every of the 9 first mornings of May. 64 Back ache stamp Betony, Egrimony, & Mugwort, and their roots with old grease & vinegar or vergis, and apply it three days. 65 Surfeit, stamp it & drink it with a little hot water and wine morning & evening three days. 66 Poison drunk, seethe one dram of the powder in wine a little, and drink it to have present help: and drink fasting to withstand poison. 67 Serpents being in a circle of Betony, cannot go out of it, but rather will dye with beating themselves. 68 Eyes stroke, stamp it and apply it, and drink the juice with small drink or water, and wash the eye with water wherein it, or the root thereof hath been sodden. 69 Eyes running, stamp it with the white of an egg, and apply it with flax hurds. 70 Phlegm in the stomach to break it and purge it abundantly, use the power of it in pottage, and drink the juice of Sorrel. 71 Headache apply Betony water with a cloth from ear to ear. 72 Betony hath like virtues to Balm, it breaketh wind, comforteth a weak stomach, either the flower or herb boiled, or the distilled water, or powder of the herb by itself, or with honey: it helpeth the mother. 73 The leaf, flower, or root in drink, conserve, electuary, syrup, or potion, or powder, is singular for all diseases of the stomach, liver, milt, kidneys, bladder, the obstruction of the matrix, and the moisture thereof, the consumption of the lungs, coughs, dropsies, continual Fevers, boil the leaves and flowers in honeyed water to have present remedy. 74 Teeth ache, seeth it with Sage and alom in vinegar, and apply it. 75 Urine to cause speedily, take half a spoonful of the roots and leaves in powder, with white wine, possit ale, broth or drink. Ptisik, seeth the powder with honey to an Electuary, and use it. 76 Barrenness by too much fatness, drink one dram of the powder, with one ounce of the water. 77 Eye bruise, stamp the leaves either sodden or raw, and apply them. 78 To cause a pellet or shot to come out of the flesh: stamp it with the fat of a Hare into an ointment, and apply it. 79 Nosebleeding, stamp it with salt, and put it in, and anoint the forehead with vinegar. 80 Spitting blood, drink the roots with Goat's milk three days, or boil Betony, Rue, Smallach, and Mints in Goat's milk, and sup it warm. 81 To expel evil humours which annoy the eyes, drink Betony with warm water ix. days. 82 Head broken, stamp it and apply it with Swine's grease. 83 To purge a costive body gently, seeth Betony, Sothernwood, and Penyroyall ana one handful to the third part, and drink thereof. 84 Eyes to be clear, eat Betony fasting. 85 Flanks swollen, drink the juice or powder of Betony. 86 Headache, seeth it with Camomile and Fenell in water, and wash the head therewith. 87 Ptisik and spitting blood, seeth it with Horehound, Nep, and xx. corns of Pepper in wine, and drink thereof daily with payment nine days, and the tenth day drink a cup full of the juice of Betony with common oil. 88 Reinss ache, drink an egshelfull of the juice of Betony, with as much wine and ix. corns of Pepper ix. days. 89 Ears deaf, put in the juice with Rose water. 90 Fever quotidian, drink Betony and Planten, of each two ounces, with water warm. 91 Head broken, and to draw out bones, stamp Betony, Vervin, and Rue, with honey or Rye meal, or Wheat flower, and the white of an egg, and apply it. 92 To expel a dead child, drink Betony and Rue, and Isope with warm water. 93 For all manner of sicknesses, drink the juice of Betony every morning of May a good draft to be free from all sicknesses, but death for one year. 94 Gout to prevent, drink half a pint of the juice yearly in the beginning of May. 95 Ears dull, put in the juice with as much oil of Spike. 96 Headache, stamp Betony, and apply it to the temples. Headmegrim, drink Sage royal, Betony and Wormwood with vinegar xxx. days. 97 Phlegm to avoid, make little pellets of the powder with honey, and swallow them down whole when thou goest to bed. 98 Spitting blood, seeth Betony, Mints, Smallach, & Rue in milk, and drink it first and last. 99 Eyes ache, apply the water or juice of Betony, and also drink it. 100 Eyes web, stamp it & strain it with wine or water, & drink it x. days to destroy it. 101 Teethach, stamp it and seeth it with vinegar to the one half, & hold thereof often it thy mouth. 102 Cough, mix the juice or powder with honey & make it an electuary, & use it ix. days. 103 Yard sore & swollen, stamp it with white wine, & apply it. 104 Gout, seeth it in water and drink it, & also wash the feet therewith, & apply the herb. 105 Drunkenness to withstand, drink the herb or powder in the morning to be free that day. 106 For the plague if one be infected, drink the water of Betony, & Scabious, of each like much, with a good quantity of Treacle of Andromachus, or for want thereof common Treacle, & drink thereof often to expel the poison from the principal parts, & to save life. 107 Headache stamp Betony, Vervin, and Cummin, & apply it, or drink Betony fasting daily, or drink Betony with water x. days, or take Betony, Camomile & powder of Nutmegs ana like much, if the stomach be stopped, put thereto one ounce of Seine, seeth them in Ale, and take thereof half a spoonful morning and evening warm, or drink the juice of Betony, wine, and honey of each one spoonful with nine corns of Pepper four days. 108 Speech lost, drink the root of Betony, or bear it about thee. 109 Bruises of all sorts, seeth Betony, Auens, and Camomile of each like much in stolen, and apply it, and he whole. Head broken, drink the juice of Betony to cast out the broken bones. 110 Byting of mad Dogs, or Adders, drink Dragons, Rue, and Betony. 111 Worms, drink powder of Betony. 112 Biting of an Adder, seeth Rue, Betony, and Fenell in Butter, and drink it. 113 Belly bound, stamp the root of Betony & drink it with Ale, it purgeth well. 114 Speaking in sleep, take Betony about thee when thou goest to bed. 115 Teethach, drink the root of Betony, or bear it about thee. 116 Deliverance to cause speedily, drink Betony. 117 Colour to be clean, drink water of Betony. 118 The decoction of Betony drunk, provoketh urine, breaketh the stone of the kidneys, cleanseth & scoureth the breast and lungs, and is good for the Ptisik or consumption, and the cough. 119 Drink one dram of powder of the leaves with Hydromell for the cramp, and diseases of the mother, and to provoke terms. 120 Drink the dried leaves in Wine against venomous bitings and inward poison, and apply the herb to the place: And taken beforehand, it preserveth from poison. 121 Betony openeth the stopping of the liver, milt, and kidneys, and cureth the same, and is good for the dropsy. 122 Drink it with wine and water against spitting of blood. 123 It cureth all wounds both inward and outward, it comforteth the stomach, helpeth digestion, voideth belching and the desire to vomit, being taken with clarified honey after supper, and so doth conserve made thereof with Sugar, as much as a Bean at once. 124 The powder of the root taken with honeyed water, provoketh vomit, and to cast out tough phlegm and superfluous humours. 125 Drink Betony with Hydromell to lose the belly gently, and to help the falling sickness, madness and headache. 126 Betony hath like virtues of Balm, it breaketh wind, comforteth the weak stomach, either the herb or flower boiled, or the water or powder worketh all these effects, and is good to be used either alone or with honey, it is good for women that are troubled with the mother. 127 The leaf, flower, and root sodden and drunk, or used any other ways, is singular for all diseases of the stomach, liver, milt, kidneys and bladder, it freeth the Matrix from all obstruction, and draweth from thence all superfluous moistness. Boil the leaves & flowers in honeyed water to help the consumption of the lungs, coughs, dropsies, and consuming Fevers coming from the stomach. 129 Dry the leaves and roots in an oven wherein brown bread hath been baked, and use half a spoonful of the powder in white wine, possit ale, drink, or pottage to provoke urine speedily. 130 Drink Betony fasting, and no poison shall hurt thee. 131 seeth one spoonful of the powder in a draft of white wine, and drink it after the drinking of poison to help thee. 132 seeth Betony in water, & wash the eyes therewith, for any dimness or other blemish. 133 Eyes cloudy & bloody, drink Betony water, with one dram of the powder of it. 134 Use Betony, & the flowers thereof any ways against the belching & weakness of the stomach, the strangling of the mother, all griefs of the stomach, liver, milt, kidneys, bladder, & Matrix, the jaundice, the Ptisik, sighing, griefs of the lungs, the disposition to the dropsy, the rotten and continual Fevers which begin in the stomach, especially the leaves and flowers sodden in water, and drunk with honey warm, and so it helpeth also them that be mad, the falling sickness, the Sciatica, and the palsy. 135 Byting venomous, seeth the leaves with Read wine, and apply them. 136 Bursten places, apply the leaves. 137 Mother strangled, drink one dram with water and honey. 138 Serpents biting, drink three drams, with xviii. ounces of wine. 139 Drink one dram with wine against deadly poison. 140 Apply the herb to venomous bitings. 141 Drink one dram with vinegar and honey, against the griefs of the liver and milt. 142 Take as much as a Bean with sodden honey after supper to help digestion, and to avoid sour belching, and stinking of breath. 143 Drink half a dram with two ounces of cold wine for spitting of blood. 144 Drink it with water against the Sciatica and ache of the kidneys & bladder. 145 Drink two drams with water and honey against the dropsy in an Ague, but without an Ague with wine and honey. Drink four drams with honeyed water to purge the body. 146 Use it with honey against the Ptisik, and spitting of matter and corruption from the lungs. Keep the leaves dried in an earthen pot. 147 Wine and vinegar made with Betony, are good for the stomach, and to clear the eyes. 148 seeth it and Wormwood in White wine to purge phlegm: it killeth Worms. 149 A precious and most noble balm. Take oil Olive one pint. S. johnswort, Betony, Centory, and Selfeheale, of each one handful, stamp them and mix them well, and let it distil in a glass all the Summer, then press it out: it cureth all wounds by only anointing them morning and evening: it expelleth humours, and is wonderful in fractures and bruises, and all such like. Ache 1. 5 (see gout and in their places) 44. 149. Adder biting 110. 112. (see bitings) Backach 24. 34. 50. 64. 88 144 Barrenness 76 Belly bound 83. 113. 125. (see Purg.) Byting venomous 110. 112. 120. 135. 138. 139. 140. (see Poison, Venom.) Belching 123. 142 Bladder griefs 25. 73. 134. 144. Blood to stop 30. (see Nose.) Bones broken 7. 58. 91. 149 Brain to restore 10. 13 Breast to purge 23. 118. stopped 20. 118. 128. Breath short 20. 118. 128. stinking 142. bruises 41. 109. 149 Bursten 126 Conception to 'cause 76 Consumption 73. 75. 87. 118. (see Ptisik, coughs, spitting blood.) Cough 73. 102. 118. 128 Cramp 119 Colour to be clear 117 Dead child 2. 92 Deliverance 26. 52. 92. 2. 116 Digestion 49. 123. 142 Demoniak 4 Drunkenneesse 104. 105 Dropsy 73. 128. 134. 145 Ears ache 14. 48. deaf 48. 89. 95. noise 48. Eyes dull 3. 45. 46. 60. 61. 81. 84. 132. 133. 147. bruised 44. 59 61. 68 77. 133. ache 99 bleared 36. running 3. 69. 43. 47. 46. 62. smarting 16. web 35. 100 Emerods' 31 Falling evil 125 Fever continual 73. 128. quarten 55. quotid. 54. 90 Fistula 28. 56 Flank swollen 85 Phlegm 23. 70. 97 Flowers stopped 119. to stop 32. Frenzy 4. (see mad.) Glandules 57 Gout 1. 5. 53. 63. 94. 104 Heart cardiak 39 Headache 5. 6. 7. 9 10. 13. 33. 42. 71. 86. 107. 125. broken 82. 91. 109. megrim 8. 96. noise 10. turning 10. Kernels 57 Kidneys griefs 73. 121. 134. 144. Lean to be 7. 6 Liver griefs 73. 121. 134. 141. Lungs griefs 73. 118. 128. 146. Mad 4. 125 Mad dog biting 27. 112 Milt griefs 24. 73. 121. 134. 141. Mother griefs 29. 73. 72. 119. 126. 127. 134. 137. Mouth bleeding 37 Nose bleeding 17. 79 Obstructions 73. 121. (see liver, milt, etc.) Palsy 19 134 Plague 106 Poison 29. 40. 66. 67. 120. 130. 131. 135. 139. 140. Pricks 7. 41. 78 Ptisik 75. 87. 118. 146 Purgation 23. 70. 83. 113. 124. 125. 145. 148. Reinss ache 50. griefs 73. Sciatica 134. 144 Sickness general 73. 93. 123. 126. 127. 134. Scrophules' 57 Sleep to 'cause 11 Speaking in sleep 1. 4 Speech lost 19 108. 114 Spitting blood 22. 80. 87. 98. 122. 143. Stomach gnawing 21 weak 72. 73. 123. 126. Stone 118 Surfeit 65 Swooning (see Heart) Teethach 19 74. 101. 115. worms 38. Treacle to make 29 Venom 40, 135. 110. 112. Vomiting 12. 20. 49. 123. to cause 124. Urine stopped 75. 118. 129. Windiness 72 Worms 111 Wounds general 41. 123. 149. Yard pain 51. swollen 51. 103. ¶ Birch. BIrch: Put powder of Birch coals into any wound or great sore to heal it perfectly. 2 Skotch the body of the tree after the Spring time, and gather the water, and drink it for the stone in the reins. 3 The same juice is good for the jaundice. Some use to distil the juice and to use it against many foul griefs of the skin, and exulcerations of the mouth, weals, and pushes and such like, and likewise the distilled water of the leaves. But lee made with the ashes of the Bark thereof is more effectual for the griefs aforesaid. 4 The juice of the leaves is good to be kept for cheeslop to save the cheese from breeding of worms in it. Iche 3 Mouth sores 3 pushes 3 Skin griefs 3 Sores 1 Stone 2 Wounds 1 Weals 3 ¶ Bistort. BIstort, the root boiled in wine or water and drunk, stoppeth the bloody flux, the flowers, and all issues of blood, and the desire to vomit, and so doth the powder drunk with Read wine. 2 The decoction of the leaves is good against all sores and inflammations of the mouth and throat, and fasteneth loose teeth being holden often in the mouth. 3 The root doth glue wounds together and hath the virtues of Britannica. 4 Drink one dram of the root with Wine or Ale against the plague to expel it by sweat: so doth the water or decoction of the root. It helpeth also the bloody flux, bruises, jaundice, and all venomous bitings. 5 The root with Piretrum of each like much, put into a hollow tooth with honey, ceaseth the pain, and draweth out the rheum. 6 Wash the canker of the back, the polip of the nose, and all maligniant sores with the water thereof to heal them. 7 The powder stoppeth all bleeding and raw wounds. Backkanker 6 Byting venomous 4 Blood to stop 7 Bloodyflixe 1. 4 Bruises 4 Flowers to stop 1 jaundice 4 Inflammations 2 canker 6 Mouth sores 2 Nose polip 6 Plague 4 Sores 2. 6 Teeth ache 5 loose 2. Throat sores 2 Vomiting 1 Wounds 3 Bitter sweet. (See Amaradulcis.) ¶ Blessed thistle. BLessed thistle: drink powder of the seeds for the pain and stitches in the side, and all gripings in the body. 2 The powder eaten or drunk provoketh sweat, and helpeth headache, giddiness, and the memory, and restoreth hearing. 3 The leaf, juice, seed, or water, healeth all kinds of poison. 4 The water healeth the canker in the breast of a woman, though it be eaten to the very ribs. Use it against the plague. 5 For the Fever Quarten and all other Fevers, take one dram of the powder, or three ounces of the water distilled, in May, a quarter of an hour before the fift, and cover thee well to sweated. 6 The juice or powder helpeth headache. The juice quickeneth the sight. 7 The powder stoppeth blood at the nose. 8 The brooth taken with wine, causeth appetite. It is good for any ache in the body. 9 It strengtheneth the members of the body. 10 It fasteneth loose teeth, and weak sinews. 11 It is good for the dropsy. 12 It breaketh the stone and impostumes. It preserveth from the plague being taken within xxiiii. hours before a man come into the infected place. 13 It it is good for the dizziness in the head, shortness of breath, and diseases of the lungs, it strengtheneth the teeth, expelleth terms, provoketh sleep, and helpeth the falling evil and inward bruises. 14 The powder is good against poison. 15 The same put into the guts by a Glister, helpeth the chollik, and other griefs of the guts, and the wounds of the same. 16 The water or juice helpeth the redness of the eyes, and the itch of them. 17 The leaves bruised are good for the bitings of Serpents, burnings and Carbuncles, there is nothing better for the canker and old festering sores. 18 The leaves are good for fomentations and to be sitten over in water, that the vapour may come to the diseased places, against the stone and stopping of the flowers. 19 Use it to all headache, whirling, and giddiness, to 'cause a good memory, to comfort the brain, to cleanse the breast, chest, stomach and throat, to provoke appetite, to consume rheum, and for pain in the belly, either the juice, water, powder, seed or green herb. 20 The white Cotten healeth all mortal wounds in three days without pain or grief. 21 The herb or powder eaten, causeth a sweet breath, fasteneth the teeth, strengtheneth the gums, helpeth the matrix, cleareth the heart. 22 If the navel of little children fall out, boil the herb in wine, and wash the navel there with. 23 Blessed thistle, either eaten or drunk, or eaten green with bread and butter as Sage and Parsely, or boiled in pottage with other herbs, or the juice with wine or Ale and Sugar, or the water of it by itself, or with wine, or Ale with Sugar, or the water by itself, or with wine or Ale, or the powder of it used any ways before meat, or with Sack after meat, or a good handful of it sodden in a quart of running water to the one half, and then drunk with wine, or with Sugar or any other ways used. 24 It strengtheneth all the inner parts of the body, sharpeneth the wit, memory, and senses, comforteth the stomach, causeth appetite, resisteth poison, and preserveth from the plague. And is excellent against any kind of Fever, if one dram of the powder be drunk with Ale or wine warm a quarter of an hour before the fit, and the body well covered to sweat till the fit be past, or the distilled water drunk after the same manner, and so it helpeth against the plague and pestilent Fevers being taken within twelve hours after the first taking of the grief. It openeth the obstruction of the members, and provoketh urine. 25 The herb eaten, helpeth the pain of the lungs and head, and causeth good hearing, sharpeneth the wits and memory, and putteth away giddiness. 26 It comforteth the brain and the sight, both being eaten, and the eyes anointed therewith: when the juice can not be had use the powder, or the dried herb steeped in water, and wash therewith. Drop the juice into blood-shotten eyes. Apply the herb to the bleeding of the nose or any other place. 27 Eat the powder of the herb with honey to spit forth phlegm and gross humours the more easily. 28 It helpeth a weak stomach, provoketh appetite, and softeneth the heart, it consumeth evil blood, and breedeth good blood. 29 The herb boiled in Wine causeth sweat. 30 Boiled in water and drunk, it consumeth evil humours, and breedeth good humours. 31 The herb eaten, strengtheneth the palsy members, and healeth blistered lungs. 32 The herb boiled or drunk raw with Wine breaketh the stone. 33 And boiled in the urine of a healthful manchild, and drunk, it helpeth the dropsy, and the plague, and breaketh all impostumes, and mastreth the canker and Falling sickness. 34 The Down laid on cuts and new wounds, doth heal them without pain. 35 The herb chewed, cureth a stinking breath. 36 Boil the herb in Wine, and drink it a quarter of an hour before the fit, and cover thee well to sweat, to help all Agues both hot and cold, or drink the powder with hot Wine, or the distilled water for the same purpose, and so it helpeth against any inward poison. 37 Eat or drink the powder of the herb, and sweat three hours to help the stitch in the side. 38 The herb, powder or juice drunk, helpeth the headache, and Megrem. 39 And taken in meat and drink, it is good against dizziness swimming and giddiness of the head, and is a singular remedy against deafness and provoketh sleep. 40 The juice laid to the eyes, quickeneth the sight, and so doth the water or infusion of the dry herb the eyes being washed therewith. 14 The water or juice dropped into the eyes, cureth their redness, bloodshooting & itch. The same rubbed on the teeth with a clout, fasteneth them & strengtheneth them. 42 The powder stauncheth blood in the nose or else where. 43 The broth or decoction of the herb in wine, helpeth an evil & weak stomach. 44 The powder eaten with honey or drunk with wine, doth ripen or digest cold phlegm, purgeth & bringeth up that which is in the breast, and causeth the breath to be easily fetched, and the herb chewed, healeth a stinking breath. 45 The powder taken before infection, preserveth from the plague. And one dram, or a wallnutshelfull taken immediately after the infection, expelleth the venom of the infection from the heart, so that a man sweat after it. 46 So doth the herb boiled in wine, or in the urine of a healthful manchild and drunk. 47 Drink the juice with wine against shortness of wind, the griefs of the lungs, and for the consumption, or ptisik. 48 Eat the herb against the trembling of the palsy members. Use the powder in Glisters against the chollik & other griefs of the guts: Or drink the water or decoction to the same effect, and for the green sickness, the griping & pain of the belly, to open obstructions, to 'cause passage of the urine, to dissolve bruised blood and to provoke sweat. 49 The leaves, juice, powder, or water healeth the canker, and old rotten festered sores. The leaves stamped and applied, are good against hot swellings, Carbuncles and sores that be hard to be cured, especially plague sores, and also the bitings of venomous beasts, Serpents, and creeping beasts. 50 The decoction of the herb killeth worms, and taketh away all inward pain of the back and belly. 51 The herb either green or dry drunk and applied, helpeth all grievous and swelling sores, bruises, bitings, etc. and covereth the flesh with skin, and is good in drinks for the French pocks, and sores of the paps and teats, the powder being laid on them. For all inward griefs it may be sodden in Ale or Wine, with Honey Lycoras or Sugar, or the powder with bread and butter, or bread and honey, or licked in with honey: the seed may be sowed at any time of the year, and so it may be had at all times. 52 The water healed a woman that was eaten with a canker to the very ribs. 53 Stamp the herb and seeth it with Swine's grease, wine, and wheat flower into an ointment, and use it to all sores and ulcers, first washing them with white wine, and then anointing them therewith twice a day. 54 Drink powder of the seeds, to help the pain, pricking and stitches of the sides, belly, and guts. 55 Stamp the green herb, & apply it to wounds to heal them speedily and miraculously. 56 Drink the juice or powder to kill worms presently. 57 Steep the dried herb in Aqua vitae, and drink it against any grievous pain, and be whole in short time. 58 Make a paste thereof with bread and honey, and distil it with white wine, and it is most excellent for the sight. 59 Stamp it grossly when it beginneth to flower, and steep it in common oil and Aqua vitae with a little Frankincense, and let it remain till it be macerated, then boil it and strain it, then take thereof a third part, and put thereto a little Virgin's wax, and boil it till it begin to fume and turn to black colour, than strain it, and keep it in a close glass, and drink one dram of the oil with sweet Wine cold, to resolve any infirmity, and to preserve health. And with the black humour anoint all the body when thou goest to bed cold, to resolve any evil quality, and to preserve good state. It maintaineth the hair black that it wax not white. It killeth worms in the body with divers other things not now written of. 60 The powder drunk in Wine or taken in pills cutteth and driveth down gross humours, helpeth the griefs of the breast, purgeth the blood, and is good for the Pcisik. 61 The leaves sodden in Wine and drunk hot, ceaseth torment, provoketh sweat and the terms, and helpeth the plague, if it be taken within xxiiii. hours after the first assault thereof: and also all rotten Fevers, the Quarten, and all manner of poison, and the swelling that cometh thereof, and so doth the water or powder. 62 The juice, tops, seeds, and leaves with Pepper and Wine stamped together, is very good against all stingings of Serpents. 63 The bruised leaves and the water, are good for burnings, Carbuncles, and bitings of Scorpions and Serpents. 64 The leaves, juice, decoction or water, are good against the canker and all other malignant sores and filthy ulcers. 65 The herb is good in foments and baths for the stone, and to drive down the flowers. It comforteth the brain, cleanseth the breast, chest, and stomach and throat, provoketh appetite, consumeth rheum, and the pain in the belly. 66 The herb or powder eaten, causeth a sweet breath, fasteneth teeth, strengtheneth the gums, helpeth the matrix, and cheereth the heart, etc. For the Quarten, and all other Fevers, cold, drink one dram of the powder with some of the water of the same herb, and drink it with Aqua vitae to kill worms, and in short time to take away all grievous pain of the body. Ache 8. 57 59 Appetite 8. 19 24. 28. 65 Backach 8. 50 Belly ache 18. 15. 19 48. 50. 54. 61. 65. (see cholik) Byting venomous 17. 49. 51. 52. 62. 63. Blood cleansing 28. 60 to stop 25. 42. Brain to comfort 18. 26. 65. Breasts canker 4. 51. 52 Breast griefs 19 27. 44. 47. 60. 65. Breath short 13. 19 44. 47. (see Breast) Breath stink 21. 35. 44 Bruises 13. 48. 51 Burn 17. 63 Carbuncles 17. 49 Cholik 15. 48. 54. 61 Consumption 47. 60 Cuts 34 Dropsy 11. 33 Ears dull 2. 25. 39 Eyes dull 6. 26. 40. 58. itch 16. 41. read 16. 26. 41 Falling evil 13. 33 Festers 17 Fevers general 5. 24. 36. 61. Festers 17 Phlegm 27. 44 Flowers stopped 13. 18. 61. 65 French pox 51 Gums griefs 66. 21 Green sickness 48 Heart griefs 21. 28 Headache 2. 6. 19 25. 38. 39 giddy 2. 13. 25. 39 megrem 3. 8. Health to preserve 59 Humours evil 30 Impostume 12. 33 canker 4. 33. 49. 64 Lungs griefs 13. 25. 31 Matrix griefs 21. 66 Memory bad 18. 24. 25. 39 Navel out 22 Nosebleeding 7. 26. 42 Obstructions 48 Palsy 31. 48 Plague 4. 12. 24. 33. 45. 46. 49. Plague sore 17. 24 Poison 3. 14. 36. 61 Ptisik 47. 60 Rheum 19 65 Sinews grief 10 Sickness general 13. 18. 19 33. 51. 57 59 Side stitch 1. 37. 54. Sleep to 'cause 14. 29 Sores 17. 40. 49. 51. 53. 64. swollen 49. 51. 53. Stinging 62. 63 Stomach griefs 1. 19 24. 28. 43. Stitch 1. 37. 54 Stone 12. 18. 32. 65 Swell 49. 61 Sweat to 'cause 2. 24. 29. 48. 61. 66. Teeth loose 10. 13. 41. 66 Throat griefs 19 65 Trembling 48 Ulcers 64. 53 Urine stopped 24. 48 Worms 50. 56. 59 Wounds inward 15. mortal 20. 24. 55. ¶ Bombase. BOmbase or Cotton: the seed suageth the cough, and is good against all cold diseases of the breast, it augmenteth natural strength, and increaseth seed of generation. 2 The juice of the leaves is good for the lask of young children, and for the gnawing and grinding in the belly. 3 The oil of the seed taketh away freckles and spots of the face. Belly ache 2 Breast griefs 1 Cold griefs 1 Cough 1 Face deformed 3 Freckles 3 Flix 2 Seed to increase, strength to increase 1 ¶ Borage. Use it in wine to cause gladness and mirth to expel sadness and melancholy. 2 Boil it with honeyed water for the roughness & hoarseness of the throat. 3 Take that which hath three branches with the root with drink for the Tertian Fever, & that with four branches for the Quarten Fever. 4 Boil it in wine to engender good blood. 5 Drink the juice with Sugar for the pain & giddiness of the head. 6 Use the syrup of the juice thereof with Sugar and the bone of a Heart's heart for the panting, trembling, and beating of the heart. 7 Mix the juice of the herb with Seine, & the syrup of Borage, and drink it morning & evening to increase the senses, & to put away melancholy. 8 Eat the raw flowers, or drink them with wine to 'cause good blood, and avoid the trembling of the heart. 9 Use the syrup for the King's evil. The dried flowers for one year, serve for all purposes that the herb is for. 10 Steep the flowers in oil, and sun it certain days, & anoint the region of the stomach and heart therewith to comfort them. 11 Distil the water in Balneo Mariae, and drink two or three ounces morning & evening of the water, for the griping and swelling of the belly, & for the bloody flux, & the hardness of fetching wind, to comfort the heart and brain, to increase the memory & wit, to purge the blood, & to avoid the frenzy. 12 Apply the water with a linen cloth to the venom of a spider or wasp, to take away the pain thereof. 13 Dip a read cloth in the water and apply it to the eyes, to avoid their pain, and to clear them. 14 The water of the flowers purgeth the blood & serveth for all the things that the herb is for, & much better. 15 Being drunk morning & evening two ounces thereof, it helpeth all distillations of the head, burning Agues, the jaundice, and cooleth the liver, being applied with linen clotheses to the region of the liver. 16 Burn Borage, and mix the ashes with with honeyed, and use it for the ulcers and blisters of the mouth, gums, tongue & throat, etc. (See in bugloss.) 17 Apoplexia, use Borage water. 18 Drink two ounces of the juice to drive out a dead child. 19 Fever quarten, seeth Borage, Sorrel, Violets, & Mercury ana, four handfuls in fair running water, from a gallon to a pottle, than strain it, and when it is cold, drink thereof in thy most heat to cool thy thirst. 20 Seconds to cause, use the juice of Borage. 21 Heart stitch, of blood heat, or bruise, drink the water of Borage, & make pottage with water, Borage & butter, and eat them morning and evening warm. 22 Heart griefs, use Borage flowers, leaves, or roots any ways: use the flowers in broths to refresh the body. 23 Breath stopped, seeth Borage, Mallows and Mercury with a piece of pork, & make pottage therewith & use them, or seeth them in wine or whey, & use them to drink. The flowers be restorative. 24 Morphue, drink water of Borage & Fumeterre, of each like much xiiii. days, & mix thine own urine with black soap & anoint often therewith. Use it in medicines for the dropsy. 25 Bloody flux, drink three ounces of the water fasting. Costivenesse use it and Mercury in pottage. Appoplexia 17 Belly bound 25 Blood cleansing 4. 8. 11. 14 Bloody flux 11. 25 Brain weak 11 Breast griefs 11 Breath strait 11. 23 Bruised 21 Consumption 23 Dead child 18 Dropsy 24 Eyes griefs 13 Fever hot 13. quarten 3. 19 tertian 3. Frenzy 11 Gums griefs 16 Heart griefs 6. 8. 10. 11. 22. stitch 21. Headache 5. giddy 5 jaundice 15 Kings evil 9 Liver hot 15 Melancholy 1. 7. 11 Memory 11 Mirth 1. 7. 11 Morphue 24 Mouth sores 16 Rheum 15 Seconds 20 Stitch 21 Stomach bad 10 Stinging 12 Thirst 19 Throat griefs 2. 16 Tongue griefs 16 ¶ Box. Box, the lee wherein the leaves have been sodden or steeped maketh the hair yellow being often washed therewith. It is not used in medicine. 2 Biting of a mad dog, stamp the seed with a little Holy water, and drink it and lie down. Hair to be yellow 1 Mad dogs biting 2 Brake. (See Fearne.) ¶ Bramble breer. BRamble breer, or Blackberry: the new springs thereof do cure the hot and evil ulcers of the mouth and throat and the swelling of the gums vulva and almonds of the throat being often chewed. 2 Wash the mouth often with the juice or decoction thereof to fasten the teeth. 3 The unripe fruit is good for the same purpose. 4 The juice or decoction drunk, stoppeth the lask, the terms, and other issues of blood. 8 The leaves stamped & applied to the stomach, helpeth the trembling of the heart, and looseness and ache of the stomach. 6 They cure the emerods and stay back running and consuming sores being laid to. 7 The unripe fruit stoppeth the belly, the bloody flux, and all other issues of blood. 8 The juice of them boiled with honey, is very good against all hot ulcers & swellings in the mouth, tongue, & throat. 9 The root is good against the stone, & to provoke urine. 10 The leaves chewed heal the diseases of the mouth. 11 They heal running sores of the head, and are a good remedy for the eyes that fall down. 12 The leaves are good to be laid upon hard swellings of the fundament, and the emerods, and ache of the stomach. 13 The juice pressed out of the leaves & branches, and dried in the Sun to a hard lump, is good for all the diseases aforesaid. 14 The juice of the ripe Berries is good for all the diseases of the mouth. 15 The unripe Berries stop the belly, and so do the flowers drunk with wine. 16 The Bark of the root breaketh the stone. 17 The fruit dried before they be ripe, stop the lask and looseness of the belly. 18 Make balls of the unripe fruit dried with vinegar, and dry them in the Sun, and put thereof into hot wine & it will be vinegar. The like may be done with Mulberries, Quickenberries, green Grapes or wild Acorus. 19 Eyes griefs, apply the juice of it with the white of an egg & flax. 20 To draw out an apostume, stamp the leaves with Eldern leaves ana one handful with white Mustardseed, and apply it. 21 Gout to soften, stamp Rue, Read Breer crops, and Broome flowers ana, like much, with Guilts grease, and boil them well together, & strain it, & anoint therewith. 22 Leapry, use the juice of the Berries, with syrup of wild Sage every morning half an ounce. Apostume 20 Belly loose 15. 17 Bloody flux 4. 7 Eyes griefs 19 falling 11. Emerods' 6. 12 Fluxes 7. 4 Flowers to stop 4. 7. 15 Fundament lump 12. 13 Gums griefs 1. 8. 9 14 Gout 21 Heart trembling 5 Head sores 11. 13 Leapry 22 Mouth griefs 1. 8. 9 14 Sores 6 Stomach grief 5 Stone 9 16 Teeth lose 2. 3 Throat griefs 1. 8. 9 Vinegar 18 Urine stopped 9 Vuula 1 ¶ Bread. BRead, pleurisy mix leavened bread, butter, the decoction of Holyoke, and oil de Bay together, and eat thereof, and also apply it before and behind. 2 Bruises and pustules of the legs, mix the pith of leavened bread with wine and honey, and boil them together and put tallow to it, and apply it. 3 Ache, bruise, or swelling, mix crooms of sour bread with vinegar, and Rose leaves, and apply it to heal it. 4 Squincy, eat bread with honey, and apply plasters thereof hot. Cramp, steep bread in vinegar as it cometh hot from the oven, and apply it hot: proved. 5 Breath stinking, toast it well and steep it in vinegar, and eat it. 6 Megrim, toast the neither crust of a brown loaf, and soak it in vinegar till it be soft, than heat it again, and apply it to the temples as hot as may be suffered. 7 Stomach weak, stamp the crooms with Wormwood and vinegar, and apply it. 8 Stomach hot, boil clean water, and steep therein shivers of brown bread, till it be almost cold, and drink thereof often iii or iiii. days. 9 Eyes sore and bloodshot, lay a toast of leavened bread in read wine that is not mingled half an hour, then lay it in a fine linen cloth and apply to either eye one. 10 Felon, seeth vinegar with the croomes of hot wheaten bread and honey, till it be thick, and apply plasters thereof. 11 Ache in the head, arms, stomach, or else where. 12 Temper stolen brown bread with vinegar, and a little cinnamon, and Aniseedes, and apply it with three or iiii. fold of linen between the skin and it to find speedy ease. 13 Megrime, boil grey bread, and powder of Cummin in vinegar, and when it is thick, apply thereof. 14 Plague, weete sour bread in vinegar, and bind it to the temples, and drink water of Tormentill. 15 Stomach weak, bake a loaf of wheat meal as it cometh from the mill in the midst of the batch, and of the crumbs thereof make three spoonful of myes, and mix it with white vinegar, that it may be standing thick, and eat thereof with Ginger, when thou goest to bed, and drink not after it. 15 Ears worms, apply well savouring bread as it cometh hot from the oven. 16 Swelling of blood letting, stamp white Bread crooms with wine, and apply it. 17 Wounds to heal, apply white Bread crooms stamped with water, and the white of an Egg. 18 Head swimming, apply the pith of Bread baked with Coliander seed. 19 Ears deaf, bake a round loaf full of Sage, & break it in the midst, and apply it hot to the ears iii or iiii. times. 20 Eyes heat and swelling, seeth white Bread and Sothernewood, and bathe therewith. 21 Squincy, put hot Bread into honey, and apply it hot, and gargoyle with the juice of Planten. 22 Stitch, toast a piece of white leavened Bread, and spread Treacle on it, and apply it hot with a fine linen cloth. 23 For the pleurisy, and for such as are used to be let blood, to save them from being let blood, and to dissolve all ill blood. Cut fine shivers of Rye Bread, and dry them in the wind, and when need is, steep them four hours in strong vinegar, then seeth it and make a plaster of it, and apply it as hot as may be suffered, it helpeth also the pain of the liver and milt. 24 For all bone ache, boil a pint of white wine with an Ox gall and scom it, and put thereto crooms of white bread, and apply it iiii. or v. times. 25 Biting of a mad dog, apply savoury with Bread. 26 Sinews ache, weete Bread in milk, and apply it hot. 27 Gout in the bone, dip hot tostes of Bread in the juice of Garlic, and apply it hot being well stamped. 28 Chollike passion, seeth crumbs of wheat Bread and powder of Cummin in white vinegar, and apply it hot. 29 Stone to break, bake a Rye cake, and slit it through the midst, and spread thereon Onions roasted very tender, and apply the one to the back, and the other to the bottom of the belly. 30 A plaster of sour bread boiled in wine, draweth sores passing well being laid to all night. Ache 3. 11. 24. 26. 27. Apostume 30 Bitings venom. 25 Bones ache 24 Breath stink 5 Bruises 2. 3 colic 28 Cramp 4 Ears deaf 19 worms 15 Eyes griefs 9 20 Felon 10 Gout 26 Headache 11. megrim 13 swimming 18 Legs pustules 2 Mad dog 25 Plague 14 Pleurisy 1. 23 Pustules 2 Senowes ache 26 Side griefs 1. 22. 23 Squincy 4. 21 Stitch 1. 22. 23 Stomach hot 8 weak 7. 15 Stone 29 Swell 3. 16 Wounds 17 ¶ Bentbrow, stamp it with ●ong marigolds that never flowered and strain it, and an●●●● with the juice with a crows feather all fleshmoles, and such like marks. ¶ Bran, flowers stopped, seeth it in wine or ale, and drink it, (See Wheat, Rye, Barley, Oats.) ¶ Brasel, make milkered with the powder of it, and steep therein Wooed or Bone, and in viii. days it willbe read. ¶ Branke-ursine, apost. to break, seeth it with Lily roots in wine, & apply it with oil. Pleurisy, seethe it with mallows in oil of violets, & apply it often. It causeth sweat. (See Cowparsnip.) ¶ Broome. BRoome, the seed or flower drunk with Mulsa, purgeth by vomit, and also downwards from the joints, cleanseth the reins from all superfluities, provoketh urine strongly, breaketh the stone in the reins and bladder, and suffereth no matter to be fixed there to a stone. 2 The flowers stamped with honey of Roses, or with an Egrere roasted, resolveth scrofules. oxymel thereof, or of the seed, dissolveth apostumes of the milt, 3 Vomit with the seeds often to help the gout, sciatica, & pain in the reins, use suppositers of the powder thereof with the juice of Planten to stop the bloody flux, and pessaries, to stop the terms or foment with water of the decoction thereof. 4 Teeth to cleanse, mix ashes of Broome branches with an eight part of powder of Alum, and temper them with water, & rub thy teeth therewith. Teeth stinking and foul, mix the said ashes with as much alom, & rub them therewith. 5 Swelling of the dropsy stamp young Broome, and strain it with stolen ale, and drink it first & last five days: proved. 6 Make lee of ashes of green Broome, and read wine, and when it is clear, drink it first & last, and the humours of the dropsy will burst out at the fingers & toes, & the dropsy cured. 7 Gout, seeth the flowers with honey & apply it, or make an ointment of the flowers of Capon's grease, or dog's grease, and use it. Or boil the juice of the flowers with as much honey, to the thickness of honey, or an ointment, and use it for the gout: proved. 8 Sciatica, stamp the flowers with honey, and apply it. Or use the roots steeped in vinegar & strained, or the branches of green Broome steeped and strained. 9 colic, drink powder of the seeds. 10 Stone and colic, to be made in May, stamp the buds of the flowers, and mix them with clarified May butter, and keep it in a close vessel eight days, then seeth it and strain it, and anoint therewith morning and evening. 11 Dogs mangy, seeth Broome tops in bouke lee half a day, and wash therewith, then mix black soap with bay salt, brimstone, and fresh grease, and dress him therewith. 12 Ache in arms or legs, stamp the flowers of Broome and Woodoose with May butter in a stone mortar, and make them into round balls, and lay them in an earthen pot 24. hours, then boil it well, & strain it into an earthen vessel and none other, and anoint therewith against the fire, till it be dried in, and then apply a warm cloth. 13 Pleurisy, drink the water of Broome flowers, and of Roses, and anoint the grief with oil of both the same flowers. King's evil, to avoid the kernels of it, drink two ounces of the water of the flowers fasting, to purge the humours downwards, and to waste and heal them without breaking, and make an ointment of the read dock stamped with grease, and use it. 14 Teeth black, burn green Broome, and mix the ashes with a fourth part of Alum, and rub therewith. 15 Gout to soften, stamp Rue, read briar crops, and Broome flowers, of each like much, with gylts grease, and boil them well together and strain it, and anoint therewith. 16 Put Broome roots into a vessel of wine, beer, or ale, and drink it to keep thee clear from all poisons. The flowers knit bones and sinews. seeth the flowers in the milk of a cow of one colour, till it be thick, & apply it to the legs to heal the dropsy. 17 unguentum Genistae, take Broome flowers, Puliol montan, and mallows ana like much, stamp them with May butter, and set it in a close earthen pot in hot horsedoung 20. days, then fry it and strain it. It is good for the gout, boneshawes and all aches, being applied cold. 18 Water of Broome cleanseth the mother, liver, and milt, and helpeth the maras. Powder of the rind stoppeth blood. 19 To kill louse, mix the juice with oil of Radish, or of Senuie, and anoint. 20 Gout, seeth the juice of Broome flowers, and Scalaceli, and honey, ana like much to the thickness of honey, and anoint. 21 Dropsy, seeth two gallons of fine Ale, with two good handful of green Broom to the one half, and drink thereof fasting daily, and use no other drink. 22 For the boneshawe and gout, seeth the flowers with wine and oil olive, and apply it. 23 Sores of all sorts, mix good store of the flowers with Valerian & Smallage, with May butter, and make them into balls as much as Eggs, and lay them on shelves to mould throughout, then fry them and strain them, and keep it in an earthen pot, and use it. 24 Aches, shreade Broome flowers, Balm, and Feverfue ana one handful, and seeth them in a little May butter and keep it, and anoint therewith against the fire. 25 Mouth set awry by sickness, drink as much of the seed as thou canst take up with thy three fingers with water. 26 The water of the flowers drunk, breaketh the stone, and so doth one scruple of the seed, and causeth sweat. Broome stamped with swines grease, helpeth the ache of the knees. 27 The leaves or crops, or branches boiled in water or wine and drunk, are good for the dropsy, stopping of the liver, milt, kidneys and bladder: for partly it purgeth out by the belly, and partly by the urine, all watery, tough, and superfluous humours: so doth the seeds taken one dram, or one dram and a half. 28 The seed is good in all medicines to provoke urine, and break the stone. 29 The flowers with swine's grease suageth the pain of the gout. Our English broom may be used to all effects, as Spanish Broome. Broome seeds taken one dram, or one dram & a half with meed or wheye, purgeth humours from the joints both upward & downward, and suffereth no tough humours to abide in the kidneys or bladder, and killeth worms, and cleanseth the stomach: the oil healeth tetters. 30 The juice of the plant or root may be dried and kept. Some steep the bruised leaves & twigs in vinegar five or six days, and press out a juice, of which two ounces and a half drunk, is good for the sciatica: but it were better to mix it with oil and apply it. 31 The fresh juice of Broome rape, doth cure all new wounds, ulcers, and corrupt sores. 32 The juice pressed out of the root and dried with a little honey in the sun, cleanseth all rotten wounds and ulcers. 33 It may be also taken out of the roots that be half dry with oil, and will serve to all intents as the juice. 34 The same Broome rape doth scour and drive away all spots, lentils, frecles, pimples, and weals, or pushes, as well in the face as in all other parts being often anointed therewith. The seeds must be corrected with rosed honey, or Rose leaves, or aniseed, or Fenell seed. Ache 2. 17. 24. 27. (see gout.) Apostume 2 Arms ache 12 Back griefs 13. 27 Belly ache 9 10 Bladder griefs 27. 29 Blood to stop 18 Bloody flux 3 Bones ache 17. 22 broken 16 Cholike 9 10 Correction 34 Dog mangy 11 Dropsy 5. 6. 16. 21. 27 Emeralds 18 Face deformed 34 Flowers to stop 3 Frecles 34 Gout 3. 7. 15. 17. 20. 22. 29 joints cleansing 1 Kernels 2. 13 Kidneys griefs 27 Kings evil 13 Knees ache 26 Legs ache 12 Lice to kill 19 Liver griefs 18. 27 Mange 11 milt apostume 2 griefs 18. 27 Mother griefs 18 Mouth awry 25 Pleurisy 13 Poison 16 Purgation 1. 27. 29 Pushes 34 Sciatica 3. 8. 30 Scrofules 2 sinews broken 16 Skin deformed 34 Sores general 23. 31. 32 Swell 5. 16. (See drop.) Sweat to 'cause 26 Teeth foul 4. 14. stink 4 Tetters 27. 34 Ulcers 31. 32 unguentum 12. 17. 23. 24 Vomit to cause. 1. 3. 29 Urine stopped 1. 27. 28. 29 Weals 34 Wounds 31. 32 ¶ Brookelime. BRookelime: strangury, drink the leaves in wine. 2 It helpeth also the inward skabs of the bladder, especially taken with the root of Sperage. 3 The same eaten with oil and vinegar, are good for the strangury and stone. 4 Fry it with sheeps suet, and apply it to bruises and swellings. Bladder scab 2 Bruises 4 Stone and strangury 3 Swell 4 ¶ Brian. BRyan, stamp it and apply it three days to the knees that are swollen. ¶ Bryony. THe root, especially the juice thereof, doth mightily purge tough phlegm, provoketh urine, cleanseth the brain, breast, and inward parts. 2 The root taken daily one dram a whole year together, helpeth the falling sickness, the Apoplexia & Vertigo. 3 It is good in medicines against venomous bitings. Half a dram being drunk with vinegar 30. days, healeth the milt that is stopped and hard: and so it doth being stamped with Figs & applied. 4 An Electuary made thereof with honey, is very good against shortness of breath, the old cough, pain in the sides, & inward burstings and congealed blood of bruises. 5 The same root used in a pessary, draweth down the terms, seconds, and dead births, and so doth a bath of the decoction thereof, and also cleanseth the matrix from all unclean filth, if they sit over it. 6 The same stamped with salt & applied, is good for naughty fretting sores that are corrupt and running, especially in the legs. The leaves and fruit are good for the same purpose applied in like sort. 7 It cleanseth the skin from wrinkles, frecles, sunburning & alspots and scars being mixed with the meal of Orobus and Fenigreeke, and so doth the oil wherein the root hath been sodden. 8 The same stamped and mixed with wine dissolveth clottered blood, and all scars, bruises, and new swellings. It ripeneth and dissolveth clotted blood, and old apostumes. It draweth out splents and broken bones, and openeth noughty ulcers and agnayles, that grow about the roots of the nails. 9 The fruit is good against the itch, lepry, and noughty scab. 10 The first springs are very good to be eaten in Salads for the stomach. They provoke urine, and open the belly. 11 The root of black Bryony is as good for all the griefs aforesaid as the white, but not so strong: yet it prevaileth much against the falling evil, giddiness or turnings of the head, to provoke urine and terms, to open and waste the stopped and swollen milt. 12 And the tender springs thereof are very good also to be eaten in Salads to purge waterish humours and superfluities, and to open the belly neither more nor less than the white Bryony. 13 Bryony must be corrected with mastic, Ginger, or cinnamon, and taken with honey, or with the decoction of raisins. 14 Bryony sodden as Amaradulcis being prepared, doth gently loosen the belly without peril, and provoketh urine. 15 The juice of the root gathered in the spring time drunk with honeyed water, driveth forth gross phlegm. 16 An ointment made thereof with oil Olive, and swine's grease, is good for the palsy. 17 The oil thereof helpeth all manner of deformities of the skin. So doth the root with oil of Tartar, and meal of Fenigreeke: or sodden in white wine from a quart to a pint, and then strained, and some Camphire put to it, and the place washed therewith every night with a spondge. 18 The berries broken do cleanse the skin, from scurf and lepry. 19 The juice of the berries baked in bread, causeth plenty of milk in nurse's breasts that eat it, or used in frumenty. 20 Powder of the berries is good for the stone. 21 The root is good for sinews that are cut to make them suppling, and to have their kindly course, especially the juice of the root gathered in April or May, and the grief anointed therewith against the fire, and then applied with linen clouts. 22 For the Gout, slice the roots thereof and of wild Dockes, and seeth them by themselves in water three hours, then stamp them small with soot of a chimney, and the milk of a Cow of one hue, and the urine of a fasting man, and apply it at every 24. hours end ix. days. 23 Take Salad oil, or for want thereof neats foot oil two quarts, Bryony roots clean scraped, and washed, and stamped, seeth it with a soft fire, till it be almost half wasted, than strain it and put in another root, and seeth it to a pint and a half, than a third root, and seeth it to a pint, than strain it and keep it well, and anoint any ache therewith wheresoever it be against the fire a long time. 24 Wounds growing together, put in the powder thereof to open them. 25 Sausflegme, stamp the root with great salt, and let it lie and rot 30. days, than strain out the juice and mix it with unguentum Album, Sulphur viwm, and honey of each like much, and anoint therewith, & apply plasters thereof in the nights. 26 For all manner of gouts, take in winter the root of Bryony, stamp it with two handful of great salt, and let it stand so thirty days, than strain out the juice and anoint therewith against the fire, and mix thereof with sheeps tallow clarified together, and apply it to the sore to abate the pain quickly. 27 seeth the roots in thine own urine, till three parts be wasted, and anoint the ache of the reins therewith. 28 Face spots, or blemishes, anoint with the juice of the roots. Frenzy and madness, boil the root and apply it to the head. 29 Face wrinkles, grind white wine with a little Bryony, and a dry fig, & anoint therewith, and go till thou sweatest. 30 Wounds ache, stamp the root with fair running water, and strain it and warm it, and apply it as warm as may be suffered, the wound being first washed. 31 Warts, burn the leaves and stones, and mix the ashes with the juice, and anoint them often, and they will fall off. 32 Breast strait, use the root of Bryony. Leapry, mix the juice of Bryony with powder of white and black Ellebore, and honey, and anoint. 33 Apostume general, slice it thin, and seeth it in a child's urine, and let it stand 24. hours, then stamp it and strain it, and use it. 34 Colour to be good, mix powder of the root of Viticell with Rose water, and dip a cloth therein, and wash therewith. 35 Witchcraft to withstand, bear the root about thee. 36 Cramps: apply thin slices of the root. 37 Frenzy, boil the root & apply it. 38 Headache, & want of sleep, make lee with the ashes of Colewoort roots, Nettle roots, & Bryony roots, & wash therewith often. Dropsy, take the juice of Bryony with honey, or use the decoction of it. 39 Strangury, use powder of the berries of Bryony. 40 Fever quarten, stamp it & apply it to the pulses and temples before the fit. 41 Scrofules, stamp the root with swine's grease, and apply it. 42 Dropsy, seethe it in water, & drink it, & be whole. 43 Mother suffocate: heat an ounce of the root in white wine, and drink it twice a week to bedward a year together. 44 Strangury, seeth Watercresses in water, and drink it with powder of the berries. 45 Mother rising, seeth two parts of the juice, with one part of Salad oil, till the juice be consumed, and anoint the place therewith where it riseth. 46 Swelling by blood letting, heat the leaves in water, and apply them. 47 Head ache hot or cold, stamp the roots and boil them in old oil and a little wine, and strain it and anoint therewith. 48 To avoid black spots and scars, boil the roots of Bryony both white and black in oil, as long as it yieldeth any juice, and anoint therewith. 49 To cleanse and whiten the skin and make it soft, stamp the root and apply it. 50 Teeth ache apply the powder of it with the juice of chervil. 51 Paps sore, anoint with the juice of the root. Ache 23 Agnayles 8 Apost. old 8. 33 Apoplexia 2 Back ache 27 Belly bound 10. 12. 13. 14 Bitings venom. 3 Bones broken 8 Breast straight 32 Breasts sore 51 Breath short 4 Bruised 4. 8. 48 Bursten 4 Correction 13 Cough old 4 Cramp 36 Colour bad 34 Dead birth 5 Deliverance 5 Dropsy 38. 42 Face defor. 7. 17. 25. 28. 29 Falling evil 2. 11 Fever quarten 40 Flowers stopped 5. 11 Frenzy 28. 37 Gout 22. 23. 26 Headache 38. 47. giddy 2. 11. Itch 9 Kernels 41 Leapry 9 18. 32 Leg sores 6 Mad 28 Milk to 'cause 19 milt griefs 3. 11 Mother rising 45. fuffo. 43. 45 Palsy 16 Purgation 1. 12. 13. 14. 15 Scrofules 41 Seconds 5 Sinews cut 21 Side pain 4 Scab 9 7 Skin foul 7. 17. 28. 48. 49 scurf 7. 18 Sleep to 'cause 38 Sores 6. 8. 24 Stomach bad 10 Stone 20 Strangury 39 44 Swell 8. by blood let. 46 Teeth ache 50 Throat griefs 41 Ulcers 8 Urine stopped 1. 10. 11 Warts 31 Witchcraft 35 Wounds 24. 30 ache 30 wrinkles 29 ¶ Buckthorne. BVckthorne, the berries do purge downwards mightily phlegm and choler with great force, much troubling the body, and sometimes causeth vomit, and therefore is not to be given but to them that be strong. 2 The berries before they be ripe, soaked in Alom water, make a fair yellow colour, and when they be full ripe, they make a green colour, which in France is called Warrant de vessye, in Spanish Sapgreene. Choler and phlegm 1 Green colour 2 yellow colour 2 ¶ Bugle. BVgle, and Self heal, bruised, drink the decoction of Bugle. It healeth all wounds both inward and outward, it openeth the stops of the liver and gall, and is good for the jaundice and Fevers of long continuance. It cureth rotten ulcers and sores of the mouth and gums being washed therewith. 2 The green and fresh herb stamped & applied, healeth wounds, galls, and scratches, and so doth the powder of the herb. 3 The juice cureth the sores and ulcers of the secret parts, being often dropped in, and so doth the bruised herb. Wounds of all sorts, stamp it with Yarrow and Sanicle, of each like much, and strain it with wine and drink it daily. 4 Being drunk and applied, it healeth and draweth out broken bones in the head, it destroyeth rheum, and helpeth head ache. 5 Wounds to heal, drink it by itself, or with Pimpernell, & Sanicle. (See Selfe-heale.) 6 Wounds to heal without plaster, drink Bugle, Yarow, and Fenell ana like much with wine thrice aday: but if the head be wounded, use no Fenell. 7 Wounds of all sorts, stamp it with Yarow & Sanicle, of each like much, and strain it with wine, and drink it daily. Bones broken 4 Chafing 2 Fevers old 1 Gall stopped 1 Headache 4 broken 4 sores 5 jaundice 1 Itch 2 Liver stopped 1 Mouth sores 1 Privities sores 3 Rheum 4 Skabbes 2 Sores 3 Wounds 1. 3. 5. 6. 7 ¶ bugloss. BVglosse, drink it with wine to help the griefs of the lungs and the dry cough. 2 Seethe it in water & honey for the cough, and roughness of the throat. 3 Steep it in wine & drink it with Mellicrat. to 'cause mirth. 4 Drink it often in wine to purge read choler coming of heat, to help the Cardiake passion and to avoid hurtful humours from the lungs. 5 Drink the juice with warm water, to avoid the swelling of the feet. 6 Steep it in wine and drink it to maintain a good memory, to comfort the heart and engender good blood. 7 Drink two. or three ounces of the distilled water, morning and evening with Sugar for the bloody flux, straightness of breath, and abstraction of mind, weakness of the brain, all hot sicknesses, agues, griefs of the liver and milt, to purge the blood, to avoid pricking of the heart and stomach, the jaundice, to cleanse the leapry and scab, to mitigate distilling of the head, to cease the pain and burning of the eyes, the same being also applied with linen clotheses, and for the ringing and sound in the ears. 8 Distil the flowers in Balneo Mariae, and it is a precious water to be drunk morning & evening with powder of pearls or Manus Christi made with pearls to comfort the heart and brain. 9 The herb, root, and seed, or any part of them sodden in wine and drunk, defendeth the heart from poison. 10 The water or conserve of the flowers, do strengthen the heart, and are good against faintness and sounding, causeth mirth, voideth melancholy, purgeth the blood, and is good against all hot fevers. 11 Milk to increase, bruise the seeds and drink it with wine. 12 Byting and stingings venomous, drink and apply the distilled water and the leaves. 13 Eyes ache & inflamed, apply the water with clouts. 14 bugloss provoketh urine, quencheth thirst, and the stalks eaten either raw or sodden, are good for the diseases of the liver. 15 Drunk with wine, it is singular good against rheum. 16 And drunk with water, it is a singular help against the Sciatica. 17 The ashes of it are good for the sores and swellings in children's mouths. 18 seeth it with Sugar and Hydromel, and use it for the sharpness and roughness of the throat. 19 The ashes of the flowers are good for all griefs of the mouth and gomes, especially of children. 20 Roast the root in the embers in a weete clout, & mix it with as much roasted apples and a little butter to assuage the pain of a white flaw, and to ripen all froncles or felons, and to take away the roughness of the tongue. 21 Steep bugloss in water and wine of a Pomegranate, and hold it in thy mouth to delight thee when thou hast a Fever. 22 Stamp the flowers of Borage or bugloss when they are full ripe, and put thereto thrice so much Sugar by little and little, and sun it in a Galley pot twenty or thirty days, and it will last a year. It causeth mirth, and comforteth the heart and spirits. 23 Their water drunk with wine, comforteth the brain, heart, and memory, and wit, engendereth good blood, voideth melancholy, madness, and frenzy. 24 bugloss easeth the pain that cometh of repletion of the veins in every part, heart trembling and panting, especially for women which are much subject thereto, make a drink with two ounces of the clear juice, and two drams of Sugar, and drink it every night blood warm to bedward ten days together. 25 seeth the leaves and roots in water, and quench steel therein, to make it hard and sharp. 26 Gout, drink the juice with warm water, and apply the substance. 27 sinews shrunk, stamp it and apply it. Stomach cold, and brain moist, mix six drams of Aqua vitae, four drams of bugloss water, cinnamon, and Saffron, of each one penny weight, and steep them together 24. hours, and drink it fasting. 28 Madness, take Aqua vitae two egg shells full, wine thrice as much, powder of Seine two drams, and take it three mornings. 29 Vomiting to stop, drink bugloss water. 30 Heart stitch, eat pottage made with bugloss, butter & water, morning & evening warm. 3 Heart feeble, use bugloss, or the powder thereof in thy broths. 32 To refresh the body, stew an old hen with good store of bugloss, and drink thereof morning, noon, & evening. 33 Coldness by long sickness, seeth one handful of bugloss in a quart of wine, and strain it & drink it morning & evening. 34 jaundice, drink bugloss water. 35 Feebleness of the heart, shortness of breath, and sighing, drink the juice with honey. 36 For passions of the heart, eat it or drink it raw or sodden to put out the noisome humours. Pissing blood from the reins, drink the juice often. 37 Liver & milt griefs, use bugloss in thy pottage, and look that thy belly be soluble. 38 Belly bound, stamp Otemeale great, and seeth them with bugloss, and use the broth. 39 Use bugloss for griefs of the heart, and impostumes. 40 Pissing blood, drink the juice. Ache (See gout.) Belly bound 38 Byting venom. 12 Bloody-flixe 7 Blood to cleanse 6. 7. 10 Brain moist 27 weak 8. 23 Breath short 35 strait 7 Choler 4 Consumption 32. 33 Cough dry 1. 2 Colour bad 6 Ears noise 7 Eyes ache 7. 13 hot 7. 13 Feet swollen 5 Felons 20 Fevers 7. 21 hot 10 Frenzy 23 Heart griefs 4. 7. 8. 10. 22. 24. 30. 31. 35. 36. 39 Hot griefs 7 jaundice 7. 34 Impost. 39 Leapry 7 Liver griefs 7. 14. 37 Lungs griefs 1. 2. 4 Mad 7. 23. 28 Memory 6 Melancholy 10. 23 Milk to cause 11 Milt griefs 7. 37 Mirth to 'cause 3. 10. 22 Mouth sores 17. 19 Pissing blood 36. 40 Poison 9 Rheum 7. 15 Sciatica 16 Sinews shrunk 27 Sickness hot 7 Skabs 7 Stomach griefs 7. 27 Sounding 10 Thirst 14 Throat rough 2. 18 Tongue rough 20 Tools to set 25 Venom 20 Vomiting 29 Urine stopped 44 White flaw 20 women's griefs 24 ¶ Bullfoote. FOr the grief of the lungs and spitting of blood, mix it with Hog's lard chopped, and a new laid egg, and boil it or bake cakes of it, and eat it ix. mornings. It maketh a man fat. For the King's evil, stamp it well with the root and all, with flower of linseed and Barrow's grease, and apply it morning & evening, and after it is healed, wash it with white wine x. or xv. days. 2 To heal wounds speedily, anoint the tops of the leaves with honey, & apply them, & assoon as they be dry, apply fresh. 3 Legs sores, stamp it and apply it. 4 To pluck out thorns or pricks apply it with Swine's grease. 5 Fever tertian and quarten to avoid, drink the juice thereof x. days. 6 Drink the juice for the cough and for wounds. 7 Breast griefs, drink the juice of Hyssop, Horehound, and Bullfoote. 8 The leaves punned with honey, do cure S. Anthony's fire, and all other inflammations. 9 The perfume of the dried leaves received through a tunnel upon the quick coals, helpeth shortness of wind, the dry cough, and breaketh impostumes of the breast without danger, and so doth the root laid on hot coals. 10 seeth it in meed, and drink it to cast out a dead child. 11 Drink three spoonful of the distilled water for the inflammation of the Liver, the gnawing of the stomach, & the venom of the burning fever, and the same also applied outwardly with linen clotheses. 12 The herb distilled with flowers of Eldrens, and Solatrum, of each like much. The virtues thereof cannot be sufficiently esteemed, the same is good especially against inflammations, carbuncles, the holy fire, the piles, hot apostumes and burnings, and so is the juice of the leaves. 14 The same is good also against all hot aches of the head, and heat of burning Fevers, and against all whelks and pushes coming of heat, and against all hot griefs of the secret parts: for the piles and emeralds, and such like. The juice healeth burnings, skaldings, and hot inflammations. 15 The fume received through a trunk, helpeth and cleanseth the lungs quickly, and healeth rotten and old coughs. Cough of the lungs, take of the fume of the powder of it laid on a chafingdish of coals through a tunnill, at morning, noon, and evening iii or iiii. days, if the cough come of hot rheum, it will dry it up: or seethe two. handful of Bullfoote in a quart of clear posset ale, with a stick of liquorice cleansed and bruised, and when the one half is wasted, drink it at morning, afternoon, and to bedward, by a little at once, but yet a good quantity in the whole. seeth Bulfoote, and pennyroyal, with a little salt in water, and drink it fasting to avoid all evils from the heart. Achehote 14 Apostume 13 Blood spit 1 Breast griefs 1 Breath short 9 Burn 13. 14 Carbuncle 13 Cough 6. 9 14 Dead child 10 Deliverance 10 Emeralds 13. 14 Fat to be 1 Fever hot 11. 14. quarten 5 tertian 5 Head ache hot 14 Holy fire 13 Impostume 9 Inflammation 13. 14 Kings evil 1 Leanness 1 Leg sores 3 Liver hot 11 Lungs griefs 1. 15 Piles 13. 14 Pricks 4 Privities griefs 14 Pushes 14 Sores 3 Stomach griefs 11 Whelks 14 Wounds 2. 6 ¶ Burr. THe juice of great Burr drunk with honey, provoketh urine, and suageth the pain of the bladder. 2 The same drunk with old wine, healeth the bitings and stingings of venomous beasts. 3 The leaves punned with a little salt, is good against all venomous bitings of mad dogs or serpents. 4 The powder of the seed drunk with the best wine that may be gotten forty days, is good against the sciatica. 5 A dram of the root punned with the kernels of a Pine apple, is a sovereign medicine against the spitting of corrupt matter. It is good for such as have ache in the joints and bones that have been out of joint or broken. 6 The green leaves punned with whites of eggs, cureth burnings & old sores. 7 The leaf laid on the top of the head draweth the matrixe upward, & laid to the soles of the feet, it draweth it downward, and so it helpeth the suffocation, & the falling or displasing of the matrixe. 8 Seethe the root in Ale, and so let it stand 24. hours close stopped, and then drink a good draft three or four times to help the yellow jaundice speedily. 9 Drink powder of the seeds with pure white wine to purge the gravel from the reins, but more speedily with Aqua vitae, 10 The juice of the lesser Burr with read stringy roots drunk with wine, is good against all venomous bitings, and the gravel and stone. 11 The fruit stamped and applied to cold swellings, doth consume and scatter them, and is good against the King's evil, swellings, wenns, and scrofules in the neck and throat. 12 The ripe seed of great Burrs in powder drunk, is good for them that have the stone. 13 The fresh leaves are good for old ulcers and sores, and for joints that are loose, and broken members, and for all heat, and ache being applied. 14 The root taken with Pineapple kernels in quantity of a dram, is good against the coughing out of matter and blood. 15 The root is good to be laid to the ache that cometh by wrenching and straining. 16 The leaves are good to be laid upon old sores. Drink one dram with Pineapple kernels, to help the cough, spitting of blood and matter, filthiness of the stomach, and contraction of of the finewes, and arteries. 17 The leaves or juice do heal old rotten sores and stinking filthy ulcers. The decoction of the root is good to wash ulcers and wounds withal. 18 The root stamped with salt and applied, is good against the bitings of mad dogs. 19 The root used inward or outward, prevaileth against the bitings of Serpents. 20 The root sodden in wine and drunk one hour before the fit, delivereth from the horror of the Fever quarten. 21 And the root stamped with Swine's grease, helpeth the squincy and swelling in the throat. 22 The Ditch burr, or lesser Burr with read roots, is good to be laid to swellings. 23 The bark of Burr roots drunk, wasteth the swelling of the milt. 24 And the decoction of it sodden in wine, and the mouth washed therewith, fasteneth loose teeth. 25 Drink the distilled water of Di●ch burr four ounces, with half an ounce of white crude honey, four or five hours before meat warm thirty days together against the catharre to cure it, except it come of the pox or hectyke, for the which also it will do good, if not cure them, 26 seeth the roots with read Nettle crops in good stolen ale, and clarify it, and drink it before the cold fit of the Fever quarten, and after the great heat is past, drink possit ale made with marigolds and Fenell, and do so four times if need be. 27 Stamp the roots with Sage leaves and apply it to saint Anthony's fire. 28 Grinned the roots of Burrs and Planten with vinegar and salt, and anoint therewith the freckles, read blains, and sausflegme of the face. 29 seeth the roots in water, and set thy feet therein up to the ankles as hot as may be suffered to help the bloody flux. 30 For the gout and Sciatica, seeth the roots in strong wine and apply it. 31 Stamp the bark or pill, and strain it with new Ale, and drink it against all gouts, proved. 32 Foment with the decoction of the pill of the roots in wine wheresoever the grief be, or stamp the roots and seeth them in Ale, and strain it and drink it at evening hot, and at morning cold for the aforesaid. 33 For ache of the reins, drink the root with Ale and butter at morning cold, and evening hot. 34 Sciatica, seeth the roots in strong wine, and apply it. 35 Bloody flux, chop the roots as much as a penny loaf, seeth them in a new pot with good Wine, and sit over the vapour of it, it stoppeth also the terms, or seeth the roots or seeds, or both in rain water, or conduit water, and drink it fasting. 36 Belly and guts pain, drink a sciat of the juice of the leaves. 37 Back ache, stamp the roots, and seeth them in Ale, and drink it at evening hot, and at morning cold. 38 piles, take up the fume of the roots of Burrs and Veruen, with Frankincense laid on coals. 39 Fever, stamp three roots of Burrs, and seeth them with half a pint of Ale, and drink thereof leuke warm before the fit. 40 Speech lost, hold the juice of the herb and root under thy tongue, and be whole. 41 Cough and pose, use powder of the seeds with Wardens or Pears, or drink it morning and evening. 42 Pursinesse of wind, and to break phlegm and much corruption, drink powder of the seeds as much as you can take up with two fingers and a thumb, first and last at morning and evening with White wine or old Ale: proved. 43 ringworm, seeth the root in vinegar and apply it. The stalk near the root, is good in salads. 44 Impostume to break, seeth the root in Ale, and drink it nine days to break, and avoid it downwards. 45 Squincy and griefs of the throat, drink powder of the seeds with Ale as often as need is. 46 Face blains, stamp the roots of Planten & Burrs with salt of each like much, with vinegar, & anoint at night to bedward. 47 Belly or guts fretting, seeth the root of Burr and Elecampana, in wine, and drink it warm morning and evening. 48 Bloody flux, stamp the roots, and seeth them in water to the one half, and stand in it, but not to the ankles, for than it bindeth too much, and bringeth danger of death by costiveness. Ache 5. 13. 15. (see Gout.) Back-ach 9 33. 37 Bellyach 36. 47 Byting venomous 2. 3. 10. 18. 19 Bladder pain 1 Blood spitting 16 Bloody flux 29. 35. 48 Bones ache 5. 13 Breast griefs 42 Burn 6 Catharre 25 Coughs 16. 41 Cramp 16 Emerods' 38 Face deformed 28. 46. frecles 28. salsflegme 28. Fever 39 quarten 20. 26. Flowers to stop 35 Gout 30. 31 Gravel 9 10 jaundice 8 Impostume 44 joints ache 5. 13. 15. loose 13. Kernels 11. kings evil 11. Lungs griefs 5. 14. 16 Mad dog 18 Matrix grief 7 Milt swollen 23 Neck swollen 11 piles 38 Pose 41 Pursinesse 42 ringworm 43 Rheum 25 S. Anthony's fire 27 Sciatica 4. 30. 31. 34 Scrofules 11 Sinews shrunk 16 Sores old 6. 13. 16. 17 Speech lost 40 Spitting matter 5 Squincy 21. 45 Streinings 15 Swell 11. 22 Stone 9 10. 12 Teeth loose 24 Throat griefs 11. 21. 45 Venom 2. 3 Ulcers 13. 17 Urine stopped 1 Wens 11 Wounds 17 Wrench 15 ¶ Bursa pastoris. BVrsa pastoris, blood to staunch, hold thy hands full of it: nosebleeding, bind it about thy neck, and hold thereof in thy hand, and also use it in thy meats, and apply vinegar and water to the secret parts. 2 Spitting blood, seeth it with Planten, and Knotgrass in rain water, and strain it and drink thereof with Sugar, at morn, noon, and even. 3 Blood to stop, apply the juice with powder of Antimonium, or dip an Eldern pith in the juice, and cast on powder of Sinnach, and put it in. 4 Chafing in the flanks, wash or bathe with the decoction thereof, or of Planten, or Horsetaile, or Knotgrass. 5 Fever hot, stamp one handful with as much Smallach, and as much Frankincense as a wall nut, and as much Bay salt, and apply them to the wrists two hours before the fit. 6 Nosebleeding, apply the juice with Bol armoniac to the temples with the white of an egg. 7 Or mix powder of Bursa pastoris with the juice thereof, powder of Camphire, and Nettleseedes, and make little tents thereof and put them in, or put in powder of the flower, rind, and kernels of a Pomegranate with the juice of Bursa pastoris. 8 Teeth ache, stamp a good handful, and apply it to the soles of thy feet. 9 For one that is new bursten, seeth Bursa pastoris, Mugwort, Ribwort, and polypody ana, one handful in a pottle of strong Ale to a quart,, then strain it, and drink three spoonfuls fasting warm daily. 10 Blood to stop, hold thy hands full of it, and look to the sun, and be not strait girded. 11 Flowers to stop, put in a pessary of the juice, and Goat's dung. 12 Urine flux, use it in thy meats. 13 Bloody flux, drink the juice, or bake cakes of wheat flower with the juice of it and of Yerrow and Planten ana like much in the embers, and eat them hot, and drink the juice of them with Read wine warm three days: proved. 14 Teeth ache, grinned it with Sage and Mints ana like much, and put it in a linen bag, and hold it to thy teeth, and shut thy mouth while one may say three Pater nosters, then open thy mouth and let out the glut, and do so as often as need is. 15 Bloody flux, drink it with Read wine, or milk, or drink the juice with twice so much Read wine when thou goest to bed, to heal the flux speedily. 16 The decoction thereof drunk, stoppeth the lask, the bloody flux, spitting blood, pissing blood, the flowers, and all other issues of blood, most excellently well howsoever it be taken, but especially with Read wine or Planten water. 17 Stamp it with vinegar and fresh Swine's grease, to quench all inflammations or heat of the body, as shingles, etc. 18 The juice alone doth heal a new wound, and stoppeth blood. 19 Nothing is better to stop the flowers, then to make a fomentation or moist bath thereof, and to sit over it close, and to drink of the same clarified in Read wine. 20 seeth the dried herb in Read wine, or rain water wherein hot steel hath been often quenched, and drink it to all kinds of fluxes both white and read, the terms and all other gnawings of the bowels. 21 Nose bleeding put in the juice with a tent, and the like into wounds warm. 22 Ears running, put in the juice. 23 Use it in plasters for the sores of the head. 24 Drink the juice for straightness of breath, the strangury, to stop rheum, and provoke urine. 25 Drink it with wine against venomous bitings. 26 seeth it in wine and honey to cure wounds. Use it in pessaries to stop terms. 27 It helpeth ache of the ears. 28 It preventeth the fits of the Fevers being taken one hour before the fit. 29 It cureth creeping and running sores, fistulas, spitting of blood and matter, the holy fire, swellings and hardness, shingles, heat of the stomach, new wounds, hot apostumes, & rheumatic sores and ulcers of the ears, and all kinds of fluxes. Byting venomous 25 Blood to stop 1. 3. 6. 10. 18. 21 Bloody flux 13. 15. 16. 20 Breath strait 24 Bursten 9 Chafing or galling 4 Ears ache 27. running 22. ulcers 29. Fevers hot 5. 28 Fistula 29 Flowers to stop 11. 16. 19 20. 26. Fluxes 15. 16. 20 Head sores 23 Holy fire 29 Inflammations 17 Nose bleeding 16 Pissing blood 16 Rheum 24. 29 Shingles 17. 29 Sores creeping 29 Spitting blood 2. 16. 29 Stomach hot 29 Strangury 24 Swell 29 Teethache 8. 14 Urine flux 12 Urine stopped 24 Whites 20 Wounds 18. 21. 26. 29 ¶ Burnet. BVrnet openeth the stops of the liver, causeth urine, and helpeth the jaundice. 2 And with honey and white wine, it unbindeth sore stitches of the ribs and teats. 3 Stamp it and seeth it with wine or milk, and strain it, and drink it hot for the grinding of the belly. 4 For all sores, wash them with the juice of Burnet and Sugar. 5 To heal the Pleurisy and putrefaction of the matrix, distil it in the end of May, and drink the water four ounces morning and evening. 6 Burnet drunk, cureth the bloody flux, spitting blood, pissing blood, the flowers, and all other fluxes of blood, and so doth the powder of the herb and seed drunk with wine or water wherein iron hath been often quenched, and so doth the herb alone being but holden in the hand. 8 Wounds, stamp the green leaves and apply them to keep them from apostumation, and inflammation, and to hot tumors, botches, swelling and ulcers. 9 It is very good to heal wounds used both inward and outward, to avoid inflammation and bleeding. 10 The leaves steeped in wine and drunk, do comfort and rejoice the heart, and help the trembling thereof, & confirmeth the stomach. 11 In pottage, it bindeth the belly. 12 It is very good in the plague time, and so is the water thereof. 13 It stoppeth the flowers and all fluxes, and represseth choleric vomitings. 14 The root and seed are most binding. 15 The leaf in Ale, Beer or Wine, is good against the rheum and flux of the body, and against the hot running gout, used both inward and outward. 16 Burnet openeth the stops of the liver, causeth urine, and helpeth the jaundice, and with White wine and honey it unbindeth stitches of the ribs and teats. Belly ache 3. loose 11 Bloody flux 6 Blood to stop 9 Breasts stitch 2. 16 Flowers to stop 6. 13. 15 Fluxes 6. 11. 13. 15 Gout hot 15 Heartgriefes 10 jaundice 1. 16 Inflammation 9 Liver stopped 1. 16 Matrix griefs 5 Pissing blood 6 Plague 12 Pleurisy 5 Rheum 15 Side griefs 2. 16 Sores 4. 8 Spitting blood 6 Stitches 2. 16 Stomach weak 10 Swell 8 Vomiting 13 Urine stopped 1. 16 Wounds 8. 9 ¶ Butcher's broom. Bvtchers' broom, or Knee holm: Kankers in wounds, apply powder of the roots. 2 Yard inflamed, stamp the leaves and boil them with Rose water & a little wine, & apply them. 3 seeth it in wine, and drink it to provoke urine, to break the stone, and drive out the gravel and urine. For the jaundice and headache, and to provoke the flowers. 4 The leaves and fruit be of the same force that the roots be of, but not so strong. It is good for the strangury. 5 The young stalks are eaten as Sperage in salads. Flowers stopped 3 Headache 3 jaundice 3 canker 1 Stone 3 Strangury 4 Urine stopped 3 Wounds 1 Yard inflamed 2 ¶ Butterburre. BVtter burr: Plague, drink the powder of it with wine, it helpeth the pestilent Fevers, provoketh sweat, drieth up all venom and evil heat from the heart. It killeth worms, and is of great force against the suffocation of the mother. 2 It cureth all naughty ulcers, and all filthy fretting sores or consuming pox and inflammations, the powder being cast into them or on them. 3 The same cureth the fartion in horses either given inwards or applied outwardly. 4 The root is good against all venomous bitings and poison being used either inward or outward. 5 Being sodden in wine & drunk, it helpeth the difficulty of breathing, it killeth broad worms like gourd seeds, & driveth down urine and terms. 6 The powder of the root doth effectually heal all running sores and moist wounds. 7 Oil of the root of it is good against all shaking and cold fevers being anointed before the fit, and the same scoureth away all the filthiness of the skin, and is good for the extreme coldness and shakinng of the joints and sinews. 8 Stamp the herb and apply it to any sores that be extremely hard to heal. 9 For the pestilence, drink one dram of the powder of the root with wine, and cover thee well to sweated. 10 The same powder is also good against the strangling of the mother, and killeth worms both in men and beasts, and helpeth them that are shortwinded. Byting venomous 4 Breath short 5. 10 Cold griefs 7 Fevers 1. 7 Flowers stopped 5 Horse fartions 3 Inflammations 2 joints cold 7 Mother suffoc. 1. 10. Plague 1. 9 Poison 4 Pox 2 Shaking 7 Skin to cleanse 7 Sinews cold 7 Sores 2. 6. 8 Sweat to 'cause 1. 9 Venom 1. 4 Ulcers 2. 6. 8 Urine stopped 5 Worms 1. 5 Wounds 6 ¶ Calament. (See Nep.) CAlament drunk three days, helpeth the jaundice, and the stomach, causeth digestion, and stayeth vomiting, and being drunk and applied, it helpeth venomous bitings, and wounds. 2 Stomach ache, seeth it with Reasins, and dry Figs in wine, & drink it first and last, or use it in broths. Wounds to heal, stamp Nep and drink it with Ale. 3 Worms, drink it with wine. Bruised blood, drink the juice to cast it out. 4 Wounds ache, stamp it with wine and eat it. 5 Fever quarten, drink the juice of Nep with wine to sweated it away. 6 seeth it in water and honey, and drink the broth to provoke the flowers. 7 Ears worms, rub the head with Calament. 8 Lytargie, drink ashes of the skin of a Hare with Calament. 9 Breasts swollen, stamp it with Wormwood, Sage, and toasted white bread and vinegar, and apply it as hot as may be suffered. 10 Stomach griefs, stamp Nep, and seeth it in Wine and drink it. 11 Cough and imposthume, eat roasted figs with powder of Nep. 12 Bleeding inward, stamp it and strain it with Ale or Wine, and drink it three or four times a day, and the blood shall come outward. 13 Drink it with Wine for shortness of breath. 14 Dead child to expel, drink it and Betony with Ale. 15 Sciatica, stamp it and apply it. Heart cardiak, drink it and apply it. 16 To preserve from the lepry in the beginning chew it fasting, and hold it, and thou shalt never be leprous. 17 Stones swollen, stamp it and apply it. 18 Teeth ache, apply the leaves. 19 Woman mischieved in child birth, stamp good store of Nep with a little Vervin, and strain it with White wine or stolen Ale, and drink it first at and last at morn and even as long as need is. 20 Bruises and bruised blood, stamp Nep leaves with salt and apply them. 21 Yexing, drink Nep with Wine: cough cold, stamp as much Nep as two walnuts with two eggs, and make a tansy and eat it. 22 piles, bruise one handful of Nep and apply it. 23 Ears worms, put in the juice. 24 Matrix cold and moist, use pessaries or subfumigations of Nep, it helpeth conception. 25 Worms and superfluous flesh in sores, apply powder of wild Calament. 26 Pissing bed, drink a little Nep before supper. 27 Wounds bleeding inward, drink the juice fasting by itself, or with chervil and Wine. 28 Calament or Nep boiled and drunk or applied, is good against venomous bitings. 29 Drunk with Wine aforehand it preserveth from poison, and chaseth away all venomous beasts from whence it is strawed or burned. 30 Drunk with honeyed Wine, it warmeth the body, cutteth gross humours, driveth away cold shiverings, and causeth sweat, and so it doth being boiled in oil and all the body anointed with it. 31 Drunk as aforesaid, it helpeth bruisings, digesteth congealed blood, and is good for burstings, pain of the bowels, shortness of breath, stopping of the breast, and the jaundice. 32 Boiled in Wine and drunk, it provoketh urine and terms, expelleth the dead birth, & so it doth in a pessary or in other suppositer. 33 It is good for lazars and lepers to eat of it, and to drink it in whey of sweet milk after it. 34 Eaten raw or sodden with meats, or drunk with salt and honey, slayeth and expelleth all kinds of worms out of all parts of the body, and so doth the juice drunk and laid to where they are. 35 Boiled in Wine, it helpeth bruises, and black spots being often washed therewith, or the green herb stamped and applied. 36 It is good to be applied to the Sciatica. It helpeth the strangury or stopping of the urine, the stone, convulsions of the stomach, wheasings, pains of the guts, stopping of terms, tertians, & the kings evil, being drunk in wine, or the powder or syrup used. 37 The water is but weak, except to stop vomits. 38 The oil is a present help against the Sciatica, & entereth quickly. 39 Drink the juice with wine, to kill worms, resist poison, cause sweat, open the liver and milt, and to heat the kidneys that have taken cold, or seeth the herb with wine for all the aforesaid, and to cleanse the breast, provoke urine, heal ruptures, help the jaundice, to restrain cholerik fluxes, to comfort the stomach, for the Fever tertian, the stomach being first cleansed. Matrix griefs of all sorts, stamp the leaves and flowers of Calament, and seeth them in water with powder of Cavil, and strain it, and drink it warm with sugar morn and even. Appetite 1 Back (See Kidneys, Stone) Bellyache 31. 36 Byting venomous 1. 28 Bleeding inward 12. 20. 27. 31 Breast griefs 31. 39 Breasts swollen 9 Breath short 13. 31. 36. 39 Bruised 3. 20. 31. 35 Bursten 31. 39 Cod swollen 17 Cold griefs 17 Cough 11 Conception 24 Dead child 14. 32 Digestion 1 Ears worms 7. 23 Emerods' 22 Fever quarten 5. tertian 36. 39 Flowers stopped 6. 32. 36 Fluxes 39 Heart griefs 15 Hicket 21 jaundice 1. 31. 39 Impost. 11 Kidneys cold 39 Kings evil 36 Lepry 16. 33 lethargy 8 Liver stopped 39 Matrix cold and moist 24 Milt stopped 39 piles 22 Pissing bed 26 Poison 29. 39 Sciatica 15. 36. 39 Scabs 16 Sores 25 Stomach ache 1. 39 griefs 10. 39 weak 1. 39 Stones swollen 17 Stone 36 Strangury 36 Sweated to cause 30. 39 Teethach 18 Venom 29 Vomiting 1. 37 Urine stopped 32. 36. 39 Wheasing 36 Woman hurt 19 Worms 3. 25. 34. 39 Wounds 2. 4. 27 ¶ Calamus aromaticus. CAlamus aromaticus doth cleanse, dry, and waste all windiness within the body without hurt. 2 The root sodden in wine and drunk, helpeth the white morphue, & causeth a good colour in the face. 3 It doth help to purge, cleanse, and dry the water between the skin and the flesh, being sodden with the seeds of Smallach, parsley and Fenel, and strained, and so it helpeth cramps also, and griefs in the sinews. 4 Being drunk in wine, sodden with Sage and fresh Capars, it helpeth the coldness of the milt, liver and reins. 5 The powder thereof drunk, augmenteth seed of generation, and purgeth the terms. 6 Nothing is better for the dropsy than Ale of Wormwood or of Sage, drunk with the said powder. 7 It also cleanseth the bladder and voideth the stinking of the urine. It is a noble herb of great virtue, chief the root. 8 Boiled with Parsley seed, it is good for the strangury, pain in the reins and bladder, & the dropsy. 9 The same taken any ways, is very agreeable to the inner parts of the stomach, liver, milt and matrix, and for all ruptures. 10 Breath stink, chew it and hold it in thy mouth. 11 Liver and milt stopped, stamp it and steep it in sufficient vinegar, and seeth it in the same vinegar to the one half, and to one pound of Calamus put six ounces of honey, and boil it to a syrup, and take an ounce and a half every morning and be whole. Calamus aromaticus causeth urine and terms taken in warily, or fomented out warily, and is good in plasters for the liver and stomach. It is good for strangury and griefs of the kidneys. It washeth all windiness from all parts without hurt. seeth it in Wine and drink it against the white morphue. It helpeth sores of the bladder, and expelleth stinking urine, and with convenient things, it helpeth the dropsy. Backache 8 Bellyache 8 Bladder griefs 7. 8 Breath stink 10 Bursten 9 Cholik 1 Cramp 3 Colour bad 2 Dropsy 3. 6. 8 Flowers stopped 5 Kidneys cold 4. griefs 8. 10. Liver cold 4. griefs 9 10. Lust to cause 5 Matrix griefs 9 Milt cold 4. griefs 9 10. Morphue 2 Seed to increase 5 Sinews griefs 3 Stomach griefs 9 Strangury 8 Urine stink 7 Windiness 1 ¶ Caltrop. CAltrop or star thistle: drink powder of the seed with wine, to expel the urine, for the gravel and the strangury. ¶ Camomile. Camomile: stinking sweat, seeth Camomile & Wormwood with some Alom in water and wash therewith. 2 Stone, drink the juice with wine. 3 Fevers, seeth Camomile, Isop, and fiveleafe ana, one handful in a quart of Ale, and make it an Alebrew and use it. 4 Ache, stamp it and apply it by itself or with Pepper. 5 Milt pain, drink one dram of powder of the flowers with three ounces of White wine, and a little of a child's urine morning and evening. 6 Itch and ill humours, seeth Lady's mantel, Camomile flowers, and jacea ana one handful in good Wine, and drink four ounces every morning, and also wash therewith twice, and be whole. 7 Bruises, boil Camomile, Wormwood, & wheat bran ana one handful in wine & after in honey, & apply it. 8 Stomach impost. drink vi. ounces of the distilled water every morning at the break of day. 9 Strangury and stone in the reins, drink one ounce of the water when need is & eat a little sugar after it. 10 To make the oil of it, put three ounces of the flowers after one days gathering in one pint & a half of salad oil in a glass, & set it in the sun xl. days, it openeth the pores, resolveth vapours, stoppeth flowing of humours, correcteth evil qualities, comforteth the sinews, & mitigateth ache or pain. 11 Aches & swellings, seeth the flowers of Camomile & Roses in white wine, & apply it plasterwise. 12 Kernels in the throat, mix powder of it with honey, & take a spoonful of it morn & even, and let it go down by a little at once. 13 Fevers cold, seeth it and wormwood in a quart of Ale to the one half, than strain it & drink it first & last. 14 Head ulcers or biles, seeth it in vinegar or water and wash therewith. Fever & jaundice, drink the juice with warm water. 15 Headache, stamp it with read Fenel, Sage & Cummin, & apply it. 16 Chollik, stone, & stopping of the urine, stamp Camomile and wild Mallows ana one handful, & seeth them in water till it be thick, put them into two pockets, & sprinkle them with white wine, & apply them one after another from the navel to the yard as hot as may be suffered. 17 seeth Camomile, Rosemary, & Time ana, one handful in a pint of Malmsey, & take up the fume thereof into the ears that are dull of hearing, or apply a ball of bruised Camomile. 18 seeth two handfuls of Camomile in strong Ale, and apply it hot as may be suffered, or take up the fume thereof into the mouth for the headache, and when it is cold heat it again and hung a cloth over thy head. Mouth biles, chew Camomile. 19 Sinews shrunk, & for swelling in the neck, grinned it with as much water cresses, of each one handful small, & fry them with wheat meal and honey, and apply it hot as may be suffered: proved. 20 Stitch, stamp the flowers with a little vinegar, & apply them hot in a bag, or seeth three handfuls with as much wormwood, some Mallows, & one handful of Rosemary in a gallon of water to the one half, & put them into two or three bladders & apply them hot one after another. 21 Worms, seeth Camomile, Tansy, & Peniroyal ana, like much, in one pint of Malmsey to the one half, then strain it, & drink thereof. 22 For the cholik at all times, fill a stillatory with Camomile, & one handful of Mints, all shreaded small, put thereto a quart of White wine and distil it, and drink the water. 23 Head pushes and weals seeth it in vinegar and wash therewith. 24 Headache of a burning fever, use Camomile. 25 Mouth canker, burn it and use the powder. 26 Milt griefs, drink one dram of the powder forty days. 27 Urine stopped, seeth it in wine or water, & drink thereof often, it helpeth also the stopping of the liver and milt. 28 Flowers stopped, seeth it in water and bathe therein. 29 The oil of it, stamp the flowers with oil olive, and let it rest xii. days, then seeth it and strain it, and do so the second time, & let it stand xuj. days, then seeth it, and strain it & use it. 30 Cholik, seeth it with Rue, & drink it. 31 Headache, seeth it in water and wash therewith luke warm and apply the herb till the ache cease. 32 Sleep to cause, apply Camomile to thy temples. 33 Headache of stopping, seeth the flowers in lee & wash thy head therewith, & apply the flowers, and steep a piece of bread in wine, & eat it with powder of Cinnamom. 34 Madness, seeth Camomile flowers and Vervin ana one handful in a quart of water or lee, & wash thy head therewith. 35 Sweat to cause, use Camomile & the flowers thereof in baths. 36 Liver cold with stitch & paleness, purge thy body, & set thy feet in warm water wherein Camomile hath been sodden, & warm, them, & beware thou take no cold. 37 Loins ache of cold cause, seeth the flowers in wine with as much water, and stamp them well, & seeth them again in the same liquor till it be wasted, and apply it as hot as may be suffered a foot broad, and then use hot ointments or oils. 38 Fevers of dry cause, or heaviness, seeth Camomile and Dill ana, two handfuls in water, & sit over it up to the knees, & cover thee well that the water may strike up through thee, then rub well thy legs downwards & walk, & use meats that warm moderately, & beware of cold. 39 Fever quotidian with great thirst, set thy feet in the like water aforesaid & dry them and rub them with salt, & as much oil of Violets. 40 Camomile drunk with wine, breaketh the stone, helpeth the jaundice, the ache and grief of the liver, sores of the mouth, headache, & megrem, and expelleth urine. 41 A good plaster for the stomach: stamp Camomile, Mints, sage, & good store of wormwood with sour bread, & boil them in vinegar, & apply it warm. 42 The decoction of the flowers, herb & root drunk, provoketh terms, expelleth the dead fruit, driveth out urine, & breaketh the stone, and so doth the bath of the decoction thereof. 43 The flowers & herb boiled in wine and drunk, expelleth the wind, & cureth the cholik & pain in the belly, and so it purgeth & beautifieth those that have an evil colour after the jaundice, and all griefs of the liver. 44 Drink one dram of the herb and flowers with wine, against all venomous bitings. 15 seeth it in water & apply it to the region of the bladder for the pain thereof, and to drive forth the urine & gravel. 46 Chew it in the mouth for the ulcers thereof, or wash the mouth with the decoction thereof. 47 Mix it with oil, & take it in a glister against all Fevers coming of obstruction or stopping of the skin. 48 The oil thereof suageth all ache, it cureth bruised and wearied parts, it softeneth all hardness & swellings, and openeth all that is stopped. 49 seeth it in water, and wash pushes of the head therewith to heal them. 50 Strangury & stone in the kidneys, drink Camomile water with sugar fasting, till the pain be gone. 51 Stamp it and strain it with white wine, and drink it to expel a dead child presently, & to cleanse the bladder. 52 Wash one handful and bruise it, and seeth it in a pint of Ale to the one half, scom it & strain it, and drink it one hour before the fit of an ague with sugar, and cover thee well to sweated three days together fasting. 53 The smell of it comforteth the brain. 54 seeth the herb & flowers in wine and drink it to help the stops of the liver & milt to purge choler to expel terms to help the torments of the small guts, to heal the grief of the kidneys & bladder, to mitigate the inward griefs of the matrix, for straightness of wind, sighing, wheasing, the griefs of the lungs, the flux lienteria, to warm the cold stomach to drive away many inward griefs. 55 seeth the flowers with vinegar & honey, & drink it daily morn and even for the falling sickness. 56 There is no medicine more usual amongst men than Camomile for all griefs. 57 Smell to Camomile & wash thy head therewith, or with the lee thereof, for the weakness of the head and brain. 58 Wash filthy ulcers with the decoction thereof. 59 The oil of the flowers thereof, softeneth all hard swellings and humours, and mitigateth aches. 60 Not man can tell all the virtues thereof. 61 Anoint the headache with the oil, and all other aches, bruises, shrink, hardness, and stops, etc. Take the flowers of Camomile, or any other flowers, or fresh green herbs, chop them small, and boil them artly in oil, cool it and press, and put therein fresh flowers, and sun it, and use it. Take powder of any simple wood, as , Aloes, Tamariske, or Guiacum, soak it in oil of sweet Almonds ten days, than heat it, and press out the oil, the like may be done with any flower or herb. Aches 4. 10. 11. 37. 48. 59 61. Backach 37. 54 Bellyach 43. 54 Byting venomous 44 Bladder griefs 45. 51 Brain ill. 53. 57 Breath strait 54 Bruises 7. 48. 61 Choler 54 Chollik 16. 22. 30. 43. 54 Colour bad 54 Dead child 42. 51 Ears dull 17 Falling evil 55 Fevers 3. 14. 38. 47. 52. cold 13. hot 24. quotidian 39 Flowers stopped 28. 42. 54 Flux 54 Gravel 45 Hardness 48. 59 61 Headache 15. 18. 24. 31. 33. 40. 57 megrem 40. ulcers 14. 23. 49. jaundice 14. 40. 43 Impostume 8 Itch 6 Kernels 12 Liver cold 36. griefs 54. 40. 43. Loins ache 37 Lungs griefs 54 Madness 34 Matrix griefs 54 Milt griefs 5. 26. 54 Mouth ulcers 18. 40. 46. canker 25 Neck swollen 19 Oil 10. 29 Sinews grief 10. shrunk 19 61. Shrink 60 Sickness general 54. 56 Sighing 54 Sleep to 'cause 32 Sores 58 Stinking sweat 1 Stomach impost. 8. cold 54. griefs 41. Stone 29. 16. 40. 42. 50. Strangury 9 50 Stitch 20. 36 Swell 11. 48. 59 Sweat to 'cause 35 Thirst 39 Throat kernels 11 Ulcers 58 Urine stopped 27. 40. 42. 45 Weariness 48 Wheasing 54 Windiness 43 Worms 21 ¶ Capars. CApars: the bark of the root is good against the hardness and stopping of the milt to be taken with oxymel or mixed with oils, or ointments fit for that purpose and applied. 2 The root used in drink is good for the Sciatica, the palsy, and bruised blood, it provoketh terms and urine mightily, that it waxeth bloody if it be much used, it cleanseth old ulcers and rotten sores that be hard to heal. 3 And laid to with vinegar, it voideth foul whitespots and morphue, the fruit and leaves have the like virtue as the roots, but not so strong. 4 The seed boiled with vinegar and kept warm in the mouth, suageth toothache. 5 The juice of the leaves, flowers, and young fruit dropped into the ears, killeth worms in them. 6 The Capers preserved in salt or pickle, as they be brought into this country, being washed, and boiled, and eaten with vinegar, are meat and medicine: for it causeth appetite, openeth the stopping of the liver and milt, consumeth cold flegmes in the stomach, but they nourish little or nothing at all. 7 Eat Capers, and drink the water of a smiths coal-trough to heal the swelling of the milt, though it have continued seven years. 8 Raw Capers eaten, trouble the stomach, wherefore they must be sodden & mixed with oil and vinegar and so eaten. 9 The continual use of them is good for them that have the palsy, the gout, and that are phlegmatic and splenetike, for excess of terms, the sciatica and stopping of the urine. 10 Drink two drams of the fruit forty days with wine to waste the milt, and drive down the urine and bloody excrements, for the sciatica, weakness of the sinews, ruptures, cramps, to provoke flowers, to purge the head, and loosen the belly. 11 Capers sodden in vinegar, helpeth the tooth ache, and so doth the dried bark of the root, which decoction serveth also to cleanse all manner of filth of the skin, all filthy sores and white scurf and hard swellings. 12 The fruit or leaves applied with Barley meal, is good for the hardness of the milt, wens and kernels. 13 They would be eaten with Oximell before other meats. 14 Flowers to cause, stamp the bark of the tree, and steep it all night in white wine, and strain it, and drink it fasting two or three mornings. 15 Distil them when they are green, and wash hair with the water in the sun, and it will be green. 16 Drink Capars to dissolve the ache of the bones. 17 Kings evil, use the decoction of the bark of Capars, and Sperage, and anoint with oil of serpents. Ache 16 Appetite 6 Belly bound 10 Bones ache 16 Bruised 2 Bursten 10 Cramp 10 Colour green 15 Ears worms 5 Flowers stopped 2. 10. 14. to stop. 9 Gout 9 Green colour 15 Hardness 12 Head purge 10 Kernels 12 Kings evil 17 Liver stopped 6 Milt griefs 1. 6. 7. 10. 12 Morphue 3 Palsy 2. 9 Sciatica 2. 9 10 Sinews weak 10 Skin foul 11. 3 scurf 11 Sores 11. 2 Stomach weak 6 Swell 11 Teethache 4. 11 Ulcers old 2 Urine stopped 2. 9 10 Wens 12 ¶ Cardamom. CArdamom, or Grains of Paradise, are good to be drunk against the falling sickness, the sciatica, the cough, resolutions of the sinews, ruptures, pain of the belly, to kill worms, and provoke urine. 2 Drink one dram in wine, with as much bark of Laurus to break the stone. 3 The common grains be near hand as good. 4 Grains are good for a cold stomach, and are much like Pepper in operation. 5 It is a good spice for women. 6 colic, seeth white time and Parslie in Ale, and strain it and drink it with powder of Grains. 7 Brain weak of rheum or pose, put powder of Cardamom to oil of Musk into an Egg shell, till it seeth, and anoint therewith: it is chief of all seeds. Put powder of it into the nose to comfort the feeble brain. Griefs of the heart, lungs, and stomach, and to preserve from all evil humours, take Cardamom, three ounces, Galingall, vi. ounces, Sugar, iiii. ounces, Saffron, i. pennyworth, and take half a spoonful of their powder morning and evening, till you be whole. Belly ache 1 Brain sick 1 Bursten 1 Chollike 6 Cough 1 Falling evil 1 Rheum 7. 1 Sciatica 1 Sinews grief 1 Stomach cold 4. 1 Stone 2 Urine stopped 1 women's griefs 5 Worms 1 ¶ Camepitis. CAmepitis, ground Pine, herb Iue, or field Cypers: liver, milt, kidneys, and bladder stopped, seeth it and Germander in oil, and apply it and use the powder of the herbs as an Electuary with honey. 2 Drink the distilled water of Camepitis, and anoint the place with it to help the gout. 3 The leaves drunk with wine seven days, healeth the jaundice. 4 And drunk with Mede or Mellicrate forty days, it healeth the sciatica. 5 Liver and flowers stopped, drink it. Wounds and corrupt ulcers, stamp it green with honey, and apply it. 6 Paps hard, stamp it green, and apply it, and so it healeth also all venomous bitings. 7 Dead child, and inward bruises, seeth it in vinegar and drink it. 8 Sweat to cause, anoint with the juice. Bitings venom. 9 6 Bladder stopped 1 Breasts hard 6 Bruised 7 Dead child 7 Flowers stopped 5 Gout 2 jaundice 3 Kidneys stopped 1 Liver stopped 1 Milt stopped 1 Sciatica 4 Sweat to 'cause 8 Ulcers 5 Wounds 5 ¶ Charloke. CHarloke Rapistrum, is not used in medicine, but some use the seed thereof for Musterseede, and it may serve in steed thereof, but it is not all out so good. ¶ Carrots. CArrots: mother, drink one spoonful of the juice of the roots of wild Carrots, with a little drink, & apply the dross to the privy place. 2 Sodden tenderly in meat, they are pleasant, and wholesome, they nourish well, & warm all the inner parts being eaten moderately. 3 The green leaves bruised with honey applied, doth cleanse unclean fretting sores. 4 The feeds of wild Carrots drunk or applied to the matrix, bringeth down flowers, it provoketh urine being drunk, and is good against all venomous bitings and stingings. 5 He that taketh it aforehand, shall not be bitten of serpents: it is good for conception. 6 The root driveth out urine, and provoketh venery. 7 And laid to the convenient place, it bringeth forth the child that sticketh in the birth. 8 The Garden Carrots hath the same virtues, but not so strong, but yet more fit for meat, and provoketh venery. 9 The roots especially of the wild Carrot, provoke urine, taken in any sort, and increaseth love. 10 The powder thereof drunk with honeyed water, openeth the stops of the liver, milt, and kidneys and is good for the gravel & the jaundice. 11 The seed of the wild provoketh terms, helpeth the suffocation of the mother: being drunk in wine, or used in pessaries, it provoketh urine, casteth out gravel, and is good for the strangury and dropsy, and for the pain of the sides, belly, and reins, against all venom, and venomous bitings. 12 The seeds of garden Carrots have like virtues, but not so strong. 13 The seeds especially of the wild sodden in wine, draweth down the terms and urine, and water of the dropsy. 14 The root used in meats, is good against the dropping of the urine, it may be kept in vinegar & honey as other roots. 15 The seed, herb, or root sodden and applied, bringeth down the dead birth, the seconds, and the flowers. 16 And stamped with honey and applied, it is good against the pocks, kankers and fretting sores, which eat the flesh and skin. 17 The seed sodden in wine helpeth the colic, and wind in the stomach and the hyckit. Backeache 11 Belly-ache 11 Bitings venom. 4. 5. 11 colic 16 Conception 5 Dead child 7. 15 Deliverance 7 Dropsy 11. 13 Flowers stopped 4. 11. 13. 15 Gravel 11 Hyckit 16 jaundice 10 canker 15 Kidneys stopped 10 Liver stopped 10 Lust to 'cause 8. 9 Milt stopped 10 Mother suffoc. 1. 11 Pock 16 Seconds 15 Side griefs 11 Sores 3. 15 Srangurie 4 Venom 11 Urine stopped 4. 9 11. 14 Windiness 16 ¶ Carway. CArway: To clear the sight, hold thy eyes over the vapour of the seeds powdered and sprinkled upon hot Barley bread. 2 Drink the decoction of the seeds to provoke urine. 3 Carway breaketh wind, helpeth the cough, and is good against the frenzy, and venomous bitings, with Alum it helpeth scabs and tetters, and restoreth hair. 4 The seed is good for the stomach and the mouth, it helpeth digestion, provoketh urine, and dissolveth all windiness of the inward parts, and is of the virtue of Anniseedes. 5 The roots boiled, are good to be eaten as Carrots. 6 The young stalks are wonderful pleasant in a Salad unsodden. 7 The herb serveth to make sweet and well smelling pottage, it maketh a sweet breath. 8 The roots are better than Persnips. 9 Both seeds and the herb are good against hot swellings. 10 seeth it in wine, and drink it to purge the reins. Back griefs 10 Bitings venom. 3 Breath ill 7 Cough 3 Digestion 4 Eyes dull 1 Frenzy 3 Hair fallen 3 scabs 3 Swell 9 Tetters 3 Urine stopped 2 Windiness 3 ¶ Cassiafistula. CAssiafistula: to purge a woman with child, stamp half an ounce, & seeth it in white wine, & strain it, and let her drink it and lie upon her bed, if the child be full of venom all about, it shall be clarified and live, and the woman whole: proved. 2 The inner pulp is a very sweet and pleasant medicine, and may be taken of all people that are weak, and women with child, without danger. It looseth the belly and purgeth choler chiefly, and sometimes phlegm gathered about the guts, one ounce being taken: it is very good for hot Fevers, the Pleurisy, the jaundice, or any other inflammation of the liver, especially mixed with waters, drinks or herbs that be of cooling nature, it is good for the reins or kidneys, it expelleth the gravel and stone, & preserveth against the stone, mixed with the decoction of liquorice, or the roots of Persley or Cythes, or a decoction of all together and drunk. 3 Throat swollen, Garlic with Cassia to dissolve and break the Apostume. 4 Gout, apply it. 5 It may be eaten alone, or tempered with Endive water, or goats wheye, or Barley water. 6 It is good in washing and cleansing glisters to soften hard Apostumes being laid to. 7 With Hierapicra, use it for pain in the guts, with syrup of Liquorice for the reins. 8 That which is shining black is best, it cleanseth the blood, and quencheth the blood and choler, and is good in Agues before blood-letting. 9 But to some it is a poison, especially such as have slippery and weak guts, to such it must be given with Myrabolanes, Rhubarb, mastic, and Spikenard. 10 But to them that are much bound, with oil of Almonds, or with Mussilage of Fleawort, it is excellent for the stopping of the urine being taken with medicines therefore, as Persley, Alexander seed, Fenell seed, and such like, because it worketh very slowly, some increase the strength thereof with Hyssop, or the wheye of Goats' milk. 11 Many give it with Hierapicra, or with syrup of Roses solutive, or the syrup of Cycorie with Rhubarb, or such like: the dose is commonly one ounce, two hours before dinner. Apostume 3. 6 Back ache 7. 2 Belly ache 7 Blood cleansing 8 Conception 1 Correction 9 10 Dose 11 Fever 8 Gout 4 jaundice 2 Liver stopped 2 Pleurisy 2 Purgation 1. 2. 5 squinsy 3 Stone 2 Throat swollen 3 Urine stopped 10 ¶ Cat's tail. CAts tail, or read Mace, the down thereof mixed with Swine's grease well washed, healeth burnings & skalding. 2 And the same down healeth broken and hollow kibes being laid on. Burn 1 Kibes 2 ¶ Cedria. CEdria, the liquor of Cedar suageth toothache being put therein. Eyes dull, spots and scars apply the liquor. 2 Ears worms, drop it in with vinegar. 3 Ears noise and dull, put it in with the decoction of Hyssop in wine. 4 Being put into dead bodies, it preserveth them from corruption, but it consumeth and corrupteth the flesh of living bodies. 5 It killeth louse, and all such vermin, and preserveth against worms and moths and such like being anointed therewith. 6 The fruit is good to be eaten against the strangury, and to provoke urine and the terms. Ears dull 3. noise 3. worms 2 Eyes dull 1 Spots 1 Lice 6. 5 Moths 5 Strangury 6 Teeth ache 1 Urine stopped 6 Worms 5 ¶ Celondine. Mix the juice with honey, and seeth it in a vessel of Copper or Brass, and drop it into the eyes to clear the sight, and to avoid the spots, scars, blemishes, bloodshooting & web. 2 Mix it with wine, and wash fretting and consuming sores therewith to heal them. 3 seeth the root in white wine with Anniseedes, and drink it for the stopping of the liver & the jaundice. 4 chew the root to help the tooth ache. 5 Stamp it and apply it 14. days to all Ringwormes, Tetters, Impetigo, and Serpigo, and black spots, wheresoever they be morning and evening to heal them. 6 Seethe it in white wine and receive the vapour thereof into the mouth to heal the canker, and to assuage the pain that cometh by watching. 7 Stamp it with old grease, brimstone, and salt, and anoint all bald places therewith, and to help the scabs and griefs of the head. 8 seeth a good handful of the roots in a pint and half of Rose vinegar, and put thereto one ounce & a half of Treacle, and drink thereof two. or three ounces, & cover thee well to sweat against the plague. 9 Apply the herb or juice to heal fistulas, creeping sores, pocks & kankers. 10 The root with the herb stamped and applied to the navel, helpeth the torments of the guts. 11 The powder of it purgeth and healeth wounds. 12 seeth the herb in wine, and apply to the belly against the colic. 13 Eyes bloodshot, stamp Celondine with Wormwood, with the white of an Egg, and Rose water, and apply it when you go to bed. 14 Breast canker, apply the juice with the dung of a white Goose. Flowers stopped, wear Celondine under thy feet. 15 Anoint any chaps wheresoever with the juice thereof & vinegar when you go to bed. 16 Drink the juice of it to drive forth the water of the dropsy by urine. 17 For the headache, boil Celondine with butter, and strain it & keep it in a close box, and anoint therewith: it is a precious ointment, and also wash the head with the decoction thereof afterward. 18 jaundice: seeth the root in stolen, and drink it three days. 19 canker, wash it well with wine or vinegar, and then apply the juice of the herb and roots thereof. 20 Anoint all skabs with the juice to heal them. 21 Stinging, stamp the root & herb, and apply it. 22 The juice drieth up wounds, and with swine's grease it healeth them up. 23 jaundice, seeth the root & herb of Celondine chopped small one pottle, in water in a close vessel, and make thereof to bathe therein. Take powder of Columbine seeds two drams, Saffron one penny weight, vinegar water one ounce, Celondine water two ounces, and drink it first and last, stamp the green root as much as a Walnut, and strain it with a dishfull of milk or wine, and drink it iiii. hours before meat, and walk after it. 24 Legs black and swollen, stamp it with Horehound, and herb Benit, and seeth it in water to the one half, and wash therewith three or iiii. time's everyday. 25 Sores old and stinking, mix the juice of it and Planten with Hony, and the yolk of an Egg ana with Barley flower, and apply it raw. 26 Skabs to heal, anoint with the juice and Brimstone. 27 For all diseases of the liver, lungs, jaundice, & all other griefs, seeth the juice of it with possitale, and clarify it & drink it with Sugar. 28 To make one to break wind, make powder of the root, Aunts eggs, and a little ginger, and give it in meat or drink, and he shall fart till he drink water. 29 Ringwormes, anoint with the juice of Celondine, or mix mustered with black soap, and the juice of Celondine, and apply it. 30 Eyes dull, and worms in them, 31 Eyes web and pearl, strain the juice of it with Aloes, & drop thereof into the eye. 32 Gout burning, stamp Celondine and fry it with guilts grease, and put thereto as much powder of brimstone, as will hill the sore, and anoint therewith. 33 lepry, stamp Celondine with vinegar, and apply it. 34 Scab general, anoint with the juice of Celondine, Rue, century, and Wormwood. 35 Face freckles, anoint with the juice of Celondine and wine, daily till it be well. 36 jaundice, stamp Celondine with the roots thereof one pound, of Liquorice razed, a quarter of a pound, seeth them in a gallon of water to the one half, and drink thereof. 37 Itch, take white vinegar one pint, Rosemary and Celondine ana one handful, boil them & strain them, and put in a quantity of white Coprose, while it is hot, and wash often therewith. 38 For all sores, especially green sores, put in the juice of Celondine and Houseleek ana into the wound, and apply the bruised herbs. 39 Head bushes, sores, or biles, beat old grease, Brimstone, Celondine, and salt, and anoint therewith. 40 Eyes sight to restore, mix the juice with the gall of a Cock and honey, and anoint. 41 squinsy, swelling in the mouth, and to purge the head, stamp the root, and seethe it in wine and gargarise therewith. 42 Eyes dull, put in the juice of Celondine (See in Alexander.) 43 Felon, apply the juice of Celondine and Planten, and it will go away. 44 jaundice, seethe the roots of Celondine, Red-docks, and Nettles in white wine, and put honey to it, and drink it morning and evening. 45 Bitten with a mad dog, drink Celondine with wine. 46 Teeth to fall out without pain, rub them with the juice of Celondine, and apply the substance. 47 Canker in the pap, anoint with the juice of Celondine and Goats' dung. 48 Morphewe, anoint with the juice and powder of Brimstone. 49 Drink it with thine own urine if thou hast drunk poison. 50 Lay it under a sick man's head, with the heart of a Moldwarpe, if he be in danger of death, he will immediately cry out or sing, if not, he will weep. 51 Tetter, ringworm, or such like, and black spots, stamp it, and apply it morning and evening fourteen days. 52 Bitings or stingings venomous, stamp it with as much Planten and some stolen urine, and apply it and drink the juice of Planten. 53 Eyes pin, or web, drop in the juice of Celondine. 54 ringworm, stamp it between two stones, and apply it often. 55 Stamp it with old suet, and apply it to scabs and ulcers, and wounds to heal them speedily. 56 Yard canker, boil the juice of Celondine and Planten, and a little salt, and apply it between the yard & the skin thereof. 57 Skabs to dry up and heal, anoint often with the juice of Celondine. 58 Canker, seeth the powder of Celondine and Roses in vinegar, till it be thick as mustard, and anoint. 59 Black jaundice, kneade Rye meal with the juices of Celondine, smallage, and Wormwood ana one handful, and bake it on the hearth, and receive up the vapour of it at the mouth, hanging a kerchief over thy head, and do so four or five times, and be whole. 60 For all diseases of the liver, lungs, jaundice, and all other inward griefs, seeth the juice of Celondine with possit ale, and clarify it, and drink it with Sugar. Baldness 7 Bitings venomous 5 Black jaundice 59 Black spots 5. 51 Breast canker 14. 47 Chaps 15 colic 12 Dropsy 16 Eyes bloodshot 1. 13 Eyes to be clear 1. 30. 40. 42 Eyes web 31. 53 Face freckles 35 Felon 43 Fistula 9 Gout hot 32 Griefs general 27 Guts pains 10 Headache 17 Head griefs 7 Head to purge 41 Head bushes 39 jaundice 3. 18. 23. 36. 44 Impetigo 5 Itch 37 canker 19 58 Legs black 24 lepry 33 Liver stopped 3 Mad dogs biting 45 Morphewe 48 Mouth canker 6 Plague 8 Poison 49 Ringwormes 5. 29. 51. 54 Serpigo 5 Sickness general 60 Skabs 20. 26. 34. 55. 57 Sores 2. 25 Sores green 38 squinsy 41 Stinging 21 Teeth ache 4 Teeth to fall out 46 Tetters 5. 51 Wind to expel 28 Wounds to heal 11. 22. 55 ¶ century. century: for worms that eat the hairs of the head and face, mix the gall of an ox or sheep with century, and boil them in wine or vinegar, and anoint therewith. 2 Eyes read and dull, put in the juice of it and of hounds tongue. 3 Ears dull, put in the juice with the gall of an eel with tents. 4 Appetite to cause, seeth century and Planten, and Pepper in wine, and drink it luke warm three nights to bedward. 5 Teeth worms, apply the juice. Breast pain, seeth it in water and drink it. 6 Coughs dry, seeth it in stolen ale and stamp it and seeth it again in the same ale, and strain it and put thereto a third part of honey, and boil it till it be as thick as honey, and take thereof three spoonful fasting to cleanse the stomach from gleete & be whole. 7 Reins grief, drink the juice with vinegar: biting or stinging, the juice with water. 8 To provoke appetite, and to cleanse the stomach and breast, and to purge the back and reins, and heal them, seeth it in water and drink it. 9 Worms, seethe it with Wormwood in milk, and drink it fasting. 10 Brain weak, mix century, Rue, and Fenell seed, with strong vinegar, and drink it in the mornings, and shave thy head, and apply thereto a black Cock cloven through the midst four & twenty hours, and then bleed in the master vein of the head and in the arm likewise. 11 Breast griefs, seeth it in white wine, and stamp it and seeth it again therein and strain it, and drink two or three spoonful with Sugar candy as often as need is. 12 Eyes watering, apply century to the nape of the neck. Ague cake, use to drink Centorie water. 13 Phlegm to break and void, seeth it in white wine or ale with Liquorice, and strain it and drink it with Sugar morning and evening, and for hoarsness with Sugar candy. 14 Stinging of a Snake or Adder, steep it in new Ale and strain it and drink it, and also stamp thereof with grey salt, and apply it to the wound. 15 Fever quarten, stamp it and strain it with ale, and drink it before the fit. 16 Fever quotidian, drink as much powder as one small Walnut with wine, and drink a little more wine after it to cleanse thy mouth. 17 Fever of the gall, drink one dram of the powder three mornings fasting with white wine, it helpeth also digestion, the cough, and costiveness. 18 To cleanse the head, chest, and stomach, seeth three handful in a gallon of water, to the one half, cleanse it, and put thereto one pint of honey clarified to the one half, and drink two spoonful at once first and last. 19 Bitings venomous, drink it with thine own urine. 20 Appetite to cause, use Centory any way. 21 Dropsy, distil it with Sage and water Cresses, of each like much, and drink the water first and last. 22 Eyes dull, or web, eat the seeds. 23 Palsy, seeth it in wine and oil, and apply it for ache of the back, and all evils within the body, drink it with cold water. 24 Spitting matter, seeth it in oil of Mastic, and anoint the chest therewith where it is sore. Teeth worms, put in the juice. 25 Eyes smarting, put in the juice with woman's milk. Ears worms put in the juice of Centory and Leeks. 27 Drink the juice against all poison. 28 Drink the juice four mornings to have a clear voice, and to cleanse the breast marvelously. 29 For all griefs in the stomach, and to cause appetite, stamp two handful, and seeth it in three quarts of Ale to the one half, then put thereto one pint of honey, and take thereof every morning three spoonful. 30 Stamp Gentian one part, Centory two parts, and distil them, and drink the water morning and evening to preserve the body from all diseases, to void all impostumes, to 'cause a good colour, to resist the plague, to help the ptysicke, to cleanse the stomach and milt from waterish humours, to break the stones in the reins, and to provoke the flowers, and to purge the belly, void choler, and cleanse the blood, to heal all inward wounds, to clear the sight, and cure venomous bitings, but to cure the wounds, put powder of Centory to it, and use it nine days. 31 Worms, seeth it in water to the third part, and drink it. 32 Eyes griefs, anoint with the juice and honey. 33 Wound swelling, stamp it and apply it. 34 Fevers cold, anoint the pulses and plants with the juice. 35 Blood casting, drink the juice of it and chervil with Pease broth. 36 Breath stinking, belching, and loss of appetite, and to cleanse the chest and stomach, seeth it in wine or water, and drink it. 37 Back ache, drink it & Yarrow with vinegar. 38 Thirst continual, stamp it with the root of Lovage, & drink them with wine or water three nights to bedward. 39 Eyes to be clear, put in the juice of Centory the greater with honey. 40 Drink the juice or powder with wine to help all venomous bitings, but with vinegar for inward poison. 41 Anoint the sores of the bitings with the juice of it. 42 Ears dull, put in the clear juice of it. 43 To open a wound, stamp it well, and apply it. 44 The water of it helpeth the griefs of the liver and milt, causeth appetite, and is good for the worms, and salsflegme. 45 Centory must be gotten between our Lady days. 46 Breast phlegm, and the stomach, steep the tops of green Centory in ale or beer all night, & drink it fasting, but in winter take the root with white wine. 47 Breast to cleanse, seeth Centory & Hyssop in white wine, and drink it three days. 48 Seethe it in water or wine to purge downward choleric, phlegmatic, and gross humours, & for the sciatica, purge therewith till the blood come. 49 It is very good against the stopping of the liver, the jaundice, and hardness of the milt. 50 The decoction drunk, killeth and expelleth worms, and is good for the cramp, and all diseases of the sinews. 51 The juice applied in a pessary, provoketh terms, and expelleth the dead birth. 52 Stamp the herb green, and apply it to heal fresh and new wounds, and old ulcers that are hard to cure. 53 The powder thereof in plasters and ointments, powders & such like, filleth up hollow fistulas, & sores with flesh, and doth mollify all hardness. 54 Drink the syrup thereof with a little vinegar and salt to cleanse the body. 55 The leaves and flowers sodden and drunk, is good against all raw humours of gross flegmes watery or windy, it doth cleanse bloody matter within the body of man or woman. 56 The powder in a pessary draweth forth the dead birth. It is wholesome against the plague in the Winter time. 57 The decoction of it is good in glisters for the sciatica. 58 The juice put in with wool, draweth down the terms. 59 The juice drunk healeth the griefs of the sinews. 60 Centory is good against the stopping of the milt and liver, the colic, the ache of the mother, spitting blood, and to kill worms. 61 And applied to the region of the milt, it doth soften it. 62 The juice may be strained out and dried against the Sun for all griefs aforesaid in this wise: gather it when it is ready to seed, steep it five days in water and seeth it, till the better half be wasted, then strain it, and seeth it again to the thickness of honey, and so keep it: the like may be done with any herb or flower. For the Balm of it (See in Betony.) Ague cake 12 Appetite 4. 8. 20. 29. 36. 44 Backeache 7. 37. 23. 30 Belching 36 Belly-ache 60. bound 17 Bitings venom. 14. 19 40. 41 Blood casting 35. cleansing 30. Brain weak 10 Breast cleansing 8. 18. 28. 36 46. 47. pain 5. 11. Breath stinking 36 see breast cleanse Bruised 55 Choler 30 Chollike 60 Consumption 30 Cough dry 6. 17 Colour bad 30 Cramp 50. 59 Dead child 51. 56 Deliverance 51. 56 Digestion 17 Dropsy 21 Ears dull and noise Eyes dull 2. 22. 30. 32. 39 read 2. watering 12. web 22 Face deformed 44 Fevers cold 34 of the gall 17 quotidian 16 quarten 15 Fistula 53 Phlegm 13 see purge. Flowers stopped 51. 58 Hardness 53 Head bad 10 cleansing 18 Hair fallen 1 Hoarseness 13. 28 jaundice 49 Impostume 30 Liver griefs 44. 49. 60 Memory 10 Milt griefs 30. 44. 49. 60. 61 Palsy 23 Plague 30. 56 Poison 27. 40 preservatives 30 Ptisike 30 Purgation 6. 18. 30. 48. 54. 55 Sickness general 23. 30 Sciatica 48. 57 Sinews griefs 50. 59 Sores 52. 53 Spitting blood 60 matter 24 Stinging 14 Stomach cleansing 6. 8. 18. 29. 36. 46. griefs gener. 29. 30 Teeth worms 5. 24 Thirst continual 38 Voice to be clear 28 Worms 1. 9 31. 44. 50 Wounds inward 30. 43. 52 outward 30 swelling 33 ¶ Cetrache. CEtrache: milt stopped, and fever quarten, take the leaves forty days with vinegar, or boil it in wine, and apply it to the hardness. It also is very good for the strangury, stone in the bladder, heat of the urine, yexing, stopping of the liver, and the jaundice: but it is not good for women that would have many children. Fever quarten jaundice Liver stopped Milt hard Stone Strangury Urine hot ¶ Cherytree. CHerytree: Ringworme, and Tetter, dissolve the gum in vinegar, and anoint therewith. 2 Strangury, drink powder of the kernels with Goats' milk. 3 Eyes misty, dropping and read, put in water of the flowers distilled in May, morning and evening cold. 4 Stamp the middle rind, and strain it with white wine, and drink it three or iiii. times to void the stone, gravel, and urine presently. 5 Stone, drink the gum dissolved in white wine. 6 Headache of choler, bleed in the vein of the liver, and eat sour Cherries. 7 Stomach hot, use confections of Cherries. 8 jaundice, seeth a handful of the leaves in a pint of milk, and drink thereof a good draft morning and evening. 9 For the heat of the liver and stomach, and the hot fever, and to cause appetite, eat conserve of Cherries in the morning's six hours before any other meat. 10 For heat in the night by the fever, hold the conserve in thy mouth. 11 Fevers of hot blood, drink the syrup of Violets, and water wherein black Cherries have been sodden. 12 Falling evil, drink the water of the leaves or flowers. 13 The gum dissolved in old wine and drunk by sups, easeth the sharp arteries of the breast, and voideth belching & loathing. 14 Sweet Cherries eaten fasting with their kernels, looseth the belly so strongly, that the feet being sore shall be healed thereby. 15 Cherries sodden in vinegar with Pears and drunk with Mastic, do greatly bind the belly. 16 The gum doth mightily break the stone, and lose the gravel. 17 Make Conserve of Cherries as of Barberies, but not with so much Sugar. 18 Cherries eaten before meat, loosen the belly very gently, but they nourish but little, and are hurtful unto moist and unhealthy stomachs, especially the small Cherries, which do often breed agues, and other maladies. 19 The read sour Cherries do likewise loosen the belly, and are more wholesome and convenient for the stomach, for they do partly comfort, and partly slake thirst. 20 The black sour Cherries do strengthen the stomach more than the rest, and being dried, they stop the lask. 21 The gum of the mazer or wild Cherytree, of the Spanish Cherie, and our common sour Cherytree is good to be drunk in wine for the gravel and the stone, and excoriation of the throat, lungs, and breast, the cough and hoarseness. 22 The water distilled of the fresh and new gathered Cherries, is good to be powered into the mouths of them that have the falling sickness, as often as the course of the fit doth trouble them. 23 Cherries breed good blood, cause appetite, cut phlegm and gross humours, expel urine, and soften the belly, being eaten when they are fresh: and being condited with sugar, they are good for them that be sick of inflammations and extreme heats. 24 And being dried in an oven, they are good against all flures. 25 The distilled water of the wild black Cherries, is good for them that have lost their speech. 26 The gum dissolved in wine, is good for the old cough. 27 Tart Cherries be more wholesome than sweet, and eaten before meat, they mollify the belly, and prepare digestion, and are most excellent in hot burning choler, and are good also after meat. 28 The gum sodden in Wine and drunk, helpeth old coughs, causeth good colour, sharpeneth the sight, helpeth digestion, and cleanseth out gravel from the reins. 29 The stones break the stone, if they be eaten dry or made milk. Preserved Cherries and Plums, are without danger: but beware of surfeiting by Cherries raw. Appetite 9 Belching 13 Belly bound 14. 18. 19 23. lose 15. 20. Breast griefs 13. 21. 23. Coughs old 26. 28 Colour bad 28 Digestion 27 Eyes griefs 3. 28 Falling evil 12. 22 Fever hot 10. 11 Phlegm 23 Fluxes 15. 24 Gravel 16. 21. 28 Headache 6 Hot griefs 10. 23. 27 jaundice 8 Inflammations 23 Liver hot 9 23 Loathing 13 Lungs blistered 21 Purgation 14 ringworm 1 Speech lost 25 Stomach hot 7. 9 weak 20. Stone 4. 5. 16. 21. 29 Strangury 2 Tetter 1 Thirst 19 Throat griefs 13. 21 Urine stopped 4. 23 ¶ chervil. chervil eaten with other meats is good for the stomach, it giveth taste to meat, and causeth appetite. 2 Strangury, boil it in wine and drink it, and also apply the herb to the region of the bladder. 3 It is good for them that be dull, old & without courage, to rejoice and to comfort them, and increase their strength. 4 It dissolveth bruised blood, especially with the powder of the burned eyes of crabs, and the coals of the Linden tree. 5 It is good for the pleurisy and pricking in the side. 6 Being used in salads, it is good for the stomach and head. 7 The leaves bruised and applied, are a good remedy against bruises, it is good for the stone in the kidneys. 8 Liver and milt stopped, eat Cheruil and use powder of the seeds of it. 9 Sides ache, drink Cheruil with wine. 10 Swell sudden in the limbs, seeth Cheruil, & Hartstong chopped small with dregss of ale, wheat bran & sheep's suet, till they be thick, and apply it. 11 For a woman that hath her throws before her time, seeth a good handful in a quart of Claret wine, & drink thereof at all times needful. 12 Mouth ranker, apply the juice of chervil and Woodbine often to it. 13 The seed expelleth the urine and stone. 14 The herb is very good against Carbuncles, and venomous bitings. 15 Drink it with wine to provoke urine, and to take away the ache in the reinss and bladder. It also expelleth wind and helpeth the griefs of the liver, and all kinds of madness, and stayeth vomiting. 16 And stamped with vinegar it destroyeth the wildfire, and healeth the canker and all other wounds. 17 Headache, drink the juice of chervil daily fasting. 18 For wounds that penetrate, drink the juice of Cheruil, or the decoction, or water thereof, or of chervil. To know whether a man that is wounded shall live or die. 19 To know whether a wounded man shall live or die, let him drink it, if he cast it not up he shall live and be cured, let him drink daily Pimpernell, Sanicle, and Bugle. 20 Wounds bleeding and sore within, drink Cheruil, and Nep in wine. (See century.) 21 For all griefs of the mouth, seeth it in water and wash therewith often. (See Alehoofe, Briony.) 22 Lean to be, take one eggshell full of the juice every morning fasting. 23 Mouth stinking, eat chervil. 24 Canker, stamp it with honey and apply it. Appetite to cause 1 Bitings venomous 14 Blood bruised 4. 7 Carbuncles 14 Dullness 3 Headache 17 canker 16. 24 Lean to be 22 Liver stopped 8. 15 Madness general 15 Milt stopped 8 Mouth griefs 21. 23 Mouth Canker 12 Pleurisy 5 Reins ache 15 Sides ache 9 Sides pricking 5 Stone 7. 13 Strangury 2 Swelling sudden 10 Vomiting to stop 15 Urine to expel 13. 15 Wildfire 16 Wind to expel 15 Wounds bleeding 20 Wounds general 16. 18 ¶ Chestnuts. CHestnuts are best kept and preserved amongst walnuts, eat them fasting with honey for the cough. 2 Flux to stop, boil the middle read bark in water to the third part and drink thereof. 3 Chestnuts of all wild fruits are the best and meetest to be eaten, for they nourish reasonably well, but they be hard of digestion, and do stop the belly: with the meal of Chestnuts and honey, is made a good electuary against the cough & spitting of blood. 4 The powder thereof with barley meal and vinegar applied, doth cure unnatural blast and swellings of the breasts. 5 The polished read bark boiled and drunk doth stop the lask, the bloody flux and all other flixes and issues of blood. 6 Chestnuts make fat, stop flixes, and harden the milt. 7 Stamp them with honey and salt and apply it to the biting of a mad dog to heal it. 8 They cause lust, and offend the head and milt. 9 Prick through the husks with a knife and roasted and eaten with honey fasting, they are good for the cough, but their chief force is in binding & stopping flixes. 10 Acorns are much like in operation. Bitings venomous 7 Blasting 4 Bloody flux 5. 6 Breasts swollen 4 Cough 1. 3. 9 Fat to be 6 Fluxes 2. 5. 6 Laskes 5. 6 Lust to 'cause 8 Mad dog 7 Spitting blood 3 Swell 4 ¶ Chickweed. CHickweed, great Chickweed stamped & applied to the eyes, or the juice thereof is good against all their inflammations and hot ulcers, and likewise for all ulcers and inflammations of the privy parts. 2 Ears ache, drop in the juice. 3 Boil small Chickweed in water and salt, and wash the hands often therewith for their heat and skyruy itch. 4 joints ache and swollen, seeth it with Camomile and wheat bran in grounds of Ale or Beer and apply it. 5 Stamp Chickweed and apply it to wounds to keep them from impostumation and to draw the corruption out of them. 6 seeth it with vinegar & gargoyle therewith often warm, to draw phlegm from the head, and to help the tooth ache. 7 seeth it in wine and drink it to cleanse the reins of the back. 8 Apply it with barley meal to the inflammations of the eyes. 9 Apply it to all inflammations or gatherings of blood and choler. 10 It is good for wounds, it withstandeth swellings, it draweth out pricks and splents. 11 The juice helpeth tooth ache put into the nostril of the contrary side to the ache. 12 The juice with fine honey, cleareth the eyes, and taketh away the white or read spots thereof. 13 It is good for the stone in the kidneys, the dropsy, griefs of the liver and kidneys, & the swelling of the fundament. 14 The juice put into the nose, purgeth rotten filth from the head, & drunk with mulse, it scoureth the belly. 15 It hath all the virtues of Parietary, and of Purslen, and is good against consumptions either used by itself or drunk with wine. 16 The same is good to be given to young children that be troubled with sickness and great inward heat, and to prevent the cramps. 17 The juice itself or the water or herb is good against hot wounds or ulcers, and therewith may be made cooling ointments as is said in houseleek, as good as Populeon. 18 seeth it bruised in running water to the one half, and wash therewith three or four days as hot as may be suffered for the heat & worms in the hands. 18 Wula fallen, roast one handful in the embers, and apply it to the bone of the neck as hot as may be suffered, and lay a plaster of sour leaven to the mould of the head ix. days. 20 Eye pearl, apply it with the gleyr of an egg, a little dry Saffron, and a spoonful of woman's milk, with flax upon the eye. 21 Stone and Strangury, stamp one handful with black soap and fresh butter of each as much as a nutmeg, and fry them, and apply them to the navel. 22 Teeth ache, seeth the leaves and roots in water and gargoyle therewith. 23 Bruise and apply it with grounds of Ale or Beer, and wheat bran thrice a day of a reasonable thickness. 24 Stone and colic, take Chickweed one handful, bright soap, and sweet butter ana as much as three nuts, fry them till they be brown, & apply it to the navel as hot as may be suffered. 25 Headache, anoint with the juice of Chickweed, ground ivy and houseleek two nights, to avoid it. 26 jaundice, stamp it and strain it with stolen ale or white wine, and drink it first and last five days. 27 Child jaw fallen, moldfall, or roof fallen, roast one handful in the embers, and apply it to the bone of the neck, and apply sour leaven of white bread to the mould of the head ix. hours to raise it. 28 seeth the leaves and roots in water, and hold it in thy mouth to void the toothache. 29 Eyes blood and white spots, put in the juice of Chickweed and blackbery tops. 30 Eyes dull & blemishes, put in the juice of Chickweed. 31 seeth Chickweed and apply it to the pecten & yard, if the pain increase, the stone is in the bladder, if not, it is in the reins. 32 Flowers stopped, roast it in the embers and apply it to the matrixe. Cramp, eat the juice with fresh beef or mutton or in a salad. Back griefs 7. 13 Bruises 23 children's griefs 16. 27 Colic 24 Consumption 15 Cramp 16. 33 Dropsy 13 Ears ache 2 Eyes griefs 1. 8. 12. 20. 29. 30 Flowers stopped 32 Fundament swollen 13 Hands itch, etc. 3. 18 Headache 25. purging 6. 14. Hot griefs 17 jaundice 26 jaw-fallen 27 Inflammaions 1. 19 joints ache 4. swollen 4. Itch 3. 18 Liver griefs 13 Pricks 10 Privities grief 1 Rankling 5 Sores 1. 5. 10. 17 Stone 13. 21. 24. 31 Strangury 21 Swell 4. 10 Teeth ache 6. 11. 22. 28 Ulcers 1 Wula fallen 19 27 Worms 18 Wounds 5. 10. 17. 1 ¶ Cinnamom. CInnamom comforteth the stomach and principal parts of the body. 2 An excellent water of Cinnamom, beat one pound of good Cinnamom somewhat gross, and steep it in a pottle of good rose water with as much Sack or Canary wine, or else in a gallon of wine without rose water in a close vessel xxiiii. hours, than still it in a limbek, and keep a pint of the first water by itself, for the latter will be weaker: some put one pound of good Sugar candy to it with the Cinnamom to steep to make it pleasant, and that is the best way. It hath innumerable virtues especially to restore and preserve: it strengtheneth the brain, stomach, liver, milt and sinews, one spoonful taken now and then. 3 Cinnamom helpeth the stopping of the liver, flixes of all sorts, the dropsy, all pain of the guts, lungs and breast. It causeth a sweet breath, and is good in sops and blanch powder. 4 Ears griefs, use it with oil: flowers and urine stopped, use it with Myrrh. 5 Stomach cold, make powder of Cinnamom, Galangal, Mints, and Sugar, and use it upon tostes with Ale or Wine. 6 Teeth to be white, and breath to be sweet. Mix powder of Cinnamom and Coral with vinegar of squilles, and rub them therewith. 7 Yard apostumed, blow in powder of Cinnamom that hath lost his virtue, and of the pil of a Pomegranate between the skin and the yard. 8 Flux, mix powder of seven. or viii. Acorns, with two drams of Cinnamom, and a quantity of fine chalk, and seeth them in Sack, and drink it and none other drink xxiiii. hours. 9 Chaps, put in powder of Cinnamom. In paste, one pound of the powder of it with oil of sweet Almonds till it be like an ointment, and warm it, and let it stand in a earthen vessel well glazed and close covered xiiii. days, then heat it and press out the oil, it preserveth the stomach from corruption being used both inward and outward. (See Almonds, Yarow, Knotgrass, Horsetaile.) Belly griefs 3 Breast griefs 3 Breath ill 3 Chaps 9 Colic 3 Dropsy 3 Ears griefs 4 Fluxes general 3. 8 Flowers stopped 4 Liver grief 2. 3 Lungs griefs 3 Milt grief 2 Sinews griefs 2 Sickness general 2 Stomach griefs 1. 5 Teeth cleansing 6 Urine stopped 4 Yard apost. 7 ¶ Cimbelaris. (See Penywort.) ¶ Cicory. CIcory. Liver pain, use the broth, decoction, or powder of Cicory or Endive with water & honey. 2 Breasts to be round, little, and hard, anoint them with the juice. 3 Headache, anoint with the juice, oil of roses and vinegar, & apply it. 4 Eyes dull, put in the distilled water. 5 jaundice, seeth the roots & flowers in wine with as much water, & drink thereof morn and even. 6 Liver griefs cut three or four roots, and seeth them in a quart of water till the third part or more be wasted, then cool it & drink thereof in the mornings, but not too much at once. 7 The juice openeth the stops of the liver, milt, kidneys, and bladder caused of heat. 8 The juice put into the eyes, sharpeneth the sight, and put into the ear or nostril on the contrary side, it helpeth the tooth ache. 9 Fever Tertian, drink the juice. 10 Liver and milt griefs, drink the juice in the mornings with sugar. 11 Cicory and Endive, do comfort a weak and feeble stomach, & do cool & refresh a hot stomach. 12 Drink the juice of Cicory for the heat of the liver, the jaundice, hot fevers, & tertians. 13 Stamp the green leaves of Endive and Cicory, and apply them to hot inflammations, impostumes or gatherings of evil humours of the stomach, the trembling of the heart, the hot gout, and inflammation of the eyes. 14 And with parched barley meal to all choleric inflammations, S. Anthony's fire, and such like. 15 Apply the juice of the leaves in Cicory and Endive, with oil of roses and vinegar to the forehead for the head ache. 16 And with ceruse and vinegar to all tumors, impostumes & inflammations that require cooling. 17 seeth the herbs and eat them for the heat & stopping of the liver and milt, and to comfort the stomach. 18 Use Cycory and Endive any way to cool the heat of the liver, to open and strengthen it, and to preserve health, especially in the broth of a Chicken, or drink a good draft fasting with sugar, or the syrup, or the green herbs used as Sage in Ale. 19 seeth a handful of Cicory in water, and drink it to draw down choler. 20 seeth the herb and root of Cicory in Wine or water, and drink it hot against the obstruction of the liver and mile, especially in the beginning of the dropsy. 21 Apply Cicory leaves to all impostumes, swellings, inflammations and pushes of the privities, the hot gout, the scabs of children's heads, and to all aches coming of heat. 22 seeth Cicory in Wine, and eat it with meat to help digestion. 23 Stamp the root and flowers, and apply them to the gout to ease it forthwith, and to the holy fire to alloy the great heat of it. 24 Mix the juice of Cicory, Endive, and Hartestong with sugar, and seeth it with a little water & vinegar, and use often to drink it for the stopping of the liver and milt, after that take the purging pills of Rhubarb, and after that some Triasandali. 25 Drink the boiled juice of Cicory to lose the belly, and to help the stomach, liver, and kidneys. 26 Apply the distilled water to the pestilent pushes with linen clotheses. 27 Bruise the herb and root, and make thereof round cakes which afterwards mix and dissolve in rose water, and anoint any scabbed place therewith to heal it and make the skin fair. 28 Gather the flowers betime in the mornings, and distill them in Balneo Mariae, and use the water for the pin, web, mystines, and ulcers, & divers other griefs of the eyes. 29 Cast the flowers of Cycory among a heap of Aunts or pismires, and they will soon become as read as blood. (See Endive.) Aches hot 21 Apostume hot 13. 16. 21 Back griefs 7. 25 Bladder griefs 7 Breast griefs 2 Children scabbed 21. 27 Choler 19 Digestion 22 Dropsy 20 Eyes griefs 48. 13. 28 Experiment 29 Fever hot 12. tertian 9 12 Gout hot 13. 21. 23 Heart griefs 13 Head ache 3. 15 Holy fire 23 Hot griefs 13 jaundice 5. 12 Impostume 13. 16. 21 Inflammations 13. 14. 16. 21 Liver griefs 1. 6. 2. 10. 12. 17. 18. 20. 24. 25. Milt griefs 10. 12. 18. 20. 24. 25. Obstruction 7 Plague pushes 26 Privities griefs 21 Purgation 19 24 pushes 21. 26 S. Anthony's fire 14 Scabs 21. 27 Skin cleansing 27 Stomach hot 11. 17. 25 Swell 14. 21 Teeth ache 8 ¶ Cycers. CIcers white, apply a plaster of the meal to the apostume of the cod. 2 Scabs in the head or else where, wash with the decoction of Ciches' peason. Cod's apostume 1 Head scabs 2 Scabs 2 ¶ Cyperus. CYperus, or English Galangal, make powder of the root with Amber & Pepper, & drink it for the gravel, stone & stopping of urine, and to suage the pain. 2 Matrix pain of wind, drink one dram of the root with good white wine. 3 Sores moist, put in powder of the roots. 4 The roots boiled & drunk, provoke urine and terms, expelleth the stone, & is good for the dropsy, poison, venomous bitings and stingings. 5 Mother, cold, and stopped, seeth it in water and bathe therein warm. 6 Use powder thereof to old running sores of the mouth and secret parts that waste the flesh, laid on with wine. 7 It is very good to be put into hot ointments & plasters. 8 The seeds drunk with water, stop the flux and all superfluous running forth of flowers, but too much thereof taken causeth headache. 9 The roots laid among clotheses, giveth them a sweet smell. 10 Powder of the root mixed with as much powder of Bays, and drunk with the urine of a chaste boy and also applied on the belly, helpeth the dropsy marvelously. (See Spignell, Galangall.) Ache 1 Bitings venomous 4 Flowers stopped 4. 8 Fluxes 8 Gravel 1 Matrix griefs 2. 8 Mouth sores 6 Poison 4 Privities sores 6 Sores moist 3. 6 Stinging 4 Venom 4 Urine stopped 14 ¶ Cipers' tree. Cipers' tree: the fruit taken into the body stoppeth the lask and the bloody flux, spitting blood & all issues of blood, and so doth the decoction thereof made in water. 2 The oil wherein the fruit or leaves have been sodden, doth strengthen the stomach, stoppeth vomiting, & stoppeth the belly & all other fluxes of the same, & cureth the excoriation & going off of the skin from the secret parts. 3 Cipres nuts cure them that are bursten and have their gut fallen into their cod being applied, & so doth the leaves. 4 The fruit thereof taketh away the polip in the nose. 5 The same bruised with fat dry figs doth cure the swelling of the cod, and with leaven put thereto, it dissolveth botches & biles being applied. The leaves boiled in sweet wine or honeyed water, doth help the strangury and issue of the bladder. 6 The same stamped small cureth green wounds, & stoppeth their bleeding being applied. 7 And with parched barley meal it is good to be laid to the wildfire, carbuncles and other ulcers and hot fretting sores. 8 The leaves & fruit laid to with vinegar maketh hair black. biles 5 Bladder griefs 5 Blood to stop 6 Bloody flux 12 Botches 5 Bursten 3 Carbuncles 7 Cod swollen 3. 5 Hair to be black 8 Fluxes 1. 2 Nose polip 5 Privities griefs 2 Sores 7 Stomach weak 2 Strangury 6 Ulcers 7 Vomiting 2 Wildfire 7 Wounds 5 ¶ Citrons. CItrons. To give Wine a sweet odour stick it or an Orange full of Cloves, & hung it into the vessel, so that it touch not the Wine, & stop it up close that the odour go not out. (see Oranges, Wine, Bear, or Ale.) ¶ Clary. CLary: fry the leaves with newlayd eggs & butter, with powder of Cinnamom, and eat them morn and even, first & last seven. days to stop the running of the reins. Distil the flowers with Cloves, wine, and a little water, and use the water for dull eyes. 2 Wash a canker or fester with the juice, and put in powder of the same herb and use it. 3 Fevers phlegmatic, make an electuary of the juice of Clary, Smallach, and Fenell and use it. 4 Reins running, make a tansy of Clary and eat it. 5 Reins wasting, prick the leaves, & fry them with two or three yolks of eggs and powder of saffron, and fry them with fresh butter & eat it fasting. 6 Feet bruised and sore, anoint with the juice of Clary. 7 seeth Clary & Nep of each a handful in possit ale and drink it to bedward with grains, long Pepper, & Ginger. 8 Whites to stop, fry it with butter and eat it fasting with Cinnamom, it is a restorative. 9 In what sort so ever it be taken, it provoketh the flowers, expelleth the seconds, and provoketh lust. 10 Boiled in Beer in stead of Hops, it causeth drunkenness, & headache, and it hath all the virtues of wild Clary. 11 The seeds mixed with honey clarify the dim eyes. 12 The seeds stamped with water and applied, draweth forth pricks, splents, and thorns, & scattreth all swellings, & so doth the green herb stamped & applied. 13 The seed especially of Occulus Christi drunk with wine provoketh lust. 14 Put two or three seeds into the eyes to cleanse them and draw out moths. 15 Chop the leaves small, and boil them in salad oil and anoint the back therewith for the grief thereof. 16 Clary with honey scoureth away the pin hawe and web in the eye. 17 Clary is good for the back, and is a restorative in a a waste. A bundle of the leaves boiled in broth or fried with yolks of eggs, and being often used bringeth great ease. 18 Clary put into new must a certain time, or else sodden therewith, is good for them that have cold stomachs, and for barren women, and such as are troubled with the whites, and it cutteth phlegm. 19 The powder of Clary put into the nose, bringeth down much water from the brain, and causeth sneezing. 20 It is good in women's baths that want their flowers being sodden with pennyroyal and other herbs of like virtue. 21 seeth it with Planten in read wine, & drink it to stop the whites. 22 seeth it in wine & drink it against cold griefs, & to stop the whites, it hath the nature of Dittany. 23 With honey it cleanseth the bloody spots in the eyes. Consumption of nature, make a tansy of xii. or xuj. leaves of Clary, four new laid eggs, and sweet butter, & use it to restore nature. Backache 15. 17 barrenness 18 Conception 18 Consumption 18 Eyes griefs 1. 11. 12. 14. 16. 23. Feet griefs 6 Fester 2 Fever 3 Flowee stopped 9 20 Head purge 19 canker 2 Lust to 'cause 9 13 Pricks 12 Reins running 14. 58. 21. 22 Restorative 9 18 Seconds 9 sneezing to 'cause 19 Sores 2 Stomach cold 18 Whites to stop 14. 5. 8. 18. 21. 22. ¶ Claver. Claver or Trifoyl, boil it with the flowers, or by itself in honeyed water or wine, & drink it to suage the hot burning & fretting of the bowels, or seeth it in water, & take it with a glister for the same purposes. 2 The same drunk in time convenient stoppeth whites. 3 The flowers or leaves sodden in oil, & applied, doth ripen hot apostumes & swellings & other tumours & breaketh them, and sometime doth dissolve them clean. 4 Wash thy head with the decoction thereof and apply the herb unto the forehead for the swimming, giddiness & turning thereof. 5 The seeds and leaves sodden in wine and drunk, helpeth the diseases of the sides, the falling sickness, the dropsy, the strangury both in men & women, and purgeth the humours menstrual. 6 Drink three drams thereof with wine, to help all venomous bitings, and it will suffer no venom to come within the body, and so it helpeth both tertians and quarten Fevers. 7 It prevaileth much against poison or venom, if xxv. grains of the leaves or seeds be drunk. It healeth wounds and cankers. 8 That with the read flowers or Honey suckles may be used for fenugreek. 9 Make lee therewith and wash the headache therewith. 10 urine to cause, drink the seeds of it. 11 seeth it well and apply it to any inward imposthume to break it. 12 Eyes griefs, put in the juice of that which hath white spots on it. 13 Stamp it finely raw with honey, and anoint to restore the hair, and to keep it from falling: proved. 14 Drink it with wine for the colic & stone. 15 Head giddy dazzling & swimming, seeth it in water and wash therewith and apply the herb to the forehead. 16 Fever tertian, stamp three slips, & drink the juice with water. 17 Eyes pearl or web, put in the juice, it cleareth the sight, (See Honysuckle, Trifoyl.) 18 Treacle, or garden Claver, the leaves, flowers, or seeds drunk in water, is good for the pain in the sides, the pleurisy, strangury, falling sickness, the dropsy, suffocation of the mother. It provoketh urine and terms, and cleanseth the matrixe. 19 The leaves taken with oxymel, is good against venomous bitings, & so is the decoction thereof with the root being also washed therewith. 20 The leaves and roots are mixed with Treacles & Mithridates, and preservatives made against poison and the plague. 21 Drink three crops with wine before the fit of the fever Tertian, & four before the fit of the fever Quarten. 22 Boil the leaves in wine, and drink it for the white flux of the matrix. Apostume 3. 11 Bellyache 1 Bitings venomous 6. 19 Colic 14 Dropsy 5. 18 Eyes griefs 12. 17 Falling evil 5. 18 Fever quarten 6. 21. tertian 6. 16. 21. Flowers stopped 5. 18 Giddiness 4. 9 15 Headache 9 griefs 4. 9 15 Hair falling 13 Impostume 3. 11 Kankers 7 Mother griefs 18. suffocation 18. Plague 20 Pleurisy 18 Poison 20 Sides griefs 5. 18 Stone 14 Strangury 5. 18 Swell 3 Venom 6. 19 Urine stopped 10. 18 Whites 2 Wounds 7 ¶ Cloves. Cloves comforteth the heart & stomach and liver, they help digestion & stop the belly, they quicken the eye sight, scour away the clouds and haws. 2 They are generally good for all cold diseases. 3 The oil of Cloves is good for a cold stomach and brain, and all cold griefs. 4 Cloves comfort the sinews and dissolve superfluous humours: and being sodden whole in milk, or the powder eaten in milk, they comfort the debility of nature, and stir up Venus. 5 They are used both in meat and medicine to give a sweet savour, and likewise to distilled waters and powders. 6 To dry up rheum, mix powder of Cloves, Mace, Nutmegs, and Rosemary with sweet Salad oil till it be some what thick, and apply it to the crown of the head. Vomiting, drink four grains of Cloves with four or five spoonfuls of read wine. 7 Stone, put powder of Cloves into Goat's blood, and dry it in the sun, and drink the powder thereof with the juice of Mugwort. 8 Mother suffocat. take up the fu●e of Cloves, grains, Frankincense, & other sweet smelling things into the body. 9 Stomach griefs general, seeth Cloves half an ounce, sugar aquartre: of a pound, & Treacle a pennyworth, a little in a quart of Malmsey, and drink thereof daily warm, & use good nourishing meats. 10 Cardiak passion use Cloves. Stomach ●old & windy, cardiak passion & swooning, use Cloves. One dram drunk with milk fasting, causeth Venus. 11 Brain weak, use Cloves and Ma●e in broths & also in the nose. 12 Gums gnawn, seeth powder of Cloves in rose water, & dry it, & do so often, & then use the powder of it. 13 Mouth stink, wash it with vinegar and water, then chew Mastic a good while, then seeth Cloves Aniseeds and Mints in wine, and wash therewith. 14 To comfort the stomach after vomiting, take powder of two Cloves with one spoonful of the juice of Mints morn and even. 15 For agewes and all other sicknesses, take powder of Cloves and Pepper of each like much, as much as will lie on a groat or six pence at once fasting, & drink not two hours after it. 16 Stomach weak, steep hot bread in good wine, and cast powder of Cloves and Nutmegs on it, and apply it. Belly lose 1 Brain cold 3. weak 11. Cold griefs 2. 3 Cardiack pas. 10 Digestion 1 Eyes dull 1 Fevers general 15 Fluxes 1 Gums griefs 12 Heart cardi. 10. to comfort 1 Liver weak 1 Lust to 'cause 4. 10 Mother suffocat. 8 Mouth stink 13 Rheum 6 Sinews cold 4 Stomach cold 3. griefs general 9 weak 14. 16. Stone 7 Sickness general 4. 9 15 Swooning 10 Vomiting 6 ¶ Coleworts. COleworts: put them into scalding water, & let them be but half sodden, & power out almost all the water from them, than put thereto a little salt, oil and Cummin, & heat them together a little more, & when the broth is somewhat cold, fup thereof & also eat the Wort, to provoke urine, and do so daily till you be well. 2 Bruise the tender leaves and stalks, and apply them to all swellings, ulcers and cankers morn and even to heal them. But the cankers must be first washed with warm water. It helpeth also bruises and cankers of the paps, but if this medicine be too sharp, put barley meal to it and apply it. 3 Beat Coleworts raw with Rue, and the herb of Coriander shreaded together, or a little salt and barley meal with oxymel mixed together, and with the whole anoint the gout and ache of the joints to help them in short time. 4 Stamp the same herbs with wine and strain out the juice, & drop it warm into the ears to help their deafness in short time. 5 Flowers stopped, seeth Coleworts in pleasant wine & drink it. 6 Mix the juice with the purest honey, & drop thereof into the corners of the eyes to help divers griefs of them. 7 Drink the juice xl. days with white wine to cure both the jaundice & the diseases of the milt. 8 Mix three parts of the juice with two. parts of Allom infused in vinegar, and anoint therewith the foul scurf and leapry to heal it. 9 Mix the juice with meal of Fenegreke and vinegar, and apply it to gouts, aches of the joints, and filthy ulcers to cleanse & heal them. 10 Draw up the juice into the nose to purge the brain. 11 Drink the juice with wine to help the biting of an adder or snake. 12 Drink the juice with read wine to the cough. 13 Hold juice with oil in thy mouth to heal the blisters thereof. Eat the leaves raw to 'cause sleep without dreaming. 14 roast the green stalks & roots in the embers & temper them with barrow's grease, & apply it to heal the continual pain & stitches in the sides. 15 Eat Coleworts raw with vinegar often to help the griefs of the milt. 16 If it be eaten alone, it engendereth troubled blood and melancholy, & yieldeth small nourishment, but the tenderer that it is sodden with fat flesh or hen's flesh the wholesomer it is. 17 The first broth of the herb softeneth the belly, & provoketh urine, but the eating of the substance bindeth the belly. 18 To dry a moist belly, boil the herb a while, & power out the broth, & power in quickly other seething water, & boil it till it be very tender, then eat the substance thereof seasoned with Pepper & salt to bind the belly, but eat the substance & broths together and then it worketh temperately, so that the broth of the first seething loosneth the belly, and the substance of the second seething doth bind it. 19 Dog wound, bruise the leaves & apply them. 20 To cause children to go soon on foot, let them eat Coleworts tenderly sodden. 21 If thou wouldst drink much at supper, eat the raw leaves with vinegar beforehand, & after supper eat again iiii. or v. leaves raw, & they will make thee so fresh & hungry, as though thou hadst neither eaten nor drunk at supper or banquet, and so thou mayst drink as much wine as thou wilt & not be drunken. 22 If any drop some drops of wine upon them as they are boiling fast, they will boil no more but change their colour as it were a thing dead in itself. 23 Colewort especially the Cabbage coal boiled, is very good with beef with vinegar & Pepper, but the much use thereof breedeth melancholy, & causeth evil dreams, hurt the stomach, & dull the sight. 24 But eaten last they preserve the stomach from surfeiting, & the head from drunkenness. 25 The seeds kill worms. 26 Drink the broth of the second seething tempered with Allom to bind the belly. 27 Stamp Coleworts, and apply it to a new and read leapry to heal it. 28 The leaves sodden with honey heal ulcers & cankers. 29 The juice looseth the belly, the latter seething bindeth it, but especially the first seething with Salt peter, or by itself purgeth. 30 Drink the juice with wine against the bitings of serpents. 31 Gout, apply the juice with meal of Fenegrek. 32 Ears deaf, put in the juice with vinegar, it helpeth also their noise. 33 Flowers stopped, put it in as a pessary. 34 hoarseness & cough, boil it as a syrup with honey, and lick often thereof. 35 The broth of any kind of Colewort with Sugar, or alone, doth gently loosen the belly, and 'cause the flowers to pass, and the same broth is good to wash all wounds often, to cleanse and heal them. 36 The young leaves eaten raw with vinegar or parboiled, do open the belly very gently, provoketh urine, and are good for the milt, and taken after meals in the same manner, do cure drunkenness and headache coming thereof. 37 The same alone or with parched barley meal, are very good to be laid to blue marks of bruises or stripes, and other hot inflammations and swellings. 38 The leaves sodden and applied with honey, are very good for consuming sores and filthy. 39 The seeds taken with Mede, kill all manner of worms. 40 The ashes of the burned stalks mixed with old Swine's grease, is good for the old ache and pain of the side. 41 seeth the tender part of the herb till it boil in water, then stamp it & strain it, and drink it with a little salt and Cummin seed three or four hours after meat two ounces at once to purge choler marvelously, or else take the raw juice with Niter & Ireos for the same purpose. 42 Coleworts eaten in meats are good for a weak stomach, they help digestion and suffer not the body to be hard. They provoke urine, & draw down choler & phlegm. 43 seeth the herb or seed in wine, and drink it hot against the stinging of serpents. 44 seeth Colewort with an old Cock, & drink the broth to help the colic, the torments of the belly, the stove of the kidneys, and for the griefs of the liver and mile. 45 Eat two or three leaves raw with salt after meat, to avoid drunkenness & surfeiting. 46 Coleworts are good to be used in meats or broths of them that have the gout, especially with some Rue and Coliander seed, and so it will purge the more effectually. 47 Stamp the leaves with Honey, to heal all inflammations, aches, creeping sores, ulcers and skabs. 48 The leaves applied to the head, keep the hair from falling, and so doth the urine of him that hath eaten much of it daily, not only the griefs aforesaid, but also fistulas, cankers, gangreves, weals, bushes, and other griefs of the skin, and therefore Cato wisheth children to be washed therewith against many griefs. 49 The ashes of the stalks thereof, or of Cabbage mixed with Swine's grease, helpeth all flowing griefs of the skin. 50 The lee made of the same ashes, is good for the holy fire, ringwormes, tetters, shingles, and all such like. 51 Coleworts eaten, are good for them that cannot see well, and for the trembling of the members, the tender buds are best. 52 The juice drunk with wine, healeth the bitings of serpents and vipers. 53 Put the juice with Daruell meal into the matrixe, to draw down the flowers. 54 The leaves laid too by themselves, or bruised with Barley meal, are good for the inflammations and soft swellings, burnings, impostumes, and choleric sores or quats like weals and leapryes, and other griefs of the skin. 55 And with salt they burst Carbuncles. 56 The leaves chewed and the juice sucked down, restoreth the voice that is lost. 57 Apply Coleworts with the white of an egg, to burnings and skalding. 58 The ashes of the root breaketh the stone. 59 The juice with the wine of raisins, is good for the milt and the yellow jaundice, and to provoke urine and the terms. 60 Lay a Colewort leaf on the crown of the head, to draw up the vulva. 61 Snuff the juice into the nostrils to purge the head, and to void pain and rheum. 62 The ashes of the stalks made into a plaster, letteth the growing up of hairs. 63 Wash the head with lee made of the ashes of Coleworts and of read Nettles, and white wine, to take away the pain without doubt. 64 The seeds are used in Treacles. 65 Glanders and sores in the mouth, wash them or anoint them with honey & the ashes of Coleworts stalks. 66 Ache and bruises, seethe read Coleworts and Auens in stolen ale or water, and apply it. 67 Pricks, apply the juice of read Coleworts sodden with wax. 68 Leg marmoll, wash with the juice of read Coleworts, wild Tansy & Planten. 69 Sinews broken, hack read Colewort roots small, and seethe it in water to pap, and weet a cloth therein, and apply it. 70 Dropsy, seeth water Cresses, read Coleworts and Sowthistle in water, and drink it morn and even. 71 Blood to stop of vein or sinowe, stamp read Nettles and Colewort leaves with Swine's dung, and apply it. 72 Eyes watering, apply the leaves of read Coleworts, tempered with the white of an egg when thou goest to bed: proved. 73 Surfeit, lay three small leaves of read Coleworts in vinegar, and eat them with salt. 74 Hoarseness, take the decoction of Coleworts with Penidies and syrup of maiden hair. 75 Cough perilous, anoint a Colewort leaf with butter, and apply it to thy stomach. 76 Headache by drinking hot wines, drink the juice of Coleworts, and apply the substance to thy head. 77 seeth the herb and roots of your read Coleworts in water, to the third part, and foment the sinews therewith that are shrunk, and there is no better medicine for green wounds, then to be bathed therewith. 78 Throat apostume or squinsy, stamp read Coleworts and Eldrens leaves of each one handful with butter and honey, of each one spoonful, and apply it. 79 jaundice desperate, make lee with the ashes of Coleworts, and weet a cloth therein, and bind it about thy head warm when thou goest to bed eight nights together, and also wash thy body therewith. 80 Loins apostumed, mix Coleworts and Fenigreke together, and apply it. 81 Emerods', take up the fume of Coleworts sodden, in a close chair. 82 Side griefs, apply sodden Coleworts with honey. 83 Tongue palsy, chew well the seeds of read Coleworts, and hold them under the root of thy tongue, it purgeth marvelously. 84 For the host, clarify the juice of read Coleworts, and put thereto Saffron, Sugar, and Honey, and make it an Electuary and use it. 85 Belly bound, put the pith of the stalks into thy fundament. 86 Burning, anoint with the melted fat of Bacon, and apply a Colewort leaf. 87 For great pain in the eyes, mix ashes of the leaves with the yolk of a roasted egg, woman's milk, and a little honey, and bind it too. 88 Eyes dull, eat great Coleworts often. 89 Mouth flap fallen, apply the ashes of the root. 90 Flux, eat the stalks roasted in the embers. 91 Ache in the back, belly, and sides, apply the ashes of the branches with stolen grease. 92 Milt griefs, eat them with vinegar raw. 93 Matrix windy, seeth a linen cloth in lee of the ashes, and apply it. 94 The root drieth up milk. 95. Fever continual, seeth the leaves with oil of Roses, and apply it to the stomach to mitigate the heat. 96 Colewort aught not to be sown with Rue, because they accord not together. 97 Emerods', sit over the decoction of read Coleworts, and wash therewith also. 98 To purge choler and phlegm, put a bundle into seething water, while one may go v. or vi. paces, then stamp them and strain out the juice, and keep it in an earthen vessel in the open air, than put a little salt and bruised Cumminseede to it, and drink it in the morning, and walk upon it three or iiii. hours, but you must wash your hands, arms, legs, and feet overnight with hot water, and go supperless to bed. 99 Ears deaf, drop in the juice with warm water. 100 To dry up milk, bathe the breasts with the decoction of the leaves. 101 Straining to go to the stool, seeth them in water, and then fry them in oil and sit over it, it helpeth also the Emerods' being sodden in water and butter, and the fume received up. 102 Hair not to fall, seeth the stalks and roots of read Coleworts in water of a spring to the one half, and wash therewith often. Abortion to cause 63 Aches 3. 9 14. 40. 47. 66. 91 Appetite 21. 54 Apostumes 37. 80 Backeache 44. 80. 91 Belly-ache 44 Bitings venomous 11. 30. 43. 52 Belly bound 17. 18. 29. 35. 36. 85. 98. 101. lose 17. 18. 26. 29. 90 Blood to stop 71 Brain to purge 10 (see head) Breast griefs 2 Breast stopped 84 Bruises 2. 37. 66 Burn 57 86 Carbuncles 55 Children to grow 20 colic 44 Cough 12. 34. 75 Digestion 42 Dog wounded 19 Dreaming 13 Drunkenness 21. 24. 36. 45 Dropsy 70 Ears dull 32. 99 noise 32 Eyes dull 88 griefs 4. 6. 51 72. 87 Emerods' 81. 97. 101 Fever continual 95 Fistula 48 Flowers stopped 5. 33. 35. 53 Fluxes 90 Gangrenes 48 Glanders 65 Gout 39 31. 46 Headache 36. 61. 62. 76. purging 10. 61 Hair to fall 62. 102. not to fall 48 Holy fire 50 Hoarseness 34. 74 Host 84 jaundice 7. 59 79 Inflammation 47. 54 joints ache 3 Cankers 2. 28. 48 Leapry 8. 27. 54 Leg marmoll 68 Liver griefs 44 Loins apost. 80 Lungs griefs 84 Marmoll 68 Matrix griefs 93 Milk to dry up 94. 100 Milt griefs 7. 15. 26. 44. 59 92 Mouth blisters 13 glanders 65. sores 65 Palsy 83 Plague sore 55 Purgation 18. 23. 29. 41. 46. 98 Pushes 48 Quats 5. 4 Ringwormes 50 Rheum 61 Sinews broken 69 shrunk 77 Side pain 14. 40. 82. 91 Shaking 51 Shingles 50 Skabs 8. 27. 47. 48. 49. 54 Skin deformed 48. 49. 54 scurf 8. 27 Sleep to 'cause 13 Sores 9 38. 47. 54 squinsy 78 Stinging 47 Stomach hot 95 weak 42 Stone 58 Surfeit 21. 24. 45. 73 Swell 2. 37 Tenasmus 101 Tetters 50 Throat apost. 78 Tongue palsy 83 Trembling 51 Ulcers 2. 9 28. 47 Voice lost 56 Urine stopped 1. 36. 43 Wula fallen 60. 89 Weals 48 Worms 25. 39 Wounds 35. 77 ¶ Colophony. COlophony, a sercloth for the spleen or stitch, or wind in the body, and to staunch blood, melt it in an earthen pot, and strike it on leather, & apply it: but for bleeding, apply it to the reins and betwixt the shoulders up to the neck. 2 The suffumigation thereof bindeth the belly, and helpeth the falling of the fundament and matrix, and furthereth conception. 3 Tenasmus, anoint the pains with honey, and cast powder of Colophony and Cresses, of each like much on it. 4 Shortness of breath of cold cause, take up the fume thereof, the matter being digested and dissolved. Bleeding 1 Breath short 3 Cough Conception 2 Fluxes 2 Fundament fallen 2 Milt 1 Matrix fallen 2 Stitch 1 Windiness 1 ¶ Cockle. COckle: eyes pearl, chew Cockle in thy mouth, and put in the juice thereof morning & evening. 2 Freckles, mix Cockle meal with as much of the gall of a Cock, and apply it one night to take them away. 3 Stamp the meal with the roots of Daffadil & honey, and apply it to any prick or thing that sticketh in the flesh. 4 Impost to open, apply the meal sodden with the dung of a Wooddove in wine. 5 To heal sore tetters, apply the meal with brimstone & vinegar. 6 Teethache apply powder of it in a clout. 7 To open the matrix & cause conception, seeth Cockle, Myrrh, white Frankincense, and Saffron in wine or water, and anoint therewith. 8 Conception to cause, take up the fume of Cockle and Frankincense. 9 Gout, bathe it well with water, & seeth oil in water & honey, & mix it with Cockle, & apply it. 10 Sores and Tetters to heal, mix Cockle and brimstone with vinegar, and anoint. 11 Headache of rheum or murr, blow in powder of Cockle that groweth among corn. 12 Belly bound, anoint with the oil of Cockle. 13 Urine stopped, apply the meal thereof with hot water to the share. (See Darnel. See Nigella.) Apostume 4 Ache 9 Belly bound 12 Botch 4 Conception 7. 8 Eye pearl 1 Face freckles 2 Flowers stopped 7 Gout 9 Headache 11 Matrix stopped 7 Pricks 3 Skabs 5. 10 Sores 10 Teethache 6 Tetters 5. 10 Urine stopped 13 ¶ Coriander. COriander: drink 7. Grains to have speedy deliverance of child. 2 Loins ache, seethe Garlic & Coriander of each two ounces in a quart of wine till the third part be wasted, than strain it & drink it morn & even. 3 If thou fearest the coming of an ague, swallow down three grains of Coriander fasting. jaundice eat Coriander. 4 Head swimming & dasling, bake it in bread and apply it. 5 Belly swollen, boil powder of Coliander seed with butter to an ointment, and use it. 6 Face salsflegme, mix Coriander with the juice of Hemlock, & read Docks with fresh grease & a little quicksilver, and anoint. 7 Flowers to stopped drink powder of Coliander, Sanders, & Saffron with read wine in the mornings. 8 The juice drunk, suffereth no fumes to ascend to the head, and for the falling evil. 9 Flowers to stop, drink as many seeds as thou wouldst stop them days. 10 Fever tertian, take three grains of Coriander with a rear Egg after three or iiii. fits. 11 Scrofules, Glandules, or kernels, kneade Beane flower with the juice of it, and bake it and apply it hot. 12 Carbuncle, or other grievous bile, apply powder of the seed with honey to destroy it quite. 13 Falling evil, drink the juice. 14 Breath stinking, seeth the seeds in Sack, and drink three spoonful at even hot, and at morn cold, and forbear excess of meats, late sitting up, early rising. 15 Mix powder of the seed with vinegar, and cast it on meat to keep it long from corruption, or cover it with meal flower of bran, it may be so kept all summer. 16 Wula fallen, seeth powder of the seeds with Rue in water of Mints, and hold thereof in thy mouth cold. 17 Worms, drink the juice. Fever quarten use the seeds. 18 Breath stinking, use the seeds morning and evening. 19 Conception, steep the seeds in vinegar, and dry them, and mix the powder with powder of Akorne cups, and use it morn and even in pottage and drink. 20 Worms to drive out, drink the seeds with Malmsey. 21 Coliander resolveth windiness and wens. 22 The seeds in receits may well be kept two years. 23 The seeds in meats help digestion, and are good for the pain in the stomach and windiness, and so is the wine of the decoction thereof. 24 The powder of the seeds cast upon meats, causeth them to digest the better, and with sweet wine it moveth lust, but too much use of it breedeth the frenzy and raging, and the much eating of the herb and seed together, is venomous to dogs, and killeth them. 25 Coriander comfects repress the vapours ascending to the head, and therefore are good for the falling sickness. 26 The seed may not be eaten raw but steeped in vinegar, or covered over with Sugar. 27 Prepared with vinegar, and bruised and taken with the juice of Planten, it stayeth great bleeding at the nose. 28 Look how many grains of the seeds a woman doth take, and so many days her course shall run. 29 The herb must not be taken inward, because it hurteth the head & the blood. 30 The juice with vinegar doth cool and heal the holy fire. 31 The seeds a little bruised, & given in reasons, do kill worms in children. 32 Mix the juice with the juice of lettuce and of Planten, the white of an egg & oil of Roses, and apply it to hot apostumes, burnings, swellings, blisters, & shingles to heal them. 33 Coliander steeped one night in wine or vinegar and dried, is good for the stomach, and against all evil air. 34 The herb with the meal of Beans or Fitches, & Rose oil applied, taketh away all inflammations & swellings. 35 Apply it with bread or Barley meal to the wild fire, spreading sores, night plowkes, and with honey and reasyns to inflammations of the stones and carbuncles: with Beane meal it driveth away kernels, hard swellings and wens. 36 The seeds increase natural seed. 37 The juice with white lead or lytarge, vinegar oil of Roses healeth inflammations of the uttermost skin. 38 It maketh flesh wherewith it is sodden, to have the taste of spice. 39 Drink the parched seeds with wine to kill and expel worms, to stop the bloody Flixe, and all other extraordinary issues of blood. 40 The fresh and green herb sodden with white bread crumbs, or Barley meal, consumeth all hot tumors, swellings, inflammations etc. 41 The Comfects eaten after meals, strengtheneth the stomach. 42 With bean meal it dissolveth the king's evil, hard lumps, wens and kernels. Ache 2 Apostume 12. 32 Backeache 2 Belly swollen 5 Bleeding 27. 39 Blisters 32 bile 12 Bloody flux 39 Breath stink 14. 18 Burn 32 Carbuncle 12. 35 Consumption 19 Deliverance 1 Digestion 23. 24 Face salsflegme Falling evil 8. 13. 25 Felon 12 Fevers 3. 10. 17 Flesh to keep 15 Flow. stopped 7. 9 39 to stop 28 Fluxes 39 Hardness 35. 42 Head giddy 4 Holy fire 30 jaundice 3 Inflammations 34. 35. 37. 40 Kernels 11. 21. 35. 42 Kings evil 42 Loins ache 2 Lust to 'cause 24 Meat to keep 15 Nose bleeding 27 Plague sore 12 Plowkes 35 Seed to increase 36 Shingles 30. 32 Skabs 35. 37 Skin cleansing 39 Skrophules 11. 12 Sores 35 Stom. weak 41 windy 22. 33 Stones inflamed 35 Swell 32. 34. 35. 40. 42 Wula fallen 16 Wens 21. 35. 42 Wild fire 35 Windiness 21 Worms 17. 20. 31. 39 ¶ Coloquintida. COloquintida, the pith or white pulp thereof taken about one scruple, purgeth mightily gross phlegm, choler, slime & stinking corruption & scrape of the guts, & sometime causeth blood to issue, & so it doth if it be soaked or boiled in honeyed water, or any other liquor & so drunk. 2 It is good against all cold dangerous diseases, as the apoplexia, the falling sickness, giddiness of the head, pain in fetching of breath, the colic, looseness of the sinews, and places out of joint: and for the same purposes it may be taken in glisters & suppositories. 3 The oil wherein it hath been boiled, taketh away the pain in the ears, and the noise. 4 The pulp or pith may be taken with gum tragacanth and mastic, and after made into balls or trochiskes with honey for the use of medicine. 5 Steep one apple of Coloquintida in partis and water twelve hours, than strain it and drink half a pint of it in the morning to purge melancholy and choler adust, but it is a very gross purgation: but the trochiskes are better to purge with. 6 Seethe a dram of Coloquintida in powder with mirts and Oat water to a thickness, and make thereof pills, and use them. Seethe it in vinegar, and hold it in the mouth to kill worms in the teeth. The oil thereof is good for the Sciatica. 7 It killeth worms in the ears, and also in the belly, being used in drinks or plasters. It is perilous to women with child, and to weak folks. 8 Knit a piece in a clout and steep it all night in a draft of white wine, and strain it and drink it in the morning to purge a strong body from much filth and the Iliake passion: But there must be four or five branches of Issop steeped therewith. 9 It will do the like, being sodden in sweet water. 10 Mix it with an Ox gall, aloes, honey, meal of Lupins, and oil of wormwood, of each a dram and a half, and apply it to the belly to lose and purge it, to kill worms, and to expel them. 11 Steep the spongy part thereof with the kernels four or five hours in a draft of wine, and drink it to bedward to purge phlegm, choler, and gross humours, and to help the dropsy. 12 The balls broken and powered in by glister, purgeth and taketh away the palsy, the Sciatica, and the colic. 13 Seethe it in honeyed water, or sweet wine, and cool it in the open air, and drink it to purge gross humours, and things like shavings. 14 A suppositer thereof plucketh down the excrements of the belly: a glister thereof healeth all the diseases of the guts, kidneys and loins, and the palsy the seeds being cast out. Mix it with a Bulls gall and honey, and apply it to a belly that is costive. 15 Steep a penny weight pulled in pieces all night in ale, and strain it and drink it to purge the belly, or drink powder of three or four of the kernels. 16 seeth it in vinegar, and hold thereof in the mouth to help the toothache. seeth it in oil and dry a clout or cotton therein, and put it into the natural place to provoke the Flowers. 17 To kill fleas, steep an apple of it in water twelve hours, & seethe wormwood therein, and sprinkle the house therewith. Purgation, take powder of three seeds with as much Diagridium as a pease with a rear egg. Apoplexia 2 Backe-griefes 14 Belly bound, See purge. Breath stopped 2 Colic 28. 12. 14 Cold griefs. 2 Dropsy 11 Ears pain 3 worms 7 Falling evil 2 Fleas to kill 17 Flowers stopped 17 Giddiness 2 Iliak pass. 8 joints out 2 Loins griefs 14 Palsy 12. 14 Purgation 1. 4. 5. 6. 8. 9 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17 Sciatica 7. 12 Sinews lose 2 Teethach 6. 16 worms 6 Worms 7. 10 Columbine. COlumbine, for the jaundice and the liver, take powder of the seeds & of saffron, of each a penny weight, wine, water and vinegar, of each one eggeshel full, drink it first and last. 2 Take one scruple of powder of the seed, with two eggshells full of wine first & last to drive out the jaundice by urine. 3 Eyes running, anoint with the juice. 4 For the water canker in the mouth, drink the seeds. 5 Emeralds, stamp read dock leaves, unset leeks, & Columbine roasted in the embers, and apply them. 6 squinsy, drink the seeds often with good ale, or stamp the seeds & herbs with honey, and take it with milk or drink. 7 Frenzy, at the first drink the juice of Columbine, & use pottage of sage, valerian or rue, and be whole for ever. 8 joints broken, drink the seeds with feuerfew in stolen ale. 9 Deliverance to cause, drink Columbine. 10 Swelling, drink the juice with five leaves of the same herb and stolen ale. 11 Headache, stamp Columbine, and fry it with May butter, and anoint therewith. 12 Palsy, seethe Primrose, Columbine, peony, lavender & saffron in ale, and drink it before and after meat. 13 Breath-stinking, eat the seeds often. 14 Columbine is good against the jaundice, & swooning, it openeth the liver, & is good for the inflammations and sores of the jaws, & windpipe. 15 Scratches & gallings, stamp the flowers with wheat meal and apply it. 16 jaundice, and stopping of the liver, & many diseases that may come thereof, drink a dram of the seed with a half penny weight of saffron with wine, & cover thee well to sweated. 17 The water of the flowers is good for the same purpose & for swooning. 18 Stamp Columbine, & apply it to dry up scabs & fistulas. 19 seeth it in milk, sweet wine, or oxymel, and drink it or gargoyle with it to help the Struma or painful swelling in the throat, called the kings evil. 20 The juice with wheat meal applied warm, drieth up moist humours in biles and sores. 21 It is good for young children to drink it against the redgum or felon. biles 20 Breath stink 13 Chafing 15 Deliverance 9 Eyes running 3 Emerods' 5 Felons 21 Fistula 18 Frenzy 7 Gallings 15 Headache 11 jaundice 12. 14. 16 jaws inflam. 14 Inflammations 14 joints broken 8 Itch 15 Canker 4 Kings evil 19 Kernels 19 Liverwort 1. 14. 16 Mouth-canker 4 Palsy 12 Redgumme 21 Sicknesses 16 Scabs 18 Sores 20 squinsy 6 Swelling 10 Swooning 14. 17 Throat griefs 14 squinsy 6 swollen 19 comfery. comfery, the roots stamped and drunk, are good for spitting of blood, & all inward wounds & ruptures. 2 Bruise it & apply it to heal fresh wounds wonderfully. 3 The root boiled & drunk, cleanseth the breast, & cureth the griefs of the lungs, & so it doth mixed with sugar, syrups or honey, & often licked. 4 for all tumours & hot inflammations, especially of the fundament, stamp it with the leaves of groundswell & apply it. 5 Ruptures & broken bones, stamp them & apply them. 6 To stop the bloody flux & terms, seeth the root in water & drink it. 7 Chew thereof to voided thirst. 8 Roast the roots in the embers, & eat them fasting 3. days against ruptures & bursting. It helpeth together broken bones, it stoppeth all fluxes of blood, & vomiting blood, the juice being drunk with read wine and a little mastic. 9 Hoarseness, eat powder of it, and of Elecampana with honey fasting. 10 Bones broken, stamp it with daisies, agrimony, and vinegar, & apply it till it be whole. 11 Roast the roots of elecampana and comfery, of each like much, or seeth them in water to the one half, then put thereto a third part of clarified honey, & make it in an electuary, and use it morn & even for the chincough. 12 Flux to stop, apply the juice of Confery & both plantins with the clay of an old oven or furnace to the belly. 13 Burstings & broken bones, eat the roasted roots with honey. 14 Matrix rend by travail of childbirth, put in powder of Comfery and cinnamon. 15 Matrix griefs, drink Comfery with Ale or water three days. 16 Bloodyfluxe wash the root in cold water, & scrape it with a knife of bone or ivory, or of a heart's horn, and eat thereof two ounces or more: but eat no vinegar that day, for that taketh away the virtue of the root. 17 Bursten, put the juice into thy bread, and eat the root either raw or roasted. 18 Teethach, seeth it in vinegar, & hold thy mouth over it. 19 Bruised, drink two spoonfuls of the juice of Comfery, & scabious morn and even, or stamp Comfery, houseleek, orpin & flower, & apply it. 20 Flowers to stop, seethe Confery in running water, & drink it. 21 Spitting blood, drink Osmund and Comfery with stolen ale 9 days and be whole. 22 If a man that is wounded drink Comfery & keep it, he shall live, if not, he shall die. 23 Vein broken in the breast, fry the roots with eggs & meal, and eat them. 24 Or seethe them and slice them, and dry them, & use the powder of them with wine and water. Blood casting 8 Bloody flux 8. 16 Bones broken 5. 8. 10. 13 Breast cleansing 3 Bruised 19 Bursten 1. 5. 8. 13. 17 Chincough 11 Flowers to stop 20 Fluxes 12 Fundament griefs 4 Hoarseness 9 Inflammations 4 Lungs griefs 3 Matrix griefs 15 rent 14 Spitting blood 1. 21. 22. 23. Swell 4 Teethach 18 Thirst 7 Vein broken 22. 23 Wounds inward 1 outward 2. 22 ¶ Coral. COral: drink Coral & pepper with water, & thou shalt have the cramp no more. 2 Falling evil, hung it about thy neck. 3 Heart burning, let a man hold read Coral in his mouth, & a woman white Coral in hers. 4 Heart cardiack, apply Coral read or white with oil of roses. 5 Teeth ache, mix powder of mastic, galls & Coral with honey, and rub therewith where need is. 6 Teeth to fall out, put in powder of read Coral. 7 Give a child twelve grains in powder when he is new borne, with the nurse's milk, and it shall never have the falling sickness. 8 Coral strengtheneth the stomach, stoppeth spitting of blood, preserveth the heart from pestilence, stoppeth terms, is good for the falling evil, & withstandeth lightnings being borne on one, and stoppeth bleeding at the nose. 9 Matrix flux, purge the cause, then take powder of sanguis Draconis, bol armoniac, white amber, & read Coral, & drink a dram with two ounces of plantine water. 10 Or take old conserve of roses two ounces, plantine seeds, two drams, sanguis draconis, & bol armoniac, ana a dram & a half, white and read Coral ana one dram, make a confection with syrup of myrtles, & drink it morn and even as much as a mean chestnut two hours before and after meat, & wear Coral about thy neck and hand. 11 Teeth to be white, rub them with powder of white Coral, white marble, cuttle bone, salgem, mastic, bay salt, and the pills of a Cytron, ana like much every morning, and after wash them in white wine, sodden with oil & camomile. 12 Hung it about thy neck down to the pit of the stomach to 'cause digestion. 13 It consumeth superfluous flesh in wounds without pain. 14 The powder strengtheneth the gums. 15 Drink the powder with water to appease the griefs of the stomach & belly for ever, and to dry up the phlegm. 16 Coral drunk stoppeth the terms, it comforteth the heart & stomach, dissolveth the fever, in Lozenges it is restorative. 17 Heart griefs, use the powder with sugar roset. 18 Impost. drink the powder with the juice of a handful of scabious roots, and as much aqua vitae. 19 It comforteth the eyes, and drieth up the tears, it cleanseth ulcers. 20 Gums bleeding, apply the powder by itself, or with honey. Belly griefs 15 Cramp 1 Digestion 12 Eyes griefs 19 Falling evil 2. 7. 8 Fevers 16 Flesh superfluous 13 Flowers to stop 8. 9 10 Gums griefs 14. 20 Heartburning 3 cardiak 4 griefs 16. 17 Impostume 18 Lightnings 8 Matrix flux 9 10 Milt griefs. 15 Nosebleeding 8 plague 8 Spitting blood 8 Stomach griefs 15 Teethach 5 foul 11 to fall 6 Ulcers 19 Whites 9 10 Wounds 13. 19 Cornefloure. COrnefloure, or blue battle, stamp it & apply it to the pain, redness, inflammation, & running of the eyes, or to any hot apostume about the eyes, and so is the distilled water or juice good for the same purposes. 2 Seethe the flower and seed in wine, and drink it against all venomous bitings and stingings. 3 Drink half a dram of powder of the seeds to purge chollar downward. 4 The herb is good for the diseases of Swine. Apostume 1 Byting venomous 2 Eyes griefs 1 Inflammations 1 Purgations 3 Swine sick 4 Cornerose. COrnerose, or wild poppy, is in nature much like to poppy. 2 Boil five or six heads in wine, and drink it to cause sleep, or take the seed with honey. 3 Stamp the leaves & green heads, and apply them to all evil hot swellings, ulcers, and wild fire. 4 The seeds put into honeyed cakes loosen the belly gently. 5 The powder of the flowers is good for the pleurisy, and so is the syrup of the same flowers. 6 The leaves gathered green, used in meats, purgeth downwards. 7 To make red butter for the diseases aforesaid, put thereto the read leaves: and likewise into cheese, to 'cause sleep. 8 The juice of the leaves will make butter or cheese green and profitable for the diseases aforesaid. 9 Mix the juice with mirth, saffron, and oil of bitter almonds, and put it warm into the ear to restore hearing, if it be curable. 10 seeth the seeds in Mede, and drink two ounces and a half to loosen the belly gently. 11 Seethe five or six heads in wine, till the better half be wasted, and drink thereof, and apply it to the forehead to 'cause sleep. 12 Stamp the seeds with honey, and eat it to loosen the belly gently. 13 The distilled water drunk, helpeth all inward heats and inflammations of the mouth, throat and liver. 14 The same applied with hemp hards, helpeth the shingles, the holy fires, the inflaming fire, and the bleeding at the nose. 15 The same water helpeth all inflammations, and exulcerations of the eyes, mouth, throat and secret parts. 16 Applied to the forehead with hemp hards, it is good for the frenzy. 17 The juice of the flowers with brimstone and saltpeter, is good against scabs, and foul spots. 18 Pleurisy, drink powder of the red flowers dried in the sun, and use it in meats, and anoint with oil of Lysarts warm. (See Poppy.) A syrup for the stomach, & to digest a surfeit, put a quart of claret wine into a basin, steep it full of the leaves of read poppy, that groweth in wheat, on a chafingdish of coals, & lay two flat white sticks over the basin, and take a piece of white cotton a span long and an inch broad at the one end, and small at the other end: put the broad end into the liquor, and the small end into a glass, then whelm a basin over the sticks, and so boil it till the liquor be boiled up, or distilled into the glass: and to every pint of the liquor put one pound of sugar, and boil it to a syrup, and keep it in a close glass, it reviveth one that is in a deadly swoone. Belly bound 4. 10. 12 Butter 7. 8 Cheese 7. 8 Ears deaf 9 Eyes heat 15 Frenzy 16 Holy fire 14 Liver hot 13. 15 Mouth heat 13. 15 Nosebleeding 14 Pleurisy 5. 18 Privities griefs 15 Purgation 4. 6. 8. 10 Shingles 14. 15 Scabs 17 Sleep to 'cause 2. 7. 11 Swell 3 Sores 3 Throat heat 13. 15 Ulcers 3 Wild fire 3 Cotton weed. COtton weed is good to be drunk with tart wine against the bloody flux, the common flux, and the terms. 2 It is good to be put into the fundament for the Flux tenasmus: apply it to old rotten sores. 3 Cartifilago hath the same virtues. Flowers to stop 1 Fluxes 1 Sores 2 ¶ Cowslip. Cowslip, Oxlips and Primroses, are now used amongst herbs, but not much in Physic. 2 They are good for the head and sinews. 3 Drink the juice nine days together to help the falling sickness. Blood to stop, stamp the leaves & apply them. 4 Eyes bleared or read, anoint with the juice or water. 5 The flowers condited with sugar, are good for the Apoplexia, often swooning, all inward griefs, the palsy, and to comfort the heart: the herb also applied outwardly. 6 Bitings venomous & stingings, apply the flowers or leaves. 7 Headache of heat, use the water, the same taketh away all spots and wrinkles of the face and skin: falling evil, drink the juice with powder of a kites liver 9 days. 8 Canker in the hand or joint, stamp the Primrose roots with clarified honey, and apply it morn & even till it be whole. 9 Speech lost by sickness, hold the juice of Cowslips or sage in thy mouth. 10 Teeth ache put the juice of Primrose into the contrary nostril. 11 Aches hot, bruise Cowslips & apply them. 12 Cramp & stretching of the sinews, seeth it in water, and bathe therewith, or with camomile flowers sodden in water: or wash with the decoction of Primrose. 13 Speech lost, stamp Primrose and sage, and anoint under thy tongue. 14 Head imposthume, put the juice of primrose into the nose to break it. 15 Palsy & benumbed limbs, distill the flowers with oil olive in a glass in the sun, and to two spoonful of it put one spoonful of aqua vitae, and anoint therewith. 16 Headache and to cleanse the brain, put the juice of Primrose, with cows milk into the nose with a feather. 17 Head megrem, stamp the roots of Primrose with rosemary leaves, and boil them in good ale dregss and honey, and apply thereof 3. or four days as hot as may be suffered: or mix the juice of Betony and Primrose roots, and cows milk, and put it into the nose bloodwarme with a feather: or put in Primrose leaves with milk. 18 Voice lost, mix the juice of Primrose with wine or water, and hold it in thy mouth. 19 Dog bitten with a mad dog, give him the juice of Primrose, with milk within 24. hours after he is bitten. Make Conserve of the flowers with sugar to help against feebleness, swooning, and to restore strength. Take Cowslip flowers, stamp them, and set into the sun in a close glass five or six weeks: this oil helpeth the gout of the feet & other members: it cureth also fresh wounds, if the same be infused in oil olive. It will then serve for many griefs, gather the flowers dry. Aches hot 11 Apoplexia 5 Benumbed 15 Bitings venomous 6. 19 Bleeding 3 Cramp 12 Eyes bleared 4 Face deformed 7 Falling evil 3. 7 Headache 7. 16. 17. griefs 2 impost. 14. 16. 17 Heart griefs 5 canker 8 Mad dog 19 Palsy 5. 9 10. 15 Sickness general 5 Sinews griefs 2. 12 Sores 8 Speech lost 9 13 Stinging 6 Swoning 5 Teethache 10 Voice lost 18 Wrinkles 7 ¶ Cowparsnip. COwparsnip or Wild carrat growing in meadows: swellings cold, stamp it & apply it. 2 Some seeth it in drink with levin, and use it in stead of ale or bear. 3 The seed drunk, scoureth out phlegm, and healeth griefs of the liver, the jaundice, shortness of wind, the falling evil, and strangling of the mother. 4 The perfume thereof wakeneth them that are fallen into a dead sleep. 5 Frenzy, litargy and headache, seeth it in oil, and anoint therewith. 6 Creeping sores and tetters, apply it with rue. 7 Liver griefs and jaundice use the roots of it. Shave the root, and put it into fistulas or false wounds, to take away their hardness. 8 Ears mattering, put in the juice of the green films. 9 The juice may be dried in the Sun, & kept as other juices be. Drink 2 Eyes sore 8 Falling evil 3 Fistula 7 Phlegm 3 Frenzy 5 Hardness 7 Headache 5 jaundice 3. 7 Lethargy 4. 5 Liver griefs 3. 7 Mother suffoc. 3 Purgat. 3 Sicknesses 3 Sores 6 Swell 1 Tetters 6 Wounds 7 ¶ Crabs. CRabs or Wildings: face swollen, distil them in a limbeck in the end of june, and wash therewith often. 2 Flux choleric, use syrup of Crabs. (See Apples.) Face swollen 1 Fluxes 2 ¶ Cranesbill. CRanesbill or Acus moscata, apply it to all wounds & ulcers. 2 Drink one dram with wine to expel all windiness of the mother. 3 Bruises and black spots, bathe them with the water thereof, and apply it four or five days. Bruises 3 Mother windy 2 Ulcers 1 Windiness 2 Wounds 1 ¶ Cresses. Cress': stamp them with pitch and apply it to break & heal apostumes. 2 Hair not to fall, anoint with the juice. 3 Flux to stop, stamp the seeds & boil them with honey, & apply it to the womb, it never faileth, being applied hot in a cloth. Vain broken, drink a little powder of the seeds. 4 Teethache, put the juice into the ear on the same side. Bloody flux, eat a penny weight of the seeds three days fasting, and drink wine or water after it, and it shall either staunch or turn to another, or else it is death or not curable. 5 Gout, seeth them with leeks & read mints, & wash therewith morn and even. 6 Head worms, stamp them with goose grease, and use it. 7 Gout old, stamp them with suet, and apply it, or stamp the leaves with bran & vinegar, and apply it. 8 Carbuncles and venomous bitings, stamp it with bran and apply it, or stamp the herb & seed together, and apply it. 9 To stop the bloody flux and all other fluxes, mix three drams of the seeds with as much honey, and make it sharp with vinegar, and drink it once or twice: proved. 10 Brain to purge, blow in powder of Garden Cress into the nose. 11 Flux diaria, drink powder of the seeds with wine or vinegar, or drink the said powder with powder of planten seeds & read wine. 12 For all skabs, skalles and sores of the head, mix powder of the seeds with fresh goose grease, and anoint, or with the juice and goose grease. 13 Blood to stop, drink a little of the seeds with the juice of planten. 14 Speech lost, anoint or rub the tongue with the juice of Cresses & powder of Castory. 15 Trembling, with water of the decoction of Cresses & Lavender. 16 Vomit to cause, seeth the seeds of Dill & Cresses in water, and put a little oil to it, and drink it luke warm. 17 Tongue palsy, chew the seeds, & hold them under thy tongue. 18 To know whether a wounded man shall die or not, let him drink read wine, & then eat a penny weight of the seed, and do so three days, if he staunch not, he may not live. 19 Palsy & maleflanke, seeth the seeds in wine, and apply it to the side & palsy members. 20 urine stopped, seeth it with wine and oil olive, and apply it to the share. 21 Fundament fallen of cold cause, put it in again, & straw on the powder, or anoint the rains with honey, & cast on the powder with Cummin, or powder of Colophony. 22 Burn the stalk to kill venomous beasts with the fume thereof. 23 To break the stone, make powder of Cress seeds, Parsley seeds, Annyseeds and black Flints, & use it morn and even. 24 Bitings of mad dogs, seeth the seeds with pennyroyal in water, & drink it to cast out the venom. 25 Fluxes general, drink powder of the seeds with ale morn & even. 26 The seeds especially are used in medicine, and may be kept five years. 27 The green herb is also of great effect, being somewhat dried before it be ministered. 28 The seeds bruised and drunk in wine, expelleth the dead youngling, & drunk with vinegar, it helpeth the griefs of the milt. 29 Eat it with the best honey to help the cough, and open the breast. 30 Chew it & hold it in the mouth for the palsy in the tongue. 31 Cresses may not be eaten alone, for than they diminish the strength, and breed evil humours. 32 The seeds taken whole, stay the distilling of the head without harm. 33 Put the seeds into the nose in powder to purge the brain, and help the headache. 34 seeth them in wine & apply them hot to the palsy members in a bag. 35 Lethargy, blow the powder into the nose. 36 Sciatica and colic, seeth the seeds in wine, and apply them in a bag hot, or seeth the green herb in wine and oil, and apply it hot to the belly for the colic and strangury. 37 The herb drunk with Mints in wine, doth drive out both long and flat worms in beasts. 38 Hair falling, anoint with the juice. 39 Teethache, drop the juice into the ear. 40 Eat the herb often in salads to have a sharp and ready wit. 41 Eaten with lettuce it is of virtue like Rocket, and is good amongst cold herbs. 42 The seed looseneth the belly, killeth and expelleth worms, diminisheth the milt, and expelleth the flowers, seconds, and dead child. 43 It is good against venomous beasts, and the perfume thereof causeth them to avoid. 44 Take it with broth of a chicken, or any other moist broth, to ripen phlegm and avoid it, and so to cleanse the breast. 45 Milt hard, apply it with honey, and so it scoureth away foul spreading sores, dissolveth cold swellings and keepeth hair from falling. 46 Apply it with vinegar & honey to the sciatica, old headache, & old and cold diseases. 47 Stamp it with goosegrease to heal the worms of the head. 48 The seed is of virtue like senuie seed, it expelleth worms, & is ill for women with child, it provoketh terms and venery, it scoureth away leapry & scurf, and sores called Favae like to honey combs, it ripeneth and bursteth carbuncles, it driveth forth the griefs of the lungs, being sodden with suppings. The same drunk withstandeth poison and venom. 49 Applied with parched barley meal and vinegar, it is good for the sciatica and disperseth swellings. 50 And with brine it driveth forth angry sores and cats hair, the leaves and branches are good for the same purposes while they are green, but not so strong, for than they may be eaten with bread. The dried herb may serve for the seed. 51 The juice cleanseth filthy sores. 52 The seeds cause abortion, with vinegar it taketh away the scab. 53 With honey it taketh away ache in any place. 54 It is good in medicines for shortness of wind. 55 Sodden with vinegar it dissolveth scrofules, and ripeneth cold apostumes. 56 Take a dram of the powder of the seeds with read wine six or seven mornings two hours before meat to stop the lask. 57 seeth the seeds in white wine, and drink it to stop the gonorrhoea or wasting of nature, and to drive forth the urine. 58 Stamp the root with swine's grease, and apply it warm four hours to the pain of the joints, and the sciatica: but for women but two hours, and go presently to sweated in a bath, and then anoint with oil of Cresses and warm wine sodden. 59 seeth Cresses in wine, and drink it against pain of the joints, the dropsy, tympany, gout, swelling, palsy, pocks, apostumations, rumes, bloody fluxes, bruises, moistness of the brain and eyes etc. (See Rocket Senuie.) Ache general 53. 58. 59 Abortion to 'cause 52 Apost. 1. 48. 55. 59 Belly bound 42 Bitings venom. 8. 24 Bleeding 3. 13. 18 Bloody flux 4. 9 Brain cleansing 10. 33 Breast cleansing 29. 44. 54 Breath short 54. 48 Bruise 59 Carbuncle 8. 48 Cats hair 50 Chollike 36 Cold griefs 46 Cough 29 Dead child 24. 42 Dropsy 59 Eyes moist 59 Felons 48 Flowers stopped 42. 48 Fluxes 3. 9 11. 25. 56 Fundament fallen 21 Gomorpass. 57 Gout 57 58 Headache 33. 46. cleansings 33. sores 12. 48. worms 6. 47 Hair falling 26. 38. 45 joints ache 58. 59 (See ache. Kernels 55 Leaprie 48 Lethargy 35 Lungs griefs 48 Lust to 'cause 48 Mad dog 24 Maleflanke 19 Memory 4 Milt griefs 28. 42. 45 Palsy 19 30. 34. 59 Pocks 59 Poison 22. 43 Plague sore 8 Purgat. 42. 44 Reins running 57 Rheum 32. 59 Sciatica 36. 46. 49. 58 Seconds 51 Shaking 42 Side griefs Sickness general 48. 59 scabs 12. 45. 48. 51. 52 scales 12. 45. 48. 51 Skurfs 48 Skrophules 55 Sores 12. 45. 48. 50. 51 Speech lost 14. 17 Stone 23 Strangury 3. 6 Swell 45. 49. 59 Teethache 4. 39 Timpany 59 Tongue palsy 14. 17. 36 Trembling 15 Venom 22. 43 Vncom 48 Vain broken 3 Vomit to 'cause 16 Urine stopped 20. 57 Whites 57 Wits 40 Worms 6. 37. 42. 47. 48 Wounds 18 ¶ Crowfoot. CRowfoot leaves or roots being stamped and applied, causeth blisters and ulcers, and therefore are good to be laid to corrupt nails and to warts to make them fall off. 2 The leaves also may be used to foul scurf or tetters, weals, galls, skabs &c. being stamped, but it may not lie long, but be taken away immediately. 3 The powder of the root provoketh sneezing. They are all poison to be taken inward. 4 Stamp Crowfoot green, and apply it to hard ulcers & swellings, and to eat out dead flesh, warts, wens, and all such like, prints of wounds, little marks like pricks. 5 The powder of the root put to the tooth that acheth taketh away the pain, but it breaketh the tooth. 6 The juice tempered with boars suet restoreth hair. 7 The juice taketh away skabs and crusty scurf: and tempered with swine's grease, it helpeth the swelling of the throat. 8 Bind it with a read third about the neck in the wane of the Moon in the first part of ♉ or ♏ both for the falling sickness & lunacy. 9 The same root steeped in wine is good to be drunk in the plague, & to cause sweat, but not good in a hot fever. 10 Stomach hot, stamp Crowfoot with crumbs of bread, & apply it. 11 Toothache, gather the root in May, dry it in an Oven, and keep it all the year, and when need is, apply it being bruised with wax and pitch, etc. three hours on the top of the tooth two or three times. Falling sickness 8 Flesh dead 4 Hair to restore 6 Lunacy 8 Nails corrupt 1 Plague. 9 Skabs 2. 7 sneezing to 'cause 3 Stomach hot 10 Teethache 2 Tetters 11 Throat swollen 7 Ulcers hard 4 Warts 4 Wens 4 ¶ Cubebs. CVbebs strengthen a weak and windy stomach, they scour the breast, help the milt, expel wind, and help the cold griefs of the matrix. 2 Head and brain to strengthen & cleanse, chew them with Mastic. 3 For trembling of the heart, melancholy, and the falling evil, there is no better medicine than Cubebs with Balm water. 4 They provoke urine, break the stone, and open obstructions. Heart faint, take four drams of Cubebs with the juice of the roots and leaves of Parsnip. Brain grief 2 Breast grief 1 Falling evil 3 Heart trembling 3. faint 4 Head griefs 2 Matrix griefs 1 Melancholy 3 Milt griefs 1 Obstructions 4 Stomach weak 1. windy 1 Stone 4 Urine stopped 4 ¶ Cucumber. CVcumber wild: head sores, biles, etc. mix ashes of the roots with water, and wash therewith. Headache, boil the root with water and oil, and apply it. 2 Ears griefs, put in the juice of the leaves, it killeth worms therein also. 3 Face wrinkles & all griefs of the skin in any place, mix powder of the root with water, and wash therewith, and wash it again with other cold water, and do so thrice or three days. 4 Teethache, use the decoction of it with wine or water, and hold it in the mouth, or put it into the ear on the same side. 5 Glandules, kernels, scrofules, and old hard swellings, stamp the root with barley meal, & apply it. 6 Dropsy of cold cause, use wine of the decoction of the root to purge out the swelling. 7 Fever quarten, drink the root before the fit. 8 Burning, sprinkle on ashes of a dry Cucumber. 9 Ringwormes, tetters and skabs, seeth the roots to the third part, stamp and strain them, and put thereto litarge of silver and brimstone in powder, of each like much, and a little wax, and rub the place therewith. 10 Milt griefs, take powder of it as much as you can take up with three fingers, with wine before breakfast. 11 Face wrinkles and deformities, wash it with cold water, and anoint it with fine powder of the root and honey three days. (See Elaterium in Dodoneus.) 12 Ears pain, put in the juice. Burn 8 Dropsy 6 Ears griefs 2. 12 Pace deformed 3. 11 Fever quart. 7 Glandules 5 Hardness 5 Headache 1. skabd 2 Kernels 5 Milt griefs 10 Ringwormes 9 Skabs 9 Skin deformed 3. 9 Skrophules 5 Swell 5. 6 Teethache 4 Tetters 9 Wrinkles 11 ¶ Cucumber. CVcumber of the garden, the whole substance thereof eaten in Summer is good for them that use much exercise, but not for the phlegmatic. 2 The water or juice of them helpeth the fever and ceaseth thirst. 3 They which are hard and heavy are not so good as they that be ripe. 4 Bladder blistered, drink the seeds in milk. 5 Cough, drink the seeds with wine and as much bruised cummin as may be taken up with three fingers. 6 Frenzy, bruise the seeds, & drink them with woman's milk. 7 Spitting blood and matter, drink the seeds with a little cummin. 8 Belly bound, use to eat cucumbers. Mad, smell to cucumbers to restore the wits. 9 Urine stopped, seeth the seeds in wine, and drink it. 10 The same helpeth biting of dogs, the seeds and leaves being also applied. 11 Pushes hot, stamp the seeds with honey, and apply them. 12 Drink the seeds with milk or sweet wine, to loosen the belly gently, and for the blistering, rawness and stopping of the bladder. 13 Dog biting, stamp the green leaves, and apply them. 14 Swooning, smell to a cucumber. 15 The juice with the seeds mixed with meal, and dried in the Sun, is made into a soap to make the face and skin white and neat, but it must be anointed with wine. 16 Cucumbers, melons, and pepons are good for hot griefs. 17 Their seeds are good for the strangury and griefs of the reins and bladder. (See Melons, Gourds etc. 18 Burning, sprinkle on the ashes of a dry Cucumber. Belly bound 8. 12 Bladder griefs 4. 12. 17 Burn 18 Cough 5 Dog biting 10. 13 Face deformed 15 Fevers 2 Frenzy 6 Hot griefs 16 Lungs griefs 7 Mad 8 Pushes 11 Scab 11 Skin defor. 11. 15 Spitting blood 7. & matter 7 Strangury 17 Swooning 14 Thirst 2 Urine stopped 9 12 Wits lost 8 ¶ Cumminseedes. CVmminseedes: if one that hath eaten Cummin do breath on a painted face, the colour will vanish away strait. 2 Ache or gout, seeth two handful of the powder in a pottle of white wine to the one half, and drink thereof a good draft first and last 15. days. 3 Ears deaf, stamp half a pound grossly, and put it into a bag, and sprinkle it with Rose water & Malmsey and bind it fast to the ear hot, & lie on it all night, and do so thrice and keep thy chamber three days. 4 Hickit, drink Cummin. 5 Bruises & black spots, boil powder of Cummin & salt ana one ounce in 4. ounce of honey a little, & anoint therewith. 6 For all aches and swellings, stamp it with the leaves of coleworts, & drink it with wine continually. 7 Vomiting much, seethe it with Mints in wine and drink it or eat it. 8 Eyes bloody, boil it in white wine and put thereto the juice of Rue, and put it in or apply it. 9 Bloody flux and bleeding at the nose, steep it in vinegar three days, then dry it & use the powder of it. 10 Belly or stomach ache, bake cakes of meal of wheat, rye, or oats, slice them & anoint the inside with honey, and cast on it powder of Cummin, & apply it hot to the navel twice or thrice. 11 Yard rankled, seeth beans, Cummin, and Holly, & apply them. 12 Stomach to comfort after purging, seethe crumbs of bread with Cummin in ale & sup thereof. 13 For all griefs of the stomach, make powder of the seeds of Cummin, flax & smallage, of each like much, & drink one spoonful 9 mornings fasting. 14. Sides griefs, see the powder of Cummin in white wine in a linen bag to the one half, & dip a green felt in the wine, & apply it often hot. 15 Flank sickness, drink Cummin and Rue with wine or stolen ale, when thou fearest the coming of it. 16 Belly lose with flux & vomiting, seeth it in wine, & drink it or eat it. 17 Sweat to cause, mix the fine powder with oil, and anoint thy hands & feet when thou art warm in thy bed, and cover thee well. 18 Head ache or migreme, cast powder of it on a piece of sliced beef, and apply it two fingers broad from ear to ear one night and be whole 19 Belly worms, seeth it with more gall & oil, and apply it to the navel Milk to cause, seeth one ounce with 4. ounces of ho●● in 3. quatres of water to the third part, and drink thereof often. 20 stitch, seeth it in white wine and apply it often in a bag. 21 Appetite to cause, seeth powder of Cummin, Ginger, & Liquorice ana one pennyworth in honey till it be thick, & mix a little geane treacle with it, & eat thereof first and last. 22 Cummin expelleth wind & all other evils from the stomach, and provoketh urine. 23 Headache, stamp it with Betony & Vervain, and apply it. 24 Ears dull, stamp it & seethe it in vinegar in a bag, and apply it as hot as may be suffered to the ear. 25 Liver chafed, stamp it with Sengreene, & seethe them in vinegar & apply it hot to thy side, as often as need is. 26 Cod swollen, seethe it & bean meal with honey and apply it. 27 Ache in any place apply the powder with honey. 28 Headache straw the powder on a new laid Eglantine hard roasted, & cut in the mids, & apply it to the nape of the neck. 29 Breath stinking, seethe two handful of the powder in a quart of white wine to a pint, & drink it hot nine days fasting. 30 Swelling, fry the powder with bean meal and honey, and apply it. 31 Headache, boil grey bread and powder of Cummin in vinegar till they be thick, & apply thereof. 32 Breath stinking, seeth the powder in vinegar, & take v. spoonful at once 9 mornings. 33 Eyes ache & dull, and congealed blood, stamp it with Rue & the yolk of an Eglantine, and apply it, or mix the powder with crumbs of bread, & the white of an Eglantine, & apply it. 34 Ears deaf, stamp it with onions & oil, and rub the ear and apply it hot. 35 Flux and vomiting, eat Cummin or boil it in vinegar and drink it. 36 Emerods' to flow, eat Cummin. 37 Pain after child birth, seethe onions in water & stamp them with Cummin and oil & apply it, or seethe Eggs mightily in water, and mix their yolks with suet, the juice of Mugwort and Cummin, and apply it. 38 For swelling above or under the eyes, and bloodiness, mix the powder with virgin's wax and apply thin plasters thereof warm as often as need is. 39 Eyes bruised or hurt, mix the powder with May butter, and apply it till the swelling be past, and then apply Saffron with woman's milk. 40 Ears apost. to break it, mix the powder with wheat flower, honey, and sheeps tallow & apply it. 41 Ears deaf & noise, seeth the powder in the juice of Leeks, and put it in warm. 42 For the host, seeth Sage, Rue, Cummin, and Pepper with Hony, & take thereof morn & even daily. 43 Appetite to cause, seeth Peniroyall and Cummin ana like much with some Pepper in Ale, and drink it at even hot, and at morn cold. 44 jaundice, seeth a hen with yellow feet in white wine with Sage, Cummin, and saffron, & eat the flesh and drink the broth. 45 Reins ache of wind, apply a plaster of Rue, Cummin, Calament, & wheat bran with white wine. 46 Back pain, strain thine own urine through a cloth, and put thereto a fourth part of vinegar with powder of Cummin, and the juice of Parsley, & boil them together & strain them, & anoint therewith against the fire. 47 Yard rankling, boil beans clean hulled with Cummin, & apply it, & forbear garlic & pepper. 48 Cod swollen, seeth barley meal with honey, & put powder of Cummin to it and apply it. 49 Heart cardiake, mix the juice of Betony with Treacle, powder of Cloves, & Cummin and anise, and use it 9 days. 50 Yard standing or satyriasis, seeth Cummin with wine or water and drink it & also apply it. 51 Ear apostumed, fry wheat meal and powder of Cummin with honey & Capon's grease or hens grease and apply it. 52 Vomit to stop, apply mastic, Cummin, and Bays, with the juice of Rue plaster wise to the stomach. 53 Headache, stamp read Fenell, Camomile, Sage, & Cummin, and apply it. 54 Belly windy, seethe the seeds of Cummin, Fenell, & Anise in wine, and drink it. 55 Strokes black & not broken, fry the juice of wormewod, honey, virgin's wax, barrow's grease, & powder of Cummin, of each like much, & apply it. 56 Ache of cold, seethe Cummin in thine own urine, & apply it often warm. 57 Stomach weak, boil read mints & Cummin with vinegar & crumbs of bread & apply it. 58 Conception to cause, take up the fume of the seeds of Cummin, Parsley, Fenell, & Alexander, of each like much into the matrix. 59 Face bruised or hurt, mix powder of Cummin & Anise with wax & apply it. 60 Headache, heat powder of Cummin in a pan & sprinkle it well with the best read wine that can be had, & apply it in a linen bag as hot as may be suffered. 61 Stitch, fill a dish with hot ashes, & cast Cummin on it, & lay a wet cloth over it, & apply it, and seethe read Thyme and Cummin with Malmsey, and drink it. 62 A plaster for the stomach, stamp Cummin, Wormwood, Mints and Frankincense ana one handful, with dried crumbs of four bread & vinegar, and apply it in a bag sprinkled with vinegar. 63 Sweat to cause, fry powder of Cummin with oil & barrow's grease, and anoint therewith the plants of the hands and feet. 64 Head megreme, anoint a Rye toast with aqua vitae, and cast powder of Cummin on it and apply it. 65 Breath evil, seethe two ounces of powder of Cummin in a pottle of white wine to the one half, and drink a little of it warm to bedward xv. nights. 66 Head megreme, apply the fine powder of Cummin with the gall of an Ox to the nape of the neck. 67 Eyes bloody, apply the powder with Wormwood & the white of an Eglantine with flax hurdes. 68 Teeth yellow and stinking, seeth two handful in wine, and drink it xx. days. 70 Belly ache, seeth Cummin & Rosemary in wine, and drink it. 71 Belly swollen, seeth it in stolen ale and drink it warm. 72 Breath short, seethe it with Pulyol & Calamint in wine and drink it, & cover thee well to sweat. 73 Drink Cummin with milk to be delivered of a dead child. 74 Ears deaf, boil Cummin & the juice of Leeks in a hollow Onion & strain it and drop it in. 75 Eyes ache & swelling, apply powder of Cummin: it helpeth any ache or swelling. 76 Eyes bruised, roast the powder of Cummin with the white of an Eglantine, & cleave it in two parts and apply it. 77 Feet swollen & gout, spread powder of Cummin with oil on a Wort leaf, & apply to the soles of the feet: proved. 78 Gout, mix fine powder of Cummin with honey, & apply it. 79 Apostume, seeth Wormwood & Cummin in wine & apply it, or seeth Onions & Cummin in wine and apply it to the place: proved. 80 Mouth griefs, seethe powder of Cummin in wine to the one half, and drink it morn & even. 81 Paps griefs and swelling, mix honey & powder of Cummin with the juice of Onions & Smallach & crumbs of hot bread, and apply it. Pap apostumed, seeth Cummin in oil with bean meal & apply it. 82 Milt swollen, seeth a bag of Cummin in white wine, and apply it hot. 83 Stitch, drink Stitchwort, & apply Cummin sodden in thine own urine to thy back. 84 Ache of the stomach and small guts, put two. parts of Bays, & one part of Cummin to honey a little, & apply it to the stomach. 85 Swelling of the stomach & belly, seethe it in ale and drink it hot. 86 Swell of all sorts, seethe Otemeale with sweet milk, Cummin, & saffron, & apply it. 87 Ache and other griefs of the matrix, stamp Paritary with honey and Cummin and apply it. 88 Cod swollen, boil crumbs of brown bread and bean meal of each like much with new Worte, and when it is almost boiled, put thereto some Cumminseede and a dish of fresh butter, and apply it. 89 Brain to comfort and restore, steep it three days in vinegar, and dry it and chew thereof, and hold it long in thy mouth, and then swallow it down, and do so often. 90 Vomiting of cold and moist cause, make iiii. bags of a span square, quilt into every one, one ounce of Cummin, seeth them in a quart of vinegar, and bind them to the wrists and insteps warm often: and eat some grey peason sodden with Cummin, and drink some good strong drink, & at every breakfast eat one penny weight of beaten Saffron to comfort the brain and stomach, and stop vomiting, and these take away all gripings. 91 Urine stopped, heat a new brick glowing hot, sprinkle thereon good wine wherein Cummin hath been sodden, and sit over the fume of it that it may go in. 92 Hardness and griping of the body, seeth the seeds of Cummin and Fenell in salad oil, and anoint therewith. 93 Chollike passion, seeth crumbs of clean wheaten bread, and powder of Cummin with white vinegar, and apply it as hot as may be suffered. 94 Cummin may be kept five years and used in meats, and drinks, and sauces, to comfort and help digestion. 95 seeth the seeds of Cummin and Fenell, with dry Figs well bruised together in wine, and drink it against the wind and torment in the guts, and for the cough coming of cold. 96 Cheeks swollen, stamp the seeds with Figs, and seeth with wine and apply it. 97 Head cold rheum, apply powder of Cummin and Bayes warm to the head in a bag to help it without fail. 98 Bruises, melt wax with fine powder of Cummin, and apply it warm. 99 seeth it and Fenigreke in wine, to void the swelling and gripping of the guts. 100 Strangury and other passions of the bladder, seeth it in in wine and apply it to the navel. 101 seeth the seeds in water, and wash therewith to be clearer and fairer. 102 Nose bleeding, seeth the bruised seeds in vinegar, and apply to the nose warm, and to the matrix to cease the reds. 103 Cummin may be used in meats as Pepper, being sodden with Pease, it expelleth wind, phlegm, and gross humours, and taketh away the loathing of the stomach. 104 Seethe it in wine, & drink it to help the jaundice & the vertigo. 105 Cummin skattereth & breaketh all windines of the stomach, belly, guts & matrix, and is singular good against the gripings and torments of the belly, either drunk or in glisters, or laid to with Barley meal. 106 The same eaten or drunk, is good for the cough and cold, and stopping of the breast, and drunk with wine it is good for them that are hurt of any venomous beast. 107 It slaketh and dissolveth the swelling of the cod being applied. 108 Mix it with Darnell meal & the pulp of reasons, and apply it to a woman's belly to stop the inordinate course of the flowers. 109 Nose bleeding, smell to the powder with vinegar. Eyes read, apply the powder with juice of Rue with cotton. 110 Mix Cummin and Hony of each three ounces, Turpentine two ounces, and Bay salt one ounce on the fire, and apply it to any swelling that cometh of a stroke or fall. 111 Eat it after Garlic to take away the smell thereof. 112 Cummin used too much, causeth a pall colour. 113 The fume of it driveth away gnats. 114 Fry it with Barley meal and honey, of each like much, with a little sheeps suet, and apply it to the swollen cod. Ache 2. 6. 27. 56 Appetite 21. 43 Apostume 79 Backeache 45. 46 Belly-ache 10. 19 54. 70. 84. bound 92. 95. 99 105. lose 16 hard 92. 105 swollen 71. 85. 99 biles 79 Bitings venomous 106 Bladder griefs 100 Bloody flux 9 Brain to restore 89 Breasts griefs 81 apost. 81 Breast griefs 42. 72 Breath short 72. stinking 28. 32. 65. 111 Bruises 5. 55. 59 98. 110 Cardiake pass. 49 Checkeswolne 96 colic 10. 15. 61. 93 Cod swollen 26. 48. 88 107. 114 Cold 106 Conception to 'cause 58 Cough 95. 106 Dead child 73 Ears apost. 40. 51 deaf 3. 24. 34. 41. 74 Eyes ache 33. 38. 39 75 bloody 8. 33. 38. 59 67. 76. 109 Emerods' to flow 36 Face bruised 59 (see swelling, cleansing 101) see eyes, painted 1 Feet swollen 77 Flank sick 15 Flowers to stop 102. 108 Fluxes 16. 35 Gnats to void 113 Gout 2. 77. 78 Heart cardiake 49 Headache 18. 23. 28. 31. 53 60 giddy 104 megrim 18. 64. 66 rheum 97 Hickit 4 Host 42 jaundice 44. 104 Liver griefs 25 Lungs griefs 42 Matrix griefs 87. 105 Milt griefs 82 swollen 82 Mouth griefs 80 Nose bleeding 102. 109 Rheum 97 Sickness general 13 Sides griefs 14. 15. 20. 25 Skin cleansing 101 Stinging 166 Stitch 20. 61. 83 Stomach ache 10. 84 griefs 13. 22. 62 swollen 84 (see belly weak 12. 57 62. 90 Strangury 100 Swell 6. 30. 38. 39 55. 57 81. 86. 96. 110 Teeth foul 68 Vomit. 7. 16. 35. 52. 90. 105 Urine stopped 22. 91 Windiness 22. 45. 54 women's griefs 37 Worms 19 Yard rankling 11. 47. standing 50 ¶ Currant. CVrrants differ not much in virtue from frail reasons (See Seine) 2 Eat them with meat to void belching and stop the flux. To void phlegm and engender good blood, eat every morning 7. drams. Belching 2 Blood to increase Phlegm 2 Fluxes 2 ¶ Daffodil. Daffodil: swellings great in all parts, stamp the roots, and drink them with water, saffron, and sugar, and be whole. 2 Stamp the blades and seeth them in a pint of ale or wine with a spoonful of Grains bruised, and drink it before the fit to help the ague. 3 Apply the root with oil to the pain of the heart or liver. 4 It doth draw and dissolve. 5 Apostume to ripen, stamp the root with Honey and meal of Orobus, and apply it. 6 Boil two drams of the fresh root new gathered in wine or water with a little Anise or Fenell seed, and a little Ginger, and drink it to drive forth by siege tough and clammy phlegm, and to help all diseases that come thereof. 7 The root eaten or drunk, provoketh to vomit. 8 It is good for burnings. 9 The root broken with a little honey healeth cut sinews, joints that are out, and old aches of the joints being applied. 10 With vinegar and Nettleseede it taketh away the spots, and morphue of the face. 11 With Fitches it scoureth away matter from wounds. 12 With Darnel meal and Honey, it breaketh apostumes, and draweth out pricks and splents. 13 It maketh flesh to grow in wounds. 14 Breasts swollen, and all inflammations, bruise the root and apply it. Ache 9 Apostume 12. 5 Belching Breasts swollen 14 Burn 8 Cuts 9 Face deformed 10 Fever 2 Phlegm 6 Flesh to grow 13 Heart grief 3 Inflammation 14 joints out 9 Liver grief 3 Morphue 10 Pricks 12 Purgation 6 Sinews cut 9 Skin foul 10 Swell 1 Vomit to 'cause 7 Wounds 11. 13 ¶ Damsons. DAmsons are most wholesome of all Plums, which eaten before meat cool the stomach and loosen the belly, (See Plumtree.) 2 Mouth heat, seeth Damsons, Violets, and a little Sorrel in water, till the Damsons begin to break, than strain it and seeth the liquor again with a few Barberies & strain it and drink. 3 To dry them, gather them in Summer, and slice them, and lay them on a board in the Sun, and sprinkle them often with vinegar, and let them dry so, then put them in a box of wood, and sprinkle them with a little vinegar, and use to eat of them daily against the heat of the stomach. 4 Seethe the leaves or rind of the root in wine or water, and wash the mouth therewith to help the toothache, and looseness of the gums and all the mouth without pain. 5 The gum breaketh and expelleth the stone. When they be ripe, gather them & slit them, and sprinkle them often with vinegar, & dry them in the sun xv. days, then keep them in a wooden vessel one year: for so long they will last, then are they good in sharp fevers for costiveness coming of dry choler, if they be new, eat them, if they be old, boil them in water and drink it for the fever tertian, stopping of the liver, the jaundice, sharp fevers, costiveness, want of appetite, and many other griefs. 6 Set i li. in a pot in an oven with a batch of bread, than strain it, and put as much honey to it, and so make it in conserve. It is good against choler and heat of the stomach and liver and other hot griefs. 7 seeth the leaves, bark or root in water or wine, and wash the mouth therewith to fasten the teeth, and keep the mouth from all pain. (See Plum, Prune.) Belly bound 1. 5 Fevers sharp 5. 6. tertian 5. 6. Hot griefs 6 jaundice 5 Liver stopped 5. 6 Mouth griefs 2. 4 Sickness hot 5 Stomach hot 2. 3. 6 Stone 5 Teethach 4. 7. lose 4. 7. ¶ Danewort. DAnewort, or walwort. Gout pain, seeth it in wine & apply it, or stamp the leaves and roots, & strain them with wine and seeth it with May butter & anoint often. 2 Dropsy, seeth it in wine or water and drink a good draft morn and even xx. days and be whole. 3 Gout, stamp iii li. with i li. of May butter, and let it stand ix. days, then boil it half an hour and strain it and anoint. 4 Ache and bruises, stamp good store with some Balm and Smallach, and i. li. of May butter, & let it lie in balls ix. days, then stamp it again and fry it and strain it, and keep it in a vessel of earth or glass and use it. Gout cold in any place, and ache of the bones, stamp three handfuls with one handful of Horehound, & strain out the juice, and boil it with a pint of swine's grease half an hour, then strain it and use it, (see Eldrens. 5 Legs swollen, mix the juice with barley meal and vinegar & wax of each like much, and boil it, and apply it. 6 Ears worms, put in the juice. 7 Costivenesse, drink the juice with honey. 8 Danewort is good for the dropsy, tetters, and scabs, & draweth evil humours out of the body. 9 Teethach, rub them with it. 10 Bruises & swellings, seeth the roots in water and stamp them with bores grease and apply them. 11 Dropsy, stamp it and seeth it, and lie therein, and hill thee well to sweat. 12 Swell in the thighs or feet, seeth the middle rind in water & apply it hot with bores grease plasterwise. 13 Dropsy, drink the juice of the root with wine iiii. days to help it, though it have continued a year, or use the syrup of the juice of it. 14 Gout, seeth the juice with as much wine to the thickness of an ointment, or honey & anoint there with. 15 Stone, chop a bushel small, put it in a bag, seeth it in water, & bathe therein ix. days & apply the bag where the stone is. 16 Fever quotid. steep two. ounces of the whitest pith in half a pint of the best aqua vitae three days, then strain it & drink thereof, if it chafe too much, put some wine or other drink to it. 17 Head vanity, anoint the temples with the juice, salt, honey, wax, & incense boiled together. 18 Backache, seeth it to pap & stamp it, & fry it with sheep's tallow, & put wheat bran to it and apply it. 19 Cod swollen, boylerye meal with the juice, honey & vinegar till it be thick & apply it. 20 Dropsy, seeth great store in water & make a bath of it, & lie therein all night, and cover thee well with the herbs and water, & also drink the juice thereof. 21 Sleep to cause, (see in Lettuce, Eldrens, etc. 22 Teethach, rub them with the root. 23 Stomach swollen & belly bound, drink the juice with honey ix. days. 24 Dropsy, seeth it in wine or water, and drink it to have present help. 25 Cod swollen, apply the juice with bean flower, & common oil. 26 Matrix swollen, impostumed & hardness: Foment, with the decoction of the root. 27 Fever quotid. stamp the root & seeth it in ale or white wine, & drink it before the fit, & sleep not. 28 Scrofules, stamp it and apply it. 29 The leaves & new buds, have the same virtues that the leaves and crops of Eldrens have being taken after the same manner. 30 Privities swollen, seeth the leaves & apply them. 31 Take up the fume of the decoction thereof for the swelling pain of the belly & matrix being set in a close stool. 32 The juice of the fruit maketh hair black. 33 The fume of it burned, driveth away serpents & other venomous beasts. 34 seeth the leaves in wine, & apply them to the torment of the gout, or seeth the juice of the herb & root with wine and butter, and anoint therewith iiii. or v. times every day. 35 Mother windy and other griefs of it, sit in the decoction of it. 36 Apply the tender leaves to suage inflammations and burnings & biting of dogs. 37 They draw together gaping wounds that become like fistulas. 38 Gout, apply the leaves with bulls tallow, or goat's suet. 39 Both Danewort & Eldrens are very hurtful to the stomach, yet the tender leaves sodden and eaten like a salad, purge phlegm & choler. 40 The juice of the Berries stamped with fresh grease and barley meal, do cleanse rotten sores, & cooleth the burning of a gout & pain in the joints. 41 The tender crops at the spring time are used in meats to soften the belly without danger. 42 The same sodden with wine & mixed with honey & drunk, is good for the cold & dry cough & to cleanse the breast. 43 The root is more effectual than the leaves. 44 Dropsy, seeth the root in wine, & drink it morn & even: it is excellent good. 45 Squincy, gargarise with the water, or with the decoction of the leaves & some Piretrum put to it. 46 seeth or steep the leaves in water and sprinkle it about the house to kill fleas and gnats. Ache 4. 40. (see Gout.) Backache 18 Bellyache 31. bound 7. 23. 41. (see Purga.) Bitings of dogs 36 Breast griefs 42 Bruises 4. 10 Burn 36 Cod swollen 19 25 Costivenesse (see Belly.) Cough dry 42 Dogbiting 36 Dropsy 2. 8. 11. 13. 20. 24. 44. Ears worms 6 Fever quarten 16. quotid. 27 Feet swollen 12 Fistula 37 Fleas to kill 46 Gnats to kill 46 Gout 1. 3. 14. 34. 38. 50 Head griefs 17 Hair to be black 32 Inflammations 36 joints out 40 Kernels 28 Legs swollen 5. 12 Matrix griefs 26. 30. 31. 35 Privities swollen 30 Purgation 1. 6. 39 Scrofules 28 Scabs 8 Sleep to 'cause 21 Sores rotten 40 Squincy 45 Stone 15 Stomach swollen 23 Swell 5. 10. 12 Teethach 9 22 Tetters 8 Thighs swollen 12 Throat swollen 45 Venomous beasts 33 Wounds 37 ¶ Dandelion. DAndelion, is in virtue much like to Cicory, and may be always used in stead of it. 2 The juice often applied, layeth down the staring of the hair of the eybrowes, and causeth new hairs to grow. 3 Head hot griefs, temper it with rose vinegar and use it, and so doth Sowthistle and Cicory. 4 Eyes dim, put in the water of it. 5 Fever tertian, drink the juice three or four times before the fit, especially with powder of crystal and wine. 6 Seethe it well in water, and use it for the knitting of wounds and for burstings & for ruptures, etc. 7 Bitings venomous, stamp it and apply it. 8 Fever quotidian, use the roots of it. 9 Fevers, drink the water of it and of Sorrel, Sowthistle and Endive all mixed together. Bitings venomous 7 Bursten 6 Eyes dull 4 Fevers 9 quotid. 8. quarten, tertian 5. Head griefs hot 3 Hair to grow 2. standing up 2. Wounds 6 ¶ Darnell. DArnell. King's evil, seeth it in wine with the dung of an ass and Linseeds, and drink it. 2 Rheum in the head, apply a bag of Darnell & salt, and aniseeds. 3 Scrofules & wheals, seeth it with Linseed, Pigeons dung & quick brimstone in wine and apply it. 4 The meal applied with salt & Radish roots stayeth wild scurf & fretting sores. 5 The same with brimstone and vinegar applied, cureth spreading scabs and leapry, and scurf. 6 With Pigeons dung, oil, & Linseed boiled & applied, it helpeth wens & hard tumours, and draweth forth all pricks splents and thorns, and doth ripen & open impostumes & tumours. 7 Sodden with Mede or oxymel, it suageth the pain of the gout & sciatica. 8 Headache, apply it to the forehead with birds grease. 9 Put into Ale or Beer, it causeth drunkenness, and troubleth the brain. 10 Apply the meal to rotten burning and deadly sores to cure them. 11 Conception to cause, use perfumes of the same, with parched barley meal & Myrrh or Saffron. 12 The meal sodden in wine with Linseed and doves dung, dissolveth hard lumps and wens, and breaketh such places as are hard to ripen. 13 The root sodden in wine and drunk after it hath stood certain days, killeth worms. 14 The seeds ground with salt, vinegar, and quick brimstone, healeth ringwormes and tetters. Apostumes 6. 12 bile 9 12 Conception 11 Gout 7 Head rheum 2 Hardness 6. 12 Headache 8 Kings evil 1. 3 Leapry 5 Ringwormes 14 Rheum 2 Sciatica 7 Scrofules 3 Scabs 5 Scurf 4. 5 Sores 4. 10 Swell 6. 12 Wen 6. 12 Weals 3 Worms 13 ¶ Dasy. DAsy. The decoction of small Daisies with their leaves, or boiled alone in water & drunk, helpeth agues, & all inward inflammations of the liver, etc. 2 The herb in meats & pottage loosneth the belly gently. 3 Maudlinwort, or the hereby part of the wild Dasy, is good against all burning ulcers, impostumes, and inflammations of the eyes & their running being applied. 4 The same applied, keepeth wounds from inflammations and impostumation. 5 Apply it to avoid all great swellings & wenns. 6 Apply it and drink it to heal wounds. 7 Use the juice for the palsy, the gout and the sciatica. 8 Daisies read or white, single or double be all of like virtues, they are used in potions for fractures of the head and deep wounds in the breast. 9 Put the juice of the herb and root into the nose to purge the brain. 10 Use Daisies in pottage. Use the green herb with sharp things to suppling the bound belly, or the decoction thereof with fat flesh. 11 The herb healeth swellings of the throat & pain of the neck. 12 Stamp it and apply it to break and heal botches. 13 Eyes web, put in the juice. 14 Stamp the herb & the root, but do away the read spotted, and seeth them and clarify them and put thereto honey & yolks of eggs as much as the herb, and put wheat flower to it, & seeth it till it be thick, & use plasters thereof to all cuts & sores. 15 If a wounded man drink the juice, & cast it up, he shall die, if not, he shall live. 16 Wounds, drink the juice, and apply thereof with sweet milk and wheat flower. 17 Heart griefs, use it with other medicines. 18 seeth the herb with parsley roots in water, especially with Radish water, and drink thereof morn & even, to 'cause urine. 19 Bones broken, stamp Daisies, Cumfery, & Egrimony with vinegar and apply it till it be whole. 20 A handful of the less Dasy with milk, stoppeth all issues of blood inward and outward in ix. days. 21 Breaking out, stamp the leaves, and fry them with fresh butter, and strain it, and anoint therewith. 22 Hands broken out with heat and worms, and blanes, stamp wild Tansy and Dasy flowers in cold running water, and wash therewith. 23 Ribs broken, drink the juice of it and also mix thereof with sweet milk and wheat flower, and apply it. 24 Head megrem, put the juice of the herb and root into thy nose lying on thy back. 25 Breast swollen and hard, mix the juice of Daisies and morel with barley, dregss of vinegar, and a hard sodden egg, and apply it. 26 Yard sore and full of of holes, stamp good store of Daisies and apply them often. 27 piles, stamp the leaves and roots with honey, and apply it. 28 Bitings venomous, stamp the roots and apply them. 29 Bruises boil Maudlin in water and apply it. 30 straining to go to the stool, & to stop the blood of the emerods, seeth Maudlin in tart wine, & foment therewith. Ache (see Gout.) Apostume 3. 12 Belly bound 2. 10 Bitings venomous 28 Bleeding 20 Bloody flux 20 Bones broken 19 23 Botches 12. 3 Breaking out 21. 22 Breasts swollen 25. bruises 28 Cuts 14 Eyes heat 3. web 13. Emerods' 27. 29 Gout 7 Heart griefs 17 Hands scabbed 21. 22 Head broken 8. to cleanse 9 megrem 24. Heat, hot griefs 13 Inflammations 1. 3 Neck griefs 11 Palsy 7 piles 27 Ribs broken 23 Sciatica 7 Scabs 21. 22 Sores 3. 14 Swell 5 Tenasmus 29 Throat swollen 11 urine stopped 18 Wens 5 Wounds 4. 6. 8. 14. 15. 16. Yard sores 26 ¶ Dates. DAtes be hard of digestion, they stop the liver and the milt, they breed wind in the belly & head ache, & breed gross blood, especially being eaten green, but when they are through ripe, they are not so hurtful. And being well digested in a good stomach, they nourish indifferently. 2 Dry Dates do stop the belly, & stay vomiting & wambling of the stomach, especially of women with child being laid as an emplaster to the stomach or belly, & mixed with other medicines and eaten. 3 Also they restore & strengthen the feebleness of the liver & milt with convenient medicines either inwardly or outwardly. 4 The leaves and branches of the Date three do heal green wounds, & close up ulcers & cool hot inflammations. If Dates be plentifully eaten, they 'cause drunkenness. 5 Dry Dates are good to be eaten against spitting of blood, griefs of the stomach, the bloody flux, & the roughness of the throat. 6 The stones burned in an unbaked pot & quenched in wine, or the ashes burnt will serve for Spodium. 7 Dates are evil for the head, eyes, teeth, & gums. 8 But they are good in a consumption or lask, especially sodden in milk or in Muscadel. 9 The powder of the stones with Sanguis draconis in rasp wine, or read wine, is passing good in the same cases. 10 The electuary called Diaphenicon, half an ounce taken, purgeth phlegm & choler. 11 Tie one stone bored through to the necks of beasts, & they shall not be hurt with their fetters, or if they be, they shallbe cured. 12 Burn the stones & apply the powder to the ulcers & fistulas of the fundament, or upon the hole of the fundament & be whole. 13 Stone in the kidneys, make powder of Date stones & white Allom, & use it with roasted figs at night only. 14 To stop the whites, take powder of Date stones, half an ounce, Dragon's blood one dram. Mix it with read wine & take one dram of it by the break of day, & as much when thou goest to bed. 15 To cause deliverance of a dead child, drink water of Rue, with powder of two Date stones. 16 For a consumption, take Dates two. li. wash them & slice them, & seeth them in a quart of honey clarified, till they be dissolved, then put in by little & little, fine powder of long Pepper, Cloves, Mace, & Nutmeg of each half an ounce, & stir it till it wax thick, & use it first & last. If you take thereof upon a full stomach you shall not surfeit (See Almonds.) 17 Date stones taketh away the tooth ache. The powder of them drunk with wine easeth women in travail. (See Consumption restorative.) Belly lose 2. 8. 9 Bloody flux 5 Blood spitting 5 Consumption 3. 8. 9 16 Dead child 15 Deliverance 15. 17 Fundament fistula 12. sores 12. Horse griefs 11 Inflammation 4 Liver bad 3 Milt bade 3 Purgation 10 Sores 4 Stomach bad 2. 5 Stone 13 Throat rough 5 Vomiting 2 Whites 14 Woman in travel 17 Wounds 4 ¶ Deadnettle. DEadnettle (See Archangel) 2 Matrix white flux, drink three ounces of the water. Matrix fluxes 2 ¶ Dew. dew: to 'cause the hair to grow long, wash the head with the Dew in meadows all the mornings of March thrice a day. Hair to grow. 1 ¶ Daucus. DAucus: Breath straight and unsavoury, seeth it with figs and drink it. 2 The seeds are good against the hycket. 3 Dry cough, seeth the root with wine and figs, and strain it, and drink it. (See Saxifrage, Wild Carrats.) Breath ill 1 Cough dry 3 Hycket 2 ¶ Diagridium. DIagridium, six grains taken purgeth down vehemently choleric humours, and is good for the jaundice, pluxisie, frenzy, hot fevers, and all griefs coming of heat. 2 Apply it with honey and oil to dissolve all cold swellings, 3 And with vinegar to heal all spreading scabs, & hardness of the skin. 4 Head ache old, apply it with oil of Roses & vinegar, put it into the matrix, to provoke the terms, and expel the seconds & dead birth. 5 Take it with the pulp of prunes, or with conserve of roses, or with mastic, and the juice of quinces. 6 The best is shining and black. 7 There is good that is whitish, but much is sophisticated with the juice of spurge Colophony etc. 8 Cast the powder of it on a bruised mallow root, and put it into the Matrix to bring down the flowers. 9 Costivenesse, seeth a good quantity in water, and seeth therein a capon and eat it and sup the broth. 10 Hecktike, drink a little of the powder with the decoction of Lycoras. Belly bound 9 Consumption 10 Fevers hot 1 Flowers stopped 4. 8 Frenzy 1 Headache 4 Hectike 10 Hot griefs 1 jaundice 1 Pleurisy 1 Purgation 1. 5. 9 Scabs 3 Skin deformed 3 Swell 1. 2 Dill. DIll: drink the broth of the leaves and seeds when it is ripe, to breed milk, to cease gnawing and windiness, it stoppeth the belly and vomiting, provoketh urine, suageth the Hycket, it dulleth the sight, and being often drunk, it stoppeth the seed. 2 seeth it in water and sit over it for the griefs of the mother. 3 Hard bunches and knobs about the fundament, apply the ashes of the seeds plasterwise: it doth the like in all other places. 4 Green Dill, suageth ache, provoketh sleep, and ripeneth raw humours. 5 The oil is good for weariness in Winter, for it softeneth and moisteneth, it is good for phlegmatic agues, and all cold diseases and swellings. 6 The decoction thereof with sugar, is good for the Strangury, and Dissurie. 7 The decoction of the tops and crops with the seed boiled in water and drunk, causeth plenty of milk, expelleth wind, suageth gripings, stoppeth vomitings and laskes, and provoketh urine. 8 A suffumigation thereof helpeth the suffocation of the mother. 9 Chafe well the seed, and smell to it to void the Hicket. 10 Ashes of the herb do close up and heal moist sores, especially in the shares and privy parts. 11 Boil Dill in oil to resolve, digest, and suage pain, provoke lust, and ripen all raw and unripe tumours. 12 Dill often used, diminisheth the sight and the seed. 13 seeth it in oil to release shrinking and astonishing of the sinews, and many other passions. 14 Mix powder of Dill with acorn cups, and drink half an ounce with half a pint of Ale or Wine, to cure the bloody Flux. 15 Sleep to cause, anoint the head with the oil. 16 Ears pain, drop in the oil. Sleep to cause, wear a garland of green Dill to thy head. 17 seeth the herb and seed in wine, and drink it to help straightness of pissing, and to increase milk. 18 Boil a handful of Dill in Wine, and apply it to the pained Matrix. 19 seeth Dill with poppy seed, and drink it to stay vomiting, griping, and windiness. 20 Strangury, seeth Dill in wine, and drink it. 21 seeth Dill with sugar in wine and oil, and drink it to drive down the Flowers and seconds, and to help the mother, but drink but two drams at once. 22 Mix powder of the seeds with as much powder of nettle seed, and mix it with water and honey, and apply it to the piles to heal them in short time. 23 Belly ache, drink the juice or decoction thereof. 24 Pissing bed, drink the seed with water or wine. 25 Stomach cold, seeth nutmegs and maces with Dill seed and fevel seed in wine and drink it. 26 Belly grinding, drink the juice of penyroyal and plantine, boiled with powder of Dill. 27 seeth the seeds in water and dip old silk therein, and wipe the emeralds therewith, and make a suppositor of the same: it helpeth also the tenasmus. 28 Ashes of the seeds helpeth the scalding and all other griefs of the yard and privy parts. 29 A plaster of the powder with sheeps tallow, and black soap, helpeth the emeralds. 30 Loathing, seeth the leaves in water, and drink four ounces and an half, and smell to the herb and seed to avoid the hicket. Vuula fallen, burn the roots, and apply the powder. 31 Lungs griefs, drink powder of the seeds morn and even, and so it helpeth pissing in bed. 32 Lust to void, eat the seeds often. 33 Hicket, apply powder of the seeds with the juice of mints to the stomach. Ache 4. 5. 11. 1. 19 23. 26 Belly lose 1 Benumbed 13 bile 11 Bloody flux 14 Cold griefs 5 Dissurie 6 Ears pain 16 Emeralds 27. 29. 22 Fevers 5 Fundament griefs 3 Flowers stopped 21 Hardness 3 Hicket 18. 30. 33 Kernels 3 Knobs 3 Loathing 30 Lungs griefs 31 Lust to 'cause 11 to void 32 Milk to 'cause 7. 17 Mother griefs 2. 8. 10. 18. 21. 28 piles 22 Pissing bed 24. 31 Privities griefs 10 Seed to bate 1. 13 Seconds 21 Sinews griefs 13 Shrink 13 Sleep to 'cause 4. 15. 16 Sores moist 10 Stomach ache. 1. 19 23. 26 cold 25 Strangury 6. 20 Smellings 5 Tenasmus 27 Vomiting 1. 19 Urine stopped 6. 17 vulva fallen 30 Weariness 5 Windiness 1. 19 Yard griefs 28 Dittanie. DIttanie drunk with water or wine, causeth speedy deliverance, and easy, though the child be dead, or out of due course, and expelleth the seconds, pennyroyal doth the like. 2 Deliverance, and to save both the woman and the child: stamp Dittanie, veruine, and hyssop ana one handful, and strain it with ale, and drink a good draft in thy travel. 3 Goats to give milk, tie it about their bellies. 4 Phthisic, and spitting of blood, drink Dittanie often with woman's milk. 5 Deliverance, stamp Dittanie, and strain it, and drink it. 6 Pricks, stamp it and apply it. 7 Teethach, seethe it in white wine, & hold it in thy mouth. 8 Plague, poison, & venom, use the water of it. 9 Flowers stopped, seethe it with savin in wine, & drink it. 10 Pricks and thorns, stamp it with polypody, and swine's grease, & apply it. 11 Strangury, drink the juice with white wine. 12 It helpeth all venom, and poison, and driveth out pellets, and all other pricks, the place being also anointed therewith. 13 Dead child, and seconds, put in the juice and powder especially of the root. 14 Sleep to cause, mix it and doggefenel with oil of roses and anoint. 15 It is used of some in stead of pepper. 16 Sciatica, stamp the root with soft grease of a goose, or capon, and apply it. 17 Milt swollen, stamp it and apply it. 18 Sciatica, apply it with clecampana four hours, and then open the blisters. Consumption 4 Dead child 1. 13 Deliverance 1. 25 Flowers stopped 9 13 Milk to 'cause 3 milt stopped 17 Plague 8 Poison 8. 12 Phthisic 4 Pricks 6. 10. 12 Sciatica 16. 18 Seconds 1. 13 Sleep to 'cause 14 Strangury 11 Teethach 7 Venom 8. 12 Dockes. DOcks and Sorrel: the leaves of all Dockes sodden, and eaten, loosen the belly gently, and so doth the broth of them. 2 Head apostume and swellings, stamp the green leaves and a little saffron, and oil of roses, and apply it. 3 Bloody flux, or lask, seeth the seeds in water or wine, and drink it, it helpeth also the wambling pain of the stomach, and venomous bitings. 4 Eat the seeds afore hand, and no biting or stinging shall pain thee. 5 seeth the root in wine, and drink it to heal the jaundice, provoke urine and terms, and to break and expel the stone and gravel. 6 The root boiled in vinegar, or bruised raw, doth heal all skurfes, as itch, and mange, and griefs of the skin, being applied. 7 The decoction or broth of the root helpeth all mange, festering, and consuming scabs being washed therewith. 8 Teethach, seeth the roots in wine, and hold it in thy mouth, and put thereof into the ear for the pain thereof. 9 Boil the roots and apply them to hard kernels and swellings behind the ears to consume them, stamp them with vinegar, and apply them to the hardness of the milt. 10 Flowers to stop, stamp the roots and apply them to the Matrix. 11 Kings evil, or swelling in the throat, hung the root about thy neck. 12 Headache, stamp sorrel with oil of roses, and apply it. 13 Whatsoever meat is sodden with any kind of Dock, will become tender, though it be never so old. 14 Conception to cause, tie the seeds to the left arm. 15 The roots either new or dry put into wine, will turn it from white to red. 16 The great garden Dock drunk in wine, purgeth phlegm, choler and water downward. 17 Carry the feeds of sorrel gathered by a chaste boy about thee, and thou shalt have no pollution of seed neither by night nor by day. 18 Swine pocks, hung sorrel roots about thy neck, or plantine roots. 19 Drink one dram of the root of the garden Dock, or Monks rhubarb to purge withal. 20 Colic, seeth the leaves of Dockes, and mallows in water, and stamp them and apply them. 21 Milt-swollen, seeth the root in strong vinegar, and stamp it and apply it: the leaves so used, doth the like. 22 Urine stopped, stamp the roots, and seeth them with wine, and apply it above the yard. 23 Face salsflegme, mix the juice of red Dockes and wormwood with aloes, and anoint. 24 Gout, seeth the leaves of great Dock in may with wine or Ale, and drink it. 25 Scabs and Itch, boil the juice of red Dockes, with guilts grease, till the juice be consumed: then put thereto a little Turpentine, and Quicksilver mortified, and use it. 26 lepry, stamp the roots of sharp red Dockes, and round Dockes, their pith taken out, and boil them with vinegar and salt butter till the vinegar be consumed, and use it both for the Impetigo and Serpigo: or boil the juice of sharp leaved Dockes with Swine's grease, till the juice be consumed. Than strain it, and put thereto Turpentine, and quicksilver mortified, and anoint therewith the Morphew, white or black spots and lepry. 27 lepry, boil the juice of sharp Dockes, Fumiterre, and Scabious ana like much with swine's grease, till the juice be consumed, than strain it and anoint therewith morn and even. 28 Stitch, stamp red fennel, and red Dockes, and fry them with may butter, and apply it. 29 Make ointment of the roots of Celondine, and red Dockes, with wormwood, of each like much, tempered with may butter, and use it, proved. 30 Worms in the hands, Boil the juice of wormwood and red Dockes with may butter, and stir it: and when it is thick like a salve, keep it to thy use. 31 Emeralds, Roast the leaves of red Dockes, Columbine and Leeks in the embers, and stamp them, and apply them, and be whole in three days. 33 Impostume to break, stamp the roots of red Dockes with Liquorice and anniseedes of each like much, and seeth them in water till the third part be wasted: then strain it, and drink it daily. 33 Kings evil, seeth red Dock roots in white wine, and drink it daily. 34 Hands scabbed, stamp sharp leaved Dockes, and Fumiterre, of each like much, and make it an ointment with may Butter, Swine's grease, and some roche alum, and anoint therewith. 35 Itch, boil the roots of sharp leaved Dockes or Sorrel, and wash therewith. 36 jaundice, wash the roots of the reddest Dockes, and put them into a vessel of good ale, and when it is stolen, drink thereof daily. 37 Burning, anoint with the juice of Sorrel and Plantine. Flux to stop, use powder of red Dock seeds. 38 Gout, grind the over bark of red Dock roots with vinegar, and boil them to the one half, and strain it and anoint. 39 Brain to purge, put in the juice of Rue and red Dockes into thy nose. 40 Breast and breath stopped, make pannecakes with Dockes and eggs, or meat, and use them. 41 jaundice, lay the roots all night in ale, and drink thereof. 42 Apostumes to ripen, Roast the roots or leaves of Dockes, and Lilies in the embers, and apply them with Swine's grease. 43 cods swollen, stamp the roots with Swine's grease, and apply them. 44 Morphewe, anoint with the juice. 45 To know whether the Gout be hot or cold, roast the tender stalk of a red Dock in a leaf of the same Dock, and apply it to the holes eight & forty hours, and if it fall not away, it is the Gout, Festerhote. 46 Scabs, stamp red Dock roots with fresh butter, and boil them and strain it into cold water, and gather the oil and anoint therewith. Apostume to ripen 42 Belly bound 1. 16. 19 Bloody flux 3 Brain to cleanse 39 Breast griefs 40 Breath stopped 40 Burning 37 Biting venomous 34 Chaste to be 17 Colic 20 Cod swelling 43 Conception to 'cause 14 Emerods' 31 Face salsflegme 23 Flowers stopped 5 to stop 10 Gout 24. 38. 45 Gravel 5 Hands skabbed 34 worms 30 Headache 12 apostume 2 swollen 2 jaundice 36. 41 Impostume 32 Itch 25. 29. 35 Kernels 9 Kings evil 9 11. 18. 33 lask 3 Leapry 26. 27 Mange 6. 7 Milt hard 9 swollen 21 Morphew 26. 44 Purgation 16. 19 reins running 17 Scab 6. 7. 25. 29. 34. 46 Skin foul 6. 7 scurf 6. 7 Stomach pain 3 Stitch 28 Stone 5 Swelling 9 Swine pocks 18 Teethach 8 Throat swollen 11. 18 Urine stopped 5. 22 Wine to colour 15 worms 30 ¶ Dodder. DOdder, boiled in water or wine, and drunk, openeth the Liver, milt, kidneys, and bladder, and gall, and veins, and purgeth choleric humours byseege and urine. 2 It is good for old fevers, and the jaundice, especially that which groweth on hops and brambles. 3 The other sorts have the properties of the things that they grow upon. 4 seeth one handful in wine, and drink it against all obstructions: the jaundice, the dropsy, etc. 5 The distilled water is very good against the French pocks, to provoke sweat, and to withstand the Fever tertian, and expel melancholy. 6 The same used in baths is good against melancholy, the jaundice, that is old, and the ague in children: it must be taken with aniseed. 7 With wormwood it purgeth yellow choler. 8 seeth it with myrrh and oil, and use it for the ache of the back, breast and other limbs. Aches 8 Backach 8 Bladder stopped 1 Brestach 8 Choler 1. 7 Dropsy 4 Fevers 2 tertian 5 French pocks 5 jaundice 3. 6. 2 Kidneys stopped 1 Liver stopped 1 Melancholy 5. 6 Obstructions 4 Sweat to 'cause 5 Doggefenell. Doggefenell, or mathes, the juice drunk, it helpeth the canker, piles and emerods, the falling evil. 2 Sleep to avoid, smell to it. 3 Headache, and to cause sleep, anoint with oil of roses, Doggefenell, and castory. 4 Teethwormes, put in the juice of the root or herb. 5 Dooge-fenell roots expel broken bones. 6 Plague hot, drink as much powder of the root as will lie on a crown with vinegar, but in the cold plague with wine. 7 Hair to grow again, seeth radish leaves with as much Doggefenell roots well in water, and wash therewith. 8 Put powder of the roots into wounds, that being healed break forth again, by reason of a putrefied bone. 9 Fundament falling, and for the sig, drink the juice and apply the substance. 10 It is called Cotulafetida, or stinking camomile, mathes, or Dogfenel, and is good against the looseness and falling down of the matrix, being sodden in water, and the feet washed therewith. 11 And being smelled unto, it helpeth the suffocation thereof, and it hath the nature and all the virtues of Castory. 12 Drink the juice of a handful of it with a pint of Malmsey against the Ague, the plague, and to comfort nature every morning. 13 Smell to it to avoid sleep in the Lytargie. Falling evil, give him the juice to drink in the fit, to cure him presently. 14 Squincy, drink the juice. seeth it in wine, and drink it for the stopping of the liver and milt, the strangury and the flux. 15 Milt hard, use it in plasters. 16 seeth it in water and wine with barley and liquorice, and drink it to help the cold humours in the spiritual members. 17 Drink the juice thereof nine days with ale and honey to cast out an imposthume. Bones broken 5 Cold humours 16 Emerods' 1 Fevers 12 Falling evil 1. 13 Fluxes 14 Fundament fallen 9 fig 9 Headache 2 Hair fallen 7 Impost. 17 canker 1 Liver stopped 14 Matrix fallen 10. suffoc. 11 Milt hard 15. stopped 14 Piles 1 Plague 6. 12 Sleepiness 2. 13 Sores 8 Squincy 14 Strangury 14 Teethwormes 4 Throat swollen 14 Wounds 8 ¶ Dragagant. DRagagant is good for the cough, roughness of the throat, hoarseness being liked in with honey. 2 Steep a dram in wine, and drink it with some powder of a Heart's horn burnt & washed, for the pain of the kidneys and bladder. 3 It is used in colliries for the eyes. The clearest is best, it helpeth ulcers and blearedness of the eyes, ulcers of the entrailss. Drink the powder of it against the cramp, and breaking of veins inward. 4 Dissolve it in Rose water, for chaps & excoriations with some starch. 5 To make the face white, and to avoid rankness, steep it a night in Rose water, and in the morning put a little borace or camphire to it, and strike the face therewith. It tempereth the sharpness of hot medicines. 6 With Fenell water it helpeth the griefs of the reins and bladder. 7 One dram with clean honey cleanseth the lungs, cleareth the voice, and helpeth the cough. 8 Lips chapped, dissolve Penides in water with gum tragacanth, & anoint. 9 Dissolve it in Rose water, and strain it and mix therewith powder of Amidum, and anoint therewith the sores & cliffs of the mouth and lips. 10 seeth it in wine with Stecados, and drink it to warm and cleanse the breast, and stomach, & bowels, for the colic, the stopping of the milt and urine, the strangury and dissury. 11 Chaps, steep it in hot water, and anoint with the mussilage. 12 Lepry, anoint with the mussilage & honey. Back ache 2. 6 Breast griefs 7 Bladder ache 2. 6 Chafing 4 Chaps 4. 8. 9 11 colic 10 Cough 17 Cramp 3 Dissury 10 Eyes griefs 3 Face defor. 5 Galling 4 Hoarseness 7 Kidneys ache 2. 6 Lepry 12 Lips chapped 8. 9 Lungs griefs 7 Milt stopped 10 Mouth sores 9 Pissing blood 3 Purgat. 10 Skin off 4 cleansing 5 Sores 3 Spitting blood 3 Strangury 10 Throat sore 1 Ulcers 3 Vein broken 3 Voice bad 7 urine stopped 10 ¶ Dragons. DRagons stamped with oil and put into the eyes, taketh away their ache. 2 The root stamped with the root of a white Onion and honey healeth all wounds that the canker hath been risen in. 3 He that rubbeth his hands with the root in May, take adders, and they shall not venom him. 4 Eyes dull, anoint with the juice. 5 Lust to avoid, drink the juice with wine. 6 Biting of a Dog or Adder, drink Dragons, Rue and Betony. 7 colic, seeth it in wine or water, and drink it. 8 Mouth griefs, apply the juice. 9 Drink the juice against all venomous bitings, poison and venom. 10 The seed drunk, helpeth the sight. 11 Dragons bound to the privity of a woman in labour, causeth present deliverance, but take it away speedily jest the matrix follow. 12 The root boiled or roasted, and mixed with honey, and licked, is good for the straightness of breath, dangerous coughs, and catharres, convulsions, and cramps, they consume gross and tough humours, and scour and cleanse the inner parts: they have like power, being sodden three or four times, till they have lost their sharpness, and then eaten in meat. 13 The same dried and mixed with honey, scoureth malignant and fretting sores that are hard to cure, especially mixed with the root of Briony: and it taketh away all white spots and scurf being rubbed therewith. 14 The juice of the root putteth away all webs and spots of the eyes, and is good in eye medicines. 15 The same dropped into the ears with oil, taketh away their pain. 16 The fruit cureth malignant ulcers, and the polip in the nose, kankers, & malignant ulcers that consume. 17 The fresh leaves heal green wounds. 18 The leaves laid among cheese, keepeth it from perishing or rotting. 19 Some hold that he that carrieth the leaves or roots about him, cannot be hurt of vipers & serpents. 20 New cheese wrapped in the dry leaves, will not mould nor putrify. 21 With the roots & leaves are made oils, ointments and plasters excellent good to heal ulcers, biles, fistulas, pocks, kankers, fretting and consuming sores, and all such like. 22 The leaves with honey take away the spots of the face. 23 The leaves applied to venomous bitings, draweth out the poison, and healeth the wound. 24 The root purgeth all the inner parts. 25 The water drunk with Venice treacle or mithridate, is good against the pestilence. 26 The savour of the herb is hurtful to women newly conceived. 27 The wine wherein it is sodden, healeth kibed heels. 28 The herb bruised with Planten, healeth a new wound. 29 Apply the juice with lint to the nolimetangere in the nose. 30 canker in the body, drink nine penny weight of powder of the root with white wine three mornings warm. 31 Nose stink, put in the juice. 32 Ears ache, put in the seed with oil. 33 Head purging, put in the juice with wool into the nostrils. 34 Stinging, drink it, and apply it. Adder 3. 6 Biles 21 Bitings venom. 6. 9 19 23. 34 Breath strait 12 Cheese to keep 18. 20 colic 7 Cough 12 Catharr. 12 Cramp 12 Dog biting 6 Deliverance 11 Ears pain 15. 32 Eyes ache 1. dull 4. 10. 14 Face spots 22 Fistula 21 Head purge 33 canker 2. 16. 21. 30 Kibes 27 Lust to voided 5 Mouth griefs 8 Nose nolimet. 29 polip 16 stink 31 Plague 25 Poison 9 19 Purgat. 12. 21 Pocks 24 Rheum 12 Skin defor. 13. 22 scurf 13 Sores 13. 15. 21 Stinging 34 Venom 39 19 Ulcers 15. 21 Wounds 2. 17. 23. 28 ¶ Duck's meat. Dvcks' meat or water lentils: drink the distilled water two or three times a day, against all inflammations and heats, especially of the plague. 2 The same applied to the region of the liver, helpeth the inflammation thereof, and the inflammations & swellings of the cod, impostumes and gatherings of humours that run from place to place, to the wild fire and great burnings, to the gouty members both alone and also mixed with meal of parched barley, or wheat flower. 3 It glueth or maketh fast the bowels of young children, and the falling of the fundament. 4 Yard and cod swollen, apply the juice. Apostumes 2 Cod swollen 2. 3 Bursten 3 Gout 2 Fundament fallen 3 Hot griefs 2 Inflammat. 1. 2 Liver hot 2 Plague 1 Swell 2 Wild fire 2 Yard swollen 4 ¶ Dwarf gentian or Soap wort gentian. DWarf gentian or Soap wort gentian: the decoction of the leaves or root drunk, cleanseth the breast, and is good for the falling sickness, and all poison, venom, and corrupt air: and so is the powder of it. 2 seeth it in wine, and wash wounds, and corrupt ulcers therewith, or straw on the powder to heal them speedily. 3 Chop it small, and give it to swine and other cattle to eat against the murrain and other like diseases, and in a contagious time. 4 Apply it to the belly, to kill worms. 5 It may be used for the great gentian. (See Gentian.) Breast cleansing 1 Falling evil 1 Poison 1 Swine sick 3 Venom 1 Ulcers 2 Worms 4 Wounds 2 ¶ Earthnut. EArthnut: the upper part draweth up by vomit choler and phlegm, and the neither part purgeth downward: the whole purgeth both ways. Purgation 1 Vomit 1 ¶ Earthbinde. EArthbinde: Headache of rheum, put in the juice of white Earthbinde into the nose. Headache 1 Rheum 1 ¶ Eyebright. EYebright: distil the leaves, stalks, and flowers, and drop the water into the eyes, to clear them, and avoid all their pain, and drink three ounces an hour before night, and wash the eyes therewith to preserve the sight. 2 Eat powder thereof daily with a rear egg or potcht egg to restore the sight. 3 Or drink half a dram of the powder forty mornings to restore the sight with the water of the same herb. 4 To break the pearl or web, mix the juice with guilts grease and goose grease, of each like much, boil them well together, and keep thereof in a close vessel, and put thereof into the eye when thou goest to bed. 5 Eyes sore, fry it with fresh goose grease, & anoint therewith. 6 Eyes dim, put in the seeds of Eyebright to clear them. 7 Eyes dull, seeth it well in water, and drop thereof into the eye. 8 Web, stamp good store of it with grease of a boar, capon, or goose, and boil them together, and when it is cold, put it in boxes, and put a little of it now and then into the eyes, or fry it with grease of a goose or heron, and anoint the eyes. 9 Eyes dull, drop in the juice with wine, to make them clear. 10 Mix three parts of the powder with a fourth part of Maces, and take every morning a spoonful by itself, or with sugar or wine, to clear the sight and memory. Eat powder of Eyebright with a rear potched egg certain days together, to restore decayed sight: or drink half a dram of the powder with the water thereof forty nights together to the same effect. Eyes ache 1 Dull 1. 2. 3. 6. 7. 9 10 Memory 10 Pearl 4 Sore 5 Web 4. 8 ¶ agrimony. TO strengthen and cleanse the liver, drink the decoction of it at morn and even. 2 Bitings venomous, seeth it in wine, and drink it. 3 Pissing blood, seeth it in water, and drink it. 4 Bloody flux, and laskes, drink the feeds in wine. 5 Old wounds, stamp the leaves with swine's grease, and apply it to warm. 6 Drink an eggshell full of the juice to cast up all poison, and to heal all venomous bitings. 7 Stamp the herbs and roots of Betony, Egrimony, and Mugwoort, with old grease and vinegar, and apply it three or four times to avoid the pain of the back. 8 Use agrimony to all hollow wounds and ulcers. 9 Drink it or the powder of it to heal the fistula in the eyes, and all other places. 10 Apply it with vinegar to warts, to take them clean away. 11 seeth it in red wine, to cleanse all wounds being washed therewith. 12 Stamp the leaves, and apply them to sores that be evil healed, or joined, to open them again. 13 seeth it with Alum, and wash therewith the rankled and swollen yard and cods warm. 14 seeth it with wine, and drink it against the obstruction and stopping of the liver, and the colic. 15 The distilled water helpeth the cough, and the jaundice, and killeth worms. 16 The leaves stamped with swine's grease, healeth cuts, ulcers and wounds. 17 The herb either green or dry, sodden with Wheat bran in old dead wine, and applied to the joints that be lose, doth much help them: and so it doth being sodden with Butter, Vinegar, and Wheat bran. 18 The syrup is good to open the liver. 19 agrimony comforteth the liver, stomach, and bowels, and is good against the ache of them, the griefs of the milt, and for long fevers. 20 And drunk with wine, it is good against the evil habit, and the dropsy, and the ulcers of the entrailss or bowels. 21 Pluck it up with the root thereof, and stamp it, and bind it to thy heel, to 'cause speedy deliverance of a dead child, but take it away speedily, lest that the matrix follow. 22 For the fistula, hung it about thy neck, and also put it in. 23 Gums griefs, apply the juice of agrimony. 24 Knees ache, or gout, seeth it in water, to the third part, and drink a cup full thereof fasting, and apply the herb warm. 25 Boil agrimony with honey, and apply it to the head ach, and megrem. 26 Apply agrimony to a broken head, to draw out the bones, and heal it speedily. 27 Put the juice of it into a Kanker that is old, with a pipe of brass, and bind a plaster thereof about it, to heal it. 28 Warts, stamp agrimony and apply it. 29 Pissing bed in youth, drink two drams of agrimony in wine or broth. 30 Fistula in the head, dry the root in the smoke, and hung it about thy neck. 31 Nose bleeding, hold it and the root of it in thine hand. 32 Nails falling off, and aching, and to make them grow, apply the powder. 33 Milt pain, eat agrimony often. 34 Back ache general, stamp the roots of it and Mugwoort with Swine's grease and Vinegar, and apply it to thy back. 35 For a woman that can not hold her urine, Stamp it with Salt, and seeth it in old wine, and drink it when it is sodden to the third part. 36 Bitings venomous, drink two drams of the powder, with two measures of Wine called ciats, to cast out the venom. 37 squinsy, seeth agrimony in Wine, and apply it. 38 Back ache, (See Betonie.) 39 Apostume general, seeth it with Houseleek and Fiveleafe in Red Wine, and apply it. 40 Mad dogs biting, wash the wound with the blood of the same dog, and apply the juice of Planten and agrimony with new Honey, and the Whites of Eggs. 41 Warts, stamp agrimony with salt, vinegar, and brimstone, and apply it. 42 Backache, stamp agrimony, Mouse-eare, and Smalach, and their roots with bores grease and vinegar, and apply it: or stamp agrimony and Lovage of each like much with barrows grease and read vinegar, and fry them well together, and apply it. 43 Drink agrimony with wine, to help all venomous bitings and carbuncles, or drink an eggshell full of the juice to expel it upward easily, and all other poison. 44 agrimony is a special good thing against hollow wounds and ulcers, and fistulas, the powder thereof being put into them. 45 Glandules, scrofules, and kernels, drink the juice with whey nine days in the wane of the Moon. 46 Belly ache, eat agrimony, or drink the powder of it with water. 47 Stamp it with vinegar to help the wounds made with iron. 48 Use it in meats to help the ache of the milt. 49 Liver stopped coming of phlegm, seeth the powder of agrimony in white wine, and drink it. 50 Eyes hurt or blasted, apply the juice of agrimony with the white of an egg. 51 Pricks, stamp agrimony, and apply it. 52 Biles to avoid, stamp Planten and agrimony with goose grease, and anoint therewith. 53 Bones broken, stamp Daisies, agrimony, and Comfery with vinegar, and apply it till it be whole. 54 Back ache, stamp the leaves & roots of agrimony and Mugwoort with old grease and oil Olive, and apply it in a bag. 55 Bottes in horses, let him eat agrimony early in the morning five or six mornings together, and let him eat nothing else until it be noon. 56 Yard or cods swollen, seeth agrimony or the water thereof, till it almost boil, with a quantity of Alum, and bathe it therewith with a linned cloth, well and warm, and apply thereof with a cloth wetten therein. 57 Itch, seeth it with Sage in rain water, and wash therewith. 58 Leg sores, apply the juice with linen clotheses. (See Comferey.) 59 Yard canker, stamp it with Houndstong, and Pimpernell, and the pap of sodden Linseed, and apply it. 60 Headache, seeth it in water, and drink it at even hot, and at morn cold. 61 Phthisic, and spitting of blood, drink the juice with wine, and Honey, and Fenell roots nine days. 62 For all griefs of the stomach, Stamp it with Mouseare, and barrows grease, and vinegar, and fry them together and apply it to the back as hot as may be suffered. 63 Sores to heal, stamp it well with May butter, and make it into balls, and lay them to mould well, then seeth them well and strain it, and anoint therewith. 64 Hair to grow, stamp it with Goat's milk, and anoint therewith. 65 Eyes dull, use the water with twice so much water of white honey suckles or Claver. Drink it with vinegar fasting daily in the plague time, both to help the disease, and to prevent it. Apostume general 39 Back ache 7. 34. 42. 54 Belly ache 46 Biles 52 Bitings venomous 2. 6. 36. 43. Bloody flux 4 Blood spitting 61 Bones broken 53 Bots in horses 55 Carbuncles 43 Colic 14 Cod swollen 13. 56 Cough 15 Cuts 16 Deliverance of a child to 'cause 21. Dropsy 20 Eyes blasted 50 Eyes fistula 22 Gums griefs 23 Headache 25. 60 Head broken 26 Head fistula 30 Hair to grow 64 jaundice 15 joints to strengthen 17 Itch 87 canker 27 Kernels 45 Knees ache 24 Leg sores 58 Liver stopped 14. 18. 49 Liver to strengthen 1. 19 Mad dogs biting 40 Megrem 25 milt griefs 19 33. 48 Nails aching 32 Nose bleeding 31 Pissing bed 29 Pissing blood 3 Poison 6. 43 Pricks 51 Phthisic 61 Sores old 63 Sores to open 12 squinsy 37 Stomach griefs 19 62 Ulcers 44 Urine to stop 35 Warts 10. 28. 41 Worms to kill 15 Wounds to cleanse 11 Wounds old 5. 8. 16. 47. Yard canker 59 ¶ Elaterium. ELaterium. The juice of wild Cucumbers dried: take x. grains to purge phlegm, choler, and waterish humours, and to help the dropsy and shortness of breath. 2. Delay it with sweet milk and power it into the nose to take away the ill colour of the eyes after the jaundice, and to suage headache and purge the brain. 3 Put it into the matrix with honeyed wine to expel the terms and dead child. 4 Apply it with oil or honey, or the gall of an ox or bull to heal the squincy & swelling in the throat. 5 The juice of the bark and root doth purge as aforesaid. 6 The root soaked in vinegar and made soft & applied, helpeth ache and swelling of the gout, and sodden in vinegar, it suageth the toothache. 7 With parched barley meal, it dissolveth cold tumours. 8 With Turpentine, it doth open and break impostumes. 9 The powder of it with honey cleanseth & voideth foul scurf, spreading tetters, maundge, pushes, weals, read spots, & all other blemishes of the skin in any place. 10 Drop the juice of the leaves into the ears to void their pain. 11 Elaterium must be taken with Mede or sweet milk, a little salt & aniseeds, or with Gum, Dragagant, salt, and aniseeds, from vi. grains to xii. one good grain is enough for a child. 12 To purge the belly, put twice so much salt to it & as much stibium as will colour it, and give a pill as much as a pease, and after drink one ounce and v. drams of worm water. 13 But to provoke vomit, take the water that Elaterium is steeped in, and dip a feather therein, and put it to the root of the tongue, but if the receiver be hard to vomit, dissolve it with oil or ointment of the Flower deluce, and forbidden them to sleep: if he cannot cease vomiting, or purging, give him wine and oil, or cold water, or barley meal vinegar and water, Apples, etc. (See Cucumbers.) Ache 6 Apostume 8 Dead child 3 Ears ache 10 Flowers stopped 3 Gouts 6 Headaches ● jaundice 2 Maundge ● Purgation 15. 11. 12 pushes 9 Scabs 9 Skin deformed 9 Squincy 4. 6. 7 Swell 4. 6. 7 Tetter 9 Throat swollen 4 Vomit to cause 13 ¶ Elecampana. ELecampana is good for all griefs of the breast, lungs and heart. 2 Breast & lungs griefs, boil it & lycoras in powder ana like much, with good store of honey, & put one ounce of ginger to it after it is sodden thick & use it. 3 Scabs general, seeth it tender, & put thereto sheep's tallow, & tie them in a cloth & anoint therewith by the fire. 4 Ears worms, put in the juice of Elecampana, Rue & Wormwood. 5 Cough dry, use powder of Elecampana & Comfery with honey. 6 Scabs general, slice the root and seeth it to pap & stamp it, & strain it with swine's grease, and put thereto some mortified quick silver & anoint. 7 Itch, seeth it in running water, & wash therewith thrice. 8 Scabs, seeth the root to pap, & mix it with oil olive & anoint. 9 Mother suffoc. seeth powder of Elecamp. & pepper with wine or ale & drink it: proved. 10 Frenzy with pain of the stone, seeth the leaves in wine and apply them. 11 Pricks, stamp the root with reed roots hedgehogs grease, & honey and apply it. 12 Elecampana fasteneth lose teeth, provoketh urine, causeth deliverance of a dead child, & is good for the cough. 13 Hoarcenes, eat powder of Elecamp. & Comfery with honey fasting. 14 Face falseflegme, seeth iiii. ounces of Elecamp, in white wine, & stamp it & strain it, & put thereto powder of Sulphur half an ounce, of Mercury an ounce, & mix them with as much swine's grease & stir it well, & keep it in bores, being first boiled & cooled and use it. 15 Scabs & pilling of the skin & nails, seeth the root in water to pap, & grinned it with oil or grease, and anoint & be whole. 16 Canker, to destroy it, anoint with the juice of Elecamp. & Radish with wheat flower, and the white of an egg. 17 Dropsy, drink Elecamp. with wine iiii. days to drive it downwards. 18 Belly & guts fretting, seeth the roots of it & Burrs in wine & drink it morn and even. 19 Conserve of Elecamp. is made with the pap of the root, & two. or three times so much sugar, it comforteth the stomach & nourishing members, it looseth tough phlegm, marvelously, and consumeth it by siege. 20 Fistula to heal, stamp the root of Elecampana and Lignum vitae, and seeth them in white wine and use it with a syringe. 21 Itch, put powder of Elecampana, brimstone, and bay ●alt ana like much into a bag, and dip it in falls oil; and rub any itch therewith warm, or do the like with Elecamp. bay salt & oil of Iris, which also helpeth the cold cramp. 22 Chincough, seeth the root with as much Ginger in water to the one half, and take the pap thereof with a third part of honey boiled & scummed and make it an electuary and use it v. or vi. days morn and even, a good quantity at once. 23 Stomach to cleanse, seeth Elecampana and Radish ana half an handful in a quart of water, & a pint of honey, & a farthing worth of bruised Liquorice, & drink thereof first & last. 24 Child bursten, distil the root in a limbeek, & drink three ounces of the water. 25 Bruises within the flesh, apply the leaves & roots. 26 Loins pain, drink two drams of the root in wine. 27 Ruptures in the body, distill the root from july to September, the leaves in the end of May, and drink an eggshell full of the water morn and even. 28 Dead child to expel, drink two. or three ounces of the water of the root. 29 Coughs cold, make an electuary of the powder or pap and Liquorice & use it. 30 Scab and itch, stamp the root with swine's grease and anoint. 31 Blood to stop, stamp the leaves and apply them. 32 Fluxes to stop, stamp it with as much of the kernels of nuts, & seeth them into an electuary and use it. 33 Fistula to heal, stamp the leaves with salt & apply them. 34 Use Elecampana to comfort the heart-root, & spiritual members, & for the sinews to cleanse them, the breast & lungs, & for all evil humours in the stomach, stopping of the liver & milt, & for all cold griefs and windines. 35 Bursten, use the juice of Rue & Elecampa. 36 Coughs & stopping of the breast, mix powder of Elecampana & Liquorice with twice so much sugar and use it. 37 Consumption, boil powder of Elecampana and Tormentil with honey and use it. 38 Health to preserve, eat it in pottage one or twice a week. 39 The decoction thereof drunk, provoketh urine & terms, & is good for inward burstings & drawing together of any part. 40 The root taken with honey in an electuary, cleanseth the breast, voideth tough phlegm, & is good for the cough & shortness of breath. 41 Bitings and stingings venomous, drink the powder of it. 42 The confects of it are good for the stomach & to help digestion. 43 Sciatica, boil the leaves in wine & apply them. 44 It is good against poison & comforteth the heart. 45 The wine thereof doth cleanse the lungs & breast. 46 The powder with honey easily to spit & break wind. 47 seeth it with Rue and use it against the windy colic & ruptures that come of the wind. 48 Use it in baths to wash & cleanse the body from filth, itch, and scabs, and to keep the body warm, and to make them read that were pale. 49 Teeth lose, chew the root. 50 The oil thereof helpeth the torments, wind of the guts, & is good for the sinews. 51 Spitting blood, drink the root. 52 The powder of the root mixed with sugar and honey, is a blessed medicine against shortness of breath, sighing, and coughing, it cleanseth the breast, and healeth the impostumes of the lungs, matrix and other parts, or entrails. 53 Bitings venomous, and inflammations, and swellings of the secrets both of men and women, stamp the green leaves and apply them. The roots, and all other roots must be gotten at the fall of the leaf. Ache 26 Backache 18. 50. 26 Bellyache 18. 50 Bitings venomous 41. 53 Bleeding 31 Breast griefs 1. 2. 34. 36. 40. 45. 52. Breath short 52 Bruised 25 Bursten 24. 27. 35. 39 47 Colic 47. 50 Cod swollen 53 Chincough 22 Cough 12. 29. 36. 40. dry 5 Consumption 37 Colour bad 48 Digestion 42 Dead child 12. 28 Dropsy 17 Ears worms 4 Face salsflegme 14 Fistula 20. 33 Phlegm 19 Frenzy 8 Flowers stopped 39 Fluxes 32 Heart griefs 1. 34. 44 Health to keep 38 Hoarseness 13 Impostume 52 Itch 7. 21. 30. 48 canker 16 Liver stopped 34 Lungs griefs 1. 2. 34. 45. 52 Milt stopped 34 Mother griefs 52. suffoca. 9 Poison 44 Pricks 11 Privities griefs 53 Purgation 19 23. 34 Sciatica 43 Sinews grief 34. 50 Sighing 52 Scabs 3. 6. 8. 15. 30. 48. Skin pilling 14 Spitting blood 51 Stomach bad 19 23. 42 Stone 10 Swell 53 Teeth lose 12. 49 Urine stopped 12. 39 Windiness 34. 46. 47 ¶ Eldren, or Bourtree. Choler or phlegm to purge, boil the leaves and tender crops of common Eldrens in some broth or pottage and eat thereof. The green middle Bark of the branches, doth not much vary from the leaves & crops, but that it is stronger in operation, purging with pain and violence. 2 The seed especially, the little flat seeds dried one dram drunk at morn with wine, are good for the dropsy, and are good for them that are fat & would be leaner being used a certain space. 3 Swell and hot tumors, stamp the green leaves & apply them. 4 Gout pains, stamp the green leaves & apply them with dears suet or bulls tallow. 5 Sleep to cause, warm the leaves between two tiles, and bind them to the nape of the neck. 6 Drop in the juice into the ears to kill the worms therein, and to cleanse out the matter and filth. 7 Dropsy, seeth the roots and drink the broth at morn, noon, & even to cure it perfectly. 8 Headache, heat the leaves between two tiles and apply it. 9 To preserve life long, gather the flowers on Midsummer day, and drink a spoonful thereof with a draft of Borage water morn and even xxx. days. 10 Burn or scaldings, boil the inner rind with sheeps tallow, and sheeps dung and anoint therewith, and it shall not be seen. 11 The leaves sodden in Wine and taken before meat, helpeth the dropsy, and is good against venomous bitings. 12 The same sodden in water and the vapour thereof taken up into the matrixe, doth soften, open, and amend the hurts that are commonly about it, and so doth the fruit being drunk in wine. 13 The same laid to, maketh hair to be black. 14 The tender and fresh leaves applied with barley meal, suage inflammations, and are good for burnings and bite of dogs. 15 The same doth glue together all hollow and gaping sores like fistulas. 16 The powder of the leaves and tender crops gathered at the spring of the year and taken with Pease broth, doth soften the belly. 17 And so doth a lotion of the sodden Berries. 18 The water is good to wash the head or any other place, against such griefs as come with the heat of the sun, and so doth the muhrooms or jews ear, being steeped in water of Eldrens flowers or of Roses. 19 The leaves or water applied, help the bitings of serpents and vipers, and healeth up running sores or fistulas. 20 Ears running, put in the juice of Eldrens and of Violets. 21 Nose bleeding (see Bursa pastoris.) 22 Swelling in the throat, apply the green Bark with salt. 23 Milt stopped, seeth the root in white wine to the third part and drink it. 24 Liver and milt stopped, seeth the leaves with Smallach and drink the broth. 25 Emerods', stamp the leaves and apply them. 26 Knees swollen, seeth the leaves in water and bathe therewith. 27 Knees ache great, and legs likewise, stamp the leaves with Fiveleafe, and pennyroyal with barrows grease and apply them. 28 Feet swollen, bathe them in the decoction thereof or of the leaves. 29 Burning or scalding, take the inner Bark, a quarter of a pound of sheep's suet, and sheep's tretles ana half a pound, fry them and strain it and use it. 30 Leapry of phlegm, seeth the leaves in strong wine and bath therewith. 31 Morphue, drink three spoonfuls of the water fasting, and walk till you sweated, & steep ix. Oak apples slised in a pint of white vinegar three days and wash therewith. 32 Burning and scalding, boil the inner Bark of Eldrens with new grease, put thereto Mastic, Frankincense and wax, and boil again until it be melted, and anoint often therewith. 33 Dropsy, use syrup made of the tendrils of Danewort and Eldrens, or seeth half a pound of the inner Bark next the wood in a pottle of the clarified juice of water Cresses till the third part be wasted, then put thereto a quart of good Hidromell, and one pound of honey, and seeth them together, & clarify them, & put it into a clean vessel when it is cold, and stop it close: it is the best medicine that may be had. Use the middle Bark of Eldrens to cure the dropsy, but if it have continued a year it is hardly curable. Or use the seeds of Eldrens or wine of the decoction of Eldrens roots, or of Isop & Eldrens. 34 Eyes dull, drink the roots of Eldrens, and make lee of the ashes of them, & wash the head therewith for the swimming thereof, and of the eyes. 35 Feet swollen apply the middle Bark of Eldrens with bores grease bring first boiled in water. 36 Gout, stamp the Bark of the roots with white wine, and apply it. 37 Voice to be clear, seeth Eldrens flowers and drink the broth. Make powder of the Berries dried in the Sun where no rain cometh, and drink the same with good Wine to clear the voice. (See Throat in Colewort.) 38 Vomit to cause, take two drams of the green Bark of roots of Eldrens. 39 To cause sweat, lay some of the leaves and flowers under the neither sheet. 40 Fever quotidian, take powder of the inner bark of Eldrens roots, with an eggshell full of aqua vitae three mornings fasting to purge the phlegm whereof the Fever cometh: or seeth the said Bark in a quart of Ale or Beer one handful, and drink it. 41 Belly bound, dry the flowers two or three days in the sun, keep them in a bladder, and when need is dry them as Saffron, and take thereof with Ale or pottage to have three or four stools by and by. 42 Reins imposthume, wash old guilts grease twice or thrice in water, and stamp it with green Bark of Eldrens and walwort, and anoint the reins therewith, and apply a plaster of wheat flower and butter. 43 Belly bound, mix powder of a millstone with the juice of the middle Bark of the Eldrens, and apply it to thy stomach to cause vomit, and to thy navel to purge downwards. 44 Itch, boil the middle Bark with oil Olive, and keep it, and when need is put thereto powder of Mastic and Oliban and use it. 45 Sleep to cause, mix the juice of lettuce and Eldrens with oil of Violets, set them in a pot into a vessel of seething water till it be thick, and anoint thy forehead and temples therewith. 46 Apostume to draw outwards, stamp the leaves of Eldrens and briars, with white Mustard seed, and apply it. 47 Legs swollen of travel, or humours with heat, wash them with the decoction of the leaves or Bark of Eldrens and salt. 48 Bloody flux, lay Eldrens flowers three hours in vinegar, then stamp them and strain them, and drink it with wine or Ale. To keep them all the year, steep them seven hours in vinegar, then dry them in the sun, and when need is, make powder thereof, and drink it with read wine or vinegar. 49 Burn and scaldings, stamp Smallach and the green Bark of Eldrens ana like much, and fry them with the dung and suet of sheep, and strain it and anoint therewith till it be whole: proved. 50 Teethach, stamp the middle Bark with salt and pepper ana like much, and apply it. 51 colic and Iliacke, apply powder of a millstone with the middle bark of Eldern. 52 Colic and stone, drink powder of the flowers with water of Woodramsons' morn and even. 53 Dropsy, scrape the root clean, and slice it and steep it in white wine, and drink the wine. A good ointment: Receive Eldern berries, one gallon, black soap one pound, set them in the ground three weeks in an earthen pot, then melt it and strain it: if you will make it hard, put thereto tallow and pitch and use it. 54 Stone, drink water distilled of the berries. 55 Ears imposthume and deafness, put in the juice of the buds, leaves, bark, or young branches blood warm: proved. 56 Legs swollen, dropsy, gout, ache, and fevers: Stamp the leaves of Eldrens and Bloodworte with Bay salt and Roch-alome, and fry them with Boar's grease, and apply it plaster wise. 57 seeth the green leaves in water to pap, and lay them on a piece of read cloth, and anoint the Emerods' with oil Olive, and then apply it as hot as may be suffered, and as it cooleth, apply new and do so all night, if need be to cure it in one night. 58 Flies to avoid, seeth the leaves with Lavender-cotton and Cummin in water, and sprinkle the house or chamber therewith. 59 The juice of Eldern sprinkled, killeth Fleaes. 60 For the windy dropsy, mix two ounces of water of the root of Danewoorte with four ounces of Eldern, and drink it thirty mornings together early in the morning. 61 Dropsy and oppilation of the liver, distil the flowers in Balneo Mariae, and drink three ounces morning and evening. 62 Bruise, stamp the leaves with the white of an Egg, and apply it. 63 Tootheache, stamp the leaves of it, or the young shoots and tops thereof with nine leaves of Sage, and fifteen corns of Pepper and apply it between the cheek and the teeth that do ache. (See Alehoofe.) 64 Ears deaf, put in the clear juice. 65 Warts to avoid, put three drops of the blood of a Wart into an Eldrens leaf, and bury it in the earth, and the Warts will vanish away: or put three small stones into a leaf and lay it in the way, and he that taketh it up shall have the Warts. 66 Colic, drink the green bark with stolen Ale. 67 Gout, anoint it often with the juice of the berries when they are ripe. 68 Swelling, bruise the leaves with ground mustard, and apply it. 69 Warts, wash them with the juice of the berries when the berries be black, and do so every night, and so bind them to in the nights. Ache 56 Apostume 49 Belly bound 41. 43 Belly hard 16. 17 Birings venom. 11. 19 Blooddy-fluxe 48 Bruise 62 Burn 10. 14. 29. 32. 49 Choler to purge 1 Colic 51. 52. 56 Deafness 55. 64 Dropsy 2. 7. 11. 33. 53. 56 60. 61 Ears impost. 55 Ears running 20 Ears worms 6 Eeyes dull 34 Emerods' 25. 57 Feet swollen 28. 35 Fever general 56 Fever quotidian 40 Fistulae 19 Fleas to kill 59 Phlegm to purge 1 Flies to avoid 58 Gout 4. 36. 56. 67 Headache 8. 18 Hair to be black 13 Iliacke 51 Inflammations 14 Itch 44 Knees ache 27 Knees swollen 26 Lean to be 2 Leapry 30 Legs swollen 47. 56 Life to preserve 9 Liver stopped 24 Matrix griefs 12 Milt stopped 23. 24 Morphue 31 Nose bleeding 22 Reins impost. 42 Scaldings 14. 29. 32. 49 Sleep to 'cause 5. 45 Sores hollow 15. 19 Stone 52. 54 Sweat to 'cause 39 Swell 3. 68 Teethache 50. 63 Throat swollen 22 Voice to be clear 37 Vomit to 'cause 38 Warts 65. 69 ¶ Ellebore white. ELlebore white, the root causeth to vomit up mightily all superfluous, slimy, venomous, and noughty humours, and is good against the falling sickness, frenzy, old pain of the head, madness, sadness, the gout, the sciatica, all sorts of dropsies, poison, and all cold diseases that be hard to cure, and such as will not yield to any medicine. 2 The root with oil or ointments, is good against all roughness of the skin, wild scurf, knobs, foul spots and leapry. 3 The same cut in slices and put into fistulas, taketh away their hardness. 4 The powder causeth sneezing, and purgeth the brain. 5 The same put in as a pessary, draweth down the terms or dead birth. 6 The same boiled in vinegar and holden in the mouth, suageth toothache. 7 And put into dry medicines, it doth clear and sharpen the sight. 8 The root punned with meal & honey, killeth mice & rats, and such like, and driveth them away: and likewise wasps & flies, if it be boiled in milk and they eat thereof, for than they swell and break. It is not good to be given unprepared, nor to young, old, or sick folk: they that be weak, that spit blood, or be grieved in their stomach, nor to women with child, nor in winter, but in summer only, and before supper. 9 Put it into the greater end of a radish root one night, then press it hard out, and take one dram of it in milk or frumenty to help the falling sickness, vertigo, melancholy, madness, white leapry, winds in the guts, dropsy, tympany, gouts, quartens, cough, and many such like griefs. 10 It is given fasting by itself, or with sesame seeds, or with broth, or with sodden barley, or with meed, or with pottage, or with a lentil broth, or any such like supping. 11 Some give it with a great deal of broth or supping. 12 Some give a little meat immediately before it, especially to them that are weak, & so it may be taken without jeopardy. 13 Vomit to cause, put a suppositor of it into the fundament. 14 Steep the root 24. hours in wine, or oxymel, and dry it, and drink half a dram of the powder of it with wine to help madness, melancholy, & such griefs as be written of in black Ellebore. 15 But to take it without danger, steep it two. days in wine, or seethe it in the broth of flesh, and take a fiat thereof to purge both upward & downward. 16 Put it into the nose with Margerom to cleanse the brain and head. 17 The root sodden with lee, or mixed with any ointment killeth louse and nits, and taketh away the scurf of the head. 18 The black wild Ellebore doth the like things & effects. 19 Ellebor white, healeth the scab & morphue, & tetters, purgeth choler & phlegm, and being applied, it cureth the Emerods. 20 The powder put into grewel, killeth worms. 21 Mix i dram with syrup, of two. parts of honey, & i. part of vinegar, to purge phlegm and melancholy to help madness and rheum, and to work both upward and downward. 22 It is corrected with long pepper, hyssop, daucus, and aniseed. 23 It worketh better and with less danger, if it be boiled with the broth of a Capon or any other meat, and then the broth drunk. 24 Head scaled, apply white Ellebore with as much swine's grease. 25 Vomit to cause, take one scruple with pease broth, or one penny weight with some broth. 26 Steep two drams in two ounces of aqua vitae, in a close vessel 14. days, than strain it and drink two drams of it with one ounce of wine to comfort and purge the body. 27 Head worms & falling of the hair, stamp it with swine's grease, and apply it all over the head. 28 Head to purge, blow powder of Ellebore, Pepper, & Castory into thy nose. 29 Mix the juice with course meal as it cometh from the millstone and butter, and apply it to the stomach to purge upward, and on the navel to purge downward. 30 Leapry, or any other deformity of the skin, seeth it with Lovage and Fenell in wine, and wash therewith. 31 Steep white Ellebore in milk, and put white Arsnike to it, and sprinkle it to kill Flease. 32 Ears pain, seeth it half in vinegar and put it in. 33 Face freckles and other spots, seeth one ounce in half a pint of strong white vinegar to the one half, then mix therewith honey three spoonful, Mercury sublimate one penny weight, and seeth it till it become thick, and anoint therewith the morphue, freckles, stainings, and all deformities of the skin. Belley-ache 9 colic 9 Cold griefs 1 Correction 8 etc. Cough 9 Dead child 5 Dropsies 1. 9 Ears ache 32 Eyes dull 7 Emerods' 19 Face deformed 33 Falling evil 1. 9 Fevers quarten 9 Fistula 3 Flease 31 Flies 8 Flowers stopped 5 Freckles 33 Frenzy 1 Gnats 8 Gouts 1. 9 Hardness 3 Headache 1 cleansing 4. 16. 28 giddy 9 skall 24 scurf 17 worms 27 Hair falling 27 Knobs 2 Leapry 2. 30 Lice 17 Mad 1. 9 14. 21 Melancholy 1. 9 14. 21 Mice to kill 8 Morphue 19 23 Nits 17 Poison 1 Purgation 15. 19 21. 26. 29 Rats to kill 8 Rheum 21 Sciatica 1 Sickness general 9 Skabs 2. 19 30 Skin deformed 2. 19 30 scurf 2. 17. 19 sneezing to 'cause 4. 28 Teethache 6 Tetters 19 Tympany 9 Vomit to 'cause 1 etc. Worms 20 ¶ Ellebore black. ELlebore black: the root steeped in wine, & made into powder, and drunk, helpeth them that be mad, melancholy and witless, the falling sickness, swimming in the head, giddiness, gout, dropsy, fevers quarten, leapry, cramps, torments of the entrailss. 2 Put it into the matrix to draw down the terms, and into malignant ulcers & fistulas, and old wounds to cleanse them. 3 Stamp it with vinegar, and apply it to heal skabs, spots, leapry, tetters, and ringwormes, and it doth marvelously heal gangrenes, and is used in eating medicines. 4 It purgeth phlegm and choler downward, either by itself or with Scamonie, or with one dram or one scruple & a half of salt. 5 It is also good with lentils, or broths which are taken for purgations. 6 It is good for the palsy and the gout. 7 It is good to be put three days into fistulas to scour them. 8 And put three days into the ears that are deaf, it helpeth them much. 9 With Frankincense it healeth skabs. 10 Laid to by itself or with vinegar, it healeth kernels, scurf, and leapries. 11 Teethache, seeth it in vinegar & wash therewith. 12 Dropsy, apply a plaster thereof made with Barley meal and vinegar. 13 The pith aught to be taken out of black Ellebore, as well as out of the white. 14 Black Ellebore hath all the virtues of the white Ellebore, and more. 15 Drink three penny weight to cast out worms, to cleanse phlegm and melancholy and the dropsy. 16 In a pessary it cleanseth the matrix, and draweth down the dead birth. 17 Ears deaf, put in the juice. Use it in plasters to kill worms. 18 The juice helpeth horses of the bots, & swine that be infected, and put into their ears, it helpeth pain of their heads. 19 It is so bitter, that no beasts nor fowls dare eat thereof, but only quails. 20 Taken inwardly, it purgeth gross, thick, and choleric humours, and helpeth madness, melancholy, the gout, and sciatica, being taken in pottage, or sodden with boiled meat, and the broth drunk or taken with long pepper, hyssop, daucus, and anyseedes. 21 cattle sick or hurt, cut the beast in some place, and put in powder of black Ellebore to draw out the poisoned humour, and to help presently. 22 Face spots, mix powder of the root of black Ellebore, one dram of Irios, two drams with honey, and anoint at night, and in the morning wash it with water. 23 Fever quarten old, use the decoction of black Ellebore. 24 Ears ache, seeth one dram of the roots well in one pound of vinegar, and receive up the fume, and when it is almost cold, put two drops into the ear, or seeth Ellebore, Castory, and Piretrum, with strong wine and drop it in, and provoke sneezing. 25 The powder of it killeth Rats. 26 Bearefoote purgeth by siege mightily both melancholy, and other superfluous humours. 27 Taken inward, it purgeth the neither parts of the body from gross and thick phlegm, and choleric humours. 28 The root of common Bearefoote steeped in wine and drunk, doth loosen the belly like black Ellebore, and is good for all such things as it is good for, one dram thereof taken with wine. 29 The same boiled in water with Rue and Egrimony, healeth the jaundice, and purgeth yellow superfluities by siege. 30 The same thrust into the ears of oxen, sheep, and other cattle, helpeth them against the diseases of the lungs, and draweth all the corruption into the ears. 31 If in the plague time the root be put into any part of the body, it draweth thither all the corruption and infection as it doth in beasts in the time of any murrain, infection, or rot. 32 Worms in the head, apply it all over the head with Swine's grease. (See Ellebore white.) Belly-ache 1 cattle sick 20. 30 Correction 20 Cramp 1 Dead child 16 Dropsy 1. 12. 15 Eares-ache 24 deaf 8. 17 Face spots 22 Falling evil 1 Fever quarten 1. 23 Fistula 7 Flowers stopped 2. 16 Freckles 10 Gangrenes 3 Gouto 1. 6. 20 Head-giddy 1. worms 32 Hair falling 32 Hogs sick 18 Horse sick 18 jaundice 29 Leapry 1. 3. 10 Mad 1. 20 Melancholy 1. 15. 20 Mice 25 Mother cleansing 16 Palsy 6 Plague 31 Purgation 4. 5. 20. 26. 27 Rats 25 ringworm 3 Sciatica 20 Scabs 39 10 Sores 2 Teethache 11 Tetters 3 Ulcers 2 Worms 15. 17 Wounds 2 ¶ Eglantine. Eglantine: morphue, mix it with vinegar and wash therewith. (See briar.) ¶ Elm. elm: head scurf, seeth the middle bark in water and wash therewith. 2 Burning or scalding, do off the uppermost bark of young Elm, and slice the green bark, & steep it in running water two or three hours till it become a jelly, and anoint with it often to have speedy remedy, or cast on the ashes of the rind, it healeth them without scars. 3 Ears dull, do with it as with Ash. 4 The leaves falling before their time, do foreshow a death of cattle. 5 To mitigate all kinds of griefs, gather the water in the cod of the leaves, keep it in a glass close, sun it twelve days and anoint therewith. 6 scurf or scales in the head, or brows, or beard, anoint with the juice of the leaves. 8 Fistula and canker, stamp the bark with wormwood and water, and apply it. 8 Burn, seeth the rind half a day in water, and gather the thick cream on the water, and anoint therewith. 9 The leaves heal green wounds being laid to, and so doth the inner bark laid to. 10 The broth of the leaves, bark, or root, is good to bathe arms or legs in, that are broken or bruised, for it healeth broken bones speedily. 11 Leapry and scurf, stamp the leaves with vinegar and apply them. 12 Drink one ounce of the bark with wine or water to expel cold phlegm and loosen the belly. 13 The liquor in the leaves to cleanse the skin, and beautify it, and skowreth away all spots, freckles, pimples, and spreading tetters being laid to, and also healeth fresh and green wounds being powered in. 14 The green leaves stamped with vinegar and anointed, healeth the leapry effectually, and bind wounds together. The first green leaves sodden are good pothearbes. Ache 5 Belly bound Bones broken Bruises Burn 1. 2. 8 cattle death 4 Ears dull 3 Fistula 7 Freckles 13 Head scurf 1. 6 canker 7 Leapry 11. 13. 14 Pimples 13 Purgation 12 Scalding 2 Skin deformed 13 scurf 6 Skabs 13 Tetters 13 Wounds 9 11. 13. 14 ¶ Endive. Endive, the leaves sodden are used in medicine, but not the root nor the dried leaves. 2 Endive comforteth the heart and liver both in heat and cold. King's evil, drink the syrup of Endive with water of the decoction of heart's tongue, it is a singular remedy. 3 Burning bushes, anoint with the juice of the leaves. Apostume hot, apply the bruised herb. 4 Liver hot, apply the herb, or for want thereof, the bruised seeds. 5 Belly loose, seeth it in vinegar and use it. 6 Cardiake passion, stamp it with vinegar, and apply it to the left pap. Apply it with vinegar, rosewater, and Ceruse, to the holy fire, hot apostume and headache coming of heat. 7 Drink the herb with wine for griefs of the liver and bladder. 8 Drink it two. or three days for spitting blood, and excess of sperm. 9 Drink the distilled water two. ounces, morn & even for straightness & stopping of the breast, and so it is also good for women with child to strengthen them & their senses. 10 Drink iiii. or v. ounces morn and even to help the plague and the kings evil, to quench thirst, & qualify the heat of the liver, the pain of the side, and pricking about the heart. 11 The water drunk, helpeth the stitch at the heart, the jaundice, the inflamed liver. 12 Liver to cleanse, take wood of sanders, with water of chervil and endive, of each an ounce and a half at thrice three mornings. 13 Liver chafed, use it in broths, and steep it in water, and drink it. 14 Back gout, drink the juice with white wine daily. 15 Cough, shortness of breath, and pain of the stomach, apply it plasterwise to the stomach. 16 Dropsy of hot cause, eat it and drink the decoction thereof. 17 Drink the juice with hot water for the stopping of the liver and milt, the jaundice, the fever tertian, and great heat of the stomach and liver. Apostume hot 3. 6 Back gout 14 Belly lose 5 Bladder griefs 7 Breast griefs 9 15 Burn 3 Cough 15 Dropsy 16 Fever tertian 17 Heart griefs 2. 6. 10. 11 Headache 6 Holy fire 6 jaundice 11. 17 Kings evil 2 Liver griefs 2 hot 4. 7. 10. 11. 12. 14. 17 Milt stopped 17 Plague 10 Side griefs 10 Spitting blood 8 Stitch 11 Stomach hot 15. 17 pain 15 Thirst 10 Women conceived 8 Epithime. EPithime, wash hair with the decoction thereof, to make it yellow. 2 Urine distilling, seeth it in good wine and oil olive, and apply it hot between the navel and the privities. (See Dodder) Hair to be yellow 1 Urine distilling 2 Euphorbium. EVphorbium, Teethach of humours, lance betwixt them, and rub the place with a little of the powder on thy fingers end weted and dipped therein. 2 Pricking in the sinews, mix old oil an ounce, with wax three drams, and Euphorbium one dram, and anoint therewith. 3 Headache, anoint with old oil and three or four grains of Euphorbium. 4 Falling evil, put oil of Euphorbium into the nose. 5 Weariness, weakness, and numbedness, take wax an ounce, Euphorbium a dram beaten in a mortar with five or six drops of oil, and temper them over the fire with as much oil as will make it a sercloth, and apply it to the reins of the back. 6 Hair falling, mix Euphorbium with oil & use it. 7 Mother suffocat. smell to it to 'cause sneezing. 8 Gout, take wax a pound, oil olive ten pound, good wine two pound, boil it till the wine be consumed: then put thereto fine powder of Euphorbium four ounces, & anoint therewith. 9 Glandules, schrophules, and kernels, mix the juice of wild lily with Euphorbium, and take seven pills thereof thirty mornings, to expel them quite, that none remain. 10 Hair falling, anoint with Euphorbium and oil. 11 Ears dull, put in powder of Euphorbium with the juice of houseleek. 12 Lust to cause, stamp it with bays & arom well with oil, & anoint the virge therewith. 13 Feet, or any other member sleep, mix Euphorbium with as much Agryppa, and boil them in wine, till the wine be consumed, and anoint therewith. 14 jaundice, take two grains with a rear egg. Fever quotidian, mix half a dram with an egg she'll full of aqua vitae, and take it three mornings together to purge the slime whereof it cometh. 15 liturgy, hold the powder to thy nose in a clout to 'cause sneezing. 16 Fistula to heal, make a tent of Euphorbium, mastic, and French soap ana like much, and put it in. 17 Euphorbium purgeth tough, cold and slimy flegmes, and choler from the sinews and far parts, and is good for old headache, palsy, cramp, weakness, that followeth the French pocks, the pain of the sinews, and extreme parts that are of long continuance, and the jaundice, and is good also against the plague, and such like contagious sicknesses. 18 Make a plaster thereof with twelve times so much oil and a little wax, which is singular good against all pains and aches of the joints, take, lameness, palsies, cramps, shrinking of the sinews, and all aches and disorder of the same. 19 Mix it with Boars grease, oil debay, or Wolves grease, or such like, to cure the scurf of the head, and baulde places, to 'cause the hair to grow again, being anointed with it: not only the head, but other bore places. 20 Mix it with oil, and stroke it on the temples for the Lytargie, sleepiness, and raging, to waken them and quicken their spirits again. 21 And apply it to the neck, or nape of the neck, to restore speech lost by the Apoplexia. 22 Mix it with vinegar, and stroke it on the place to take away all foul and evil favoured spots of the body, especially the white scurf and scale of the skin. 23 Mix it with oil, and use it against falling of the hair and baldness. 24 It may be mixed with as much mastic and gum tragacanth, and put into the midst of an unbaked loaf, and so baked, and the crumb taken, and made into small pills, which are singular good against the weakness that followeth the French pocks, and all pain of the outward parts. 25 It may be mixed with as much mastic, and made into pills with the juice of oranges, and so it is excellent against the plague. 26 seeth it with oil of eldrens, bean flower, and earth worms, and use it against pricking in the sinews. Aches 17. 18. 24 Apoplexia 21 Benumbed 5. 13 Cramp 17 Choler 17 Ears dull 11 Fistula 16 Falling evil 4 Phlegm 17 French pocks. 24 Glandules 9 Gout 8 Headache 3. 17 Hair falling 10. 19 23 jaundice 14. 17 joints ache 17. 18 Kernels 9 Lameness 18 Lytargie 15. 20 Lust to 'cause 12 Mother suffocat. 7 Palsy 17 Plague 17. 25 Purgation 17. 24 Sinews griefs 17. 18. 2. 25 Skin cleansing 22 Sleepy members 13 Speech lost 21 Taken 18 Teethach 1 Weariness 5 ¶ Eringium. ERingium, the leaves are good to be eaten in salads. 2 The roots boiled in wine, and drunk, are good for the colic, and griping of the belly, and expelleth wind, provoketh terms, and is good against the stone, and gravel, and pain in making water: it provoketh urine, expelleth the stone, and cureth the griefs of the kidneys being drunk fifteen days together, and is good for the griefs of the liver, and all venomous bitings or poison, especially drunk with the seed of wild carrots: it helpeth also the cramp and the falling sickness. 3 Byting venomous, especially of Frogs, stamp the green herb, and apply it. 4 The root preserved or comfited, is good for old folks, and others that are wasted and withered, to restore them again, and so is the root of the thistle Centum capita: but not so good. 5 The root drunk, expelleth the urine and terms, it is drunk with wild carrot seeds against many griefs. 6 Apply it to warts and swellings, to 'cause them to fall: it may be kept in vinegar, urine, or sugar, or honey, as Sperage and Sampere are kept, and condited. 7 Seethe the root in wine, and drink it against against the griefs of the liver, milt and lungs, the torments of the belly and inflammations. 8 Drink a dram with some bruised seeds of wild carrots to resist poison that hath been drunk. 9 The continual use of the root helpeth the stone. 10 Drink the roots with Hydromel for the crick in the back, and the falling sickness. 11 Apply the root to kernels under the ears. 12 Pricks and splents, bruise the root, and apply it. 13 Bones bore without flesh, stamp the root, salt, and swine's grease, and apply it. 14 The young leaves may be boiled, and with salt and oil preserved for salads. 15 The herb with the root, must be gathered when the Sun is in Cancer. 16 They be black without, and white within; very aromatic like spice. 17 The herb or root made in powder, infusion, or decoction, and drunk, cleanseth the reins, bladder, and Matrix, and provoketh terms. 18 It greatly prevaileth against the colic, and torments of the belly, being drunk with Hydromel. 19 Drink a dram at once against the falling sickness. 20 The root must be tender sodden and preserved in sucket, for meat or medicine in Winter, and to restore nature. 21 Drink a dram of the root with wine against the stinging of any venomous beast or worm, or the Fever. 22 Drink it sixteen days morn and even, to cure all griefs of the reins, the stone, and stopping of the urine. Back griefs 1. 17. 22 Belly ache 2. 7 Bitings venomous 2. 3. 21 Bones bore 13 Colic 2. 18 Consumption 4. 19 Cramp 2 Falling evil 2. 10. 19 Fevers 21 Flesh to grow 13 Flowers stopped 25. 17 Frog biting 3 Gravel 2 Inflammation 7 Kernels 11 Kidneys griefs 2. 17 Liver griefs 27 Lungs griefs 7 Matrix to cleanse 17 Milt griefs 7 Poison drunk 2. 8 Pricks 12 Sickness general 5 Restorative 4 Sores 13 Stinging 21 Stone 20. 22 Swelling 6 Urine stopped 25 Warts 6 Windiness 2 Erisimon. ERisimon, lick in the seed often with honey, to cleanse the breast and lungs, shortness of breath, and the old cough, the seeds being first steeped in fair water, and then dried by the fire, or lapped in paste and baked, for else it will be too hot. 2 Use the same seed so prepared, against the jaundice, griping in the belly, the sciatica, and all venomous bitings. 3 Mix the seed with honey and water, and use it for hidden cankers, hard swellings, impostumes behind the ears, old and hard impostumes of the breasts, and genitors applied, for it wasteth cold swellings. Bellyach 2 Byting venomous 2 Breast griefs 1 Breath short 1 cods swollen 3 Cough old 1 Hard swelling 3 Impostumes 3 jaundice 2 canker 3 Lungs griefs 1 Sciatica 2 Swelling 3 ¶ Esula. ESula, the juice, seed or root, purgeth choleric and sharp humours, like the Tythimalles, and are in all things of the nature of the Tythimalles. 2 The seed and leaves do the same things that the juice doth. 3 Belly worms, kill them with other things, and then take two drams of Esula to expel them. 4 Steep the bark of Esula, or Tythimall in vinegar four and twenty hours, and dry it, and make it into powder, and put thereto anniseedes, or fennel seeds, tragacanth, and mastic, and minister it with some cold liquor, as of endive, or cicory, or oranges, and so it will not inflame the throat. (See Tythimall) Purgation 1. 2. 4 Worms 3 ¶ Fearne. FEarne: worms to kill, drink an ounce of powder of the roots dissolved in wine. 2 Burn, burn it and apply it with the white of an egg. Wounds, festers, and cankers, stamp them with their roots, & wash the griefs with the juice, and apply the dross. 3 Nosebleeding, the roots staunch blood, and heal the wound. 4 Mother suffocat. seethe lovage, hissop, wormwood, and Fearn leaves, & apply them to the navel and shares. 5 Burn, stamp the roots with cows milk, & apply it. 6 Chop a basket full of Fearn and seethe it in a bag in the third part of a tun of water, and bathe therein to restore the strength of the sinews. 7 Milt pain, seeth the root in water and drink it. 8 The root of male Fern, called Osmund rosal half an ounce taken with honeyed water, killeth, and expelleth worms. Milt stopped, seethe it in water and drink it. 9 The leaves of both Fearns put into bedstraw, driveth away punises, & all other such worms. 10 Fearne is very dangerous for women with child. 11 Worms broad, drink four ounces of the root of male Fern with twelve grains of Diagridium, or twelve grains of black ellebore, but take garlic before it. 12 Wounds made with reed, drink the root and also apply it. Worms both round and broad, drink three drams of the root of female Fern. 13 Sores to skin, apply powder of the root, the same healeth the galling of the necks of oxen. 14 Belly bound, seethe the young green leaves with other words, & use them. 15 Burn, apply the juice of the roots with rose water, or cold water to heal it when all other things fail: it doth the like with water of cows dung. 16 If a horse be sick, and it is not known whereof, put a portion of the root under his tongue, and he shall by & by cast out his excrements both ways, and so rise and do well. 17 Powder of the root is good for all moist ulcers both of man and beast. 18 The root of the female maketh women barren. 19 The powder of brakes doth heal dangerous sores both of men, kine, swine, etc. Barren to be 18 Belly bound 14 Burn 2. 5. 15 cattle galled 13 Festers 2 Gnats 9 Horse sick 16 canker 2 Milt pain 7. 8 Mother suffocat. 4 Nosebleeding 3 Purgation 10. 14 Sinews griefs 6 Skin off 13 Sores 13. 17. 19 Worms 1. 8. 10. 12 Wounds 2. 12 ¶ Fenegreke. FEnegreke, Apostumes, and the pleurisy to dissolve them, boil it with linseed, oil of violets and butter, and apply it. 2 Gut to cleanse, seeth half an ounce of the meal in a pint of water, and to the clearest of it, put one ounce of honey and drink thereof morn and even. 3 Guts fretting, drink half an ounce of the meal, with two drams of honey, with warm water first and last, to purge out all superfluous slime, and avoid the pain. 4 Loins apostumed, apply Fenegreke and coleworts together. Impostume inward to break, seeth the meal with water that mallows have been sodden in, and apply it. 5 For the host, liver, and lungs, and milt, stamp bays, Fenegreke, & pepper, and boil them in ale, and take a spoonful of it every day. 6 Reins apostums, stamp mallows & holy oak, with Fenegreke, & bearfoot, and swine's grease, and apply it. 7 Apost. general, seeth it with holy oak & linseed, & stamp them with butter or swine's grease, and apply it, being first boiled with barley meal. 8 Speech lost, seethe it and honey in the juice of Hoorhound and water cresses to an electuary, and use it. Pleurisy, apply the root of holy oak with Fenigreeke, bran of hempseed and butter. 9 Voice to be clear, seethe it with hyssop, and pennyroyal, and white wine, and drink it. 10 Gonorrhoea, seethe the seeds in water till the third part be wasted, and drink four ounces morn & even three or four days to cure it. 11 Bruise, seeth it with wheat bran, honey, and lard in white wine, and apply it to aches, bruises, or gouts, etc. 12 biles and botches, seeth it in linseed with cows milk and water, and apply it. 13 Belly bound, seethe it in water and drink it to lose the belly without peril. 14 The decoction, or broth of the seeds drunk with a little vinegar, expelleth all evil humours that stick in the bowels. 15 The same decoction first made with dates, and after with honey, till it come to the thickness of syrup, doth cleanse and cure the griefs of the breast, so that the patiented have no fever nor headache, for than it is evil. 16 The meal sodden with meed helpeth cold hard apostumes, & swellings. Milt hard & swollen, apply it with vinegar and saltpeter. 17 Sat in the decoction thereof, or bathe in the decoction of it for the impostumes, ulcers, and stopping of the matrix. 18 Mix the straining or juice with goose grease, and put it into the matrix, to soften all hardness & pain of the neck thereof. 19 Wash the scurf scale and nits of the head, with the decoction thereof. 20 Apply it with brimstone & honey to bushes, pimples, spots, weals, mange, scurf & itch of the face or else where to heal it. 21 Rawness, ulceration, and feebleness of any part, apply green Fenegreke, with a little vinegar. 22 The seeds prepared as lupins, may be eaten, and is of like virtue, and loseneth the belly gently. 23 The young crops are good in salads with vinegar and oil: but being too much used, it bringeth headache, and overturneth the stomach. 24 Sodden in honeyed water, and drunk, it softeneth all inward impostumes, and helpeth the pain of the entrailss. 25 Use the decoction of the meal for the griefs of the lungs and the old cough. 26 seeth the seeds in water, and strain it, and use it to heal spreading sores of the head, and the scurf, and skall, and to make the hair to grow. 27 Put the same with Goose grease into the Matrix or fundament, to enlarge them in the passage place. 28 Use the decoction thereof for the tenasmus and stinking bloody flux. 29 Use the meal in glisters for the torments and exulceration of the bowels. 30 It is good against all tumors and swellings. 31 The meal sodden with wine and Saltpetre doth quickly take away the skalles and scurf of the head or beard. 32 The oil thereof cleanseth spots and scars of bruises or wounds, and the hot apostumes of the privities. Apostumes 1. 7. 16 Back apost. 4. 6 Belly ache 3. 24. 29. bound 22 Biles 12 Botches 12 Bloody flux 28 Breasts griefs 15. 5 Bruises 11. 32 Cough old 25 Face deform. 20 Fundament hard 27 Gomor pas. 10 Guts to cleanse 2 Impost. 4. 24 Itch 20 Head griefs 19 26. 31 Liver griefs 5 Loins apost. 4 Lungs griefs 5. 25 Matrix grief 17. 18. 27 Mange 20 Milt griefs 5. 16 Pleurisy 18 Privities griefs 32 Purgat. 2. 3. 14 Reins running 10 Skin off 21 to cleanse 20 Speech lost 8 Sores 26 Swell 16. 30 Tenasmus 28 Voice lost 9 Weals 20 Wounds 32 Whites 10 ¶ Feverfue. FEuerfue: take two drams of the powder of it with honey, to purge by siege melancholy and phlegm, and to help giddiness and swimming or turning in the head, for shortness of breath, pensiveness and sadness. 2 seeth the herb without the flowers in water, and drink it for the stone. 3 seeth it in wine, and apply it to the navel, heart, or side for the suffocation, hardness, and stopping of the mother. 4 Sat in the decoction of it for the hardness, and swelling, and inflammation of the mother. 5 Stamp the green leaves with the flowers, and apply it to the wild fire, and other inflammations of choler. 6 Stamp it with Salt, and apply it to the wrists of children at every xxiiii. hours end especially to avoid the ague. 7 Drink the juice or powder to lose the belly, to drive down phlegm & choler, to kill worms, cleanse the matrixe, and help cold fevers. 8 Give it with salt to cattle to help their swelling and difficulty of breathing. 9 Stamp the green herb and apply it to the griefs of the belly. 10 It hath also the virtues of wormemood and of century: and tansy hath the same virtues. 11 Drink the herb and flower for shortness of wind and the stone: but tansy is better for men, and Feverfue better for women. 12 Feverfue comforteth the stomach, and is good for the Fever quotidian, the cramp, and coldness of the stomach, it cureth venomous bitings being applied. And with vinegar it helpeth the Morphue. 13 Stamp it and apply it to wounds wherein are broken bones, and to knit and heal them. 14 The root stoppeth the bloody flux. 15 Stamp it and apply it above a botch to remove it from place to place. 16 Stomach gleet stamp it with Auense, and drink it with stolen Ale morn and Even. 17 Fever quotidian, stamp it with as much Smallach, and strain them with water, and drink thereof when the fit cometh thrice and be whole, or drink the juice of it and Smallach of each two. handfuls with small Ale warm before the fit, and cover thee well to sweat. 18 Gout, stamp it with as much Saint Mary Garlic and apply it. 19 Vomiting, take it three days with a rear Egg and be whole. 20 Ears ache and dindling, put in the juice and stoup it in. 21 Fluxes general, seethe it in water, and sit over the fume of it. 22 Heart griefs, seethe it in wine with salt and drink it. 23 Mother suffoc. Drink the juice of Motherwort and Feverfue with gross Pepper in old Ale and be whole. 24 Gout, anoint with the juice and a Neat's Gaul mingled together warm. 25 Impost. Drink the juice. Bellyach 79 bound 7 Byting venom 12 Bloody flux 14 Botch 15 Breath short 1. 11 Bones broken 13 cattle sick 8 Cramp 12 Ears ache 20 Fever quotid. 6. 7. 12. 17 Phlegm 1 Fluxes general 21 Gout 18. 24 Heart griefs 22 Head giddy 1 Impost. 29 Inflammation 5 Melancholy 1 Morphue 12 Mother griefs 3. 4. 7. 23 Purgat. 1. 7. 16 Stomach grief 12 Stone 2. 11 Vomiting 19 Wild fire 5 Worms 7 Wounds 13 ¶ Fennell. FEnnell, head bushes and ulcers, seeth the seeds with wine in a glass, and anoint therewith. 2 Eyes watering, seeth the roots with Betonye, and wash therewith. 3 Eyes itch, (See Aloes.) 4 Eyes griefs, seeth the root in water, and put in a drop. 5 Eyes blemish, bruise Camphor and strain it with the juice & use it. 6 Vomit to cause, stamp the root of Fennell and Mugwort with wormwood leaves & drink it with warm water and honey, to provoke it presently. 7 Eyes watery, seethe it with water in an earthen pot, and put it into the eyes. 8 For the host, griefs of breast, heart, stomach & sides, and to cause appetite, seethe two. parts of the juice with three parts of honey to the thickness of honey, and put Pepper to it, and eat three spoonfuls every day. 9 Stomach swollen, seethe the roots of Fenell & Smallach in wine of each like much, & temper them with water, & drink it fasting. 10 Stamp Lovage, Persly, Fenell of each like much, and temper them with water, & drink it for the griefs of the bladder to voided the urine well. 11 Cod swollen, seethe the roots of Persly and Fenell in water, and dip clouts therein and apply it often. 12 Headache, seeth read Fennell, Feverfue and Sage of each like much in strong Lee to the one half, and wash therewith as hot as may be suffered: or stamp read Fenell, Camomile, Sage and Cummin, and apply it. 13 Heart burning, chew crops of Fennell, and suck down the juice, and spit out the rest. 14 Belly windy, seeth powder of the seeds of Fennell, anise and Cummin in wine, and drink it. 15 Stitch, stamp read Fennell and read Docks, and fry them with May Butter, and apply it. 16 Brain feeble, mix century, Rue, and read Fennell seeds withstrong vinegar, and drink it in the mornings. 17 Cough and Kings evil, stamp Isope and Fennill roots, and strain them with ale, and drink it at even hot, & at morn cold. 18 Head white skall, shave it, and apply Coprose with the juice of Fennill. 19 Vomit to stop, stamp Fennill, and drink it with wine. 20 Milk to increase, seethe the roots of Fennill and Parsnip in the broth of a chicken, and eat them with a little fresh butter. 21 Eyes dim and dazzling, seeth the juice of Fennill roots with as much honey, to the thickness of honey, and keep it in a brass vessel, and when need is, mix thereof with woman's milk that suckleth a boy, and apply it. Proved. 22 To open the pipes, stuff eight figs with Fennill seeds, and seeth them with a little Isope and two branches of Organy in a pottle of water to the one half, then strain it, and put thereto Sugar candy, & drink thereof warm. 23 Headache, seeth Rue and Read Fennill, and wash the head therewith. 24 Liver and milt griefs, use the decoction or powder thereof, or of the rind of the root. 25 For the ptisike, dryskab, burning or scalding, press out the oil between two hot tiles or plates, and use it. Lean to be, seeth it in water, and strain it, and drink it first and last. 26 Ptisike dry and cold, drink the juice of the roots with white wine. 27 Stomach cold, urine stopped, and for the stone, seeth it with Parsley & Smalach, of each like much, and drink it. 28 Dropsy, seeth the seeds in water, & use much of it in thy wine, or use powder of the seeds of Fennill, Anise, and Peony in thy drink, or seeth Fennill roots in thy wine. 29 Eyes griefs, apply the juice of Rue and Fennill with cotton. 30 Eyes bruised and red, mix powder of Cummin with the juice of Fennill roots and white wine, and seeth them with a gentle fire, and strain it two or three times, and put one drop of it into the eyes. 31 Flowers stopped, seeth Savin with the roots of Smalach, Parsley and Fennill in wine, and strain it, and drink it. 32 For all headache, seeth Rue & Fennill in water, and wash thy head therewith. Liver stopped of cold cause, cleanse it with the seeds of smalach, Fennil, & Dill. 33 Megrem, stamp long Planten, Fennill, and Betony with woman's milk, and apply it, and as the grief removeth follow it therewith till it come to the ridge bone. 34 Marmall, apply a plaster of Fennill & Salt. 35 Reins griefs, use Fennill roots. 36 Stomach cold, seeth Nutmegs and Maces with Fennill seeds and Dill seeds in wine, and drink it. 37 Stomach weak, seeth Maces in the juice of Fennill, and drink the decoction with wine. Proved. 38 Strangury, seeth the leaves of Fennill, Smalach, and Parsley with Wheat bran, and apply it: or seeth the roots of Fennill, Parsley, Smalach, and Water cresses in white wine, and drink the broth, and apply the roots with the leaves of Water cresses plaster wise. 39 Trembling, use the seeds of Fennill and Parsley mixed together. 40 Vomit to stop, seeth two parts of the juice of Fennill with one part of Honey, till it be thick, and use it morn & even. 41 Headache, bathe sometimes in a bath made with Fennill. Liver impost. hot, drink the juice of Fennill. 42 Loins ache, seeth the roots in water, and drink it morn and even. 43 urine to cause, stamp Smalach, Parsley and Fennill, of each like much, and seeth them, and put Butter to them, and apply it to the lomes and secret parts hot. 44 Strangury, use the roots. Headache, seeth it in water, and wash therewith. 45 Eyes bloody, anoint with the juice of Red Fennill roots & Hony. 46 Vomit to cause, seeth two parts of the juice with one part of Honey, till it be thick, and drink thereof morn and even. 47 Stomach swollen, stamp the roots of Fennill and Smalach, of each like much, and strain them with wine, and drink it at even warm, and at morn cold. Milk to increase, drink the juice of Fennill and Vervin. 48 Lungs and milt to restore, seeth two parts of the juice with three parts of Honey to an electuary, and use thereof morn & even. 49 Liver wasting, seeth Water cress, Read Fennill, and Sorrell, with a chicken, in an earthen pot, and use it nine days. 50 Liver & milt stopped, and for the dropsy, make a syrup with the juice of Fennill & Dawke, and use it. 51 Slender to be, eat two or three cloves of Garlic, with as much Bread and Butter, morn and even three hours before and after meat, and drink water wherein Fennill hath been sodden, morn & even fourteen days. 52 Dropsy, drink three halfpenny weight of powder of the Adamant, with the juice of Fennill, to expel the water. 53 Cough extreme, seeth the roots with bruised Aniseed & Liquorice in White wine, and drink a good draft to bedward, and in the morning eat a Fig and a Date roasted, somewhat hot, two or three hours before meat, and do so three or four times. 54 Milk to cause, seeth the seeds in Barley water and drink it, or seeth Rice in milk with croms of white bread, Sugar and Fennel seed, and use it. Or drink powder of Fennell seed and Crystal of each like much with wine. 55 Eyes dull and giddy, let a child eat sweet Fennel seeds every morning, and then lick the diseased eyes. 56 hoarsness and straightness of the breast, seethe Mullyn, Fennill, and Lycoras in water or wine till it be tender, than strain it and sugar it, and drink thereof. 57 colic, make powder of Fennell seeds two. ounces, Mynts as much as can be taken up with three fingers, and drink thereof i dram with vi. ounces of warm wine. 58 Lean to be, Drink Fennell, and eat the seeds daily. 59 Cough perilous, Stamp the roots and strain them with wine or ale, and drink it nine days morn and even. 60 Stomach swollen, dry cough, and headache, stamp the root of Fennell and Smallach, and strain them with white wine and drink it fasting. 61 Stomach swollen and gleete about the Heart, Liver, Lungs, and milt, boil two ounces of the juice with three ounces of Honey till it wax thick, and use it as an electuary first and last, the body being first well purged. 62 Vomiting and weakness of the stomach, to cleanse the Lungs, to comfort the milt, to destroy Rheum, and for all griefs of the brain, seeth two parts of the juice, with one part of Honey, till it be thick, and drink thereof morn and even with sodden water. 63 Ears worms, put in the juice. 64 Ache of strokes, apply it with swine's grease. 65 Eyes dull, make an ointment of the juice of Rue and Fennell with honey, and anoint therewith, or eat them, and let thy breath go into thine eyes. 66 For the fever, poison, and to cleanse the stomach and sharpen the sight, eat Fennell seeds, but it must be used as medicine, and not as meat. 67 Biting of an Addar, stamp Rue and red Fennel with Butter and fire it, and strain it and drink it, and be whole. 68 To keep a horse from all diseases, give him good store of Fennell baked in his bread, and let him eat it three days, every day aloof. 69 Eyes ache, mix the juice of read Fennel with Alum in a brazen vessel, and set it in the sun xii. days, then keep it in a box, and use it when need is. 70 Eyes sore, anoint with the juice of Rue, and Fennell, and honey of each like much. 71 Milk to cause, seeth it in wine and drink it. 72 Lean to be, seeth it in water and drink it first and last. 73 colic, drink powder of the seeds of Fennell, Parslie and Alysander. 74 For swelling in the stomach and to 'cause Appetite, stamp the root of Fennell and of Ash of each like much, and strain it with wine and drink it. 75 Headache, seeth Rue and Fennell with water, and wash thy head therewith, and apply the herbs. 76 The seeds comfort the stomach, openeth the stoping of the Reins and Bladder, the juice helpeth webs in the eyes. 77 Drink it with wine or water to expel all poison and venom out of the body. 78 Drop it into the ears to kill worms in them. 79 Drink it with wine to help the dropsy and all swellings, and to stop vomiting. 80 Drink it with wine and water to increase milk, with oil it helpeth a swollen yard. 81 Headache, drink Fennell and Rue with Pepper in wine: Eyes dull, drop in the juice of the roots morn and even. 82 Urine to cause and to expel the stone, drink the juice of Fennell, Smallach, Parsley and Pimpernell of each like much with water. 83 Biting of an Adder, seeth Rue, Betony and Fennell, in Butter, and drink it. 84 Stomach ache of cold or wind, eat powder of Filipendula and Fennell seeds together. 85 The seeds, herbs, roots and rind, are used in medicine: gather the seeds in September, they may be kept three years. 86 Boil the herb or seeds in fair water, and drink a glass-full every day to avoid unnatural heat, and to cleanse the sight. 87 The whole roots may be plucked up in May and kept three years. 88 Stamp Fennell, and mix it with old Barrowes grease, and anoint the face therewith lightly, to avoid the read spots like lepry. 89 Eat Fenel to increase milk. 90 To provoke urine & terms eat the seeds, likewise for the stopping of the Liver and Milt, and the shedding of Urine. 91 Mix the juice with warm Milk, and give it sucking children to help the hardness of fetching breath. 92 seeth the rind of the root and drink it morn & even for the pain of the stone when it cometh of hot cause. 93 Eat Fennell to comfort the stomach & help digestion, or eat or drink powder of the seeds. 94 seeth the roots till they be soft, and apply them to women's Paps that begin to opostumate to heal them without harm. 95 Put the juice into a Tin Poringer, and sun it xv. days, and drop thereof into the eyes to clear their dimness, but if Aloes epatike be put thereto it is much the better: or boil the juice between two dishes, and gather the dew of the upper dish, and keep it in a vial, and use it, it mendeth the eyes greatly. 96 Ears worms, put in the juice warm. 97 Cramp and dropsy, seeth the roots in wine, and drink it. 98 Burning and swelling, anoint with the juice and Vinegar. 99 Breath to be sweet, use Fennill. 100 Eyes dull, eat the seeds often fasting. 101 Use the root clean washed, in Pottage and Ptisants. 102 seeth the tufts in wine, pottage, or ale, to help the bladder, reins, and stone, and to increase milk and natural seed. 103 Fennill is good to wash the feet withal to bedward, and for Barbours' baths, with Balm and Bays. 104 The syrup is good for a phlegmatic stomach. 105 Stamp Fennill, Parsley, Water cresses, of each like much, put there to White wine, and crumbs of Barley bread, let it stand all night in a stone mortar, then strain it, and clarify it, and drink it to cleanse the reins from gravel, and stone, and choler, for the strangury, and to 'cause much urine. 106 Fennill is good for fat men, to open the veins and guts. The seed hath greater virtue than the root. 107 Mix the juice of the roots with clarified Honey, and anoint the eyes therewith for their redness. 108 To increase milk, and provoke terms, seeth the leaves in water or wine, and drink it often. 109 seeth the seeds of Fennill, Anise, and Cummin in wine, and drink a good draft first and last four or five days to avoid wind in the belly marvelously. 110 The decoction of the crops, easeth the pain of the kidneys, expelleth the stone, urine, and terms, and so doth the root, which is also good for the dropsy. 111 Drink the leaves or seeds with wine, against all venomous bitings or stingings. 112 Drink the seeds with water, for the pain and wambling of the stomach, and desiring to vomit. 113 The herb, seeds and root are very good to open and comfort the liver, lungs, and kidneys. 114 Mad dog biting, stamp the root with Honey, and apply it. 115 Stamp the leaves with vinegar, and apply them to the wild fire and all hot swellings. 116 Stamp them together with wax, to avoid the blackness of strokes and bruises. 117 seeth Fennill in wine, and bathe the ache of the yard therewith, or stamp it with oil, & anoint therewith. 118 Dry the juice of Fenell in the sun, and use it in collyries for the eyes to quicken the sight. 119 Apply the broth of the tops to the back for the ache of the kidneys, and to drive forth water. 120 Drink Fenell in an ague with cold water, to slake loathsomeness and the heat of the stomach. 121 Some cut the stalk and take out of it a juice like a gum, which is very good for that eyes. 122 Fenell provoketh men to generation of children. 123 Serpents chew it to clear their eyes. 124 The use of Fenell in wine, is good for the dropsy, the griefs of the liver and lungs. 125 The broth of the roots in water or wine, is good for the griefs of the kidneys and bladder. 126 The herb or decoction thereof applied to the pecten, driveth forth urine, the seed stirreth man to procreation. 127 The seed or broth of the herb is good for a pleurisy. 128 seeth the seed in wine, and drink it against venomous bitings & stingings, to expel all poison and venom, terms, stone, urine, and viscus humours. 129 The seeds and flowers that grow in the midst of it, are the best parts. 130 The same sodden in water and drunk, taketh away the heat and loathing of the stomach, and helpeth the hot and dry cough. 131 The seed chewed by itself, or condited with sugar, cutteth tough phlegm, and maketh it easy to be spit out, and sharpeneth the sight, and so doth the distilled water dropped into the eyes morn and even. 132 Eyes worms, drop in the water or juice. 133 Stamp the roots with honey and apply it to bitings or stingings of mad dogs, or serpents, the same being first washed with urine or vinegar. The juice may be drawn out of the root, herb, flower, & unripe seed, and dried in the sun, and kept to be used with other medicines when occasion serveth. Oil of Fenell, press it out between two hot stones or irons, it will keep long, and is good for the ptisike, dry scab, burning and scalding. Heart faint, drink the juice often. Ache see in their place Adder biting 83 (see bite) Back griefs 35. 42. 102. 105 110. 113. 119. 125 Belly windy 14. 109 Bitings venom. 67. 83. 111 114. 128. 133 Bladder griefs 10. 76 102. 125. (see urine) Breast griefs 8. 22. 56. 91 (see cough, ptisike Breasts sores 94 Brain weak 16 Breath stink 99 Bruises 116 Burn 25. 28 colic 57 73. 109 Cod swollen 11 Consumption 25. 26. 48. 49 Cough 17. 25. 26. 53. 59 60. 130 Cramp 97 Digestion 93 Dropsy 28. 52. 79. 97. 124 Ears worms 63. 78. 96 Eyes ache 69 blemish 5. 30 bloody 45 bruised 30 dull 21. 55. 64. 66. 81. 86. 95. 100 121. 123. 118. 131 dasling 21. 55. griefs 4. 29 76. itch 3. read. 30. 107 sore 70 watering 27 web 76 worms 132 Face deformed 88 Feet to wash 103 Fevers 66. 120 Flow. stopped 31. 90. 108. 110 Hart burning 13. griefs 8 Headache 12. 23. 32. 33. 41. 60 62. 75. 81. (see eyes megren 33. bushes 1 sores 1 scall 18 Hoarseness 56 Horsekeeping 68 Host 8 (see breast) Hot griefs 86 Impostume 41 Kings evil 17 Lean to be 25. 51. 58. 72. 106 Liver griefs 24. 49. 50. 62 90. 113. 124 impost. 41 Loins ache 42 (see back) Lungs griefs 48. 50. 62. 113 124 (see breast consump.) Lust to cause 102. 122. 126 Mad dog biting 114 133 Marmol 34 Milk to increase 20. 54. 71 80. 89. 102 Milt griefs 24. 48. 62. 90 Pleurisy 127 Poison 66. 77. 128 Ptisike 25 Purgation 61 Rheum 62 Seed to increase 102. 126 (see lust to cause) Shaking 39 Sickness general 62 Sides griefs 8 (see liver, milt, chollike Scab dry 28 (see face) Scalding 25 Skin deformed (see face) Slender to be 51 (see lea. 84) stitch 15 Stom. cold 27. 36. 84 hot 120. 130 griefs 8. 66. 84 104. 112 swollen 9 47. 60. 61. 74. 79. 84. (see wind) weak 37. 62. 76. 93 Stone 27. 82. 92. 105. 110 Strangury 38. 44. 105 Swelling 79. 98. 115 Trembling 39 Venom 77. 128 Vomit to 'cause 6. 46. to stop 19 62. 79. 112 Urine shedding 90 stopped 10 27. 40. 43. 76. 82. 90. 102 105. 110. 119. 125. 126 Wildfire 115 Windiness 14. 109 Yard-ache 117 swollen 80 ¶ Figs. FIgs new gathered, nourish more than other fruits, but they breed wind & loosen the belly gently, abate heat, quench thirst, but taken of too much, they hurt the stomach, and make it weak, and without appetite. 2 Dry Figs nourish better then green and new, yet they breed no good blood, for they that eat them much, become lousy and full of vermin. 3 Figs eaten before meat loosen the belly, are good for the kidneys, and drive forth gravel with the urine. 4 They provoke sweat, and thereby expel stinking humours, and therefore are good for young children for the small pocks, measles, and weals, to bring them forth speedily without peril. 5 They are good for the throat and lungs, the cough, shortness of breath to void phlegm etc. whether they be taken raw, or roasted, or sodden with hyssop and drunk. 6 Bruised inward, seeth them in water, and drink it to mitigate the pain. Stamp them with salt, rue, and nuts, and use it to withstand all poison, venom, and corrupt air. 7 For hoarseness, sharpness of the throat, all swellings, and impostumes of the mouth, throat almonds, jaws, and swellings of the tongue, gargarise, with the decoction of Figs, or hold it in the mouth. 8 For ache of the teeth and jaws, hold Figs in thy mouth. 9 Apply them with wheaten meal to soften and ripen impostumes and angry swellings behind the ears, especially with linseed and Fenegreeke put thereto, but the roots of Lilies put thereto, ripeth and breaketh impostumes and botches: with Barley meal, they scatter and consume swellings. 10 Sodden in wormwood wine with Barley meal, and applied to the belly they are good for the dropsy. 11 Stamp them finely with Mustarseede, to help the ringing noise and sound of the ears, and mend the hearing, being applied outwardly. 12 Dried Figs soften, consume and make subtle, and may be very well used both inwardly and outwardly to ripen and soften impostumes, and dissolve them. 13 Kings evil, swelling, kernels in the throat, and all other tumors, stamp the leaves finely, and apply them. 14 The milky juice helpeth all deformities of the skin, Leapries, spreading sores, Tetters, small Pocks, Mesels, Pushes, Freckles, lentils, and such like scurf and spots of the body and face being laid to with parched Barley meal, and with fat or grease, it taketh away Warts, it cureth the tootheache, being applied with Bombase or Cotten, or a little pellet made thereof, and put into the hollow tooth. It openeth the veins of the Emeralds, and looseth the belly being applied to the fundament, and so do the leaves if they be put into the fundament. 15 It is good to be applied with meal of Fenigreke and Vinegar upon the hot gout, especially of the feet. The same juice is good to be put into all venomous bitings of Serpents and mad dogs. 16 The same turneth milk, and causeth it to cured. 17 The ashes of a Figtree mixed with oil and wax cureth burnings. 18 And lee made with ashes of the Fig, healeth scurviness and festered foul fretting sores being washed therewith. Dod. 19 Head scurf, stamp the leaves and branches, and strain them with water and a little vinegar, & anoint therewith. 20 Roast three Figs, and seeth them in a cup of Beer with some bruised Liquorice, and Aniseedes, & keep it warm by the fire, and drink thereof warm to bedward and eat the Figs, and so it helpeth the cough in three nights. 21 A little of the wood of the tree put into a pot, maketh the meat to be soon sodden. 22 Stamp a handful of Figs, till the kernels be broken, and temper them with a little fresh grease, and apply it to a sore breast as hot as the woman may suffer to avoid the swelling and pain. 23 Rub warts with Figtree leaves and bury them, and the warts will go away. 24 seeth Figs in wine with hyssop & strain it, and drink it to help the griefs of the throat, lungs, and old rotten coughs. 25 Figs be good against melancholy and the falling sickness. Stamp them with shoemakers wax to heal ulcers. 26 Figs will ripen hard apostumes and the plague sore. 27 They are good against rheums and flow of the belly. 28 They are very good for the throat, windpipe, kidneys and bladder, for them that be ill coloured with long sickness, shortness of breath, the dropsy, and the falling sickness. 29 Stamp them with snails, swine's grease, and bean flower, and apply it to a swollen throat to ripen it, and help the squinsy. 30 Figs in meat, cleanse the blood. 31 The same made warm and drunk with hyssop, purge the breast, & are good for the cough, the belly, & old diseases of the lungs. 32 Figs eaten with Niter & Saffron soften the belly. 33 Sodden with Rue, they are good in glisters against the gnawing of the belly. 34 Sodden and applied, they drive away hardness, and so soften the swelling behind the ears and other swellings. With the shell of a Pomegranate they purge away agnayles, and such angry swellings. 35 With Coprose they heal running issues of the leg, which are almost uncurable. 36 Sodden with wine, worm wood roman, and barley meal and applied to the belly, they are good for the dropsy. 37 Figs applied with a plaster of wax, are good for kibed heels and itchings. 38 The milky juice broken with an Almond and drunk, openeth the mother. The same laid to with the yolk of an Eglantine, draweth down the terms. 29 It scoureth away lepries, freckles, scurf, and deformities of the face, and skabs, and running sores of the head laid to with barley meal. 40 Figs stamped with levin and salt, soften plague sores and other ulcers & apostumes and breaketh them. 41 A Fig tied to a Bull, will make him tame though he be never so wild. 42 Figs are best eaten fasting with nuts or almonds, & so they cleanse the breast and lungs. 43 And eaten fasting with powder of ginger, pepper, time, or peniroyal long before meat, they are good against oppilations of the liver & milt, congealed matter in the body, distillations or rheum falling into the breast & stomach, they cleanse the reins and make the body soluble. 44 Steep two. or three Figs all night in aqua vitae and eat them in the morning against shortness of wind & the cough. 45 Seeth Figs in water & a little vinegar, & stamp them and apply them to the swine's evil, kernels, & swellings in the throat. 46 Apostume, stamp three Figs with oil, & apply it. 47 Yard swollen, apply a plaster of iiii. Figs, wheat meal, & oil Olive. 48 Poison to withstand, eat every day xx. leaves of Rue with three Figs, & a little salt to be safe that day. 49 seeth half a pound of Figs with one handful of hyssop, & one spoonful of honey in a pottle of white wine to the one half, and drink two. or three spoonful first & last to help the rheum & the cough. 50 colic, grind Figs with mustardseed and fenigreeke, and apply it cold: proved. 51 Mithridates medice against the plague, mix xx. leaves of rue with two. Figs & two. walnuts, and a little salt, & eat it & be sure from venom that day. 52 Cough, roast three Figs, and put them in a cup of Beer with a little powder of Liquorice & Aniseedes, and eat them & drink the drink warm to bedward iiii. nights. 53 Shoulder ache, grind Figs & reasons of the sun in a querne with mustardseed, of each like much with strong vinegar, and apply it with a lambs skin. 54 Stamp the fresh branches and seeth them with vinegar, & stamp them well, and apply them to the mentagra or lychen, which is a foul breaking out of the face, with a scab beginning at the chin. 55 Liver stopped, eat dry Figs with Pepper amongst thy meats, or else the seeds of Cuscuta preserved with fine sugar. For the ptysike, old catharre, the cough, and other griefs of the lungs, boil one handful of hyssop with iiii. Figs, & some reasons in water, and a little honey, and drink thereof a glass full fasting. 56 Tongue palsy, mix one dram of the pulp with vi. grains of Euphorbium, and hold as much as a bean under thy tongue, & spit often. Breast stopped with cold, seethe Figs with bruised mustard seed in wine, and drink it luke warm. 57 Bitings venomous, stamp them with rue and nuts, and apply it to all venom. 58 Bones broken, seethe Figs and poppy seeds in water & apply it. 59 Cod swollen, seethe Figs in wine and apply them. 60 Side impost. stamp them with oil or grease & apply them. 61 Make tents of the rinds of old Figs, and put them into fistulas, and lay a Fig plasterwise above on it. 62 Phlegm or rheum in the stomach, stamp radish roots with dry Figs, and a little honey, and boil it into an electuary and use it. 63 Cough of outward cause, take a dishfull of beaten Barley, iiii. ounces of reasons, and xii. Figs washed in warm water, seeth them in a new pot with iiii. quarts of water, one hour, than strain it & seeth it again with vi. ounces of sugar, but let it boil but once, and cool it and drink it morning and evening, to soften and cleanse the breast: if it wax too thick, put more water to it. 64 Cough & imposthume, eat roasted Figs with powder of Nep. Loins apostumed, stamp barley meal iiii. ounces, Figs two. ounces, the juice of mallows vi. ounces, and apply it with a sponge or cloth. 65 To open the pipes, & clear the voice, roast powder of hyssop in Figs, and eat every day one. 66 Hoarseness, stamp Figs, and seeth them in wine or ale, and drink it. 67 straightness of the breast & stomach, seethe fat Figs well stamped in wine, with some bruised mustardseedes, & drink it warm to bedward, or seethe fat Figs with hyssop and lycoras, with barley in water, and drink it. 68 Apost. apply a plaster of Dwale and Figs or reasons. 69 Reins impostumed, use oxymel with the decoction of reasons and maiden hair. 70 Apostume to break, stamp honey and fat Figs with swine's grease, and apply it as the best medicine. 71 Emerods' to provoke, rub Fig leaves first in thy hands, and then upon the veins of the fundament, and then bind them to it. 72 Hoarseness, roast sugar in Figs on the coals, and eat them hot. 73 Breast to purge, seeth Figs and honey in white wine, and drink it. 74 Cough, fill a dry Fig with the seeds of Tansy, and seeth them in white wine with one ounce of lycoras with a soft fire to the one half, and drink thereof every night. 75 Impost. stamp Figs with fresh grease, and apply them hot to the side or grief, and drink the juice of Feverfue. 76 Stomach cold griefs, seeth hyssop, Figs, & honey together and use it. 77 colic, stamp Figs with mustardseed & vinegar, and apply it cold. 78 Cough, seeth x. good Figs in a quart of white wine with lycoras, any seeds, and sugar candy, of each like much to the one half, and drink three or iiii. spoonful morning and evening. 79 Apost. to ripen, stamp fat Figs with swine's grease, and fry them together, and apply it. 80 squinsy, gargarise with the decoction of dried Figs, and a dog's dung to open the apostume, or put mustard seed into Figs, and eat them at night to dissolve the gross humours, and to open the lights, and help the breathing. 81 For stopping of the liver, shortness of breath, and spitting of blood, seeth dry Figs in white or claret wine with mustard, and drink it every night, first eating the figs, and then drinking the wine. 82 Pleurisy, stamp dry Figs with suet, or oil and gum, and apply it. 83 lask to stop, drink ashes of Figtree branches with water. 84 Swelling about the yard, mix Figs with wheat flower and oil, and apply it. 85 The ashes of an old Figtree causeth sweat. 86 To cause deliverance of a dead child, take the white juice of Figs, or powder of Dittanie with water in an ague, but with wine without an ague. 87 Gout, stamp a little bread, dry Figs, honey & vinegar together, and bind it to. 88 For painful bushes on the legs, stamp dry Figs with flowers of ivy, and apply it. 89 Warts apply the milk of Figs. Ache 53 (see the place.) Air evil 6 Agnailes 34 Apost. 9 12. 25. 26. 40. 45 46. 68 70. 75. 79. 80 Backeache 43. 64. 69 Belly-ache 33 bound 13. 14 32. 43 Bitings venomous 15. 57 Bladder griefs 28 Blood cleansing 30 Bones broken 58 Botch 9 (see apostume) Breasts sore 22 Breast griefs 5. 31. 42. 43. 56 63. 65. 67. 73. 81 Breath short 28. 44. 81 Bruised 6 Bull wild 41 Burn 17 Chollike 50. 77 Consumption 55 Cod swollen 59 Cough 20. 24. 31. 44. 49. 52 63. 64. 74. 78. Colour bad 28 Dead child 86 Deliverance 86 Dropsy 10. 28. 36 Ears dull 11 Emerods' 14. 71 Face deformed 14. 39 54 Falling evil 25. 28 Feet gout 15 Fistula 61 Phlegm 62 Flowers stopped 38 Flux 83 Freckles 14. 39 Gout 15. 87 Head scurf 19 39 Hoarseness 7. 66. 65. 72 Impost. 12. 60. 75 Itch 37 Kernels 13. 45 Kibes 37 Kings evil 13. 45 Kidneys imposthume 69 griefs 28 lask to stop 43 Leapry 14. 39 Leg sores 35. 88 Liver stopped 43. 55. 81 lousiness 2 Lungs griefs 5. 20. 34. 31 42. 43. 56. 65. 73. 81 Loins griefs 64 Mad dog 15 Meat to seeth 21 Mesels 4. 14 Melancholy 25 Milk to cured 16 Milt stopped 43 Mother stopped 38 Mouth griefs 7 Neck apostume 9 34 Obstructions 43 Palsy 56 Plague 48. 51 Plague sore 26 Pleurisy 82 Pocks 4. 14 Poison 6. 48 Ptisike 55 Pushes 14 Rheum 27. 49. 62 Shoulders ache 53 Sickness general 43 Skabs 14. 18. 35. 39 54 Skin deformed 14. 39 54 scurf 18. 39 (see head) Side imposthume 60 Speech lost 56. (see palsy, Tongue.) Spitting blood 81 Squincy 29. 80 Sores 14. 18. 26. 25. 40. Stomach cold griefs 76. rheum 62. stopped 67. Swell 7. 13. 22. 29. 34. 40. 45. 47. 84. Sweated to 'cause 85 Swine's evil 45 Teethache 8. 14 Tetters 14. 39 Thirst 1 Throat griefs 5. 7. 13. 24. 28. 29. 34. 44. 80. Tongue palsy 56 Venom 6. (see Poison, Bit.) Ulcers 40 Voice bad 65. (see Hoarse.) Warts 23. 34. 89 Weals 4 Yard swollen 47. 84 ¶ Filipendula. FIlipendula: strangury, drink it with good white wine. Phthisic, seeth it in white wine and use it. 2 Shortness and straightness of breath of cold cause, use powder of it and Gentian in broths and drinks. 3 Colic passion, seeth it with Fiveleafe and Time and apply it. 4 jaundice, drink powder of it with other medicines. 5 The knots that hung by the roots used in powder, are good for fistulas and hollow sores both inward and outward. 6 Emerods', anoint with eels grease and cast on powder of the roots. 7 Poison to avoid, stamp the herb and root in the end of May and distil it, and drink six ounces at a time: it helpeth also the plague. 8 It breaketh wind about the liver and milt, and destroyeth the stone. 9 The root boiled in wine and drunk, helpeth the dropsy, strangury, pain of the bladder, stopping of the urine and the stone. 10 Drink the powder thereof with Fennel seed against all cold and windy griefs. 11 Use powder of the root often with meats against the falling sickness. 12 The leaves and seeds sodden with wine and honey and drunk, bringeth down the seconds, helpeth the dropping and stopping of urine, the strangury, and griefs of the bladder and jaundice, and so doth the root sodden in wine. 13 The powder of the root licked in with honey, helpeth the cough, yexing, and shortness of wind. 14 The powder drunk with wine is good for the falling sickness and the jaundice. 15 Use it in broths for ache of the back and kidneys, windiness of the stomach, the stone, strangury and stopping of the urine. Bachache 15 Bellyache 8. 12 Bladder grief 9 12 Breath short 2. 13 Colic 3 Cold griefs 10 Cough 13 Dropsy 9 Emerods' 6 Falling evil 11. 14 Fistula 5 Flowers stopped 12 Hicket 13 jaundice 4. 12. 14 Poison 7 phthisic 1 Sores 5 Stomach (see Windiness.) Stone 8. 9 15 Strangury 1. 9 12. 15 Urine stopped 9 12. 15 Windiness 8. 10. 15 ¶ Fillbeards (See Nuts, Hasill.) ¶ Fitches. Fitches' are not used in medicine, but given to horses. 2 But parched and taken with honey, as much as a great nut at once fasting they are good for a consumption. 3 Apply the meal with wine to venomous bitings the place being first well cleansed. 4 Apply it with wine and honey to the swelling of the paps, and to spreading sores: it cleanseth spots, as Lupins doth, and may supply the want of Lupins, with vinegar it helpeth the tenasmus, and is good for the stopping of the urine. 5 They feed oxen and kine fat speedily. 6 Boil them in wine wherein saffron hath been boiled, and stamp them & apply them to any bruise. 7 Eyes rapture in the tunicles, mix the meal with Frankincense and the white of an egg and apply it. Bitings venomous 3 Breasts swollen 4 Bruises 6 Bursten 7 cattle feeding 5 Consumption 2 Eyes hurt 7 Sores 4 Tenasmus 4 ¶ Fiveleafe. FIueleafe. The roots boiled in water, till the third part be wasted, helpeth the raging ache of the teeth, and the sores of the mouth being well washed therewith & then drunk, & so it stoppeth all bleeding, bloody flux & other fluxes, & the sciatica. 2 seeth the root in vinegar to soften fretting sores & dissolve wens, & cold swellings. It cureth evil favoured nails, the inflammations of the fundament or mother, & all naughty scurf being applied. 3 Drink the juice of the young roots for the griefs of liver, lungs, & all poison. 4 Fever tertain & quarten, drink the leaves with honeyed water, or wine with pepper. 5 And drink it in the same manner xxx. days for the falling sickness. 6 Stamp the leaves and apply them finely to burstings & falling of humours into the cod. 7 Stamp the leaves with salt & honey to heal up wounds, fistulas, & spreading sores. 8 Drink the juice of the leaves to cure the jaundice, & comfort the liver. 9 seeth it with vinegar to heal the running sores, wens, windy swellings, impostumes, hot inflammations, agneils in the fingers or toes, hard lumps that put forth blood in the fundament or mother, & also scabs & scurf. 10 Drink v. ounces of the juice to heal the jaundice quickly. 11 Drink Fiveleafe to resist poison and venom. 12 Drink the juice xxxiii. days to heal the falling sickness perfectly. 13 The root, water & juice, serveth for all things that Tormentil serveth for. 14 Hands trembling, wet them often in the distilled water of it. 15 Drink the syrup of it xii. times to help the squincy & all fluxes & terms. 16 It helpeth fevers, resisteth poison, expelleth devils. 17 The leaf taken with wine twice, helpeth the ephemera, iii the tertian, iiii. time's the quarten. 18 carry Fiveleafe & nettles in thy hands against fear & fancy. 19 Throat sore, seeth i handful with as much Columbine in a pint of new milk, and drink thereof hot often. 20 For head ache, ach of the limbs, and soreness of the mouth, tongue & throat, seeth it in wine, & drink it three days morn & even & be whole. 21 For ache & gnawing, drink the juice with ale. 22 Nose bleeding, drink the juice with ale, and apply the juice to thy forehead. 23 To kill a canker, seeth it in white wine with swine's grease and apply it. 24 Mouth, throat, and tongue sores, rub with honey and the powder of it. 25 Poison and venomous bitings, drink the juice with wine. Hoarseness, seeth crops of Mints, Sage, Fiveleafe, Ginger and lycoras well bruised with stolen ale, and strain it and drink it as hot as may be suffered, and as often as need is. 26 Mouth or tongue scalded, seeth it in water, and hold thy mouth over the vapour of it, & also wash thy mouth therewith thrice a day. 27 Stone, seeth it and the root of it in wine and drink it fasting to break and expel it. 28 Biting of an adder: stamp it and drink it with wine. 29 Belly ache, hardness, and swelling and bound, drink two spoonful of the juice. 30 Colic, seeth it in ale or wine and drink it. 31 Eyes web, apply it with swine's grease and salt. 32 jaundice, use it and Mints in syrups. 33 Ilyak, seeth it in wine or ale and drink it. 34 Kings evil, drink the juice or broth with salt and honey three cyats and use it. 35 Reins ache, drink one handful with warm water. 36 Strangury, drink the water or juice. 37 Gums rotten, bruise it and rub them therewith. 38 Mouth and throat sore, bruise it and seeth it in water, and draw in the vapour of it and also gargarise therewith often, & so it is good for the squincy. 39 Vomit to stop, bake the leaves with whites of eggs & eat them. 40 Woman's belly hard, stamp it & drink it with hot milk. 41 Flux, use powder of it with the juice of Planten. 42 Flowers to stop, seethe it with rain water & bathe therewith. 43 Legs ache, drink it. 44 Bitings & all venom, drink the juice. 45 Colic, drink powder of the root, and long Pepper with good ale. 46 Flix Diaria, drink the juice with sweet milk. 47 Bloody flux, drink two spoonfuls of the juice. 48 Tongue greatly swollen, hold the juice in thy mouth. 49 Biting or stinging, drink the juice with wine. 50 Mouth canker, boil it & Honysuckles, Roch alum, & honey in vinegar & running water, & wash thy mouth therewith. Bleeding, drink the juice with read wine. 51 Stomach cold, drink it with ale or wine. 52 Teethach, gargarise with the decoction of it. 53 Nose bleeding, drink the juice & anoint the nostrils with it. 54 Flux, use the root. 55 Emerods', seethe it in goat's milk, & use it three days when they bleed. 56 Fistula, put in the juice with a spout. 57 Nails to grow, stamp it with any grease & apply it. 58 Mouth stink, seeth the leaves in wine & wash therewith. 59 jaundice, drink iiii. ounces of the water or decoction of it. 60 To heal inward ●●ptures, & to dissolve congealed blood distill it with the root thereof in the midst of May in a limbek and drink four ounces morn and even daily. 61 Flux and excoriation of the belly, drink the juice. 62 For great griefs within the body, boil it with pennyroyal and Poppy leaves of each like much in wine, and foment therewith. 63 seeth it in vinegar & gargoyle therewith for all griefs of the teeth, gums, mouth and throat. 64 Pissing blood, seeth it with Reed mace in wine and drink it. Aches 20. 21. 43 Adder biting 28. 49 Apostume 9 Agneils 9 Backache 35 Bellyache 21. 29. 61. 62. 33. bound 29. hard 29. 40. swollen 29. 40. Bitings venomous 25. 28. 44. 49. Bleeding 1. 22. 50 Bloody flux 1. 47. 50 Bruised 60 Bursten 6. 60 Cod swollen 6 Colic 30. 33. 45 Demoniak 16 Dropsy (see Belly) Eyes web 31 Emerods' 55 Falling evil 5. 12 Fancy 18 Fear 18 Fevers 4. 16. 17 Fistula 7. 56 Fluxes 1. 15. 41. 46. 54. 61 Flowers to stop 15. 42 Fundament griefs 2. 55. 9 Gums rotten 37 Hands shaking 14 Hard lumps 9 Headache 20 Hoarseness 25 jaundice 8. 10. 32. 59 Iliak pas. 33 canker 23. (see Mouth.) Kernels 23. (see Throat.) King's evil 34 Legs ache 43 Liver griefs 3. 8 Lungs griefs 3 Mad 16 Mother griefs 9 Mouth canker 50. scalded 20. sores 1. 20. 24. 37. 38. 63. stink 58. nails rough 2. to grow 57 Nose bleeding 23. 53 Pissing blood 64 Poison 3. 11. 25 Sciatica 1 Shaking 14 Scabs 9 Scurf 2. 9 Sores 2. 7. 9 Squincy 15. 19 20. 25. Stinging (see Bitings.) Stomach ache 21. 24. 62. cold 51. Stone 27 Strangury 36 Swell 29 Teethache 1. 52. 63 Tongue sore 24. 26. 63. swollen 48. Throat sore 19 20. 24. 25. 38. 63. Trembling 14 Venom 11. 44 Vomit to stop 39 Warts 9 Wens 2. 9 Women swollen 40 Wounds 7 ¶ Flags. FLags or yellow Flower de luce, or common Flags have the nature of the roots of Tormentill and Bistort, and being boiled in the water and drunk, it stoppeth the bloody flux, and all other fluxes of the belly and all bleeding and the flowers howsoever it be taken, yea, if it be used but outwardly in plasters or baths. 2 Teeth ache, put the juice of the yellow Flag into the ear on the same side. 3 Freckles, seeth the root of stinking segs in in cows milk, and use it, (See Acorus, Flower de luce, Gladen.) Bloody flux 1 Flowers to stop 1 Fluxes 1 Freckles 3 Teethache 2 Whites 1 Reins running 1 ¶ Flax. Flax. seeth the seed in water and apply it as a pultisse or plaster to appease all pain, to soften cold swellings, apostumes of the ears, neck, and all other places. 2 Stamp the seeds with figs and apply it to ripen and break all apostumes and to draw forth thorns and pricks being mixed with the root of wild Cucumber. 3 Apply the same with Cresses and honey to rough and evil favoured nails to make them come off, and to heal them. 4 Stamp it raw and apply it to all spots in the face. 5 seeth it in wine and wash ulcers and old sores therewith to keep them from corruption, festering, and rankling. 6 seeth them in water, and drop thereof into the eyes to clear the sight. 7 Take them in glisters for the pain of the belly and matrixe, and to cure wounds of them. 8 Mix them with honey, and take it as an electuary or lotion, to cleanse the breast, to help the cough, and eat them with raisins for the consumption or phthisic, 9 Fevers and hectic. 10 Apply the meal of it with Mallow roots and swine's grease warm, to ripen and break apostumes. 11 Eat it with Pepper and honey to move Venery. Use the decoction thereof to cleanse, mollify, and ripen the apostumes of the matrix. 12 The oil serveth for Printers ink, Painter's colours, for vernishing of boards, for the Armourer in making clean harness and weapons, and lamps. 13 The oil washed in five or six waters with a stick till it wax white, and then with a spoon taken forth (for it will swim aloft) will heal burnings, scaldings, and inflammations, it mollifieth hard sores, and is good for bone setters to strengthen the sinews, joints and bones, for convulsions, emerods, etc. If it be drunk after poison, it will cast it up by vomit & cleanse the stomach. With powder of a Boar's tooth, applied with a feather, it healeth the squincy presently. 14 The dross of the seeds after the oil is strained forthsteeped a while in rain water, amendeth all the spots & deformities of the skin being washed therewith. 15 Linseed hath the nature of Fenegrek. 16 If it be taken in cakes with Pepper plentifully, it causeth lust. 17 Let women sit in the decoction thereof for the inflammation and heat of the matrix. 18 Drink six ounces of the oil against the plague. Drink two or three ounces of it with barley water for the pleurisy, but let the oil be fresh and not old if it be taken inward. 19 The seeds licked in with honey as much as a nutmeg at once, helpeth the cough, and causeth lust. 20 Anoint with the oil against obstructions, colic, and hardness, or use the decoction of the seed either in glisters or outwardly. 21 The seed or oil helpeth burnings, softeneth all hardness or apostumes, mendeth the defaults of the face, especially the seed sodden in wine and the face washed therewith. 22 The seeds sodden with as much Cress seeds and honey, is good to be applied to scurvy nails. 22 Breasts rankled, apply the meal with the white of an egg, and then apply the juice of Smallach with Rye meal, and let her drink the juice of Vervin, Fenel seed and Amber. 25 Seed to restore in the back, drink powder of it with goats milk three or four times fasting. 26 seeth the seeds with Fenigreke in oil of Violets & butter, to dissolve all apostumes and the pleurisy. 27 Flowers to stop, seeth it in Goat's milk and drink it. 28 Legs swollen, seeth it in water tender, and stamp a great handful of Hemlocks, and seeth them together & apply them till it be nesh and soft. 29 Noli me tangere, dip a cloth in the oil and apply it. 30 Stinging, pluck out the sting and apply a plaster of Linseed and vinegar. 31 Swell, apply Linseed, Holy oak, and Mallows boiled together: it healeth sores also. 32 Side pain, seeth the bruised seeds in water, and dip a cloth in it and apply it to have present help. 33 Yard burnt, apply ashes of the seeds in a linen cloth. 34 urine stopped, seeth the seeds long in honey and use it. 35 Freckles, seeth it in vinegar and use it, & after wash with woman's milk. 36 Quincy, mix the juice of wormwood with milk, honey, and meal of linseed and apply it. 37 Yard apostumed, apply powder of the seeds with gylts grease. 38 Belly bound, seeth the seeds in water till they be tender, then do away the water, and fry the seeds with fresh grease, and eat it hot. 39 Gout hot, stamp linseed, ivy leaves with oil Olive, and apply it hot at every eight hours end. 40 Pap apostumed, seeth the seed till it be broken, then power out the water, and seeth the seeds in milk to pap, and apply it often till it be broken. 41 Apostume to ripen, seeth the seeds in water to pap i.li. than put thereto Holy oak leaves, & swine's grease, & boil them & malax it and apply it. 42 Gout at the bone, seeth it in water till it be thick, then stamp it and mix it with sheep's suet & the juice of Henbane, and herb Benet, & seeth them well together & apply it. It helpeth also all running gouts. 43 Swelling of a bruise or hurt, stamp the seeds and seeth them in milk and apply it. 44 Gout, take yolks of eggs, Linseed, saffron, & woman's milk of each like much, work them well together & apply it: proved. 45 Hair to grow, mix ashes of the seeds with honey and anoint often. 46 Quincy hot or cold, apply a plaster of Linseed & Goat's milk. 47 Hands rankled & scabbed, wash with the decoction of the seeds. 48 Weariness & to cause sweat, apply water of the decoction of the seeds to the stomach. 49 Sores ache, apply a plaster of the seeds. 50 fellow rankling, seeth the meal of linseed and barley in ale, and apply it. 51 Soreness, and chafing of the yard, and for women's breasts, boil the juice of morel with linseed, and barrows grease, and apply it. 52 Paps sore, seeth the seeds or meal, and apply it. 53 Stomach griefs general, stamp the seeds of smallach, cummin, and linseed, of each like much, and drink it with hot water. 54 Belly, or womb griefs general, seeth a bag of linseed in water two hours, and apply it as hot as may be suffered. 55 Cramp, bathe in the decoction of linseed. 56 Put the seeds into a radish root, and set it into fat earth, and the herb will come forth like Dragons, and taste like vinegar and salt, and is used for sauce without vinegar and salt. 57 Flax to be soft as silk, dress it and comb it, and cover it over with fresh calves dung, and let it so soak five or six hours, then wash it, and it will be soft as silk. 58 Canker in the yard or else where, cast on powder of linseed, and apply a plaster of mallows and wormwood, sodden and stamped with Swine's grease. 59 Codswolne, seeth Flax and salt in vinegar, and apply it. 60 Yard scaled, or ape galled, burn an old Flaxen cloth clean washed, and anoint it with oil of eggs, and cast on the powder. 61 Hair falling, burn the seeds, and mix them with oil olive, and anoint therewith. 62 Yard swollen, seeth the seeds with mallows and apply it. 63 Navel of children, swollen by much crying, cough, fall, or bruise, mix powder of fair old linen cloth, burned, and of bitter lupins, and apply it with tow to the navel. 64 Short wound, eat powder of the seeds with honey. (See for Oil.) Nails scallen, and falling off, mix the seeds, with as much seeds of wild mints, and honey, and apply it. Aches 1. 49 See gout, etc. Apostumes 1. 2. 10. 11. 21. 40. 41. (See botch. Back weak 25 Belly ache 7 bound 38 Bitings venomous 30 Bones broken 13 Breast griefs 8 See cough Breast sores 24. 30. 51. 52 Breath short 64 Bruise 43 Burn 13. 21 Colic 20 Consumption 8 Cough 8. 19 Cod swollen 59 Cramp 13. 55 Eyes dull 6 Emeralds 15 Face deformed 4. 21. 35. 29 Felon 5 Fevers hect 8 Flowers to stop 27 Freckles 5 Gout 30. 42. 44 Hands scabbed 47 Hardness 13. 21. 28 Hair to grow 45. 61 Inflammations 13 joints griefs 13 canker 58 Kernels 13 Lust to 'cause 11. 16. 19 25 Matrix griefs 11. 17. 20 Nails foul 3. 12 Navel out 63 Neck kernels 1. 36 swollen 1 See Throat. Noli me tangere 29 Obstructions 20 Plague 18 Pleurisy 19 Poison 13 Phthisic 8 Purgation 13 Painting 12 Rankling 5. 50 Reins running 25 Sauce 56 Sinews griefs 13 Side pain 32 Scalding 13 Skin deformed 4. 14. 21 Short wound 64 Silkelike 57 Sores 5. 13. 49 squinsy 13. 46. 36 Stinging 30 Stomach to cleanse 13 griefs general 53 Sweeting much 23 Swell 1. 28. 31. 43. 59 Sweat to 'cause 48. 45 Throat swollen 36 See squinsy Vomit to 'cause 13 Vernishing 12 Urine stopped 34 Wens 1 Weariness 48 Wounds 7 Yard apostume 37. 51 ape galled 60 chafed 51 burnt 33. 60 canker 58 Scalded 60 Swollen 62 Fleawort. FLeawort, Psillium: Eyes heat, steep it in water, and apply it. 2 Hair not to grow, use the cotton that is found in Fleawort. 3 Eyes tears, heat and itch, steep it all night in water, and wash the eyelids therewith. 4 Flux, roast the seeds in an eggeshel, and drink the powder thereof with wine. 5 A bathe of the decoction of Fleawort, taketh away all pain of the gout, of what sort soever it be. 6 Fevers continual, steep the whole seeds all night in water, and strain it, and drink it with sugar to quench intolerable heat. 7 Bind as much Fleawort as a filbert in a clout, and lay it in warm water three hours, and struck thy tongue therewith to avoid the heat and bitterness of the jaundice. 8 Thirst and dryness of the tongue, tie the seeds in a cloth and steep it in cold water, and rub thy tongue therewith, and drink the water wherein it hath been steeped. 9 seeth or steep the seeds in water, and drink it to purge down a dust or choleric humours, to suage pain and inflammation of the entrails, hot fevers, all inward heats, drought and thirst. 10 Bruise the seeds, and purge them at the fire, and use them for the bloody flux, & vehement lask, especially when they come of violent medicines: mix the seed with oil of roses and vinegar, or water, and struck it on hot griefs, apostumes, & swellings behind the ears, or else where, and headache. 11 Apply the seed with vinegar to the going out of the navel, and burstings of young children. 12 Apply water, wherein the seed hath been steeped, to S. Anthony's fire, and all hot swellings, and drop it into the ears that run, or have worms in them. 13 Straw the green herb in the house to withstand breeding of fleas. Apostumes hot 10 Bloody flux 10 Bursten 11 Ears running 12 Eyes hot 1. 3 itch 3 tears 3 Fleas to void 13 Fluxes 4. 10 Fevers continual 6 Gout 5 Headache 10 Hot griefs 6. 9 12 Hair not to grow 2 jaundice 7 Kernels 10 Navel out 11 Neck apostume 10 Purgation 9 S. Anthony's fire 12 Swell 10. 12 Thirst. 8. 9 Tongue heat 7. 8 ¶ Flower de luce. FLower de luce, Six drams of the root taken with water & honey, purgeth gross phlegm & choler, provoketh sleep, stayeth tears, & ceaseth stamp them and drink them with water, and cover thee well to sweat. 41 Flowers stopped, make a pessary of the root, and anoint it over with oil de bay, or common oil, and cast thereon powder of walwoort, and put it in all night till it provoke it to bleed. 42 Pricks or bones to draw out, stamp the root and apply it. 43 Bruises, drink the root. 44 It healeth ache of the sinews. 45 Drink it with ale or wine to cleanse the breast from evil humours, and to help the cough. 46 It helpeth cramps, and venomous bitings, it expelleth a dead child. 47 Drink the juice of it and morel, of each one egg shell full clarified, and sweetened with sugar to heal all dropsies that be curable both hot and cold, but some take the juice of Iris one day, and the juice of morel another day: for Iris looseth, and morel provoketh urine: proved. 38 Take an egg shell full of the juice of the root raw, to purge phlegm, and waterish humours from all parts of the body. 49 And with the juice of time it is good for ache, and swelling in the head, stomach, and legs, and bowels, and wind in them: you may put to it a little sugar, or honey, and cloves, or a little aqua vitae. 50 Mix the juice of the flowers with gum water, and it will be perfect and durable, blue or green. 51 Cough to heal speedily, use caudles with the powder of. 52 cattle hidebound, give them the juice of the leaves. 53 Dropsy ascites, mix half an egg shell full of the juice with four ounces of mellicrate and half a dram of powder of the best rhubarb, and drink it hot in the morning once a week: it is wonderful. 54 Ache in the loins or haunches, stamp the roots with brimstone, and bears grease, and apply it. 55 Aches general, stamp the root with the oil of it and honey, and apply it. 56 Hair falling, mix the powder with as much soot of a chimney, and temper them with old oil, and anoint. 57 Fistula to heal, stamp one ounce of the root with verderam, and oil of tartar, of each a dram, and apply it to the sore. 58 Stinging of serpents, apply powder of the upper parts with wine. 59 Apostumes under the ear, boil the root and stamp it with salt, & ayply it to dissolve it. 60 Belly torments, drink a dram of the powder with sour wine. 61 Belly bound, drink the juice with the yolk of an egg as hot as may be suffered. 62 Milt griefs, drink it with wine. 63 Flowers stopped in a new laid woman, and to bring down the seconds, stamp the roots, and boil them long in vinegar, and receive up the fume thereof through a narrow mouthed glass, or other vessel. 64 Skin to cleanse, wash with the powder in water. 65 Costivenesse, drink the powder with any liquor. Aches 1. 54. 55 Apostumes 6. 59 Armpits stink 5 Abortion to 'cause 19 20 Backach 54. 55 weak 12 Belly ache 14. 49. 60 bound 30. 61. 65 See Dropsy purge. Bitings venomous 15. 46. 58 Bladder griefs 32 Blisters 25 Bones broken 25. 42 Breasts cleansing 12. 30. 32. 37. 45. See Cough. Breath stink 4 See Breast. Bruises 43 cattle hidebound 52 Colic 49 Cough 1. 30. 32. 37. 45. 51 Cramp 1. 24. 46 Colour to make 50 Dead child 46 Deliverance 19 20. 21 Drink to keep 18 Dropsy 10. 31. 36. 47. 53 Eyes tears 1 Face deformed 9 38 Fevers 1. 13. 14 Fistula 16. 27. 57 Flowers stopped 2. 14. 19 39 41. 63 Fundament griefs 25 See Privities Gomorpassion 1. 11. 14 Gums rotten 27 Hardness 6. 17 Headache 8. 49 cleansing 3 Hair to grow 39 56 jaundice 13. 33. 40 Impostume 30 joints griefs 24 Kankers 16 Kernels 17. 59 Liver griefs 32 Loins griefs 2 Lungs griefs 32 Matrix griefs 2. 17. Milt griefs 1. 14. 23. 62 Nails apostume 25 Neck apostume 59 Poison 15. 34 Pricks 25 42 Privities griefs 16. 17. 25 Purgation 1. 10. 13. 19 47. 36. 48. 49 Reins running. 1. 11. 14 Sciatica 21 Seconds 63 Seed distilling 1. 11. 14 Sinews griefs 24. 44 Shaking 1 Sickness general 32 ¶ Frankincense. FRankincense, cough old, eat three grains by itself, or with a rear Egg. 2 Teethach, apply it with the juice of read nettles and the white of an Egg. 3 Eyes bloody, mix it with mastic the juice of Smallach and the white of an Egg & apply it. 4 For a woman that hath been in labour & given over, and for the Emerods', set it in a close chair on hot coals & sit over it, but an earthen vessel is better than a close chair. 5 Ears dull, boil it with oil olive and scum it clean, & anoint the forehead therewith from the one ear to the other. 6 Vomit to stop, mix powder of Mastic and white Frankincense with Rose leaves and the juice of Mints and apply it to the stomach. 7 Flux white, mix i d. weight of Nutmegs, and two. d. weight of white Frankincense with the juice of Quinces, and drink it. 8 Sores old, cast on powder of Frankincense & Orpiment. 9 Teethwormes, receive up the fume of the seeds of Leeks and Henbane, with powder of Frankincense. 10 Flux, roast an Onion tender and bruise it, and lap it in a cloth, and apply it to the fundament, and sit down upon it as hot as may be suffered a long time, and roast Frankincense in an other Onion, and put off the covering and apply it hot to the Navel. 11 Itch, anoint with powder of Frankincense and oil de Bay. 12 Wounds and hurts to heal, melt virgins wax, a quarter of a pound, with sheeps suet two. ounces, and take it from the fire, and mix therewith Frankincense i. ounce, and use it, see in lib. Animalium fol. 9 13 Eyes watering, mix it with Mastic, Bolarmon. gum tragacanth, and the white of an Egg, and apply it to the forehead and temples. 14 Vomit to stop, mix it and as much Mastic with Barley meal and the white of an Egg, and spread it on Tow and apply it to the mouth of the stomach. 15 Wounds bleeding, mix it with the hairs of a horse belly, and the white of an Egg, and apply it. 16 Headache great and heavy, mix it with Aloes and mastic ana, with vinegar and white of an Egg, and apply it to the forehead and temples with stuphes. 17 But if it come of vapours, mix it with Barley meal and the white of an Egg, and apply it to the temple on the same side that acheth with a Paper. 18 Or mix it with Pigeons dung, Wheat flower & the white of an Egg and apply it. 19 Pissing bed, in a cold cause, drink three drams of the powder of it. 20 Teeth ache, mix it with worm wood, hot bread & vinegar, and apply it. Or roast it in a read Apple & apply it. 21 Or with Wheat flower, the white of an Egg, and morel & read Nettles, or take it & Mastic ana, three drams, Peritrum vi. drams, mix them with honey or Treacle, & apply it to the tooth. 22 Head skal, mix it with Pitch and rosin of each like much with fresh grease, & shave thy head & anoint it, & when the hairs rise like bristles, pluck them up & apply new plasters, the powder and grease must be melted together. 23 Stomach griefs, mix it with wormwood, Mints, Cummin and dried bread crumbs ana i. handful, & stamp them with vinegar and apply them hot in a bag sprinkled with vinegar. 24 Stone, stamp it with Gromelseed, parsley seed, read Mints, Violets and Saxifrage, & let it steep in good stolen ale all night, & drink it first and last. 25 Emerods' pain, sit over the fume of the powder of it laid on a tile almost read hot, and laid in hot water to the midst. 26 Drink fine powder of white Frankincense with wine in cold weather, & with water in hot weather wherein reasons have been sodden, to comfort the brain, memory & stomach. 27 Face swollen with tooth ache, apply it with the juice of read Nettles & the white of an Egg. 28 Vomiting, boil it with the juice of Mints and a little vinegar, & apply it to the pit of the stomach. 29 Nose bleeding, stamp it with earth-worms & the white of an Egg, & apply it. 30 Fundament fallen, receive up the fume of it & Pitch, and Mastic. 31 Leg swollen hard & sore, hold it over the fume of it and vermilion, and lay a cloth over it. 32 Whiteflaw, apply it with the pulp of Resins. 33 Rheum & distilling of the head, use the fume of it, or apply a plaster of it. 34 Ache of all sorts, apply it with the white of an Egg. 35 Use it to clear the sight, to heal new wounds & stop all fluxes of blood. 36 With milk it healeth all evil ulcers of the Fundament, and dissolveth gross Phlegm, it strengtheneth the memory. 37 And with Duck's grease it healeth wounds. 38 Emerods', sit over the fume of it in a close chair. 39 Tooth ache, lay it and the seeds of Henbane & Leeks on hot coals of each like much, & receive up the fume of it through a funnil. 40 Chollik, roast it in an Onion & apply it, & be whole. 41 Head ache, apply it with Hony & the white of an Egg & white wine to the temples & neck, or beaten it with the white of an egg & oil of Roses, & apply it to the temples. 42 piles, mix it with oil of Roses & anoint. see Olibanum. Flowers to stop, receive up the fume of it. Sores 2. 17 Stomach stopped 2. 5 Weak 19 20 urine stopped 5 Weals 5 Worms 8 Yard blistered 1 Skin off 1 ¶ Furs. FVrres or Thorne-broome, seeth Leaves in wine or water and drink it, to stop the Flowers and the lask. 2 Drink the seed in wine against all venomous bitings and stingings. Bitings Venomous. 2 ¶ Galbanum. GAlbanum is good for the old cough, shortness and streitnesse of breath, Burstings, Brusing, cramps and shrinking of senowes. 2 Drink it in wine with Myrrh against all venom & poison by drinks or shots, to provoke Terms and expel the dead births, and so it doth in a Pessary or Perfume. 3 Let a woman in painful travail, drink as much as a Bean, with a glass of white wine. 4 Burn it in Perfume to expel serpents and venomous beasts: if a man be anointed therewith, none of them shall hurt him. If it be mixed with oil, and the seed or root of Angelica or of Spondilium, and they touched therewith, it causeth them to die. 5 The perfume of it helpeth the strangling of the Mother, and the falling evil. 6 Apply it to the navel, to set the Matrixe in the natural place. 7 It doth soften and draw forth Prickles, Thorns, and cold humours. 8 Apply it to all cold swellings. 9 Use it in all ointments and emplasters that shall warm, digest, dissolve, ripen, break and draw Apostumes and Pricks. 10 Apply it to the hardness of the Milt, and pain of the side. 11 Face-freckles or spots or elsewhere, apply it with Vinegar and Niter. 12 Toothache, put it into it. Ear running or mattering, put it in with oil of Roses, or of Nardus. 13 Sleep to cause, apply it to the head. 14 Lethargy, smell to the fume of it: make it soft, and apply it to to a plague sore or botch to take it clean away. 15 Soften it and put in a cloth of silk and so into the mouth of the Matrixe, and let the woman's head be clean, and a thin call, and a clean kerchief on it, without any odours: if in the morning, after she hath lain with it in this manner all night, her head smell of it in the crown, she is apt to conceive. 16 Mix it with powder of Piretrum and the milk of Spurge or Wartwort and apply it to any rotten or aching tooth, to break it, or pluck it out. 17 Dissolve it in Vinegar, and use it to all hardness and knots of the joints, and to heal Felons. 18 A Pessary thereof bringeth down the Terms strongly. 19 Milt hard, apply it with Assafoetida and Wax, or dissolve it with as much Armoniake and Vinegar, and put thereto Wax and powder of Wormwood and of cost, and use it. 20 Plague sore, apply it with black Sope. 21 Belly worms, take pills of it and Sugar candy beaten together. 22 Apply it under the Navel to provoke Urine presently in the strangury. 23 Take Pills of it for the old Cough, and shortness of breath, bruises and ruptures, or drink a little with mire in Wine. 24 To cleanse it, put it in a bag, and hung it in a deep pot, and set it into a vessel of hot water, and the best will be in the bottom, and the dross in the bag: or dissolve it in Vinegar and strain it. 25 Heels kibed, mix powder of it and Dragagant with Ox Tallow and a little oil of Violets, melt them together and apply it. 26 Temper it at the fire and cleanse it, and apply it to a bile two days without removing, and do so as often as need is to break it and heal it fair. 27 Breath stopped, take two drams of it with a rear Egg, or with Barley water. 28 Worms, make Pills of it, and anoint them with Honey and use them. 29 Urine stopped, apply it to the end of the Yard, but for a woman, to the Navel. 30 It cleanseth wounds, and keepeth them open. 31 To cleanse it, put it into very hot water, and by little and little the filth w●l separate from the clean, and so it may be used in Plasters, etc. or resolve it all night in Vinegar, or in Vinegar and water: and in the morning boil it and strain it. The like may be done with other Gums that will not be powdered. 32 Dissolve it it vinegar, and apply it to a swollen Pap to break it, dissolve it and anoint in vinegar of each like much and apply it to Apostumes. Apostume 8. 9 14. 32 Botch 14. 26. 32 Breasts swollen 32 Breath short 1. 23. 27 Stopped 27 Bruised 1. 23 Bursten 23 Conception 15 Cough 1. 23 Cramp 1 Dead child 2 Deliverance 23 Face deform. 11 Falling evil 5 Felon 17 Flowers stopped 18 Hardness 7. 17 Kibes 25 Knots 17 lethargy 14 Milt stop. 10. 19 Mother displaced 6 Suffocate 5 Plague sore 14. 20 Poison 2 Pricks 7 sinews shrunk 1 Serpents 4 Side pain 10 Skin deform. 11 Strangury 22 Swelling 8 Teeth ache 12 To fall 16 Venom 24 urine stopped 22. 29 Worms 21. 28 Wounds 30 ¶ Gallingale. GAllingale (See Cyperus.) Put the root or juice into the nose to comfort the Brain. 2 Heart worms, chew it and swallow it down. 3 Stomach cold, use powder of it with cinnamon and Sugar upon tostes with ale or wine. 4 Put the juice into the eyes to clear them. 5 Stomach pain of cold cause, stamp English Gallingale, and boil it in oil, and apply it to the mouth of the stomach, & apply it above the yard to provoke urine, or seethe it in water and drink it to voided urine. 6 Gallingale stoppeth the flowing of the urine coming of coldness of the reins and bladder. 7 English Gallingale helpeth Chaps. 8 Hycket, seethe one dram of the powder with a pint of good white wine, and drink two. ounces morn and even two hours before meat. 9 Appetite to cause, make powder of Galingale, Pepper and parsley seed of each two drams, and with new honey, make it an electuary, & take one spoonful morn & even two. hours before and after meat. 10 Stomach windy & ill, use it in sauses with ginger, Mints, and vinegar: it is the best root or spice for the stomach. 11 For the griefs of the breast and breast bones, take out the core of a ripe apple, fill it with powder of Galingale and lycoras and honey all well mixed together, and roast it, and pill it, and eat it as often as need is. 12 For griefs of the heart, lungs, and stomach, & to preserve from all evil humours, take Cardamom three ounces, Galingale vi. ounces, saffron i.d. worth, sugar four ounces, make them into a fine powder, and take thereof half a spoonful morn & even till you be well. 13 Stomach hot, eat Gallingale with green Parsley. 14 It taketh away the coldness of the breast, heart, guts, reins, and matrix. It causeth a sweet breath, expelleth wind, helpeth digestion, provoketh lust, dissolveth the hard milt. 15 It comforteth the brain and memory being put into the nose. 16 Hold a piece in the mouth to 'cause belching. 17 It is good for the colic. 18 Drink it with the water or juice of Planten to stop the bloody flux, and strengthen nature, to comfort the brain and the trembling of the heart. Appetite 9 Back griefs 14 Belly ache 14. 17 Bloody flux 18 Brain weak 1. 15. 18 Breast griefs 11. 14 Breath stink 16 Chaps 7 Colic 17 Digestion 14 Eyes dull 4 Flux 18 Heart griefs 2. 12. 14. 18 Hicket 8 Lungs griefs 12 Lust to 'cause 14 Matrix griefs 14 Memory 16 Sickness general 12 Stomach cold 35. griefs 12. hot 13. windy 10. urine dropping 6. stopped 5. Windiness 10. 14 ¶ Gall, or noble Myrtle, etc. GAll, or noble Myrtle, or dwarf Myrtle: brew the leaves, buds, and flowers in Beer in stead of Hops to make it have a pleasant smell & taste: but it is good to use therewith some hops or Rosemary, Calament, or Groundpine or such like opening seeds or herbs, as the seeds of Carway, Fenel, or Anise. 2 Drink it to kill heart worms. Beer 1 Worms 2 ¶ Gallion. GAllion stamped and applied to burnings, draweth forth the heat, & healeth them. 2 Apply it to the nose or to wounds to stop their bleeding. 3 Mix it with oil of Roses, and set it in the sun, & apply thereof to wearied members to comfort them. 4 The roots provoke Venus. 5 The herb is very good to be put into rennits to make pleasant cheese. 6 It is good for the holy fire, shingles, and burnings. 7 seeth it, and wash the feet therewith against weariness, and also wash dry scabs therewith. Blood stopped 2 Burn 1. 6 Cheese 5 Holy fire 6 Lust to 'cause 4 Shingles 6 Scabs 7 Weariness 3. 7 ¶ Garlic. Garlic, breaketh all evil winds in the body, and provoketh urine, but it hurteth the eyes & causeth thirst. Colic windy, roast three cloves of Garlic in a wet paper in the embers, and pill them, and put them into the fundament somewhat warm. 2 It healeth venom within a man. 3 It healeth all cold sores as it were Treacle. It healteth scabs, morphue or bladders being chafed well with the juice. 4 Worms to kill, apply it with rye bread, salt, and good ale dregss to the navel or breast to make them come out. 5 Head scaled, stamp it with honey and apply it. 6 Urine stopped, stamp it with Hocks and vinegar, and seeth them in ale till the third part be wasted and drink it often. piles, drink powder of it. 7 Biting of a man, stamp it with Rue, meal and honey and apply it. 8 Colic, stamp three cloves with a good handful of Time, and strain them with ale, and make a possit with it, and drink the ale of it. 9 Horse bots, cut horse hair small, and give it him with warm milk in a horn, and put in either ear a spoonful of milk, and a clove of Garlic, and knit the ear with a list two hours. 10 Teethach, stamp it with honey and apply it to the cheek. 11 Worms, drink sweet milk four days, and the fifth day stamp Garlic with vinegar, & eat it to kill them all. 12 Gout, stamp peeled Garlic with houseleek, & anoint therewith strongly. 13 Head ache of cold, eat Garlic, and mix the ashes of it with vinegar & apply it. 14 Pissing blood, seeth the heads with their roots and all in wine and water, & drink it three days & be whole. 15 If a spider be in thy cup, or crept into thy mouth, drink Garlic. It helpeth also poison & venomous bitings. 16 Voice to be clear, seeth Garlic in milk, or pun it by itself, & eat it with soft cheese. 17 Teethach, pill a Garlic head, and bind it to the wrist on the same side that the grief is on, bruised as broad as a walnut all night, & let the water go out of the blister, but if it run too sore, lay to the rough side of a walnut leaf. 18 hoarseness & old cough, eat sodden Garlic. 19 Stomach with cold humours, eat raw Garlic with salt & bread fasting. 20 For small worms in the belly, eat Garlic fasting. 21 Loins ache of cold cause, seeth Garlic and Coliander of each two. ounces in wine one quart, till the third part be wasted, then strain it & drink it morn & even. 22 Bladder stopped with the stone or slime, and for the stitch and pain thereof, stamp two. Garlic heads & their roots well cleansed with a good handful of Mallows, & their roots, and seeth them in a new pot half an hour with a quart of wine, & strain it, and put thereto two. drams of sugar, & drink thereof cold a good draft morn & even as often as need is, & hold a toast of bread to thy mouth, if thou doubt to cast it up again. 23 Teethach, stamp it with saffron & pepper, & apply it between thy teeth. 24 Squincy, stamp Garlic and rub it therewith, and stamp more & apply it plasterwise. 25 Fundament fallen, bake Garlic, & put it in, & when it is gone in, apply of the said Garlic with tallow, & when it is in put in a stoppel. 26 Gout cold, stamp peeled Garlic and seeth it with man's urine and scum it, and apply it six hours thrice and be whole. 27 Canker and fester to destroy them mix Orpiment with Houseleek & Garlic and apply it. 28 Biting of ● mad dog, stamp Garlic cloves with Mints, morel, & salt, and apply it. 29 Plague to resist & to kill worms, eat a top of Rue, a Garlic head, & a corn of salt xxx. morning's: proved. 30 Matrix to open, put in a clove of peeled Garlic. It helpeth the suffoc. of the mother. 31 A plaisteer of the cloves and leaves, stoppeth the humour causing rheum. 32 Teethache, stamp two cloves, and bind them to the wrist on the same side that the grief is on. 33 Colic & Ilyak, eat Garlic with a little bread. 34 Fundament falling, receive up the fume of the warm and clear juice of Garlic. 35 Stone, seeth seven. heads in water a good while and drink it three days. 36 Flowers to cause, put a clove of pilly Garlic into the matrix. 37 Mother suffoc. dissolve Treacle, Cloves, and Garlic in strong wine & drink it. 38 Fever certain & quotidian, bind Garlic to the outward parts before the fit come. 39 Eat Garlic & drink after it the blood of a cock with warm wine, & no venomous beast shall hurt thee. 40 French Garlic fried with oil, killeth ill scabs and breaking out, & breaketh apostumes. 41 Eat Garlic & breath upon a painted face and the colour will quickly vanish away. 42 Gout hot or cold, stamp Garlic with as much houseleek and apply it. 43 Colic, stone, and strangury, stamp vi. cloves, & strain them with a draft of Rhenish wine & drink it three days. 44 Stone, and to expel urine, burn the cloves in a pot, & drink the powder, or use it in pottage. 45 Serpent crept into the body, eat Garlic. 46 Teethach in the neither jaws, pill Garlic & bruise it & apply it to the soles of the feet to help it speedily. 47 urine stopped, stamp Garlic & Mallows and strain them in white wine, and drink a good draft ix. times. 48 Sow Garlic when the Moon is under the earth, & pluck it when she is above the earth & it will not smell, it will be the sweeter if it be bruised when it is set, or olive stones set about it. 49 To take birds that eat the seeds when they are sown, seeth Garlic that it may not grow again and cast it to them, and they that eat it may be taken up with your hand. 50 Cough, stamp Garlic with hog's grease, and anoint the back & feet therewith by the fire. 51 Cocks that eat Garlic are stout to fight, and horses that eat it with bread and wine at the hour of battle, are lively and fierce. Therefore traveilers and warriors do bite thereof often to 'cause agility and courage. 52 Moules to catch, put Garlic, Onions, or Leeks into the mouths of their holes, and they will come out quickly as amazed. 53 Coughs, stamp three or four cloves with bores grease and anoint thy feet when thou goest to bed & keep them hot with a toasted trencher and warm clotheses, it helpeth all coughs in young and old. 54 Emerods' bleeding, drink the juice of yarrow, and cast on burnt Garlic & they will dye. 55 Teethache, put a clove of Garlic into the ear on the same side that acheth. 56 Cough, cleanse two or three heads of Garlic and stamp it with hog's grease, and warm thy feet hot, and rub them well therewith, and lap them hot, and cover thee well, rub therewith also the smals of thy legs. 57 Side colic, seeth four heads with a pint of white wine, & drink thereof, and go to bed and cover thee well. 58 Ears noise, put in the juice of Garlic & saffron with goose grease. 59 Apostume or swelling in the groin or share to break it, mix two Garlic heads with unslakt lime and yolks of three eggs and apply it. 60 To defend from the plague, eat Garlic & drink wine after it. 61 Ringworms, mix the ashes of Garlic with honey, and anoint therewith. 62 Flowers and seconds to bring down, seeth it in water and receive up the fume of it. 63 Pissing blood, seeth heads in water to the third part & drink it. 64 Scabs, stamp it finely, and apply it especially with swine's blood. 65 Pissing bed, seeth it with sage in wine, till the third part be wasted, & strain it and drink it morn & even. 66 Bitings venomous, drink Garlic with wine, and apply it with fig leaves and Cummin, or anoint the biting of a dog with the juice, or apply Garlic or Onions with Rue & salt, & wash the sore first with the juice of Garlic or Onions. 67 Flux to stop, pill two heads and stamp them, & seeth them in almost a pint of milk with some shaven chalk, & drink it once or twice. 68 Bleeding to stop, drink the juice of yarrow with powder of burned Garlic. 69 Garlic consumeth, dissolveth, and expelleth poison. 70 Stamp it, & apply it to any venomous bitings of beasts or worms. 71 Worms in the body, take Garlic with the juice of Parsley & Mints with a little vinegar & pepper, and make it a sauce, and eat it with bread or meat. 72 Colic and pain of the reins, seeth it in wine & oil and apply it plasterwise to the belly, and round about the root of the yard. 73 Eat Garlic to withstand all corrupt and stinking air. 74 Teethach, hold a clove of it in thy mouth when the ache cometh of cold cause. 76 Garlic maketh inflation, drieth and harmeth the stomach, & causeth thirst. 77 Apply it to the skin xii. hours to raise blisters, & therefore the eating of it by them that are choleric is hurtful, for that it inflameth them, drieth up the whole body, especially in hot seasons, and engendereth leapry in in them, causeth frenzy, hurteth the sight, and moveth headache, and it doth more harm raw then sodden or roasted, but the moderate eating of it in Winter by them that are phlegmatic, is right profitable. 78 roast it & stamp it with figs & barrows grease to break an apostume as is aforesaid, and to draw forth the matter. 79 Anoint the head with the juice to kill both lice, & nitts. 80 Drink Garlic with the decoction of Agarik, to kill both lice and nitts. 81 Mix the ashes with honey and anoint thin places of the head to help the shedding of hair. 82 Mix the ashes with honey and May butter and anoint the scab or leapry and all filthiness of the skin, and after go into a bath or hot house. 83 Ulcers old, sprinkle on the ashes. 84 seeth Garlic and eat it against hoarseness, the old cough, to purge the breast and dry up the moisture in the stomach. 85 seeth it with the leaves and all in wine, and drink it to procure urine, terms, & seconds, and anoint the belly therewith also, or take up the fume of it in a close chair. 86 The savour of it driveth away all venomous worms. 87 If any be stung of an adder, or hath drunk poison, let him eat Garlic and he shall have no harm thereby. 88 seeth it with vinegar & drink it with honey, to kill, & expel all kinds of worms in the body. 89 Seethe it with oil olive, & anoint swellings & other griefs of the bladder. 90 seeth it with milk, & drink it to heal the blistering of the lungs. 91 seeth it with Centory in wine & drink it to help the dropsy gathered of cold cause. 92 Bruise it with Coliander seed, and so take it with wine to assuage the pain of the loins, and to open the straightness in making of water. 93 seeth it with leaves and temper it with oil olive, or oil of Poppy, & anoint the temples therewith for the headache. 94 seeth Garlic & after roast it dry and make it into powder with Pellitory and Mastic, & wash the mouth therewith to help the toothache. 95 If a woman cannot smell the savour of Garlic being set by her bedside in the night, she is undoubtedly with child. 96 Garlic is good to be eaten of labouring men that eat often meats that are cold & hard of digestion. 97 Rue eaten after Garlic taketh away the smell thereof, & so doth a raw bean, or a Beet root roasted in the embers. 98 Garlic used in meat, resisteth all poison & infirmities coming by drinking of corrupt & evil water, & killeth worms & venomous things in the body. And being drunk with wine & also applied outwardly, it helpeth the bitings & stingings of vipers, serpents & mad dogs. 99 Garlic eaten, cleareth the voice, helpeth the cough, is good for the dropsy, provoketh urine & softeneth the belly. 100 The juice anointed, taketh away scabs & leapry from the skin, & all filthy spots from the face being rubbed therewith, but especially the ashes of it with honey. It is a singular remedy used any ways for diseases of cattle. 101 Wild Garlic is more strong to all effects then the garden Garlic. 102 Stamp it & apply it to the emerods. 103 Seethe it & the smell of it will be gone, but the virtue remaineth to be eaten against coughs, pain of the lungs, & to cause sleep. 104 It is the common people's treacle. It maketh sanguine men to have read faces. 105 Stamp it with Mastic, & hold it in the mouth to assuage toothache. 106 Stamp it and gargarise with it for the squincy. 107 Drink it with new ale to kill worms. 108 Eat it against the falling evil. 109 Mix it with pitch, brimstone, & rosin, & use tents thereof to heal fistulas hot. 110 Stamp vi. cloves & strain it with a draft of Rhenish wine & drink it for the stone, colic, & strangury. 111 Stamp a whole head p●●ied & apply hot to the soles of the feet for the toothache that cometh of cold cause. 112 Garlic dispatcheth all windines, openeth all stops, killeth & expelleth broad worms, provoketh urine, cleareth the voice, cureth old coughs, & is good for the dropsy either raw or sodden. 113 Burn the cloves in a pot to drive out urine & the stone. 114 Stamp it with swine's grease & anoint the feet & backbone there with for the cough coming of cold cause. 115 Teethach, stamp it with vinegar & apply it, or boil it in water with a little incense, & wash the mouth therewith, & put it into the hollow teeth, or mix it with goose grease, and put it into the ear. 116 Headache, bruise it and apply it to the temples. 117 Bruises, black spots, or other deformities of the skin, anoint with the ashes of it & honey. 118 For the white scurf, leapry, running ulcers of the head, manginess, wild fire, spreading scabs like tetters, etc. stamp it with oil & salt and apply it. 119 Swelling hard, apply it with grease. 120 Fistulas, apply it with sulphur & rosin. 121 seeth it twice or thrice in water to put away the sharpness of it, and so it is much better than raw. It expelleth wind, & breedeth no thirst, cleareth the voice, helpeth the cold cough, provoketh urine and the terms, causeth lust, helpeth the windy colic and stone, and the sciatica coming of phlegm. 122 Adders bitings, apply it with oil de Bay. 123 Burn it to heal great wounds. 124 seeth it in milk to help the old cough, spitting blood and matter, and for the rheum and distillations. Aches 21. (see Gout.) Adder biting 87. 122 Air corrupt 73 Apost. 40. 59 78. (see Swol.) Back ache 21. 72. 92 Belly (see Colic, Worms.) Black spots 117 Bladder griefs 89. stopped 22. Blisters 3. to make 77. Blood to stop 68 Birds to take 49 Biting of man 7. venomous 15. 28. 66. 70. 98. Breast cleansing 84 Bruises 117 cattle sick 100 Colic 8. 33. 43. 57 72. 110. 121. Cocks to fight 51 Conceived 95 Cough old 18. 50. 53. 56. 84. 112. 114. 121. 124. Dropsy 91. 112 Ears noise 58 Emerods' 54. 102 Face deformed 110. painted 41. Falling evil 108 Fester 27 Fever quotidian and tertian. 38. Fistula 109. 120 Flowers stopped 36. 62. 85. 121 Flux to stop 67 Fundament fallen 25. 34 Gout 12. 26. 42 Headache 13. 93. 116. scald 5. 118. Hair falling 8 Hoarseness 16. 18. 84. 99 Horse bots 9 to fight 51. Iliak passion 33 canker 27 Leapry 82. 100 118 Lice 79. 80 Loins ache 21 Lungs blistered 90 Lust to 'cause 121 Mad dog 28. 98 Mange 118 Matrix stopped 30. suffocat. 30. 37. Morphue 3 Moules to catch 52 Nits 79. 8 Obstructions 112 Pissing bed 65. blood 14. 63. Plague 29. 60 Poison 15. 69. 87. 98 ringworm 61 Rheum 31. 124 Sciatica 121 Seconds 62. 85 Serpents 45. 86 Side colic 57 Scabs 3. 40. 64. 82. 100 118. Skin deformed 82. 100 117. 118. Sleep to cause eat it sodden Sores cold 3. 83 Spider 15 Spitting blood 124 Squincy 24. 106 Stomach cold 19 raw 19 84 Stone 22. 35. 45. 44. 110 113. 121 Strangury 22 Swell 59 119 Teethache 10. 17. 23. 32. 46 55. 74. 94. 105. 111. 115 Throat swollen 24 seesquincy Venom 2. 15. 39 48. 86. 98 Ulcers old 83 Voice bad 16. 18. 99 112 121 Urine 1. 6. 22. 24. 44. 47. 85 89. 92. 112. 113. 121 Wild fire 118 Windiness 1. 112 Worms 4. 11. 20. 29. 71. 88 107. 112. 121 Wounds great 123 ¶ Gelofers. GElofers: make conserve of all kinds of clove Gelofers with sugar, & use it to comfort the heart for hot fevers & the plague. 2 The root of garden Gelofers is good against the plague. 3 Stamp Gelofers & apply them to heal wounds of the head, & to draw forth broken bones. 4 The decoction of them is good to wash the head withal. 5 Seethe the flowers in white wine, & drink it against the terror of the tertain fever, & the horror of the quarten fever warm before the fit, & to kill worms. 6 The oil of Gelofers healeth the biting of a mad dog, the wounds of the sinews & cold gouts. 7 The root is good for the falling sickness. 8 They with the purple flower are preserved as roses with sugar, & are very good against the plague or any kind of poison, that falling sickness, the palsy, and the cramp, and giddiness. 9 Drink iiii. ounces of the juice of the whole plant after the first assault of the plague to cure it. 10 Put the herb & flowers in vinegar certain days to make it pleasant & very good to revive one out of swooning, the nostrils & temples being washed therewith, and so it also delivereth from the plague, being daily used in like manner. 11 Winter Gelofers in medicine, are much of like nature. The conserve of the flowers, is good against the weakness of the heart, & hot burning fevers. 12 Anoint the temples with the vinegar thereof for the headache. 13 Drink a glassful of the juice of winter Gelofer against all griefs. 14 To draw a woman's pap that would rot, stamp double Gelofers, & heat them with fair water, & pluck out the stoppel of the glass, & set it on the pap head. 15 Wall-gelofers, dry them & boil them in water, & drink it to provoke urine & terms, to cure hard apost. of the mother being bathed therein. 16 Seethe the flowers in oil & wax, & use it to chaps, or rifts of the fundament, & falling down of the long gut, & to close up old ulcers. 17 Mix it with honey to cure the ulcers & swellings of the mouth. 18 Drink two. drams of the seed to expel the terms, seconds, & dead birth, or put it into the matrix as a pessary. 19 Eyes dull & spots, drop in the juice. 20 Milt hard, stamp the root with vinegar, & apply it, & likewise to the liver for the hardness thereof. 21 The flowers may be kept dry to purge the matrix & terms. 22 seeth the roots soft in vinegar, & apply it to hot apostumes, & the gout. 23 Seethe the root soft with vinegar & oil of roses to help the hardness of the liver & milt. 24 The oil of the flowers is precious for griefs of the reins, bladder, & joints & sinews. 25 Temper the juice with honey to heal sores of the mouth & head. 26 And with wax it healeth chaps. 27 Seethe the dry flowers in water, and sit therein for the inflammation of the mother, & to bring down the terms. 28 In a cerot they heal the rifts of the fundament, 29 With honey the sores of the mouth. 30 Drink the wine of the decoction thereof, or the distilled water v. spoonful morn and even, for the griefs of the liver and kidneys. 31 Drink the seed or juice to drive down the flowers, seconds, & dead birth mightily. 32 Seethe the fresh flowers in wine, and drink it for the inflammation of the matrix. 33 Drink the distilled water daily for a certain time, to strengthen all the inner parts to comfort the blood, to cheer the mind, and take away pain. 34 The juice of all kinds of Gelofers put into the eyes, taketh away all spots and mystinesse thereof. 35 It is the best of all Gelofers. 36 They with the purple flower are much of like nature. Apostume hot 22 Bladder griefs 24 Bitings venom. 6 Breasts sore 14 Backeache 24. 30 Chaps 26 Cramp 8 Dead child 18. 31 Deliverance 18 Eyes dull 19 34 spots 19 34 Falling evil 7. 8 Fevers hot 1. 11 tertian quarten 5 Flowers stopped 15. 18. 21 27. 31 Fundament fallen 16 chaps 16. 28 Gout 6. 22 Giddiness 8 Headache 12 giddy 8 sores 25. 34 Heart 1. 11 joints griefs 24 Liver griefs 20. 23. 30 Mad dog 6 Milthard 20. 23 Mother apost. 15. 21. 27 inflammation 32 Mouth sores 17. 25. 29 Palsy 8 Plague 1. 2. 8. 9 10 Poison 8 Seconds 18. 31 Sinews griefs 6. 24 Sickness general 13. 33 Sores 16. 17 Venom. 8 Urine stopped 15 Worms 3 ¶ Gentian. GEntian: (see Dwarf Gentian) drink one dram of the root in powder with wine, and a little pepper and rue for all inward poison, and all venomous bitings. 2 And with water for the griefs of the liver and stomach, and use it for all cold diseases of the entrailss. 3 The juice of the root dissolveth bruised blood, and helpeth the grief of the side and burstings. 4 The same juice cureth festered and fretting sores and wounds being dropped into them. 5 Apply the same with lint to the eyes to suage the pain and heat. 6 It skowreth all filth from the skin, being anointed therewith. 7 Put the root into the matrix as a pessary to pull down the dead birth and terms. 8 Stamp Gentian with twice so much century, and soak them in wine v. days, then distil it, and drink the water morn and even, to preserve the body from the plague, to heal the ptisike, to cleanse the stuffed stomach, to break and expel the stone from the reins to avoid watery humours from the milt, to provoke terms to purge choler and corrupt blood, to heal inward wounds and venomous bitings, to clear the sight, to preserve the body from all diseases, to avoid all impostumes, and to 'cause a good colour: but in healing wounds apply the powder of Centory outwardly. 9 The root is much used in medicines against poison. It is perilous for women with child to drink. 10 There is nothing better for the iliaca passio, & the dropsy, being drunk in wine & water, and for all the diseases of the lungs, and for all diseases of horses, kine, oxen etc. 11 Horse pussy, or broken wound, give him powder of it in his water to drink. 12 Ptisike, drink powder of the root of Gentian, and Filipendula of each one dram with honey and water often. 13 Mad, drink the seeds of Rue and Gentian with vinegar, and apply a black cock to the head, cut through the midst xxiiii. hours, and the third day bleed in the head. 14 Or use Gentian, and Rue, and also wash thy head with the same herbs, or drink Gentian often with honey and vinegar. 15 Breath short, and strait, use powder of it in meats, broths, and drinks: spiders biting, apply the juice. 16 Stomach to cleanse, use Gentian and Tormentill, of each like much in thy pottage and be whole. 17 Fever quarten and quotidian, drink powder of Gentian and maces, of each like much, with a little pepper with glorified Ale and Sugar before the fit. 18 Fever quarten, seethe the root in wine, and drink it before the fit: it is taken to be mate-fellon. 19 Drink Gentian in water and honey to help the swelling of the stomach and body, to help venomous bitings, and cause deliverance of a dead child. Bitings venom. 1. 8. 15. 19 Blood corrupt 8 Breath short 15 Bruises 3 Bursten 3 cattle sick 10 Consumption 8 Cold griefs 2 Colour bad 8 Dead child 7. 19 Dropsy 10 Eyes griefs 5. 8 Fever quarten 17. 18. quotidian 17 Flowers stopped 7. 8 Horses sick 10. 11 Iliake pas. 10 Impostume 8 Liver griefs 2 Lungs griefs 10 Mad 13 Milt griefs 8 Oxen sick 10 Plague 8 Poison 1. 9 Ptisike 12. 8 preservative 8 Purgation 8 Sickness general 8 Side griefs 3 Skin deformed 6 Sores 4 Spider 15 Stomach griefs 2 stuffed 8 16. 19 Stone 8 Venom 1. 9 Wounds 4. 8 ¶ Germander. GErmander: milt hard, urine stopped, & for the dropsy, in the beginning seethe it in wine, & drink it thrice every day. 2 Stamp it when it flowreth, & drink the decoction, & also apply the herb to bruises to help them speedily. 3 Stamp it & apply it to fistulas of the eyes, or make oil of the herb, & drop it into them to heal them presently, especially if the body be of cold complexion. 4 Seethe the herb in wine, & drink it to avoid the kings evil. 5 Seethe it in wine with fenel seeds & Seen, to help greatly the stops of the liver & milt, & parsley seeds put thereto, it helpeth the strangury & stone. 6 Palsy, boil it in wine, & apply it to help it. 7 Wounds to heal, bruise it with oil, & apply it. 8 Boil the green herb in conduit water, & drink it to help the cramp, the palsy, the cough, hardness of the milt, stopping of urine, and the water between the skin and flesh. 9 Seethe it in wine, & drink it against poison, and apply the herb to the bitings of venomous beasts, worms & serpents. 10 Seethe it in wine & vinegar, & drink it for the hardness of the milt, the old cough, and old ulcers mixed with honey & so drunk 11 Eat the powder of the herb with honey to kill worms. 12 Rheum, heat the powder in a linen bag & apply it. 12 Mouth blisters, wash with the decoction of it thrice a day. 14 Scab small, make an ointment of it with swine's grease, & anoint therewith often. 15 Eyes dull, haw & pearl, apply the juice of the leaves with oil streaked on the eyes. 16 Stamp the leaves and lay them in oil, & apply them to burstings, wounds, & consuming sores. 17 Seethe Germander and the flowers of it with a little betony in wine or water, & strain it, & sugar it, or honey it after the manner of a decoction: it doth mightily heal the cough, the beginning of the dropsy, stopping & hardness of the milt, the strangury & stopping of the urine & terms, it serveth for all griefs the Betony serveth, especially for women that are cold, & troubled with the whites. 18 Germander dried & sodden, is good for women to sit in, or to be applied to their natural place in bags to stop the whites & the gnawing of the matrix. 19 Seethe it with salt & vinegar, & stamp it with levin, & apply it to the stomach for the coldness of the stomach, & the belching, loathing, & vomiting. 20 Eat the leaves by themself, or with reasons, the stones taken out fasting to withstand the plague. 21 They help the tertian fever, & open the liver & milt, one handful being boiled with Seine i. ounce, & aniseedes two. drams in a quart of white wine. If two. drams of parsley seed be put to it, it helpeth also the strangury & stone, and when the one half is wasted, strain it and drink it fasting two. days, two. hours before meat. 22 Drink it with vinegar to abate the swelling of the liver & against poison. 23 Drink it with good wine, & also make pills thereof with honey, & swallow them to purge sores & ulcers. 24 It openeth the stops of the joints, & drieth gross humours. 25 Stamp the leaves with oil to heal wounds. 26 Drink the seeds to draw out yellow choler, and to comfort the eyes. 27 Steep it in aqua vitae, and drink it to purge melancholy madness. 28 seeth it in read wine, and drink it often to stop a lask, & eat parched almonds, & be whole. 29 Worms in the eye lids, stamp it with old wine and apply it. Flowers stopped, stamp half a handful and strain it with ale, and drink it with one pennyworth of saffron in the mornings. 30 Head fistula, put in powder of Germander, and wash the head with the decoction of it. 31 Ruptures inward, stamp it with a wooden pestle, and steep it in good white or read wine that is astringent, and drink thereof often. 32 Gather Germander when it flowreth, dry it in the shade, and mix one spoonful of the powder of it with the yolks of two eggs, and seeth it, and eat it morn and even eight days, and keep a good diet to cure the falling evil. Bitings venom, 9 Bruises 2 Bursten 31 Cough 8. 10. 17 Cramp 8 Dropsy 1. 8. 17 Eyes fistula 3 griefs 15. 26 worms 29 Falling evil 31 Fever tertian 21 Fistula 3. 30 Flowers stopped 17. 29 Fluxes 28 joints stopped 24 Kings evil 4 Liver stopped 5. 21 swollen 22 Madness 27 Matrix griefs 18 Loathing 19 Melancholy 27 Milt hard 1. 8. 10. 17 stopped 5. 17. 21 Mouth blisters 13 Obstructions 24 Palsy 6. 8 Poison 9 22 Plague 20 Rheum 12 Sores 10. 23 Skabs 14 Stomach cold 19 Stone 5. 21 Strangury 5. 8. 17. 21 Ulcers 10. 16. 23 Urine stopped 1. 8. 17 Whites 17. 18 Worms 11. 31 Wounds 7. 16. 25 ¶ Ginger. GInger: eyes dull, grind white Ginger on a whetstone into a fair basin, and put thereto as much salt, and grind them well together, and temper them with white wine, and let it stand xxiiii. hours, and put the clearest in a glass, & use to anoint therewith when thou goest to bed. 2 Teethache, boil Ginger in honey and vinegar, & put it into thy hollow tooth, or boil ground ivy and Ginger in wine, and hold thy mouth over it, & rub thy teeth with the Ginger, or burn Ginger, black pepper, and salt of each like much in a linen clout, and lay a little of the powder on a linen cloth, and apply it to the tooth. 3 Cough, eat roasted apples with Ginger and sugar candy. 4 Flowers to stop, lay Ginger, Bay leaves, and Savine on hot coals, and receive up the fume thereof through a tunnel in a close chair. 5 Eyes dull and read, grind white Ginger on a whetstone into a brazen mortar, & put thereto as much salt, and grind them well together, & let it stand hours, than put the scom into a vial, and with a feather anoint xxiiii. well the eyes when thou goest to bed, & be whole. 6 Chincough, seethe Elecampana with as much Ginger in fair water to the one half, and stamp it & strain it, and put thereto a third part of honey boiled & scummed, & make an electuary of it, & take thereof a good quantity morn & even. 7 Eyes pearl, rub Ginger dipped in white wine on a whetstone of Norway over a sawser, & with that wine wash the eyes with a feather to voided the pearl, & preserve the eye. 8 Breast to be clear & voice good, mix powder of Ginger, lycoras, & sugar with the yolk of an Eglantine, & a little salt, & warm it in the shell, and eat it fasting. 9 Ache, take new wax a qꝪ. of a li. oil olive v. spoonful, Ginger pared & grated three races. Melt the wax, put in the oil, & heat it a little, & then put in the Ginger, & dip a cloth in it, & apply it hot, and role it & keep it warm. Hickit, eat every morning a race of green Ginger, & drink two. draughts of malmsey three hours before meat. 10 colic & stitch, drink powder of Bays and Ginger, and use it also in meats. 11 Face salsflegme, anoint with powder of Ginger & pepper, and the juice of pimpernel. 12 Appetite to cause, seeth powder of Ginger, Cummin, and Liquorice of each one pennyworth in honey, till it be thick, and mix a little geine Treacle with it, and eat thereof first & last. 13 Seethe it with Figs in wine, and drink it to help the cold & the cough, or eat the powder in Figs. 14 Use the powder in meat to withstand swooning, for rawnesses in the stomach, and to loosen the belly, and cause digestion. 15 Take two. drams, & as much sugar with warm water to purge viscus humours. 16 Green Ginger provoketh lust, digesteth meat, warmeth the stomach, & drieth up the moisture that cometh by eating of fruit. It is good for the phlegm of the lungs, the old cough, shortness of breath, and all cold griefs: it openeth obstructions, helpeth digestion and appetite, and expelleth gross humours and wind. 17 Ringwormes, anoint them with black soap, and almost as much Ginger iiii. or v. days, it helpeth tetters also in like sort. Mix i penny weight with thrice so much sugar, and put thereof into the eyes to consume the white phlegm that groweth over the eye in short time. 18 Take Ginger two. ounces, sugar viii. ounces, cinnamon half an ounce, use it as blanch powder with roasted wardens, apples, quinces, hensawes, and such like. 19 Stomach griefs, and to help digestion, use green Ginger before meats. 20 Eyes pearl, mix fine powder of Ginger and pepper with the gall of an Eel and fine honey, and use it to kill it. 21 To drive down the Emerods', drink powder of Ginger, long pepper & grains, of each like much to bedward warm: proved. 22 Face salsflegme, grind powder of Ginger & brimstone with honey, and the juice of read nettles and anoint therewith. 23 Flowers stopped, boil a pottle of the best wine with a good race of Ginger, and a few maces and grains in powder with butter & drink thereof often. 24 Teethache, seethe powder of pepper and Ginger in ale, and put it into a clout dipped in aqua vitae, and apply it. Aches 9 Appetite 12. 17 Breast cleansing 8. 16 Chincough 6 Chollike 10 Cold griefs 16. 13 Cough 3. 13. 16 Breath short 16 Digestion 16. 17. 19 Eyes dull 1. 5 pearl 7. 20 read 5 web 17 Emerods' 21 Face salsflegme 11. 22 Flowers stopped 23 to stop 4 Hicket 9 Lungs griefs 16 Lust to 'cause 16 Obstructions 16 Purgation 15 ringworm 17 Sawse 18 Stitch 10 Stomach cold 16. 19 raw 16 windy 16 Swooning 14 Teethach 2. 24 Tetters 17 Voice bad 8 Windiness 16 ¶ Gooseberries. Gooseberies' unripe, stop the belly and all issues of blood, especially the juice of them pressed out and dried. 2 The juice of green Gooseberries is very good for all hot inflammations, shingles, and wild fire, and so be the leaves, but not so good as the juice. 3 The berries eaten with meats, provoke appetite, & cool the heat of the stomach & liver, and are good against hot agues. 4 The young leaves eaten raw, provoke urine, and are good for the gravel and stone. 5 They are good in sauces before they be ripe, with flesh and fish for them that be choleric, hot and sick. Appetite 3 Bloody flux 1 Fluxes 1 Fevers hot 3 Gravel 4 Hot griefs 5 Inflammations 2 Liver hot 3 Shingles 2 Stomach hot 3 Stone 4 Urine stopped 4 Wild fire 2 ¶ Red Gooseberries. Red Gooseberries, or ribs do refresh and cool the hot stomach, and liver, and are good against all inflammations, and heat of the blood and hot agues. 2 Chew them and hold them in the mouth for all hot humours and inflammations, and to cool thirst in agues. 3 It stoppeth the choleric lask, and the bloody flux, especially the rob or dried juice thereof. 4 The rob made of the juice of common ribs with sugar, is very good for all the diseases aforesaid, it stoppeth vomitings, and is good for hot agues, being drunk with a little cold water, or holden in the mouth against thirst. 5 They may be kept either in their own juice, or in vergis, or dried in the sun. 6 They have in all points the virtues of barbaries. 7 They take away all inward heats. Bloody flux 3. 4 Fevers hot 4 Fluxes 3. 4 Heat inward 1 Liver hot 1. 4 Mouth heat 2 Stomach hot 1. 4 Thirst 1. 2. 4 Vomiting 4 ¶ Goosefoot. GOosefoot is in nature much like to morel or nightshade, and in outward causes may be used for it. 2 It killeth swine if they eat it, and is very dangerous as Solanum is. See morel, Nightshade, Petymorell. ¶ Gooseheirife. GOoseheirif or Clever, drink the juice of the leaves and seeds against venomous bitings. 2 Ears ache, drop in the juice. Wounds bleeding, stamp it and apply it. 3 Kings evil, and all kernels and wens in any place: stamp it with swine's grease, and apply it, and so it helpeth swollen paps of curdled milk. 4 jaundice, seethe it in wine and drink it. 5 Sores or scabs in any place, bruise it and lay it in spring water four and twenty hours, and then wash therewith. 6 Cough and phlegm in the stomach, seethe a handful in a quart of ale with a little pared liquorice, and some currants to the one half, than strain it, and drink it first and last, at morn and even. 7 Dropsy, mix the juice of it and walwort ana six handful, and drink it ten days, and bathe thee every day with the same herbs, till the water come out at the soles of thy feet, then bathe no more, but continued the use of the said drink ten days out. 8 Worms in the flesh, drink the juice of it and of tansy. Bitings venomous 1 Bleeding 2 Breasts swollen 3 Coughs 6 Dropsy 7 Ears ache 2 jaundice 4 Kernels 3 Kings evil 3 Scabs 5 Sores 5 Wens 3 Worms 7 Wounds 3 ¶ Goosetansie. GOosetansie, face pimples, wash it with water of it and of roses. 2 Fluxes, kneade wheat cakes with the juice of it, and yolks of eggs, and bake them and eat them. 3 Liver to restore, seeth it with new wort, and strain it and drink it with white wine or ale: proved, or seethe it with liverwort & ribwort in strong wort, and strain it, and put in sugar, and sometimes drink thereof, and sometimes set a barm on it, and drink thereof first and last thirty days, (see Dasie for hands.) 4 Liver hot, and face deformed, distil it with a quart of strawberries, and three pints of new milk, and drink thereof morn and even, and wash thy face therewith. 5 seeth it in water or wine, and drink it to stop the bloody flux, and all other fluxes of blood, and the whites and terms. Boil it in water and salt, and drink it to dissolve bruised and congealed blood. 6 The decoction of it cureth ulcers, and sores of the mouth, and the hot humours that fall into the eyes, and stripes that perish the sight, being washed therewith. 7 It hath many other virtues, as against the stone, inward wounds, and corrupt fretting ulcers of the gums, and secret parts: it strengtheneth the bowels, it closeth up green wounds, it fasteneth lose teeth, and helpeth the toothache. 8 The distilled water is good for the freckels, spots, pimples, and sun burning of the face, the ache, fluxes, redness, and spots of the eyes, and to cleanse the skin, and make it white. 9 Steep it in white wine, and wash therewith to make the skin white. Bloody flux 5 Bruises 5. 6 Eyes griefs 6. 7. 8 Face deformed 1. 4. 8 Flowers to stop 5 Fluxes 2. 5 Freckles 8 Liver hot 4 wasting 3 Mouth sores 7 Privities sores 7 Skin to cleanse 8 Stone 7 Teethach 7 lose 7 Ulcers 6 Whites 5 Wounds 7 ¶ Goulds. GOulds, or wild Marigolds growing in corn. 2 Boil it in wine to cure the jaundice, and to restore good colour, and drink it after long and often bathing. 3 The seed drunk in wine by itself, or stamped with the flowers, doth also cure the jaundice. 4 Stamp the flowers with oil and wax to dissolve cold swellings of the head. 5 The leaves and tender branches may well be used in pottage and salads. Colour bad 2 Head swellings 4 jaundice 2. 3 Swell 4 ¶ Gourds. GOurds: Deliverance to cause, tie the root to her reins, but take it away speedily, lest the matrix follow. 2 Anoint any cattle with the juice in summer, and hot weather, and no flies will touch them. 3 Face red, make an oil of two ounces of the seeds, & four ounces of peach kernels, and anoint therewith morn and even. 4 Stamp the leaves & rub horses with them, and no flies will touch them, or rub them with leeses of wine at morn and noon. 5 Dissolve a dram of the leaves in good wine, and drink it as often as need is for the prefocation of the mother. 6 Sores moist to heal, put the powder of the rind. 7 Headache, frenzy, & want of sleep, dip a cloth in the juice of Gourds, and purslan with vinegar, and apply it. 8 Pissing blood, drink powder of the seeds of Gourds, cummin, and mallows, of each four penny weight, with two ounces of milk, and use to eat good store of milk. 9 Liver chafed, scrape off the uttermost of a Gourd, and steep the same scrape in vinegar and apply it. 10 Apply the juice to a bore place, to withstand the growing of hair. 11 Ashes of dry Gourds doth quickly heal rotten ulcers of the yard. 12 Gourds are not eaten raw, but sodden, roasted, or fried. 13 The seeds clean picked from their uppermost skins, and sodden in barley water, and strained and drunk, helpeth the griefs of the liver, kidneys and bladder, the impostumes of the breast, and provoketh urine. But if the patient cannot drink of this water, then make it into a syrup with sugar, and so it is good also for all agues. 14 Mix the meat of gourds, or rather the juice with milk and vinegar, and apply it to the liver for the heat thereof, with a cloth dipped therein. 15 Gourds aught to be hanged up and dried, and when winter cometh, the seeds must be taken out, and rubbed with salt, that so the clammy humour may be avoided, and then they are to be laid up in a dry place, and so they may be kept three years. 16 Apply the meat of the gourds to the forehead of young children to avoid the great heat and inflammation of the head and brain. 17 Anoint burning gouts, and the inflammation of the eyes, with the juice of Gourds, and drop thereof into the ears for the burning heat in them, either by itself, or with oil of roses hot, the same is good to anoint the ridge bone, to assuage the burning heat of agues, and for the holy fire, being anointed. 18 The ashes of the rinds cast on the ulcers of the privy parts, now grown to a rottenness, doth cleanse and heal them, and so it doth burnings and scaldings. 19 The decoction of the meat with a little honey and niter drunk, looseneth the belly gently. 20 Distil the meat and seeds of ripe Gourds, and drink four ounces of the water twenty or forty days to help the stone in the kidneys: and drink it ten days to cleanse the reins and bladder. 21 Apply the meat of them shreaded small to hard swellings. 22 The water drunk, provoketh urine, and qualifieth the heat of the ague: boil the meat and seeds, and slice them and boil it with onions, butter, and salt, and so it is good for them that be lean. 23 If a gourd be made hollow, and filled all night with good wine, and drunk in the morning, it purgeth the belly or body. 24 The juice or distilled water of the meat of unripe Gourds drunk, quencheth heat of burning fevers, the same being also applied to the heart and liver. It helpeth also ache of the ears, and of the eyes, and all other parts, and the hot gout. 25 Bruise the meat and apply it to swellings and apostumes. 26 Drink the juice of the whole herb boiled with a little honey & saltpetre, to loosen the belly gently. 27 Gourds, drive away Venus, and engender thin blood. 28 The juice of the tender branches drunk with sweet wine and a little vinegar, cureth the bloody flux. 29 The seeds of Gourds is almost of like virtue with the seeds of Cucumbers. Aches hot 17. 24 Apostume 25 Belly bound 19 23. 26 Bladder griefs 13. 20 Bloody flux 28 Breast imposthume 13 Burn 18 Deliverance 1 Eyes inflamed 17 Face read 3 Fevers hot 17. 22. 24 Flies to void 2. 4 Frenzy 7 Gout hot 24 17 Headache 7. 10 heat 16 Hair not to grow. 10 Holy fire 17 Impostume 13 Kidneys griefs 13. 20 Leanness 22 Liver griefs 13. 14 chaste 9 14. 24 Lust to void 27 Mother prefocat. 5 Pissing blood 8 Privities sores 18 Purgation 23. 26 Sleep to 'cause 7 Sores moist 6. 11. 18 Scalding 18 Swell 21. 25 Stone 20 urine stopped 22 Yard sores 11. 18 ¶ Grains. Grains, see Cardamom: flowers to cause, drink one nutmeg, as much Grains, and as much saffron in powder, with half a pint of drink, warm. 2 Emeralds to drive down, and for the shaking fever, drink powder of grains, long pepper and ginger. 3 Impostume in the breast, bake water cresses, sage, and avence a handful, grains one ounce, clarified honey one pint in paste, and when it is well baked, it is sovereign for aching. 4 Mother suffocat. take up the fume of Grains, cloves, frankincense, and other sweet things laid on a fire of charcoal into the matrix: proved. Breast imposthume 3 Emeralds 2 Flowers stopped 1 Impostume 3 Mother suffocat. 4 ¶ Grass. Grass, seeth it to help the griefs of the milt. See hay. ¶ Gratiola. GRatiola, or gratia Dei, boil it and drink it, or eat it in any kind of meat to open the belly freely, and to purge gross phlegm and choler. 2 Wounds to heal speedily, straw on the powder of it, or use it in oils or ointments. 3 Two scruples will purge a meetly strong body. 4 Wounds to heal, bruise the herb and apply it. Purgation 1. 3 Wounds 2. 4 ¶ Gromel. GRomel, urine stopped, stamp it with parsley, & strain it, and drink it with white wine. 2 It is good for the stone & all griefs of the bladder. 3 Urine stopped, stamp it with parsley and rue, and drink it with white wine, and be whole. 4 Eat tostes of bread, or sops in wine with powder of the seeds of Gromel, and parsley to void the stone after it is broken. 5 Urine stopped, seeth mallows, and a good quantity of Gromell in vinegar a good while, and drink thereof warm. 6 Stamp the seeds and drink them in white wine to break the stone, especially in the bladder, and to drive forth urine. 7 Bruise the seeds and steep them all night in white wine, with some fennel, parsley, and seen, and in the morning seethe it, and strain it & sugar it, and drink it to purge phlegm and choler, to open and cleanse the reins and bladder, and to expel wind plentifully: it must be boiled in a stone vessel. 8 Stamp the herb and apply it hot for the same purpose. Back grief 7 Bladder griefs 2. 7 Purgation 7 Stone 2. 4. 6. 7. 8 Urine stopped 1. 3. etc. Groundswell. GRoundswell: Brestssore, stamp a great handful, and drink it with white wine, or stolen ale morn and even 15. days, and keep thee from men & queasy meats. 2 Fever, stamp four handful with vinegar and bay salt ana three spoonfuls, & seeth it till it be almost dry, and apply it to thy wrists as hot as may be suffered. 3 Breast to cleanse, stamp white horehound four ounces, Grounswel three ounces, walwort two. ounces, and seethe them with fresh barows grease, and apply it to thy breast, & in one night thou shalt avoid much phlegm & corruption. 4 Wound to heal, stamp it with some wormwood, and old swine's grease, and apply it, and so it healeth bushes and whelks. 5 Boil the leaves and stalks in water or sweet wine, and drink it to heal the ache of the stomach, coming of choler. 6 Stamp the leaves and flowers alone, or with a little wine, and apply it to the burning heat, & inflammation of the stones & fundament. 7 Mix it with fine powder of Frankincense, and apply it to heal all wounds, especially of the sinews. 8 Eyes bleared and dropping, apply the down of the flowers with saffron and water. 9 Apply it with a little salt to waste & consume the kings evil, or struma in the throat or neck. 10 The small Groundswel is good in salads with oil & vinegar. 11 Stamp Groundswel and seeth it in water and drink it with pottage to purge hot choler. 12 The heads with the flowers tempered with a little wine and Manna healeth the wounds of sinews. 13 Saint james wort is of the same nature. 14 The whole stalk sodden in water and drunk with Malmsey, healeth the choleric ache of the stomach. Breast to cleanse 3 Breasts sore 1 Eyes griefs 8 Fevers 2 Fundament inflam. 6 Head scald, (See before) 1 Inflammations 6 Kernels 9 Kings evil 9 Privities sores 6 Purgation 3. 5. 11. 12. 14 Pushes 4 Salads 10 Sinews cut 7. 12 Sores 4 Stomach ache 5 Stones heat 6 Wens 9 Whelks 4 Wounds 4. 7 ¶ Guiacum. GViacum or Lignum Sanctum: It drieth up maketh fine and subtle, it melteth or resolveth, skowreth away & provoketh sweat, and withstandeth putrefaction. 2 Use the broth thereof for the French pocks, for the Gout that is not deeply rooted, the griefs of the Liver and Milt. 3 Dropsy, seeth it in wine and use it. 4 Use the broth for the jaundice & many other griefs that be hard to be cured. 5 It is very good to be sodden in Rhenish wine. 6 And the powder of it sodden in Beer wort, is drinkeable enough: but whether it be sodden in water or wine, or Beer wort or Ale wort, such herbs must be sodden with it as do respect the disease that it is taken for. 7 For the Gout, Dropsy, Sciatica and Timpany, it is comparable with the best medicines, and likewise for the Ranker. 8 The sap is not so good as the heart. It helpeth the extreme pains of the joints, sinews and veins, muscles, veins, sinews, head and feet, and bones, and no disease is so sharp and cruel to nature, but this precious wood will heal it both speedily and gently, and suage the pain: The french Pocks, the Gout, the Dropsy, the Strangury, Pissing blood, the stopping of the urine, Oppilations, Headache, Vertigo or giddiness: Fevers, Shyngles, horrible Apostumations and swellings of the belly: but straight diet is not to be allowed. 9 For the Rheum and gross humours, fill a diet pot with Cunduit water all saving a quart, which must be white wine, Lycoras scraped and cut small, one pound, Lignum vite half a pound, the bark of it one ounce, boil them one hour and an half, than strain it & keep it in a close vessel, and drink thereof first and last, the best is from saint john's Island: for hot griefs, use the more water, and less wood: for cold griefs, more wood and less water. It cureth the Pocks and almost all other griefs: it must be sodden in a close vessel set in seething water x. hours. 10 Diet, use meats competently to suffice nature, as Mutton, Veal and Hens sodden in a double vessel, and seasoned with salt and brought to a pleasant taste: but use no excess drink, as much as is needful for the disease, always warm: but if thou be saint, use therewith some Rhenish or small white wine, as much as of the drink mixed together: but drink no Beer till thou be'st whole. Take the drink by five a clock, and cover thee well. Drink eight ounces at once, and sweat two hours, or more or less as strength may bear, and dry up the sweat with warm clotheses, after put on thy clotheses warm, and sit by a good fire or walk in thy Chamber till eight a clock, then go to Dinner: first sup a little of the broth with a little bread, then eat competently of the flesh, and after walk, or use some recreation of mind and body, and sup at four of the clock, and go to bed at seven, and drink eight ounces, and sweated. 11 For all griefs of the joints, knots, tumours, etc. Receive Lignum vite well prepared one pound and an half, Lycoras and polypody ana one ounce, Seine, aniseed and Fenell seed ana half an ounce, water twelve pound: steep the wood in the water twelve hours, then seeth it with the rest in an earthen vessel and scum it as long as long as the scum will rise, and save the scum to anoint withal, and take the water every morning or every other morning, and cover thee well to sweat two hours, and continued it three or four weeks. 12 For the salt humour, seethe half a pound of the wood and the bark thereof with Lycoras and Aniseedes, and half a pound of clear Honey with cold herbs, as Liver-wort, Hartstong, and two ounces of french Barley, and half a pound of Reasins of the sun, the stones taken out, seeth them well and use it. Ache general 8 Apostumes 8 Belly swollen 8 Cold griefs 9 Diet 10 Dropsy 7. 8 Fevers 8 French Pocks 2. 8 Giddiness 8 Gout 27 Hot griefs 9 Humours gross 9 joints ache 11. 8 canker 7 Knots 11 Liver griefs 2 milt griefs 2 Pissing blood 8 Rheum 9 12 Sciatica 7 sinews ache 8 Shyngles 8 Salt humour 12 Sickness general 8 Stone 8 Strangury 8 Swell 11 Tympany 7 Urine stopped 8 ¶ Haresfoote. Hare's foot, seeth it in wine and drink it to stop the lask & bloody flux: but in an Ague, use it with water. 2 Apply it to the inflammations and heat of the Share. Bloody flux 1 Fluxes 1 Inflammations 2 ¶ Heart's ease. Heart's ease or Pansies, seeth the flowers and drink it, to cure and stay the beginning of the falling sickness in children that foam at the mouth. 2 Seethe the flowers and plant together, and drink it to cleanse the Lungs and the breast for fevers and inward inflammations. 3 Use the herb inward and outward, or the powder thereof for all wounds and ruptures, especially with read wine. 4 Drink the water of it for the torments of the belly of children, and for inflammations, and to cleanse the Lungs and Chest: or seethe it in wine and drink it. 5 The herb is good for the squinsy of Swine. 6 It is good for all wounded men, women and children, and for all them which have broken bones. 7 Outwardly it cleanseth the skin from all Itch, Scab, shingles, ringworms, ulcers, etc. 8 It healeth green wounds without danger of any Apostumation. 9 Used in Plasters or the juice preserved with oil, for herbs being strained, and the juice clarified on the fire, and cooled and kept in a clean glass and a little oil Olive powered on it, it may safely be preserved till time of use for Syrups and Salves. 10 Use it with other medicines for the green sickness. Belly ache 4 Bones broken 6 Breast to cleanse 2. 4 Bursten 3 Falling evil 1 Green sickness 10 Fevers 2 Hogs squincy 5 Inflammations 4 Itch 7 Lungs to cleanse 4 ringworms 7 Skabs 7 Skin deformed 7 Shingles 7 Sores 7 Wounds 3. 6. 7 Hartshorne Planten. HArtshorne Planten, Stamp three pound, and mix it with common oil and let it stand nine days, then put to it one pint of water, and boil it till the water be consumed, so that the oil be green, than strain it and use it for the Gout and all aches. 2 It hath the virtues of planten, and is singular good against pissing of blood, the gravel and stone: it helpeth the Flix, and is good in salads: it doth cleanse and comfort the stomach, and healeth burnings. Aches 1 Fluxes 2 Gout 1 Gravel 2 Pissing blood 2 Salads 2 stone 2 ¶ Hartstong. HArtstong, seeth the leaves in wine, and drink against biting of Serpents: it stoppeth the lask and bloody Flixe: it is good for the Milt that is too lose, or too much opened. 2 power it into the mouth of the cattle that are bitten with Serpents. 3 The water comforteth the heart, and voideth the Hycket. 4 The same is good against Dygs of the mouth being gargarised. 5 Apply it with Hempe-hurds to the heat of the Liver and stomach. 6 Use it to malignant ulcers, sores and wounds. 7 It stoppeth all fluxes both in man and beast: it must be gotten early or late, when neither the sun nor Moon do shine on it: it is of nature much like to Cetrache. 8 Kings evil, seeth it in wine and drink it. 9 Stone and Strangury, bind it fast together, and seeth it in a mess of sweet Milk, and make a possit thereof, and drink the ale warm, or seethe it in three parts of water till two parts be wasted, than strain it and drink one part thereof with two parts of good white wine to expel the stone and gravel. 10 jaundice and griefs of the Liver and Milt, seeth it in water or wine and drink it, or eat the herb. Heart griefs, drink powder of it, and of a Heart's horn, Maces, Nutmegs, Cloves and Saffron, and Sugar, and use them in broths. 11 Milt griefs, make powder of it, and of the Lungs of a Fox, Maces & Sugar candy, & drink thereof with wine or ale proved. 12 Or make powder of it and quickebeam of each like much dried in an Oven, & put thereto as much powder of large Maces, some read Saunders, and a little Saffron, and as much Sugar Candie as will make it sweet, and eat thereof, the oftener the better. 13 Liver griefs, seethe it with Fumiterre & Liverwort, of each one handful in clarified Wheye, and drink thereof first and last, especially in May, with a little Rhubarb or Chamepiteos. 14 To dry up & diminish the Milt, drink it with wine thirty days. 15 Milt stopped, drink powder of the root with wine at the wane of the Moon. 16 jaundice, drink one dram and an half of the powder of it with white wine twenty mornings. 17 seeth it in oil of Roses, and apply it to Apostumes to break them. 18 Coughs, drink it with wine or Ale. Apostumes 17 Bitings venem. 1. 2 Bloody flux 1 cattle venem. 2 Coughs 18 Fluxes 1. 7 Hart griefs 3. 10 hot 5 Hycket 3 jaundice 10. 16 Kings evil 8 Liver griefs 10. 13 hot 5 Milt griefs 1. 10. 11. 12. 14. 15. Mouth griefs 4 Stone 9 Strangury 9 ¶ Hasell. HAsell Nuts and Filbeards nourish very little, and are hard of digestion, they engender wind in the stomach, and cause headache if they be eaten too much. 2 Cough old, drink them with honeyed water. 3 Roast them and eat them with a little Pepper to ripen the Rheum and Catharre. 4 Burn them and apply them with Hog's grease or Boar's grease, to heal the scurf and scales of the head, and to restore hair. 5 The scales or husks are good for the Squincy, even as the husks of Walnuts. 6 Seethe the inward rind of green Hasell branches in small ale to the one half, and drink thereof a good draft first and last eight or ten days to have sure remedy for the Strangury. 7 Burn the seeds that hung on the tree, and blow the powder of it into the Nose to stop bleeding of it. 8 The utter rind of Nuts maketh the hair black being stamped with vinegar. 9 Seethe Nut leaves in water, & wash the head or beard therewith where hair falleth away. 10 Hasell Nuts cause the Cough, therefore they are best to be eaten with Reasins: they may be eaten after fish, in stead of Cheese. 11 Take two ounces of the powder of the Shales with tart wine, to stop the Flux and the Whites. 12 Stamp Nut kernels with Honey & Hyssop water, to help the Cough. 13 Stamp them with Dittanie & black soap, to draw pricks out of the flesh. 14 The shales burned & applied to the hinder part of a child's head, 'cause the grey eyes to become black. 15 Flowers to stop, Drink one dram of the powder of the skins that cover the Kernels. 16 The Kernels ground with the grease of a Hog or Boar, restoreth hair, being anointed therewith: or dry Nuts with their Shells on a Hearth, and make them into powder, & mix it with old Lard of a swine unsalted, and anoint therewith, to have present help. 17 Flux to stop, dry the flowers in an Oven, and drink the powder with wine. 18 Flux to stop, stamp the kernels with as much Elecampana, and seethe them to an Electuary, & use it. 19 Venom of all sorts, Apply a Plaster of Nuts, Rue, and Figs. 20 To knit broken bones in five or six days, drink powder of the Catstaile of the tree, and of read Dock seeds. 21 Head pose, Eat the kernels roasted, with powder of Pepper. 22 Lay Hasell of three years shoot in the fire, & gather the sap, & drop it on a new ground Axe, and touch the Web in the eye therewith to break it, & then anoint the eye with healing salves. 23 Hair to be black, Mix the shales or utter rinds, with the juice of Sloes & ink with Vinegar & apply it. 2 Hair falling, seeth the leaves in water, and wash head & beard therewith. 25 Ears worms, Drop in the juice of the Husks. 26 Cough & horcenesse, Roast Nuts & eat them with Hony. 27 Reins & Bladder pain, stamp Filbeards and drink them with water or wine. 28 Urine distilling, Use roasted Filbeards. 29 Fever quotitian, Seethe the middle bark in water, and drink it with nine grains of the less Spurge, or Peony. 30 The rind and leaves of a Nut tree drunk in Vinegar taketh away the rigour of the fever quarten. 31 Apostume phlegmatic or melancholy, to break it, Stamp Nuts with Rue and Hony, & apply it. 32 Burn, anoint with oil of Nuts and Wax. 33 Ears soul, Use the juice or sap with other medicines, especially with the grease of an Eel, or with Hony. 34 Nose bleeding, Burn Hasell sticks, and blow in the ashes or powder thereof. 35 Pricks, stamp the kernels with fresh Butter & apply them. 36 Hair to grow where none is, Burn the Nuts & husks with Beech-mast and the leaves of Elecampana, & mix the ashes with Honey, and seethe it, & anoint therewith. 37 Nose bleeding, Burn the tackling & blow in the ashes. 38 Stamp the kernels with May Butter & Pigeons dung, and apply it to Apostumes to break them, & avoid the pain in the back. 39 Fill a pan full of the flowers, seethe them xxiiii. hours, & put wine to them that they burn not nor dry not, and strain it, & drink thereof in February five days to become Lean. 40 Mix the ashes of the Nut and husks with old swine's grease & anoint, to 'cause the hair to grow. 41 Mix the ashes of the shells with powder of Senuie & Goose grease, & anoint a leprous face therewith to heal it. 42 Mix powder of the tackling, two drams with an Egg roasted with oil, till it be hard, & take it four or five mornings fasting, to help the bloody flux: if that serve not, take iiii. drams with an Egg. 43 Apply the Moss of the tree, the older kept the better, to stop blood. Apostume to break 31. 38 Back grief 27. 38 Blood to stop 7. 43. (See Nose bleeding. Bladder grief 27 Bloody flux 42 Bones to knit 20 Burn 32 Catharre 3. 21 Cough 12. 26 old 2 Ears dull 33 Worms 25 Eyes web 22 to be black 14 Face leprous 41 Fever quotid. 29 quarten 30 Flowers to stop 15 Flux to stop 11. 17. 18 Head scales 4 scurf 4 Heart to be black 8. 23 falling 9 24 to grow 4. 16. 36. 40 Head pose 21 Horcenesse 26 Lean to be 39 Lepry 41 Nose bleeding 7. 34. 37 Pricks 13. 35 Rheum 3. 21 Squincy 5 Strangury 6 Venom general 19 urine distilling 28 Whites 11 ¶ Havergrasse. HAuergrasse which is like Oats, Seethe the herb and root in water, till the third part be wasted, than strain it and boil it again with honey till it wax thick, and so it taketh away the smell of the stinking sores of the Nose being put in with a Tent, especially with some Aloes put to it. 2 Seethe it in wine with dried Roses, & wash the mouth therewith to amend the corrupt smell of it. Breath ill 1. 2 Mouth stink 2 Nose stink 1 ¶ Hawthorne. HAwthorne, Stamp the Bark with read wine, and fry it with Boar's grease and apply it hot to draw out a prick. 2 The white Thorn is never stricken with lightning. 3 Use the leaves with white wine to expel the stone. 4 The Haws stop the lask and the Flowers, and are good against the gravel and stone, especially with white wine. Gravel 4 Prick 1 Stone 2. 4 ¶ Heath hather HEath hather or Linge, Eyes ache read and dull, drop in the juice of the leaves. 2 Bitings Venomous, apply the flowers and leaves. 3 Stone in the Bladder, seethe it in fair water, and drink five ounces warm morn & even three hours before meat thirty days, and at the last, enter into a bath of the decoction thereof, and sit upon the Heath in the bath. 4 The bark of it may be used for the bark of Tamariske. 5 The water of the flowers is good for the Colic and Headache, and the pain and redness of the Eyes. 6 Stinging of venomous things, and the swelling of the same, stamp the flowers with the tender springs, and apply them. 7 It is good in Foments and sweeting baths, namely the flowers of it, for the Gout, Palsy, and griefs of the joints. Ache 7 Biting venom. 2. 6 colic 5 Eyes griefs 1. 5 Gout 7 Headache 5 Palsy 7 Stone 3 Swell 6 ¶ Heye. Hay: leapry, hold a piece of iron over the reek of Heye, and anoint with the liquor that is on the iron, all itch, scab, and marmoles. Itch Marmoles Scab ¶ Hemlock. Hemlock: apply it to the stones of young children, or breasts of young maidens, to 'cause them to continued small, but then they will be weak and sickly all their life time. 2 Apply it to hot apostumes, inflammations, and wild fire, to suage the pain & heat, as Henbane and Opium doth. 3 Leg swollen, heat it between two tiles and apply. 4 Birds to catch, steep such seeds as they live by in the juice, or in wine leeses, and sprinkle it where they haunt, and by eating thereof they will become giddy, and then they may be taken. 5 Quench hot iron iii or iiii. times in the juice till it be cold, and it will become soft. 6 Apply it to women's breasts after they be delivered to waste away the milk. 7 The juice may be gathered and dried in the sun, and kept to use. It must be taken out of the tops & leaves before they seed, the same is good in eye medicines, S. Antony's fire, all hot griefs, and the things aforesaid, and for running sores that spread abroad. 8 Lust to void, apply the leaves to the stones. 9 They are not to be used inward, but the herb, juice, or water applied somewhat warm, it helpeth all inflammations and swellings that cannot otherways be helped: it taketh away heat and ache of the head, or any other part, the shingles, holy fire, ringwormes, tetters, it ceaseth all ache, procureth sleep, and helpeth all hot griefs. 10 The juice is strong poison, but if any have drunk it, let him drink plenty of hot and sweet wine. 11 Headache, seethe them soft, and apply them hot all night morn and even iiii. or v. times. 12 Seethe it in wine, and drink it to help the falling sickness. 13 Stamp the leaves, and dry them, and make it into a plaster to heal all ruptures & chappings within ix or x. days. 14 Legs swollen with a fall or bruise, heat it between two. tiles & apply it. 15 Gout, seethe old piss, & clarify it, & seethe it therein & apply it, or seethe it in wine & apply it. 16 Breasts not to be great, grind the seeds with vinegar, and anoint them often. 17 Lust to abate, stamp it, and apply it to the pecten: matrix swelling, & coming out, stamp it and apply it. 18 Gout hot, apply the juice with swine's grease, it helpeth great swellings. Falling evil, apply it to the soles of the feet, to draw down the humours. 19 Swell, wash with water of it. Aches 2 Birds to catch 4 Breast to be small 1. 6. 16 Bruise 14 Bursten 13 Chaps 13 Chaste to be 1 Gout 15. 18 Falling evil 12. 18 Headache 9 11 Holy fire 9 Hot griefs 2. 7 Inflammations 2. 9 Iron to be soft 5 Leg swollen 3. 14 Lust to void 8. 17 Matrix falling 17 swelling 17 Ringwormes 9 S. Antony's fire 7 Sleep to 'cause 9 Sores 7 Swell 3. 9 19 Tetters 9 ¶ Hemp. Hemp: the seed expelleth windiness. 2 If a man take a little too much of it, it drieth up natural seed, and the milk of women. 3 jaundice, and stopping of the liver, stamp the seed, and drink it with wine. 4 Ear pain, and vermin therein, put in the juice of the green leaves. 5 Gout & shrinking of sinews, seethe the root in water, and apply it. 6 Hens to lay apace, give them the seeds. 7 Gnats to voided, lay the moist branches by thee. 8 Belly bound, stamp the seeds, and seethe them in running water and strain it and drink a good draft when thou goest to bed. 9 Oil to make, stamp the seed, and sprinkle it with a little wine, and heat it in a new earthen pan well glazed, and when thou canst not suffer thy hand any longer in it, press out the oil through a square bag, & drink one ounce of it, to make thee merry, fierce, and hardy to fight, and comely to see to: and in like sort thou mayst draw oil out of all seeds. 10 Cough dry, seed the seeds in milk, and use it. Give a horse as much seed to eat as thou mayest take up with both thy hands to 'cause him presently to piss and voided the colic and stone, but he must not drink of two. hours after. 11 Fever quarten, take the juice of Hemp before the fit, (see Fenigreeke.) Sinews shrunk, seeth the roots in wine, and apply them. 12 Ears noise, purge with pills Hiera picra, and put in oil of Hempseed warm with a little vinegar, but if it come of great heat, then with woman's milk, and leap on the foot on the same side often, and provoke sneezing. 13 Breast suppuration and mattering, seeth Hempseede in water, and use the milk thereof. 14 Stamp the seed & strain it with water, and put to it two rear roasted Eggs, and take it fasting to stop the bloody flux. 15 Ears worms, put in the clear juice of the leaves and seeds. 16 Appetite to cause, steep the seeds in ale one night, then rub them between your hands till the husks be off, and wash them clean, and stamp them, and make it like an Almond caudle and use it often. 17 Canker or fester, burn Hempseede & Rye meal, & mix the powder with the juice of Smallage & honey, & dip tents of linen therein & put it in. 18 Seethe the seeds in goats milk to the third part, & drink it three days to avoid all inward poison. Appetite to cause 16 Bloody flux 14 Belly bound 8 Breast griefs 13 Cough dry 10 Ear pain and vermin 4. 12 15 noise 12 Fester 17 Fever quarten 11 Gnats to void 7 Gout 5 Hens to say 6 Horse sick 10 jaundice 3 canker 17 Liver stopped 3 Milk to abate 2 Mirth to 'cause 9 Oil to make 9 Sinews shrunk 5. 11 Seed to abate 2 Strong to be 9 Urine stopped 10 Windiness 1 ¶ Henbane. HEnbane: Emerods', stamp the leaves of it & Purslen with oil of Roses, crumbs of bread, and the yolk of a hard egg, and apply it to have speedy help. 2 Teeth worms, take up the fume of the seeds tempered with wax and laid on coals. 3 Anoint thy temples with the juice, and thou shalt see marvels in thy sleep. 4 Teethach, seethe the root in vinegar & Rose water, and hold thereof in thy mouth, or seethe them in white wine, & hold the wine in thy mouth hote a good while. 5 Worms in hands or feet, set a read hot tile in a vessel of water, and lay Henbane seed on it, and hold the hands or feet over the vapour of it. 6 Cod apostumed, apply meal of Beans and Barley with Henbane leaves, and oil of Roses. 7 Stamp the seeds with lime, and apply it to sores that rot at the bone. 8 Teethache, heat the root well, and apply it to the root of the tooth, or burn the juice with Leekeseede, and receive up the fume of it. 9 Poisoned, drink one dram of Symphonia, with a woman's urine. 10 Teethache, take up the fume of the seeds with Leekeseedes and Frankincense. 11 Apostume to break in one day & a night, apply Henbane leaves. 12 Frenzy, apply a plaster of the leaves or seeds luke warm to the forehead, and if he sleep, he shall mend, or else die. Or seeth it in sweet wine, and bathe the forehead therewith, and the temples, ears, and nostrils. 13 Teeth ache, stamp it and apply it. 14 Tooth to fall out, touch it with the powder of the root. 15 Oil of Henbane, fry the seeds with oil and press it out, it helpeth all swellings and burnings. 16 Teethache, make a candle of the seeds with wax and Pimpernell, and hold thy mouth over it as it burneth, or seeth the root in Oximell, and apply it, or seethe the seeds of it and leaves, and take up the fume. 17 Worms called Digs, lay a hot tyle-stone over a vessel of water, and lay thereon Henbane seed, and hold thy feet over it, and they will come out. 18 Sleep to cause, Seethe Henbane in water or wine, and wash thy temples, pulses, hands and feet therewith. 19 Yard apostumed, apply a plaster of Henbane and Guilts grease. 20 Teethache, heat the root of black Henbane well, and apply it to the tooth & the root thereof, and it will fall out. 21 Lust to void, anoint thy yard with the juice. 22 Cod ache and swelling, stamp the leaves and seeds, and apply them. 23 Breasts pain and kernels, stamp the seeds with wine, and apply it. 24 Gout pain, anoint with the oil of Henbane, or boil the juice with hog's grease, and put wax to it, and anoint therewith, or seeth the herb in wine, and apply it. 25 Scabs, pocks, and Leapry, take up the fume of the seed to the grieved part. 26 Henbane is good for the gout coming of melancholy. 27 The seeds mixed with the seeds of Hemlock, and a candle made thereof, and burnt on a stone, with the smoke thereof, slayeth worms in the teeth. 28 The juice is good for all wounds. 29 It is good for the cough, hot apostumes & the gout. 30 The seeds should be gathered in August. 31 To avoid the ache of the gout by & by, stamp the seeds with oil olive, & let it stand so xxiiii. hours, then fry it & strain it, and apply it. 32 The juice is drawn forth of the leaves & stalks, and dried in the sun, it is good for collyries for the eyes, for the heat, rheum and pain, and the like in the ears and matrix. 33 The same laid to with meal of wheat or parched barley, is most profitable against all hot swellings of the eyes, feet, and other parts of the body. 34 The seed is good for the cough, falling down of rheum and humours into the eyes, or upon the breast, against pain, the inordinate flux of the terms, and all other issues of blood viii. or x. grains being taken with Hydromell. 35 The same stamped with wine and applied, suageth the pain of the gout, healeth all pain and swellings of the genitors or stones, suageth the swellings of the paps after deliverance. It may also be put into all anodyne medicines, to suage pain. 36 The leaves alone, or stamped with parched Barley meal, or mixed with other ointments, plasters, and medicines suage all pain. 37 If one wash his feet with the decoction of Henbane, or take it in glister, it causeth sleep, & so doth the seeds laid to with oil, or any other liquor to the forehead, or if one do but smell often to the herb and flowers thereof. 38 The leaves, stalks, flowers, seed, root, and juice, do cool all inflammations, cause sleep, and suage pain, but it may not be used too much. 39 seeth Henbane in water, and wash thy forehead and feet therewith hot, to 'cause sleep in the hot evil, and apply a plaster of the seeds with woman's milk and vinegar hot to thy temples. 40 And so it also destroyeth the Emerods. 41 Gout and sciatica, stamp the root and apply it. 42 Teeth ache, bruise Henbane, and hold it in thy mouth a good while. 43 The juice mixed with other medicines for the purpose, taketh away hair. 44 Frenzy, draw the humours downward with suppositories or glisters, and dip a spondge in the juice or decoction of Henbane, and apply it to the head, or smell to Henbane, to provoke sleep, or seeth it in sweet wine, and wash the temples, ears, and nostrils therewith to provoke sleep, or apply the flowers, seeds, or herb, to void madness & cease pain. 45 Apply the juice with a clout to the eyes, to void their inflammation, running and pain. 46 Ears ache, put in the juice or oil. 47 Ache or swelling, apply the green leaves. 48 Apply Henbane with parched Barley meal to any ache or gout. 49 Sleep to cause, wash thy feet with the decoction thereof, or anoint thy forehead and temples thereof with the oil of it and vinegar. 50 The juice may be mixed with wheat flower and made into little cakes and dried and kept to use for one year. 51 The smoke of Henbane taken in at the mouth, is good for the cough. Ache 31. 34. 35. 36. 38. 47. 48 Apost. 11. 29. 19 22. 35. 6 Blood to stop 34 Breasts griefs 23 swollen 35 Cod's apost. 6. 22. 35. ache and swollen 22. 35 Cough 51. 34 Ears griefs 32. 46 Eyes griefs 32. 33. 34. 45 Emerods' 1. 40 Feet worms 5. 17 Flowers to stop 34 Fluxes 34 Frenzy 12. 44 Gout 24. 26. 29. 31. 35. 36 41. 48 Hands worms 5. 17 Headache 44 Hair to void 43 Hot evil 39 Inflammations 38 juice to keep 32. 50 Leapry 25 Lust to void 21 Mad 12. 44 Matrix griefs 32 Oil of it 15. 31 Pocks 25 Poisoned 9 Pissing blood 34 Rheum 34 Sciatica 41 Sleep to 'cause 3. 12. 18 37. 38. 39 44. 49 Scabs 25 Sores rotten 7 Spitting blood 34 Swell hot 33. 35. 47 (See Cod.) Teethache 4. 8. 10. 13. 16 20. 42. to fall out 14 worms 22. 27 Wounds general 2. 8 Yard apost. 19 22 Herb Iue, drink it to kill worms, (See Camepitis.) ¶ Herb Robert. Herb Robert: it stauncheth blood of green wounds bruised and applied. It is excellent good against sores and ulcers of the paps of women, and privities of men, either the juice or the substance applied. 2 The juice cureth ruptures and sores of the mouth, and the stink of them. It healeth wounds. 3 The powder of it slayeth the canker in any place, and so doth the herb stamped with salt and honey. Blood to stop 1 Breasts sores 1 Breath stink 2 Bursten 2 canker general 3 Mouth sores 2 Privities sores 1 Wounds 1. 2 ¶ Hermodactil. HErmodactil: gout cold, stamp the root of it, and of walwort, with hog's grease and apply it, or stamp Hermodactil with vinegar, and apply it. Take Hermodact. iiii. drams, Cummin, and Ginger ana one dram, and take thereof two. drams in powder. It is wonderful good for all gouts & griefs of the joints. 2 The powder of it taketh away superfluous flesh of knots in the face, and with Agrippa it doth heal up the same. 3 It purgeth phlegm from the far parts, and is very good against the gout, sciatica, and pain of the joints. It must be taken with a little Ginger, long Pepper, Anise, or Cummin, and a little Mastic, and so it doth not overturn the stomach. 4 They are of the nature of Affodill. And with Barley meal and honey, they draw forth all pricks. 5 The roots bruised and applied, draweth forth all great aches. Aches 1. 5 Face knots 2 Gouts 1 Pricks 4 Purgation 1. 3 Sciatica 3 ¶ Heps. HEps dried, & the down taken out, stoppeth the belly strongly, but the leaves bind weakly. 2 The down within it is very perilous for the throat & wind pipes. 3 Tarts made of Heps, are very good against fluxes and vomiting. Flowers to stop, pill them and dry them, & drink the powder of them. Stamp seven. or viii. of the berries, and strain them with old wine without an ague, but with water in an ague, and drink thereof three days if need be, to help the griping, fretting, and straining of the belly. (See Rose.) Flowers to stop. 3 Fluxes 3. 1 Vomitings 3 ¶ Hypocistis. HYpocistis stoppeth all laskes & fluxes of the belly, and is of stronger operation than the flowers or leaves, and therefore cureth all fluxes & the terms. 2 Laudanum drunk with old wine, stoppeth the lask, and provoketh urine. 3 It is very good against the hardness of the matrix laid to in a pessary. 4 The perfume, taken up, draweth down the seconds being laid on hot coals. 5 Head scurf, and hair falling, apply it with Myrrh, and oil of Myrrh. 6 Ear pain, drop it in with honey or oil of Roses. 7 Sores scars or wounds, apply it with wine. 8 Hardness and ache, use it in ointments. 9 Use it in ointment to the breast for the cough, and in other medicines: for the cough: flux, & to cause urine, drine it with wine. 10 Matrix cold, use it in pessaries. 11 Ears deaf, use it melted in oil of bitter Almonds. 12 Teeth lose, mix it with Mastic and use it. 13 Hair falling, melt it with Bares grease, or oil of Myrrh, and anoint therewith. 14 Use it in suffumigations to bring down the seconds, and terms, and urine. 15 Drink it with old read wine to stop the bloody flux: use it both inward and outward to preserve health. 16 Put a tent of it into the nose to break the pose. 17 The best is heavy & black. Falling evil, anoint the spin of the Back with it. 18 Headache, use it with convenient medicines. 19 Apply it with wine to scars of sores or wounds. 20 Rheum in the brain, use a Pomander with cubebs, maces, and greek pitch. 21 With vinegar it taketh away hair. Ache 8 Bloody flux 15 Cough 9 Ears deaf 11 pain 6 Falling evil 17 Flowers to stop 1 Fluxes 1. 2. 9 Hardness 8 Headache 8 scurf 5 Hair falling 5. 13 to fall 21 Health to preserve 15 Matrix could 10. hard 3. Pose 16 Rheum 20. 16 Seconds 4. 14 Scars 7. 19 Sores 7. 19 Teeth lose 12 urine stopped 2. 9 14 Wounds 7. 19 ¶ Holly. HOlly: ears deaf, put in the sap of Holly laid on the fire and provoke sneezing, or use it among other like medicines. 2 Pricks, apply birdlime with the yolk of an egg. 3 Some say, that five of the Berries taken inwardly are good for the colic, and provoke to the stool. 4 The broth of the Bark of the root is good for joints that be out and have waxed hard thereafter. It dissolveth and driveth away swellings and sodereth together broken bones. 5 Colic, stamp the Berries & strain them with ale and drink it warm. 6 Stone and stopping of urine, seeth a handful of Berries in a pint of ale to the one half, than strain it and drink it with a little butter v. or vi. spoonful at once. 7 Flux read, drink powder of the leaves, and use it in thy meats. 8 Stitch, dry the leaves in an oven, and take off the pricks & drink the powder of the leaves with ale. Belly bound 3 Books broken 4 Bloody flux 7 Colic 3. 5 Ears deaf 1 joints out 4 Pricks 2 Stitch 8 Stone 6 Swell 4 Urine stopped 6 ¶ Holyoke. HOlyoke and Mallows: cramp, take Holyoke, oil of violets, and swine's grease, of each like much, fry them & strain it, and anoint therewith. 2 Teeth ache, stamp it and apply it. 3 Belly hard stamp it with soap and apply it to the navel. 4 For all aches and bruises of wounds and strokes, seeth the roots tender, and grinned them, and fry them with wheat flower and oil olive, and apply it as hot as may be suffered. 5 Swelling of tooth ache, stamp it and apply it. 6 Leapry, seeth it in vinegar, and stamp it and strain it, and anoint therewith. 7 Griefs of the matrix after deliverance, stamp the roots, fry them with new swine's grease and apply it. 8 Wounds general, seeth the roots, & put in the juice of them, or stamp the roots with oatmeal, and seeth them and apply them. 9 Apost. behind the ear, seeth the root to pap, and fry it with bores grease bruised, Linseed, Fenigreke and barley meal, and apply it to all impostumes. 10 Belly and matrix pain, apply the leaves. 11 Dead child to expel, stamp the leaves with a little salt, and goose grease, and apply it to the matrix. 12 For pain of the back, loins, belly and matrix, seeth the leaves in water, & wash them often therewith. 13 Yard canker and swelling, seeth it and apply it with gylts grease, or stamp powder of linseed with it and Wormwood, and seeth them and apply them, and so it ripeneth apostumes also. 14 To break a botch bile or keyll, seeth the roots in water, and stamp them and strain them, and put theereto swine's grease, and apply it to draw and heal. 15 Pleurisy, dip wool in the decoction of Holyoke and butter and apply it. 16 Gout, fry Holyoke with sheeps tallow, and apply it three days. 17 seeth it with linseed to dissolve all gatherings of humours in the body. 18 Apostumes, seeth the roots to pap, and put thereto as much Fenigrek and Linseed as the pap, seeth it till it rope, and stamp them well, then strain it and put thereto barrow's grease & barley meal, and fry it and use it. 19 Holyokes or garden Mallows white or read, are moist as the other kinds are, and may be used both inward and outward. 20 seeth the herb, root, or seed in milk, or in wine, and drink it to cease the hot and dry cough, the blistering of the lungs and ptisik. 21 seeth it in wine or water mixed with honey and Allom, and gargarise therewith to heal the blisters of the mouth and throat, and other stinking sores. 22 Belly bound, seeth it, and eat it, to help the ague that cometh of costiveness, or seeth it, and make therewith a glister to open the belly and soften it. 23 Distil water of the flowers of the greater Mallow, to heal the breaking out of the mouth, and all inward and outward heats, the holy fire, blisters of the throat, and all other swellings being gargarised or otherways applied with linen clotheses. 24 Wash the head with the decoction of Mallows to cleanse it from all scurf, the roots do the like. 25 Stamp Mallows and Garlic together, and strain it with white wine, and drink thereof nine times to 'cause thee to make water freely. 26 seeth Mallows in water, and stamp them well, and fry them with swine's grease till it be somewhat thick like an ointment, and apply thereof morn and even to swollen legs three or four times together and be whole. 27 seeth the seeds of Holyoke or other Mallows with figs and raisins in water, and use it for the coughs and chincough. 28 Mallows are good for wounds, bruisings, and rancklings. 29 The garden Mallows is better inward then outward, and the wild better outward then inward. 30 Mallows taken in meat, nourish better then lettuce, and soften the belly, but art hurtful to the stomach by losing, mollifying, and relenting the same. 31 Eat the raw leaves with a little salt, to help the pain and ulceration of the kidneys and bladder, and for the same purpose, and for the gravel and stone boil them in water or wine, and drink it. 32 Drink the decoction or broth of the roots presently after the taking of any kind of poison to vomit it up again. 33 Bath in the broth of Mallows to mollify the hardness and tumors of the matrix. And use it in glisters for all painful griefs of the guts, bladder, mother, and fundament, and going off of the skin. 34 Drink the seeds in wine to cause abundance of milk and for the gravel and pain of the bladder. 35 Apply Mallows to the stinging of Bees and Wasps, and to draw out thorns and splinters. 36 Stamp them raw or sodden by themselves or with swine's grease, and apply them to suppling, mollify, ripen, and dissolve all kinds of tumors hot or cold. 37 Roast Mallow roots in the embers and stamp them and apply them to the exulcerations and soreness of women's breasts. 38 Mallows boiled and moderately eaten with oil, and vinegar are indifferent good of concoction, and do avoid superfluous matter, through the belly. 39 Use Mallow roots or seeds in Wine or milk daily for the hot cough and exulceration of the lungs and phthisic, and use the herb, seeds or roots daily in meats and broths, or conserves of the flowers. 40 seeth the herb and root with the seeds of Fenel and Dill, and drink it to have plenty of milk, for gnawing of the belly, guts, and bladder, & to lose the belly. 41 Drink the distilled water continually to cool all hot fevers, and to help the griefs of the lungs & sides, the pleurisy and spitting of blood and matter, the bloody flux and hot impost. of the kidneys and bladder. 42 seeth the flower in water or wine & mix it with honey & Allom as sometime the disease requireth to cleanse the exulcerations of the mouth and throat & all inflammations both inward and outward, the holy fire, the squincy, and other kinds of swellings. 43 Use the water or juice against the stinging of wasps & bees. 44 The oil of the flower defendeth from being stinged. 45 The leaves and roots sodden in wine helpeth the scurf of the head. 46 Apply the water warm to heal wounds. 47 The leaves, roots, and seeds with swine's grease soften all hard apost. and the swellings of the liver, milt & matrix. 48 seeth the herb, root, & seed with barley meal in water, & mix it with oil of Roses, or of olives, and apply it to soften all hot apostumes, the holy fire, shingles, & inflammations, and to draw out pricks & stings. 49 seeth a bag full of the leaves and roots in water and bathe therein & apply the bag to the grieved place for the obstructions of the liver, milt, kidneys, and bladder, & to help the stone. 50 Drink half a cup full of the juice every day to preserve thee from the falling sickness and all other sicknesses. 51 Eat the tender leaves with salt to heal the imposthume of the eye, and to prevent the danger of the fistula there, and also apply thereto the herb stamped with honey. 52 Scotch the root of a Mallow and rub the teeth therewith to cleanse them and make them white but of all things for that purpose powder of Mastic rubbed on once a month is the best, and so preserveth the gums. 53 Chew the leaves raw and apply them with a little salt and honey to the corner of the eye to help the apostume there, but when it beginneth to heal put in no salt. 54 Stamp the leaves with oil, and apply them to the wild fire and burned places, and rub thy face or hands therewith, and no bees nor wasps shall sting thee. 55 Eat the leaves with salt and honey to heal the squincy. 56 Seethe the root soft & apply it to women's breasts with black wool warm to heal the ache, burning, swelling, & hardness of them. 57 seeth a handful of the leaves with oil and wine to purge women. 58 seeth the leaves in wine and apply them to the mouth of the matrixe after deliverance, to stay the falling down of it, and to make it soft. 59 seeth it in oil and vinegar and apply it to burnings and saint Anthony's fire. 60 Drink the seeds in wine to cleanse the stomach from rotten and stinking phlegm and melancholy. 61 Drink the juice often to cleanse the lungs, & to have a clear voice. 62 seeth Holyoke with swine's grease, goose grease, and Turpentine, and apply it to the belly to assuage the grievous swelling, burning, and inflation thereof. 63 seeth the root in wine, and drink it to provoke urine, to ease the stone, the cleanse the reins for the sciatica, ruptures, and bloody flux. 64 The seeds be good for the stone and reins, the roots do stop the bloody flux. 65 When Mallows are drunk to expel inward poison, drink milk after them to vomit them up. 66 seeth Holyoke with the broth of a hen, wheat flower and butter, and apply it to ripen apostumes of hard maturation. 67 Use Holyoke also in fractures of bones to knit them. 68 Bath the feet in the decoction of Mallows to provoke sleep in sharp fevers. 69 Stamp the leaves with new swine's grease, and heat it on a tile, and apply it to the hardness of the liver or milt. 70 Drink the juice with wine for the strangury & stone. 71 Wash the hands, face, and feet with the broth of Mallows, or Holyoke, to provoke sleep. 72 Drink the broth of the seeds for the ptisike and cough. 73 The seed sodden in oil, softeneth hardness, cleanseth and ripeneth. Abhorring meat, anoint the stomach with oil of Roses, or of Violets, and seeth Mallows in the said oils and apply them. 74 Belly bound, seeth Mallows & polypody, of each like much, & drink the broth. 75 Swell, apply a plaster of broom, & Mallows. 76 Colic, seeth Mercury & Mallows in oil, & apply them. 77 Flowers stopped, anoint the over bark of the root with honey and cast on powder of Scamony, & put it into the matrix. 78 Burning & scalding apply sodden Mallows. 79 Eyes hot griefs, bruise Mallows & apply them. 80 Aches in any part, seeth Mallows & apply them. 81 Head scurf, wash with the decoction of Mallow roots. 82 hoarseness, anoint the breast with Bole & fresh butter, & apply a plaster of Mallows sodden in salad oil to the breast. 83 Impostume, apply a plaster of Mallows, barley meal, whites of eggs, & fresh grease to ripen it when it cometh of a hot humour. 84 Paps griefs, stamp Mallow roots & apply them. 85 Pleurisy, seeth Mallows, Brankursin in oil of Violets & butter, & apply them. 86 Sinews shrunk, apply sodden Mallows. 87 Squincy, apply a plaster of Mallows & Lily roots, with May butter. 88 Stitch, stamp Mallows, & wormwood with new butter & apply it. 89 Stones apostumed, boil Mallows, Henbane, and wormwood in water, & foment therewith often. 90 Stone to expel, seeth Mallows long in water and drink thereof warm. 91 Stone & strangury, drink the juice of Mallows. 92 Swelling of blood letting, and for swelling of the yard, boil Linseed, Mallows, & Holyoke together, and apply them. 93 Head dry scales, seeth the root in water & wash therewith often. 94 Eyes spots or blemish, hand the root of Althaea or Vervin about thy neck. 95 Breast impost. seeth the leaves & seeds of Mallows in fresh butter or cream with some Capon's grease, and strain it & anoint thy breast therewith. 96 Cough straightness & stopping of the breath and heart, sit in a dry bath over the decoction of Mallows, Valerian, & ote straw, & sweated well, if the liquor cool, put hot flints into it, but if thou be fat have a siege or two first. 97 Sweat to cause, put Mallows into a close tub, and sit over the fume thereof in a bath. 98 Belly swollen, seeth a basket full of Mallows in water, & sit therein warm as thou canst suffer, & keep thy belly soluble. 99 Fundament falling, seeth Mallows in goat's milk, and apply them hot often. 100 Strangury, seethe Mallows and Garlic well bruised in a quart of wine till the third part be wasted, and drink thereof thrice a day. 101 Hair to grow & to void scurf, seeth Mallows and their roots and wash therewith. 102 Belly bound, seeth Mallows, & use the broth. 103 Back sore, seeth Mallows in water & apply them hot in a read cloth. 104 Belly bound, use Mallows & Mercury in pork broth, & drink whey after it. 105 Apost. to ripen, stamp Mallows, wormwood, & Mugwort, of each like much, & fry them with swine's grease, wheat flower & honey, & boil it together till it be thick & apply it. 106 Eyes rapture of the tunicles, mix the juice of Mallows with barley meal & the yolk of a raw egg & apply it. 107 Pleurisy, seethe Mallows in wine & apply them hot (see Fenigrek & in Linseeds.) 108 Belly bound, seeth Mallows & put thereto a cup of new ale & eat them. 109 Head broken, seeth field Mallows, wormwood & Mugwort, of each like much stamped with honey & swine's grease & apply them. 110 Ache of arms or legs, apply sodden Mallows. 111 Face rawness & spots, seethe the roots of wild Mallows, & stamp them with vinegar, wine, salad oil & honey, & anoint therewith. 112 Head scurf, seethe Mallow roots in running water & wash therewith. 113 Whites to stop, seeth wormwood & Mallows in sack, & apply it to the belly hot as may be suffered. 114 Belly bound, seeth Mercury & Mallows ana i. handful with a piece of pork or with whey, or white wine, & drink the broth. Handsscabd & rankled, wash with the decoction of Mallows. 115 Wounds to heal speedily, seeth Mallows well & stamp them & strain them & mix the juice with old barrows grease and barley meal & apply it. 116 Pleurisy, stamp iiii. ounces of wild Mallow roots well sodden, & put thereto butter i. ounce, honey i. ounce & a half, pigeon's dung two. drams, mix them & apply it hot to break the corruption. 117 Eyes ulcers, chew the leaves of Mallows & apply them with a little salt. 118 Morphue, bath in the decoction of Mallows, wormwood, & the chaff of barley or oats, & use ointments after it. 119 Belly bound, stamp a root & seeth it, & mix it with old hog's grease & a little bran, & apply it to the stomach. 120 Stomach swollen, use Marsh Mallows sodden in water. 121 Matrix heard, foment with the decoction of Mallows. 122 Paps swollen, stamp Mallows & apply them hot with oil. 123 Matrix pain after childbirth, seethe the roots of Marsh Mallows & walwort, & stamp them & apply them with oil. 124 Gout to heal in three days, stamp wild Mallows roots with stolen grease & apply it. 125 Belly bound, use Mallows and Mercury with sweet hog's grease. 126 Impost. hot in the beginning, stamp Mallows & apply them, or stamp them with swine's grease, & lay it on a hot tile, & apply it to the impost. to ripen & break it. It destroyeth all hardness of the liver & milt. 127 Bruised blood to cast out, drink the juice of white Malowes with wine. 128 Belly bound, seethe Mallows & read nettles in water, & sit over the fume thereof. 129 Legs swollen, seethe Malowes & stamp them, & fry them with barrow's grease till they be as an ointment, & apply it morn & even three or iiii. days. 130 That no flies nor bees shall touch thee, stamp Mallows with oil olive & anoint, but if thou be stinged already stamp Mallows & apply them. 131 Mix i li. of the powder of Mallow roots dried in the shadow with iii li. of honey sodden & scummed, stir it on the fire to an electuary, & use it for shortness of wind. 132 Oppilations or stopping, seeth wild Marsh Mallows, and strain it, and drink thereof with sugar candy. 133 Backache, stamp i li. of Mallows with fresh sheep's dung & loffe grease of each two. li. & apply thereof with unwashed wool. 134 Matrix windy, seeth Mallows & Parietary, and bathe in the water, & apply the herbs in a bag. 135 Wounds made with iron, seeth them in water & stamp them with swine's grease & barley meal & apply it. 136 Belly bound, seeth them in ale & eat them. 137 For sickness and anguish in the sides, seeth the tender crops in water, & stamp them & put thereto the fatness of wheat, so that it be tough as glue and apply it hot as may be suffered. 138 Yard swollen, seeth Linseeds with Mallows & apply it. 139 A ripening plaster, seeth Mallows & wormwood to pap, then let the water run from them, then grinned them finely with i li. of old swine's grease: it is most precious of all other for sore breasts that do rot. It doth ripen & cleanse by the pores, & mitigateth pains in the breasts and all other apost. as of the neck, throat, armholes or else where. It must be applied warm on a double cloth morn and even. 140 Teeth black or yellow, cleanse them well & use to rub them with a Mallow root. 141 Botch, seeth them with Rue, & wormwood in running water, & when they be soft, fry them with fresh butter or fresh grease & apply it. Abhorring meat 73 Aches gener. 4. 80. 110. 124 Apost. 9 14. 17. 18. 41. 47. 48. 66. 83. 105. 126. 139. 141. Backach 12. 41. 63. 64. 133. sore 103. Bellyach 10. 12. 33. 40. 62. bound 22. 30. 38. 40. 74. 102. 104. 108. 114. 119. 125. 128. 136. hard 2. 62. swollen 62. 98. sore (see Ache.) Bile 14. (see Botch, Apost.) Bladder griefs 31. 33. 41. 49. (see Stone, Strangury.) Blisters 23. (see Scab.) Bloody flux 40. 63. 64 Bones broken 67 Botch 14. 141. (see Apost.) Breast impost. 95. (see Impost.) Breasts sore 37. 56. 84. 139. swollen 122. Breath strait 96. 131 Bruise 4. 28. 127 Burn 54. 59 78 Bursten 63 Chincough 27 Colic 76 Cod swollen 89 Cough 20. 27. 39 72. 96 Cramp 1. (see Sinews.) Dead child 11 Eyes apost. 5. 1. 53. heat 70. rapture 106. spots 94. ulcers 117. Face deformed 111 Falling evil 50 Fevers 22. 41. 68 Flowers stopped 77 Fundament fallen 99 griefs 33 Gout 16. 124 Gravel 31 Heartstopt 96 Hardness 73. 126 Hands scabbed 114 Head broken 109 Skall dry 93 Scurf 24. 45. 81. 112 Hair to grow 101 Hoarseness 82 Holy fire 42. 48 Hot griefs 23 Impostume 41. 83. 95 Inflammation 42. 48 Kidneys griefs 31. 41. 48 Leaprie 6 Legs ache 110 swollen 26. 129 Liver griefs 47. 69. 126. 132 Loins ache 12 Loathing 73 Lungs griefs 41. 61 Blistered 20. 39 Matrix griefs 7. 10. 12. 33. 47. 58. 121. 123. 134 Milk to 'cause 34. 40 Milt griefs 47. 49. 69. 126. 132 Morphew 118 Neck apostume 9 39 Obstructions 49. 132 Pleurisy 15. 41. 85. 107. 116 Poison 32. 65 Pricks 35. 48 Phthisic 20. 39 72 Purgation 57 60 Rankling 28 S. Anthony's fire 59 Sciatica 63 Sinews shrunk 86 Shingles 48 Sickness general 50 Sides griefs 41. 88 137 Scabs 114 Scalding 78 Sleep to 'cause 68 71 Spitting blood and matter 41 squinsy 42. 55. 87 Stinging 35. 43. 48. 54. 130 Stitch 88 Stomach griefs 60. 73. 120 Stone 31. 49. 63. 64. 70. 90. 91 Stones apostume 89 Strangury 70. 91. 100 Swell 5. 17. 23. 26. 36. 33. 42. 75. 92. 129 Swear to 'cause 97 Teethach 5 foul 52. 140 Throat sore 21. 23. 42 Voice ill 61. 82 Vomit to 'cause 32 Urine stopped 25. 41. 63 Whites to stop 113 Wild fire 54 Women to purge 57 Wounds 4. 8. 28. 46. 115. 135 Yard canker 13 swollen 13. 92. 138 ¶ Horehound. HOrehound white, boil it in water, and drink it to open the liver, and milt, and all stops, it cleanseth the breast and lungs, and is good for the old cough, pain in the side, old spitting of blood, the phthisic, and ulceration of the lungs. 2 The same taken with the root of Iris, causeth to spit gross humours, and tough phlegm from the the breast, and so doth the juice boiled with the juice of Fennell, till the third part be wasted, and taken a spoonful at once, and so it helpeth the old cough. 3 Boil it in wine, and drink it to open the matrix, to expel the terms, seconds, and dead birth, and to help deliverance in time of travel, and against the bitings of venomous beasts and serpents. 4 Drop the juice with honey and wine into the eyes to clear the sight, and into the ears to suage their pain, and open the hearing, and draw it into the nose to take away the yellowness of the eyes, remaining after the jaundice. 5 Stamp the leaves with honey, and apply them to old ulcers, corrupt ulcered nails, or agnayles, and painful swellings about the nails, and joints to cure them. 6 Mix it with hens grease to resolve the swelling or Struma in the neck. 7 The dried leaves with vinegar do cure virulent and spreading ulcers. 8 Drink three spoonful of the juice with as much scummed honey, for the falling sickness. 9 seeth the leaves in white wine, or water, with scummed honey, and drink it against shortness of breath, the cough and the pleurisy. And with Iris for the stopping of the liver, milt, kidneys, matrix and bladder, and to bring down the terms and seconds. 10 The juice cleareth the eyes, and killeth worms in the ears. 11 All kinds of Horehound are good for women to bathe in, that are troubled with the whites, and pain in their back, sides and legs. 12 The distilled water is good against all scabs, bushes and weals. 13 The lee of the ashes of black Horehound helpeth the scabs and sores of children's heads. The powder of Horehound healeth the piles. 14 seeth Horehound in wine and oil, and apply it to the bladder to provoke urine, and to the milt for the hardness thereof. 15 Use powder of Horehound and wormwood, with sweet milk or wine to kill worms, and lay a plaster thereof to the belly. 16 The dried leaves sodden in water with the seeds thereof, or the juice of the green herb with honey, is good against sighing, shortness of breath, the cough and phthisic. 17 With powder of Iris it cleanseth the lungs from gross and tough phlegm. 18 It is good for women to sit in the broth thereof after their deliverance, to draw down the flowers and seconds if need be. 19 It is good for them that have had a hard and long travel, and for them that are bitten of Serpents: but it hurteth the bladder and kidneys. 20 The leaves are good with honey to scour filthy and stinking sores, they stay fretting and eating sores, and agnayles, and suage the pain of the side. 21 The juice of the leaves dried in the sun, is good for the same purposes. 22 The same laid to with honey and wine, cleareth the sight, and put into the nose, scoureth the jaundice, and put into the ear by itself, or with oil of roses, it taketh away the pain thereof. 23 seeth it in fair water with honey and sugar, and strain it, and drink it to cleanse the stomach from stinking phlegm. Drink the water thereof against the falling down of the rheum from the head and lungs. 24 The syrup thereof helpeth the King's evil. 25 Stamp it with honey, and apply it to the eyes to cleanse the sight. 26 Teethach, chew the root fasting, or else drink it. 27 Flix to stop, seeth it in wine and oil, and stamp it well, and apply it to the shares. 28 Colic, stamp it and seeth it with oil olive, & apply it, or drink the decoction of it with the root of a lily. 29 Emeralds swelling, seeth it in water, wine, & sale, and set it in a close stool, & sit over it, and apply the herb. 30 jaundice, drink the juice with thine own urine. 31 Scabs, seethe it in running water, & wash therewith as hot as may be suffered, & then use other ointments. 32 Breast griefs, drink the juice of Horehound, bulfoot, and hissop with sugar. 33 Cough perilous, seeth the juice with honey and lycoras, and use it. 34 Cough, and short wound, take Horehound, hissop, woodbine, chickweed & beconie, stamp them, and seethe their juice with ale or wine, & honey, and drink thereof daily. 35 Hoarseness, take Horehound and comfery, stamp them, and strain out the juice, and seeth it with honey, and drink thereof warm, or eat it five or six days. 36 Breast stopped, seeth the juice with honey and fresh butter, of each like much, and drink it as hot as may be suffered to beddewarde. 37 Burn, bruise and apply it. 38 Cough, use the syrup of Horehound. 39 To help digestion and stay vomiting, seeth Horehound and Puliol-montan. in water with powder of pepper, and drink it luke warm. 40 Side pain, stitch, or imposthume: chop good store of white Horehound, & seeth it in milk in a bag and apply it. 41 Ears deaf, put in the juice of betony, & Horehound. 42 Cough perilous, drink the juice with honey. 43 Worms, drink the juice of Horehound and mints. 44 Scabs, wash with the juice, and use ointment of docks and wormwood. 45 Cough old, seethe 3. pound of dried Horehound in ten pound of spring water, till the third part be wasted, then strain it, and put thereto good honey a pound & a half, and powder of pepper half an ounce, beile it till it become thick, keep it in a vessel of glass, and take a spoonful morn and even. 46 For pain in the bladder, and difficulty of pissing, seeth Horehound in wine and water, and strain it, and drink it. 47 Head Vertigo, or swimming, seeth it with rue and penny royal, with a little salt in water, till the third part be wasted: then strain it and put honey to it, and seethe it till it become thick, and take a spoonful or two seven mornings. 48 Colic, seethe it in wine, and drink it. 49 Weariness by travel or labour, anoint with the juice and oil of roses. 50 Scab, seeth it in water, & wash therewith and be whole. 51 Eyes blind, drop in the juice with honey. 52 Stomach ache, drink the juice with water in a fever, but in wine without a fever. 53 Ears worms, put in the juice of it & wormwood. 54 Lungs griefs, drink it with butter, or some fat thing. 55 For the liver, milt and lungs, boil the juice with as much honey, till the third part be wasted, and take every day 3. spoonful. 56 phthisic, & spitting blood, seethe it in water and use it for all griefs of the lungs. 57 Breast stopped with cold, seeth it with honey and butter, and drink it at night as hot as may be suffered, and cover thee well to sweated. Breast stopped with choler, lay a bed of fresh butter in a new earthen pot, and another bed of it, and so till the pot be full: then passed it up close, and set it in an oven till the herb be boiled, than strain it and keep the butter and heat as much as the yelke of an egg, and drink it hot, it helpeth the moist cough, cleareth the voice, & helpeth the phthisic. 58 Breast griefs, and for the cough, seethe it with fresh butter, add hissope in ale or bear, and drink it early in the morning daily. 59 Stomach to cleanse, take the juice of Horehound a quart, honey and new butter, of each a pint, boil them together, and drink thereof hot as may be suffered. 60 The water is good for the lungs, breast, cough, and colic. Agnailes 5. 20 Backpaine 11 Bitings venomous 3. 19 Breast cleansing 12. 17. 23. 32. 36. 57 griefs 58. 60 stopped 35. 57 Breath short 9 16 Burn 37 Bladder stopped 9 46 Colic 28. 48. 60 Consumption 16. 56 Cough old 1. 9 16. 33. 34. 38. 42. 45. 57 58. 60 Dead child 3 Deliverance 3. 19 Digestion 39 Ears pain 4. 22 dull 4. 22. 41 worms 10. 53 Eyes dull 4. 10. 22. 25. 51 Emeralds 13. 29 Falling evil 8 Flowers stopped 3. 9 18 Flux 27 Giddiness 47 Head giddy 47 sores 13 Hoarseness 35. 57 jaundice 22. 30. 4 Impostumes 40 Kidneys stopped 9 Kings evil 6. 24 Legs pain 11. 49 Liver griefs 19 55 Liver griefs 54. 55 56. 57 60 stopped 1. 55 See Breast, Cough, Stomach Matrix to cleanse 3 stopped 9 Milt stopped 1. 29. 55. 14 Nails ulcers 5 Neck kernels 6 Pleurisy 9 Phthisic 1. 16. 56. 57 Purgation 23. 59 Pushes 12 Rheum 23 Seconds 39 18 Sides pain 1. 11. 20. 40 Scabs 12. 13. 31. 44. 50 Sores 20 Spitting blood 1. 56 See Lungs Stitch 40 Stomach ache 52 to cleanse 23. 59 Swell 5 Teethach 26 Venom 3. 19 Ulcers 5. 7. 20 Urine stopped 14. 46 Vomiting 39 Voice ill 57 Weariness 49 Whelks 12 Whitflawe 5 Whites 11 women's griefs 11. 18 Worms 15. 43 ¶ Houndstong. HOundstong healeth wounds, & with barley meal it healeth wild fire. The root healeth wounds and wild fire. 2 The wine or water wherein it hath been boiled, cureth old sores, wounds, and hot inflammations, and is excellent against the ulcers and griefs of the mouth. 3 Boil the juice thereof with honey of roses, then mix it with turpentine, and stir it hard till it be incorporate, and then use it to wounds. Roast the root in the embers, and apply it to the fundament to heal the inward emeralds. 4 seeth the seed, root, or plant in water, and drink it for the fever quarten: wash the teats with the juice thereof co make them small and soft, 5 Dogbiting, stamp the herb with swine's grease and apply it. 6 Wounds new & bleeding, apply it. 7 Mix it with honey to preserve hairs from falling: with vinegar it quencheth burnings. 8 Seethe it in read wine, and drink it to stop the bloody flux, and the running of seed, and to heal ulcers, scabs, pocks, and such like, and also apply it. 9 seeth the root in wine, and drink it morn and even, to soften the belly. 10 Wrap it in leaven, and roast it in the embers leisurely, then take it out of the leaven, and put it into the fundament, to take away the heat and pain of the emeralds presently, and to cure the same quickly. 11 The water, juice, or powder thereof is very good for the same purpose. 12 The water healeth wounds, especially of the privy parts. 13 The herb bruised with swine's grease, and fried, healeth the bitings of mad dogs, and burnings, and restoreth hair in bald places, & is good against old breaking out of wheals, bushes, fistulas, and swellings. 14 seeth the juice with as much honey of roses, till the juice be consumed, then mix it with turpentine, and use it for all the griefs aforesaid. 15 Apply the root with oil to heal Wens, and with barley meal it healeth Saint Anthony's fire, and provoketh sweat, being anointed with it. 16 It healeth sores of the mouth, that be almost uncurable, and all other sores, and is good for the bloody flux: therefore it aught to be used for all sores and wounds, the French pocks, and such like. 17 It helpeth also the issue of seed and catharres: wherefore the herb made into pills is good for the rheum. 18 The root drunk, is good against the Fever tertian and quarten: it helpeth the cough, ripeneth and breaketh apostumes, and draweth out thorns and pricks being applied. 19 Ears dull, put in the clear juice. 20 Take the root out of the earth, make a hole in it as long and deep as you can, fill it up with salt, and cover it well that nothing come into it, and set it again as it was, and cover it with earth three days, then take it out, and take out the liquor and keep it in a glass, and put thereof into the ear fourteen days if need be, to restore hearing. 21 Emeralds, distil it in a limbeck, and drink three ounces of the water morn and even, and also wash therewith if they appear outward. 22 Fundament falling, seethe it with ale in a new pot, to the one half, and drink it morn and even. 23 Dogge-biting, stamp it with salt, and apply it. 24 Swell of all sorts, roast the roots and apply them with swine's grease. 25 Head shaking, use to eat it. 26 Eyes red, put in the juice of it and of century. 27 Pissing blood, stamp the roots of Houndstong, and Oxetong, with galts grease, and apply it to the reins. 28 Apply Houndstong green or dry to carbuncles, stings, and venom to ripen it. Apostume 18 Belly hard 9 Bitings venom. 5. 13. 14. 28 Bleeding 6 Bloody flux 8. 15 Breaking out 13. 14 Breasts to be small & soft 4 Burn 7. 13. 14 Carbuncle 28 Catharre 17 Cough 18 Ears dull 19 20 Eyes read 26 Emeralds 3. 10. 11. 21 Dogbitings 5. 23 Fever tertian 18 quarten 4. 18 Fistula 13. 14 Fluxes 8 French pocks 16 Fundament falling 22 Head shaking 25 Hair falling 7 to grow 13. 14 Inflammation 2 Mad dog 13. 14 Mouth sores 2. 16 Pissing blood 27 Pocks 8. 16 Pricks 18 Privities sores 12 Pushes 13. 14 Rheum 17 Saint Anthony's fire 15 Seed distilling 8 Scabs 8. 13. 14 Sores 2. 16 Stinging 28 Swell 13. 14. 24 Sweat to 'cause 15 Venom 28 Ulcers 8 Weals 13 Wens 15 Wild fire 1 Wounds 1. 2. 3. 6. 12. 16 ¶ Herb Christopher. Herb Christopher, see Osmund, or Waterfearne, it is good for the falling evil, and the frenzy. ¶ Hops. Hops, the decoction thereof openeth the liver, milt and kidneys, and purgeth the blood from all corruption of humours by urine, and is good for scabs, scurf, and such like griefs, coming of corrupt blood, and so doth the young springs and tender crops that come up in March and April, used in salads. 2 The juice purgeth yellow choler, and cleanseth the blood from all filthiness. 3 The same juice dropped into the ears cleanseth out their filth, and taketh away the stink thereof. 4 The roots sodden and drunk, openeth the liver and spleen. 5 The syrup thereof doth purge gross raw phlegm from the guts. 6 Steeped in whey, they purge blood and yellow choler. 7 The syrup is good against hot fevers, and the jaundice. 8 The Hoppe with his juice, and parched barley meal is good for the burning headache, and for the great heat of the stomach and liver. 9 Hops purge both choler and melancholy, and drive away impostumes and swellings, and the water of the dropsy. 10 The juice purgeth most, but it openeth not so much: when it is sodden, it openeth more, and purgeth less. 11 The flowers sodden in wine, and drunk, are good against poison, and all manner of evils in the entrailss. 12 The decoction of the flowers is good to be sitten in against the swelling of the matrix, to provoke urine, and for the stone in the bladder. 13 Sweat to cause, use Hops in baths. Belly swollen 9 Bladderstopt 12 Blood to cleanse 1 Choler 2. 6 Dropsy 9 Ears cleansing 3 Phlegm 5 Headache 8 Impost 9 Kidneys stopped 1 Liver hot 8 stopped 1. 4 Matrixe swollen 12 Melancholy 9 Milt stopped 1. 4 Poison 11 Purgat. 1. 2. 5. 6. 9 10 Sickness general 11 Stomach hot 8 Stone 12 Swelling 9 Sweat to 'cause 13 Urine stopped 1. 12 ¶ Horsmint. HOrsmint: Ears worms, put in the juice of Horsmint and of wormwood, with powder of Aloes & Vinegar. 2 canker dry, Seethe it with Honey and Barley flower and vinegar in an earthen pot with vnslaked Lime and black Pepper, and let it dry to make powder, and lay thereof to the sore. Ears worms 1 canker 2 ¶ Horstaile. HOrstaile or Shavegrasse: Yard griefs and swelling, distil it in a Limbeck, and apply it. The decoction thereof healeth chafing of the skin in the flanks or elsewhere. 2 Seethe it in wine or water, and drink it to stop all fluxes of blood and all other extraordinary fluxes, terms, and laskes both white and read, and so doth the juice drunk alone, or with wine, and is most convenient in the same sort for all ulcers, sores and hurts of the kidneys and bladder, and bowels, and all burstings. 3 And boiled with the root, it is good against the Cough, difficulty of breathing and inward burstings. 4 The juice put into the Nose, stoppeth bleeding. 5 And into the Matrixe, it stoppeth the terms. 6 The powder of it cast upon fresh wounds, do join them together and healeth them, and defendeth them from inflammation, and so doth the fresh herb stamped and applied. 7 The juice drunk with wine stoppeth all manner of fluxes, and helpeth all ruptures and bruises of the bowels, guts and bladder, and so doth the herb or root thereof sodden in wine or water. 8 The juice or water is good for all Ringwormes, Tetters, read Pshes, Quats, inflammations of the fundament, the bloody flux and swellings of the stones. 9 It is good against all stops of the Bladder, it cleanseth the stomach, sides and Lungs. 10 The syrup or juice of it healeth wounds of the Guts, it stoppeth blood, and healeth wounds and ruptures, and falling of the Bowels into the Cod's being drunk often and also applied warm with vinegar to the Belly. 11 The fume of it is good to 'cause children's Guts to go back into their body, when as through Flux or cold they hung forth, and so it stoppeth the immoderate terms of women. Bladder hurts 7 stopped 9 Bloody flux 28 Bruised 7 Bursten 2. 3. 7. 10 Breath straight 3 Chafing 1 Cod swollen 8 Cough 3 Flowers to stop 2. 5. 7. 11 Fluxes 2. 7 Fundament fallen 11 Nose bleeding 4 Pushes 8 Quats 8 ringworm 8 Sides griefs 9 Skin off 1 Skabs 8 Sores inward 2 Stomach stopped 9 Tetters 8 Urine stopped 9 Wounds 6 inward 2. 10 Whites 2 Yard griefs 1 ¶ Houseleek. Houseleek or Sengreene: drink the decoction or juice against the bloody Flux and all other fluxes of the belly, and against biting of field Spiders. 2 Headache, apply the juice with parched Barley meal and oil of Roses. 3 Eyes inflamed, drop in the juice or bruise the herb and apply it. 4 Flowers to stop, put in the juice with Wool or Cotton. 5 For the hot Gout and inflammations, bruise the herb alone with parched Barley meal and apply it. 6 The juice made into an ointment with soot, oil and wax, healeth burnings, the heat of the head and Liver. 8 Apply the bruised herb by itself or with Barley meal parched, to Saint Antony's fire, hot burning and fretting sores or ulcers, skaldings, burnings, and all hot griefs. 8 Eyes sore and hot, apply the juice with Honey and the white of an Egg with Flax hurdes. 9 Eyes burning and pricking, drop in the juice four or five nights. 10 Gout hot or cold, stamp it with as much Garlic and apply it, to ease it much. 11 Drink three or four spoons full of the distilled water against all burning Fevers, Bloody Fluxes, and other fluxes. 12 Drink the juice to kill worms, apply the water or juice to all inflammations, heat of the eyes, inflammations of the Liver, Kidneys and joints, the hot Gout, Burn, and the Frenzy. 13 With the juice of Solatrum, and the eyes of Poplar tree sodden with swine's grease and strained, it is much better than Poplar. 14 The leaves laid to by themselves or with parched Barley meal, are good for burning heat of swollen places, and all inflammations. 15 Stonecrop is of the same nature: it quencheth hot Apostumes, biles, Felons, Skaldings, Burn, the hot Gout, etc. especially with oil of Roses, Vinegar and parched Barley meal. 16 Liver chafed, stamp Houseleek with Cummin, and seeth them in Vinegar and apply it to the side as hot as may be suffered as often as need is. 17 Abhorring meat, grind Houseleek and Penywurt with oil of Violets, and apply it warm to the stomach. 18 Ears dull, boil the juice with Cummin in an Onion, and strain it, and put it in, and provoke sneezing. 19 Ears griefs, boil it with a Rams Gaul and the grease of an Eel, and use it. 20 Stamp the leaves of Houseleek, Sparewort and Peach leaves, and put the juice into the one ear, till it run out of the other, to restore hearing, if it be curable. 21 Frenzy, shave the head and apply the juice of Houseleek to the mould of the head and mids of the forehead, or anoint the forehead and temples, and joints of the Arms with the juice of it. 22 Headache of heat, apply the juice of Houseleek, morel, and lettuce with vinegar, or anoint the forehead and temples with the juice of it, and woman's milk that suckleth a boy. 23 The same with the white of an Egg applied to the forehead and temples, is good in a hot fever to avoid the ache, and to 'cause steep. 24 Apostumes, stamp Houseleek, Planten, & Nightshade, and apply them. 25 Liver apostumed, apply the juice of Houseleek, Nightshade, and such like. 26 Mad, seethe Houseleek in water, and apply it warm to the head. 27 Nose bleeding, stamp Houseleek, Planten, and Ribwort with Barley meal & apply it to the neck. 28 Pissing much, apply Houseleek or the juice thereof. 29 Madness with great heat in the head, stamp Houseleek and Roses of each like much with woman's milk, and apply it to the forehead & temples. 30 Stinging of Bees, Anoint with the juice of Houseleek. 31 Ears running, roast the juice in an Onion or Skallion and strain it, and put it into the Eare. 32 Legs ache and swelling, seethe Otemeale and the juice of Houseleek in milk with sheeps tallow and apply it. 33 Fever hot and the Plague, mix the juice with Wheat flower and the white of four Eggs, and apply it to the sides. 34 Heat & burning of Gunpowder, anoint with the juice and gleers of Egs. 35 Eyes dull, put in Euphorbium with the juice of Houseleek. 36 Lust to void, anoint the Yard with the juice of Houseleek, great morel & Vinegar. 37 Liver grief and swelling, apply the juice of Houseleek and morel with Barley meal and Vinegar. 38 Apostumes general, seethe it with Egrimony and Five leaf in read wine, and apply it hot. 39 Rubbing and chafing, apply the juice with Rose water and the white of an Egg, but most of the juice. 40 canker and fester, mix Houseleek with Garlic and Orpiment, and apply it. 41 Sores general, put in the juice of Houseleek and Celondine, and apply the herb: proved. 42 Face swollen or scorched, rub it twice or thrice a day with the juice of Houseleek. 43 Ears dull, put the juice of Houseleek, oil Olive, the juice of a Leek, and the milk of a woman that suckleth a boy, into a Vial three days, and let it stand open, and use it. 44 Ears deaf, boil the juice with as much Eels grease, a little, and put it into the Ear nine nights: proved. 45 Eyes heat and pricking, clarify the juice in an Egg shell, and keep it in a glass, and use it four nights: proved. 46 Warts, pill off the skin, and apply it four days or more morn and even. 47 Face swollen or inflamed, anoint with the juice. 48 For the hardness of the brawns of the feet, dip them in hot Piss till they be soft, than lance them about, and apply the juice of Houseleek, and it will be well on the morrow. 49 Rankling and heat in any place, stamp it with Vinegar and Flax hurds, and apply it. Abhorring meat 17 Apostume 15. 24. 38 Back heat 12 Bitings venomous 1. 30 Bloody flux 1. 11 Burn 6. 7. 15. 34 Chafing 39 Ears dull 18. 19 20. 43. 44 running 31 Eyes dull 35 heat 3. 8. 9 45 Face swollen 42. 47 Feet hard 48 Felons 15 Fever hot 11. 23. 33 Flowers to stop 4 Fluxes general 1. 11 Frenzy 12. 21 Gout 5. 10. 12. 15 Headache 2. 22. 23 Hot griefs 7. 12. 14. 49 Inflammations 5. 7 joints heat 12 canker 40 Legs ache 32 swollen 32 Liver griefs 37 Apostume 25. 37 hot 6. 12. 16 Loathing 17 Lust to void 36 Mad 26. 29 Nosebleeding 27 Ointment 13 Pissing much 28 Plague 33 Rankling 49 Saint fire 7 Scalding 7 Skin off 39 Sleep to 'cause 23 Sores general 41 hot 7 Stinging 30 Swell 14. 42. 47. 32. Warts 46 Worms 12 ¶ jasmyn. IAsmyn cureth the foul dry scab, and read spots: it dissolveth swellings & wens, or hard lumps and gatherings being applied, and so doth the oil thereof, which being put into the nostrils, and often smelled unto, causeth the Nose to bleed, in them that are of an hot complexion. 2 jasmyn drieth Rumes, and the moistness of the brain, and is good against the cold griefs thereof, and for salt phlegm, and for old men of a cold complexion, and for aches that come of clammy and tough humours. 3 The same either dry or green laid upon any Tetter or foul spots will drive them away: It is good for the pose, but it causeth headache in them that are of a hot complexion. Aches 2 Brain moist 2 Hardness 1 Head griefs 2 Nose to bleed 1 Rheum 23 Skabs 13 Spots 13 Swell 1 Tetters 3 Wens 1 ¶ juniper. IVniper: the fruit or berries is good for the Lungs, stomach, Liver and kidneys, it cureth the old Cough, the griping and windiness of the belly, and provoketh Urine, being boiled in Wine or Honeyed water and drunk: and so it helpeth them that be bruised. 2 The juice of the leaves doth withstand all venom, especially of Vipers and Serpents, being drunk and applied on the wounds. 3 The fruit is good for the same purpose, howsoever it be taken. 4 juniper or the berries thereof burned, driveth away all venomous beasts, and all infection and corruption of the Air, and therefore it is good to be used in the Plague time. 5 The ashes of the rind healeth naughty scurf and fretting skabs, being mixed with water and applied. 6 The gum is good for the stomach and bowels that are cumbered with cold phlegm: It expelleth all kinds of worms, and stoppeth the flowers. 7 The perfume of Vernix is good for the Brain, it drieth up superfluous humours of the head, and stoppeth the Ruin. 8 This gum tempered with oil of Roses, helpeth the rifts and chaps of the hands and feet. 9 Use the berries against all bitings and stingings of Serpents as the best remedy therefore. 10 Drink the berries against the diseases of the breast, to expel urine, to help bursten places and the suffoc. of the Mother. 11 The ripe berries are good against many griefs, & are much more wholesome than Pepper. No man can fully express their virtues, being used in meats they are good for a cold stomach, they digest phlegm therein, they help inflammations and torments, they purge the griefs of the breast, the Cough, provoke urine, expel poison from the heart, the flowers, & tough humours from the Hyps. 12 Lee made with wine & the ashes of juniper driveth forth urine, & helpeth the Dropsy. 13 The precious oil of the berries is as good as Balm, and so is the oil of the dry wood. 14 The oil healeth all manner of evil skabs, and all chaps & cliffs of the hands and feet. 15 The ashes of the bark anointed with water, driveth forth the Lepry, and is good against the bitings of Serpents & Vipers. 16 The oil warmeth the sinews, comforteth the head being overcome with cold. 17 The wood maketh ardent hot fierce. 18 It is not good to sit long under the juniper tree. 19 Poison or plague, make fine powder of the berries, and of Terra Lemnia, of each two drams and a scruple, mix it with Honey, and keep it in a clean vessel, and take thereof as much as an Hasell Nut, with three ounces of Mulsa, which is Honey one part, and water eight parts, sodden and scummed till the fourth part be wasted: if there be any poison, this will cast it up, but if there be none, it will rest in the stomach. 20 Cough in children, steep the berries in wine and drink it. 21 Plague to withstand, use the fume of the berries and cloven roots. 22 Matrixe apost. seethe the roots or fruit in water, and bathe therewith. 23 Dead child and poison or venom to expel, and for stingings, 24 Gather the berries in September when they be ripe, bruise them & distil them through a Limbeck, and drink iiii. drams of it. 25 Chincough, drink the berries with wine. 26 Drink the leaves with water & Honey to cause deliverance, & to expel the seconds. 27 The berries are excellent against all poison & venomous bitings. 28 Ears deaf, seethe the berries with Savin in good wine, & take up the fume thereof. Air corrupt 4 Bellyach 1 Breast griefs 10. 11 Bitings venem. 2. 9 15. 27 Bruised 1 Bursten 10 Chaps 8. 14 Chincough 25 Cough 1. 11. 20 Dead child 23 Deliverance 26 Dropsy 12 Ears deaf 28 Flowers stopped 11 to stop 6 Hart griefs 11 Head griefs 7. 16 Inflammat. 11 lepry 15 Liver griefs 1 Lungs griefs 1 Matrixe suffoc. 10 apostumed 22 Plague 4. 19 21 Poison 2. 19 23. 27 Rheum 7 Sciatica 11 sinews cold 16 Seconds 26 Sickness general 11 Scabs 14. 15 Stomach cold 6. 11 Venom 2. 4. 9 23 urine stopped 1. 10 Windiness 1. 10. 11. 12 Worms 6 ¶ juiubes. Iviubes' eaten, are hard of digestion, and nourish very little: but taken in Electuaries, syrops, and other medicines, they mollify the roughness of the Throat, Breasts and Lungs, and are good against the Cough and exulceration and inflammation of the kidneys & bladder, & the reins of the back being vexed with any sharp or salted humour, & they quench the heat of choleric blood. Blood hot Breast grief Back grief. Kidneys grief Lungs griefs Salt humours Throat rough ¶ ivy. IVye: boil the leaves in wine to cure great wounds, and to stay great and corrupt Ulcers. 2 Boil the same in vinegar and apply it for the stopping and hardness of the Milt. 3 The flowers applied with oil and wax, heal all burnings. 4 The flowers sodden in wine, and drunk morn and even, healeth the dangerous lask and bloody flux. 5 Boil five ivy berries with oil of Roses in the rind of a Pomegranate, and put it into the ear of the contrary side to that which the tooth ache is on, to heal the tooth ach. 6 The gum of ivy killeth Lice & Nits. 7 It also taketh away hair from any place that it is laid upon. 8 To provoke Urine, drink powder of ivy berries with ale or white wine. 9 For the frenzy and melancholy sadness, put the juice of ivy into thy nose, & seeth Mints in vinegar, and lay them to thy head. 10 For dazzling and turning in the head, mix the juice of it with old lard and anoint therewith. 11 For the megrem and watching, anoint thy brows and nostrils with the juice of ivy oil and vinegar. 12 For the polip in the nose, put in the juice of ivy. 13 For the strangury, put a handful of ivy leaves with a pint of good aqua composita into a close vessel, drink thereof three or iiii. spoonfuls morn and even first & last v. or vi. days to have present help thereof. 14 Take the dried wood of ivy and the gum of ivy ana like much, put them into an earthen pot bored full of holes in the bottom, or in two. or three places & set another pot close under it in the earth pasted together with clay, and make a fire round about the uppermost pot, and there will distil an oil into the neither pot, which healeth all cold griefs of the joints. 15 To help the bloody flux, drink one ounce of the flowers in wine and be whole. 16 The leaves sodden in wine and drunk, or the powder of the Berries, driveth down terms. 17 One ounce of the Berries being bruised and drunk with wine, expelleth the stone. 18 The leaves sodden in wine helpeth all manner of ulcers being washed therewith. 19 ivy used in baths, draw down the terms, and so do the leaves or tops thereof stamped and put in as a pessary. 20 The leaves stamped with vinegar and a little Rose water, is good for all old ache of the head. 21 The juice maketh hairs black being anointed therewith. 22 The tender leaves sodden in sharp vinegar and tempered with crumbs of leavened bread and applied, doth help the griefs of the liver. 23 The tender leaves also stamped with Roses and tempered with oil of Roses, vinegar, and woman's milk and applied to the forehead, help the pain of the head. 24 The juice with oil of bitter Almonds put warm into the ears, helpeth the hearing. 25 The leaves sodden in wine are good for the spots, scabs of the face, skin and privy parts being washed therewith. 26 Nothing is better for the canker than the juice of ivy tempered with clarified honey and wine sodden together. 27 The juice put into the mouth of the matrix, draweth forth terms & dead child. 28 One dram being drunk after the flowers be past, causeth sterility in women. 29 Honey mixed with the Berries of ivy will kill louse in children's heads. 30 The green leaves sodden in wine do knit, join and heal wounds or cuts. 31 The juice often drunk in wine, doth heal the terror of a quarten or tertian. 32 The gum of ivy tempered with wax and put to a pained tooth will draw it out without pain. 33 Anoint the emerods, or any great aches or cold with this gum. 34 Drink a little of it with white wine against abhorring of meat. 35 This gum is very hot and will blister. They that will gather it must cut off the bark of the ivy, and renew the cut every morning, and wash their hands and face with vinegar and Rose water before they gather it, but wipe them not and so the gum will not blister them. 36 This gum must be kept close in a glass or box of metal. 37 For extreme headache, anoint with the juice of ivy, and oil of Violets, or with vinegar, and anoint the nostrils therewith. 38 Hair not to grow, anoint with the juice of ivy and ashes of blood suckers mixed together. 39 Marmoll, wash it with the decoction of ivy to heal it. 40 For the stone, gather ivy Berries that grow on an Ash tree, dry them and do off their black part, and make them into powder with a quantity of Cinnamom and lycoras, and use in broths and drinks daily. 41 Teethache, boil the Berries and leaves in wine, and hold it often in thy mouth to take away the ache and stink, or boil ivy and Ginger in Wine, and hold it in thy mouth, and rub thy teeth with the Ginger, or boil the leaves or gum of ivy in vinegar in a hot cause, or in wine in a cold cause, and use thereof. 42 To drive out the stone of the bladder and kidneys, drink powder of ivy Berry's two ounces morn and even, with two ounces of wine and be whole. 43 Head swimming, anoint with the juice of ivy and old lard. 44 Nose polip, put in the juice, or use the gum in ointments. 45 Milt pains, seethe ivy in wine and drink it. Oil of ivy Berries, stamp the leaves and Berries, and steep them in oil and wine three days, then seeth it, and strain it, and use it. 46 Gout pains, garsh the place, and lay thereon bean meal, and lay thereupon ivy leaves or Colewort leaves. 47 Plague, drink as much powder of ivy Berries as will lie upon a groat, with a draft of white wine, and cover thee well to sweat, and change thy clotheses. 48 To draw out a tooth without pain, rub it and none other with powder of the gum of ivy. Oil of ivy, receive powder of Balm one ounce, oil Olive one pint, set it into an onen after the batch is drawn, and when it is cold strain it, and melt therein half an ounce of gum Hederae, and two pennyworth of Camphire, and put it into a vial, and hung it in hot water, and it will be a pure balm. 50 To have gum Hederae, cut a great branch of ivy in sunder, and bruise the end that is cut with the head of an axe, and set it rest three or four weeks in Winter when the virtue is in it, and then take it. 51 Shoulders ache, anoint with honey, and cast on bean flower, and lay on ivy leaves. 52 Stone, mix powder of the read bark of ivy tree, with as much get, and drink thereof with wine or ale five or six times blood warm. 53 Hairs to be yellow, wash with lee made with the ashes of the wood without the bark. 54 Hair not to grow, apply Labdanum, gum Hederae, Emmets eggs, Arsnike and vinegar to the place. 55 Toothache, seeth ivy roots in wine, and hold it in thy mouth. 56 Urine and stone to expel, drink ivy Berries with warm wine. 57 Fever quarten, take three grains of the gum. 58 Legs painful, stamp dry figs with the flowers of ivy & apply it. 59 Warts, apply the gum of ivy with vinegar. 60 Wine of the decoction of the roots holden in the mouth, helpeth the toothache. 61 ivy sodden in wine till it be thick, breaketh botches. 62 Belly hard and sore, drink two spoonfuls of the juice of ivy leaves. 63 Eyes pin and web, use water of ivy growing on an Ash three gathered between the S. Marry days (See Alehoofe.) 64 To draw out a tooth, burn a green Emet or Newt to powder in a new earthen pot, and melt gum Hederae with the powder and milk of spurge, and put thereof under the stone of a ring well closed, and touch the sore tooth with the stone, and it will fall into thy hand. 65 Pissing much, seeth ivy Berries in white wine, and drink it, and it shall stay quickly. 66 Canker, seeth the leaves of wild ivy with wine, and apply it to kill it. 67 Paps hanging sagging down, wear thereto a garland of ivy, or stamp ivy and apply it. 68 Tooth to draw out without pain, burn the gum and green leans ana like much in a new earthen pot, and mix the fine powder thereof with milk of spurge, and put some of it into the tooth, but if it be not hollow touch it therewith and it will fall out. 69 Aches cold, use oil of ivy. 70 jaundice, seeth it when it flowreth in white wine that is not too sour nor too sweet, and drink it seven mornings. 71 Sciatica, anoint with the juice of ivy drawn out by Alchimi, or fry the herb in fritters, and eat it ix. days fasting. 72 Liver and milt hard and swollen, steep ivy in wine x. days till it rot, then boil it & strain it when the wine is consumed, & mix it with oil Olive and wax, & use it to anoint therewith. 73 Stone, drink ix. of the Berries with wine, or the juice of the leaves with water. 74 Teethache, stamp the Berries and seeth them in wine with the shaving of a Hartshorne, and apply it without the cheek. Aches 69 Belly hard 62 Bladder stone 42 Blister to 'cause 35 Bloody flux 15 Botch to break 61 Burn 3 Child dead 27 Cold griefs 14 Cuts to heal 30 Deafness 24 Emerods' 33 Eyes web 63 Face spots 25 Fever quarten 31. 57 Fever tertian 31 Frenzy 9 Gout 46 Headache old 20. 23 Head dazzling 10. 43 Hair to be black 21 Hair not to grow 7. 38. 54 Hair to be yellow 53 jaundice 70 canker 26. 66 lask 4 Legs painful 58 Lice to kill 6. 29 Liver griefs 22. 72 Meat abhorring 34 Megrem 11 Melancholy 9 Milt pains 2. 45. 72 Nose polip 12. 44 Paps hanging down 67 Pissing much 65 Plague 47 Sciatica 71 Shoulders ache 51 Sterility to 'cause 28 Stone to expel 17. 40. 52. 56. 73. Strangury 13 Terms to draw down 16. 19 27. toothache 5. 41. 55. 60. 74. Tooth to draw out 32. 48. 64. 68 Ulcers 18 Urine to provoke 8. 56 Warts 59 Wounds to heal 1. 30 ¶ Knotgrass. Knotgrass helpeth all diseases of the heart and mouth of the stomach, the griefs of the back, the stone and colic, by drinking it or the infusion of it. 2 Fever quarten, drink the juice with powder of seven. Pepper corns before the fit to put it quite away. It must be gotten on a Thursday, and the juice gotten in the wane of the Moon. 3 Spitting blood, drink the juice. 4 Sweat to cause, and to heal the plague, stamp herb Rape, with the roots of the less Planten and Knotgrass ana half a handful, & boil them in vinegar and strain it, and drink it, and cover thee well to sweated. 5 Teethach, stamp a handful, and bind it to the plant of the foot of the contrary side, and lie down & sleep. 6 Eye spots, put in the juice. 7 Pissing blood, drink it with wine fasting and be whole. 8 Belly long worms, drink the juice with milk. 9 Blood to stop, drink it with stolen ale. 10 Worms, drink the water. 11 Bloody flux, use Knotgrass any ways. 12 Nose bleeding, drink the juice. 13 Breast or ribs pain and soreness, stamp it with butter and apply it, or stamp it with oil of Roses and anoint. 14 Chafing, use the decoction of it. 15 Eyes pearl and web, put in the juice viii. night's when thou goest to bed. 16 Ears deaf old, stamp Aunts eggs, and strain them with the juice of Knotgrass and put it in. 17 Spitting or vomiting of blood, drink the juice. 18 Teats swelling, carry it about thee. 19 Stamp it with Comfery, and seeth it with milk of a read kow, and strain it, and drink it morn and even to void the pain of the back, and heal any sore of the kidneys. 20 Drink the juice to help spitting blood, pissing blood, and all other issues of blood, vomiting and lasks. 21 Drink it with wine against all venomous bitings. 22 Boil the leaves with wine or water, and drink it to stay all manner of lasks and fluxes of the belly as well white as read, spitting blood and all such like, and the terms, as well as the juice. 23 It is also good against tertian fevers, drunk one hour before the fit. 24 Flowers to stop, put in the juice with a pessary. 25 Nose bleeding, put in the juice with a tent. Ears pain and filth, put in the juice. 26 Boil it with wine and honey to cure the inflammations and ulcers of the secret parts. 27 Stamp the green leaves, and apply them to the heat of the stomach, hot swellings and impostumes, the consuming burning of S. Anthony's fire, and all green & fresh wounds. Prosper hath the same virtues. 28 It would be gathered on Thursday in the increase of the Moon: but the juice in the wane of the Moon. 29 seeth it in read wine, and drink it to stop all fluxes, terms, spitting and vomiting blood. 30 It expelleth all poison, and the stone of the kidneys strongly, and restraineth all inward heat of the stomach and other parts, and helpeth the gnawings of all the entrails, & is good for all the inner parts, & so is the water of it drunk with powder of the seeds. 31 The water or juice is good for all ringwormes, tetters, shingles, holy fire and inflammations both inward & outward, stinking filth in the ears, rotten sores, gangrenes of the gums, & all wounds both new and old, especially of the secret parts both of men & women, & doth preserve the same against inflammation and all other evil accidents. 32 There is no herb that stoppeth blood better than Knotgrass. It stoppeth the whites & is good for the strangury, all sores of the privities. It is good to keep back such matter as would run to sores or wounds. It provoketh urine. 33 Stone to expel, seeth Prosper in wine and drink it. Apostumes 27 Backach 19 Bellyach 29 Blood to stop 9 Bloody flux 11. 20. 22. 29. 32. Breasts swelling 18 Bitings venomous 21 Breast pain 13 Chafing 14 Colic 1 Ears deaf 16. 25 Eyes spots 6. pearl 15. Fever quart. 2. tertian 23. Flowers to stop 24 Fluxes general 22. 24. 29 Gangrenes 31 Heart grief 1 Heat inward 29 Holy fire 31 Mouth sores 31 Nose bleeding 12. 25 Pissing blood 7. 20. 22 Poison 30 Privities griefs 26. 31. 32 Ringwormes 31 S. Anthony's fire 22 Shingles 31 Side pain 13 Scabs 31 Skin off 14 Spitting blood 3. 17. 20. 22. 29. Stomach grief 1. hot 27. 29. Sores 31. 32 Stone 1. 29. 33 Strangury 32 Swell 27 Sweated to 'cause 4 Teethach 5 Tetters 31 Teats swollen 18 Vomiting 17. 29 Urine stopped 32 Whites 20. 22. 32 Wounds 27. 31. 32 Worms 8. 10 ¶ Lady's mantle. LAdies mantle is much like to Sanicle in quality, & serveth for all such griefs as Sanicle is good for, and also taketh away all heat of all wounds, inflamed ulcers, and apostumes. 2 The same stamped and applied to the paps of wives and maids, maketh them hard and firm. It hath also the virtues of Tormentill. 3 It is very good for burstings in children. (See Sanicle.) 4 Drink one dram of the powder with three ounces of the water to help all ruptures in short time without cutting, and with the water & sugar xv. or xx. days to cause conception letted by cold causes. Apostumes 1 Breasts fagging 2 Bursten 3 Conception 4 Inflammations 1 Sores 1 Wounds 1 ¶ Lady thistle. LAdy thistle. The root drunk in wine is good for them that spit blood, that have feeble stomachs and lose bellies. It provoketh urine and expelleth it forth. 2 Teethach, seeth it in wine, and hold it in thy mouth. 3 Swell cold and soft, stamp it and apply it. 4 The seed is good for the cramp in children, or the drawing awry of any member, and the biting of any venomous beast. 5 Teeth lose and foul, seeth the root and wash with it. Belly lose 1 Spitting blood 1 Stomach weak 1 Swell cold 3 Teethach 2. foul 3. lose 3. Urine stopped 1 ¶ Lark's spur, etc. Lark's spur or Larks claw, drink the seed of it against all poison, and venomous bitings. ¶ Langdebeefe. LAngdebeefe: it taketh away the read colour of the face, the cardiacke and evil humours in the lungs. 2 The juice drunk with hot water, causeth a good memory and wit. It must be gathered in june and july. 3 Swell in any part, seeth it in vinegar or wine, and put thereto honey and salt, and apply it as hot as may be suffered. 4 joints ache, seeth one handful in a pint of white wine, and one spoonful of honey till it be soft, then grinned it and seeth it till it be somewhat brown, and then apply it. (See bugloss.) Ache 4 Face read 1 Heart griefs 1 joint ache 4 Lungs griefs 1 Memory 2 Swell 3 Wit 2 ¶ Lunaria, or Moonwort. LVnaria, or Moonwort: it is of the nature of Adder's tongue and Picola, in healing all wounds both inward and outward. It stoppeth the whites and read flowers in women. It helpeth burstings of children. 2 The powder of it is good for the whites, reds, and bloody flux. 3 For a blast, and to heal cankers, stamp it with as much Pimpernell, and apply the juice. 4 Wounds bleeding, stamp it and apply it. (See Adders tongue.) Falling sickness, drink it when luna is in virgo in the wane. Blast 3 Blood to stop 4 Bursten 1 Bloody flux 1 Falling evil 4 Flowers to stop 1. 2 canker 3 Whites to stop 1. 2 Wounds general 1. 4 ¶ Laureall. LAureall. The leaves purge the slimy phlegm, & waterish superfluities, & are good for the dropsy, & so doth xiiii. or xv. of the Berries taken at once. 2 The leaves chewed or put into the nose, purge the head & brain, and cause sneezing. 3 The leaves must be steeped 24. hours in good strong vinegar, & then dried, and their powder drunk with Aniseedes and Mastic, or else boiled in whey of sweet milk, or broth of a Capon, and so taken. 4 Or seethe v. or vi. scruples with Comfery in wine, & strain it & drink it to purge the belly. 5 A little of the powder given to children in pottage, taketh away the superfluous humidity, & killeth worms. 6 It causeth quick and speedy deliverance in child birth, and bringeth down the seconds and terms, being drunk three or four times three penny weight at once, & also driveth forth urine. 7 The same stamped and bound to the head, taketh away the pain thereof. 8 The leaves green or dry drunk, provoketh terms, and causeth vomit. Belly bound, temper it with as much honey, and use it, one spoonful causeth vomit, or seethe the powder with water & honey, and drink it luke warm. 9 Flux to stop, drink the powder of it. 10 To cause deliverance of a dead child, drink the powder. 11 To purge all venom, poison, and impostumes out of the body, 12 Stamp Laureall and Stonecrop, & strain it with old ale, and drink it twice a day. The same doth kill and expel worms. 13 Laureall purgeth phlegm and choler, and helpeth digestion: the juice put into the ear, or a suppository put into the ear, is good against dull hearing. 14 Make an Electuary with powder of Laureall, pure honey, and bread crumbs with good store of Saffron, and use it both to purge and to restore. 15 Laureall draweth out yellow water. 16 Steep the leaves in vinegar, and the juice of Barberies, or the juice of Pomegranates, or of Quinces, and cast thereon powder of Mirabolanes, then dry them & boil two scruples, or one dram in fat broth with cinnamon & Sugar. The powder may be taken from five grains to ten, with Tamarinds, mastic, and Spike. Hermius. It helpeth the dropping of urine, and pissing of blood. Correction 3. 16 Dead child 10 Deliverance 6 Digestion 13 Dose 16 Dropsy 1. 15 Ears dull 13 Flowers stopped 6. 8 Fluxes 9 Headache 7 purging 2 Impostume 11 Pissing blood 16 Poison 11 Purgation 1. 3. 4. 11. 13. 14. 16 Seconds 6 Strangury 16 Venom 11 Vomit to 'cause 8 Urine stopped 6. 16 Worms 5. 12 Yellow water 15 ¶ Lavender. lavender: smell often to it to comfort and clear the sight. 2 Boil it in water, and weet thy shirt in it, and dry it again and wear it, and no louse will be in it so long as it smelleth of it. 3 Steep the flowers in wine and distil them, and hold the water in thy mouth to recover speech lost by the apoplexia. 4 It hath many other virtues, it helpeth all cold griefs of the brain, cramps, and gripings of the body coming of cold, the stopping of the milt, it healeth the belly, and provoketh terms. 5 Shred the herb with the flowers, and distil it in june, and drink two. ounces of the water to help giddiness of the head, & rub the head all over with it, and let it dry in by itself. 6 The same also helpeth the cramp, apoplexia, the astonishing and trembling of the members and hands, and the palsy members being rubbed therewith. 7 Drink three ounces at once for the heaviness of the moving of the tongue. 8 Hold thereof in thy mouth for the ulcers thereof, and the toothache, and the blistring of the mouth. 9 Seethe the flowers in wine, and drink it to provoke urine well, and drink it iiii. days to provoke the flowers and seconds, to expel wind, and to help the jaundice. Or take the flowers with cinnamon, cloves, mace, grains, cubebs, and the leaves of rosemary, to help all the aforesaid more strongly, and also the palsy and toothache. Headache & dissinesse of cold, wash it with the water. 10 Benumbed or taken, wash with the water or decoction of the flowers often. 11 For all cold griefs of the head, and to comfort the brain, quilt the flowers into a cap, & wear it daily. 12 Heart gripping, seethe the flowers in wine, and drink it, especially seeth the flowers with roses, cloves, maces, cinnamon, cubebs, & cardamom in wine, and drink it for all griefs aforesaid, & for the apoplexia, and to restore speech, the water will do the like. 13 Palsy, seethe it well in water, and drink half a pint first and last xiiii. days, the same taketh out any stain in cloth being rubbed therewith. 14 Sprinkle a toast of wheat bread with Malmsey, and cast thereon the dry flowers, and apply it hot in a cloth to the navel to help the colic. 15 Take as much as a bean of the conserve of the flowers for the beating of the heart, the jaundice, giddiness of the head, the palsy members, & to comfort the brain. 16 Fever quarten, seeth Sage, Lavender, and Rosemary in wine, and drink it before the fit. 17 Speech lost, seeth Lavender, Cowslip, and Sage in wine, and drink it hot. 18 Trembling, use water of the decoction of Cresses & Lavender. 19 For all passions of the sinews, drink two ounces of the water, and wash the head therewith. 20 Ears dull, put in the oil of Spike, with as much juice of Betony. 21 Lavender-spike causeth urine. 22 A decoction thereof applied to the matrix, stoppeth superfluous terms, and taketh away the humours of the matrix. 23 Drunk with cold water, it putteth away the weakness and trembling of the heart. 24 Steeped in lee, and the head washed therewith, it causeth hair to grow, and stayeth it from falling. 25 The oil of Spike well drawn by a glass, is very sweet, and hath many virtues, especially for the palsy members. It ●aseth the gout, and all other griefs of the joints. It helpeth swellings of the stomach, the diseases of the liver and kidneys, and the King's evil. 26 The decoction of Spike helpeth the palsy of the tongue, comforteth the sinews, and drieth up moisture from the tongue. 27 The flowers steeped in wine and set in the sun a certain space in a narrow mouthed glass, well stopped, and after distilled by glass in Balneo mariae with a soft fire, (but if the fresh flowers may be had, it need not be infused) this water is very precious against all cold griefs both inward and outward. 28 Put thereof with a linen cloth into the nose for the grief of the head and brain. Drink two ounces at once for the colic coming of cold. 29 Anoint the forehead and nape of the neck for the pain and giddiness of the head. Apply it to members that have the palsy, shaking and cold. 30 Matrix inflamed, seeth it in water, and sit over it. 31 Use it to dry up the moisture of the dropsy. 32 Heart weak, sick, and swooning, seethe it in wine, and make it a syrup, and use it. 33 Liver and milt stopped, seeth it in goats milk, and use it long. 34 Dropsy cold, seethe it in the urine of a goat or black sheep and drink it, and seethe it in goats wheye, & drink it first and last a long time for both dropsies hot and cold. 35 Spikenard comforteth the brain and sinews, warmeth every cold part of the body, and is good for the falling sickness, the colic, flux, cardiake, dropsies, and hyckit. 36 With honey it increaseth hair, it provoketh urine, helpeth the fretting or gnawing of the stomach, it drieth up rheums of the breast and belly, put into the matrix, it doth dry up and cleanse it, and the fume thereof helpeth conception. 37 For swooning and the cardiacke passion, seethe it in wine or rose-water, & drink it with sugar. 38 Brain weak, put it into the nostrils, or seeth it in oil, and so it is also good for deafness and running of the ears. 39 For coldness of the stomach, want of digestion, and stopping of the liver & milt, with any cold humour, use wine of the decoction thereof. 40 Gums rotten, use the powder of it. 41 The oil thereof is good for the palsy, falling sickness, gouts of the joints and of the feet, both taken at the mouth, and also anointed. Steep powder thereof in oil xx. days, then boil it and strain it. 42 Sweeting too much, cast on the powder of it. 43 seeth Spikenard in water, and temper thy wine therewith, and also make a syrup with the said water, and use it against swooning, and to comfort the heart. 44 Stomach gnawing, drink it with cold water. 45 It is used in Antidotes and Treacles. Aches 2. 5. 41 Apoplexia 3. 6. 12 Back griefs 2. 5 Belly-ache 4. 36 windy 7. 9 Benumbed 18 Brain to comfort 11. 15 28. 38 colic 14. 28 Cold griefs 4. 6. 27 Conception 36 Cramp 4. 6 Digestion 3. 9 Dropsy 31. 34 Ears dull 20. 38 running 38 Eyes dull 1 Falling evil 35 Fever quarten 16 Flowers stopped 4. 9 to stop 22 Giddiness 5. 9 15. 29 Gums rotten 40 Gout 41 Heart griefs 12. 23. 32 37. 43 Headache 9 15 cold griefs 11. 29 giddy 5. 15. 29 Hair falling 24. 36 Hickit 35 jaundice 9 15 joynts-ache. 41 Kings evil 25 Lice 2 Liver griefs 25. 33. 39 Matrix griefs 22. 30. 36 Milt stopped 4. 33. 39 Mouth sores 8 Oil 25. 41 Palsy 7. 9 13. 15. 25. 26. 29. 41 Rheum 3. 6 Seconds 9 Sinews griefs 9 26. 35 Shaking 6. 18. 29 Speech lost 3. 7. 12. 17. 26 Stomacke-ache 36. 44 cold 39 swollen 25 windy 9 Sweeting much 42 Swooning 37. 43 Taken 10 Teethache 9 Trembling 6. 18 Urine stopped 9 21. 36 ¶ Lavender cotton. Lavender cotton, or garden Cypers, drunk with wine, is good against all poison & venom: it is the female kind of Sothernwood. 2 Stamp it and strain it with milk, and drink it fasting to kill worms. 3 Both it & Wormwood are good to be set in the house and windows to expel serpents. 4 And drunk with wine, are both good against deadly poison. 5 The leaves drunk with wine 7. days, helpeth the yellow jaundice, the obstruction of the liver and kidneys, and is good against the sciatica, and all things that Rue is good for, and S. john's wort. 6 Matrix swollen and falling, stamp it well, and apply it. Back griefs 5 jaundice 5 Kidneys stopped 5 Liver stopped 5 Matrix fallen 6 swollen 6 Poison 1. 3. 4 Sciatica 5 Venom. 1. 3. 4 Worms 2 ¶ Leeks. leeks: the seeds may well be kept three years. 2 Stamp Leeks with salt, & apply them to evil bushes to heal them. 3 Mix powder of Leeks with oil of Roses and vinegar, and drop it into the ears to take away their pain, and to help the toothache. 4 The much eating of Leeks doth much harm the stomach and eyes, and filleth the body with wind, and therefore it aught to be twice sodden with water before it be eaten. 5 Leeks provoke the passage of the terms, causeth urine, and procureth a superfluous heat. 6 Drink the juice with woman's milk to help the old cough, the blistering of the lungs, and spitting blood. 7 Take two drams of the juice with as much powder of Galls and Olibanum, mix them well together, and drink it against vomiting of blood that is of a bruise, and put thereof into the nose to stop the bleeding of it. 8 Drunkenness to avoid, eat Leeks raw. 9 Stamp Leeks with honey and apply it to broken and bruised members to suage the swelling and consume the bruised blood. 10 Sciatica, drink the juice. 11 Sores and wounds cold, and full of rotten flesh, put in the juice. 12 Sciatica, or pain in the hips, anoint with the juice of Leeks and Lily roots. 13 The often eating of Leeks causeth headache, and thirst, burdeneth the stomach & inflameth the blood. 14 The juice mixed with salt and laid on fresh wounds, doth unclose them. 15 Lust to cause, eat Leeks: for the old cough and dropsy, drink the juice with wine. 16 Headache, mix two parts of the juice with one part of honey, & drop it into the nostrils & ears. 17 seeth unset Leeks in white wine and butter, and apply it hot on the belly iii or iiii. times together to help the colic. 18 Distil the roots in june, and drink two. ounces of the water morn and even, against spitting up of cold blood. The same is good against barrenness, being often drunk, and put into the nose, stoppeth the bleeding of it, and being drunk, it looseth the belly, helpeth the sciatica, purgeth the kidneys and bladder, causeth urine, and expelleth the stone. 18 Wounds, wash with the water morn and even. 19 The same helpeth the exulceration & fractures of the matrix after childbirth being bathed or washed therewith morn & even. 20 Unset Leeks eaten with vinegar, are good for the stomach, & soften the belly. 21 And eaten with honey, are good for the griefs of the breast, increase natural seed, & are good for all kinds of ulcers and apostumes like as Onions are. 22 Headache, seethe them in wine, and apply them to the forehead & temples. 23 Hair not to fall, wash with the juice. Put Leeks into moldholes to make them come forth. 24 Drink the juice with honey against the bitings of serpents and venomous beasts. 25 Stone to break, use the seeds in medicines. 26 For the old cough, hoarsness, and to cleanse the breast, use the juice in an Electuary, or Lohoc. 27 Abath of Leeks sodden in salt sea water, openeth the stops of the matrix, and provoketh terms, and softeneth the hardness of the matrix by sitting over it. 28 Nose bleeding, put in the blade or juice with a little vinegar and fine powder of Frankincense, or with like quantity of Myrtle berries, or Galls, or Mints. 29 The juice with woman's milk stoppeth the issue that cometh when a woman hath had her birth before her time. 30 Burning, apply the bruised leaves. 31 Ears griefs, use the leaves with a goats gall, or like portion of honeyed wine. 32 Leeks are good for the jaundice, and the dropsy. 33 Drink two ounces and a half with honey to scour the mother. 34 Leeks quench thirst, drive away drunkenness, and soften the belly, provoke terms, scour the breast, void sour belchings, and are good for a moist and slimy matrix, and are good to be used of them that would have children. 35 Use them in a ptisand, or eat them raw every other day fasting to clear the voice. 36 The heads twice sodden, and the water changed, stop the belly. 37 The use of them hurteth the teeth and gums. 38 Fistula in the fundament, sit over the fume of the seeds. 39 lick in the seeds with honey for all griefs of the breast. 40 Apply Leeks with salt, to take off crusts of sores. 41 Leeks are good for the Emerods', and such as have cold stomachs, but not for them that are hot of nature. 42 Lips chopped, anoint with the ashes of Leeks mixed with honey. 43 Leeks are best sodden, or washed thrice before they be eaten. 44 Wounds, stamp them well with honey, and apply it. 45 Cough, drink the juice by itself, or with woman's milk. 46 It healeth fractures, and taketh away hardness. 47 To destroy the wild fire, stamp Leeks heads on a shared over the fire to burn, and while they be moist in the shared, apply them. 48 For all gouts, seeth Leeks & oatmeal with sheeps tallow, and apply them hot. 49 Wounds or cuts, put in the juice of Leek heads with tents, and apply the dross upon it, and renew it every day once, and after the third day mix hot milk with white wine, and apply it with linen clotheses, & do so every day till it be whole, and drink Bugle, Pagle, and Goldin. 50 Stone & all griefs of the bladder, stamp Porrets of unset Leeks, and seethe them in ale or wine from a pottle to a quart, & drink thereof ix. days morn & even with powder of Filipendula one ounce, and be whole. 51 colic, stamp unset Leeks, and apply them to the navel. 52 colic and stone, drink the juice of unset Leeks, and of the berries of Knevel with stolen Ale. 53 Emerods', stamp unset Leeks, and fry them with sheeps tallow, and apply them as hot as may be suffered two or three times, and be whole. 54 Belly & stomach swollen, stamp the heads, and drink them with cold drink, and roast them in Docks and apply them hot to the breast and navel. 55 Reins running, use pottage of water, oatmeal & unset Leeks, & anoint the reins with oil of roses: proved. 56 To stop issues of blood, drink the juice. 57 Ears ache, seethe the roots in urine, and put it in. 58 Seconds to cause, drink the juice of Leeks and persley, with oil of pennyroyal. 59 Swell inward, drink good store of the roots. 60 Spitting blood, take two. drams of leekeseedes and myrrh. 61 Belly-ache, apply the heads sodden in oil. 62 Yard swollen, stamp them with fresh Boar's grease, & apply it. 63 Woman in travel, stamp the blades, & skald them in hot water, and apply them to her navel hot, and when the child is out, say quicunque vult thrice over her, and she shallbe safe. 64 Emerods', apply leeks with salt. 65 Canker in any place, seeth a handful of unset Leeks with their roots with xx. branches of yarrow in white wine till it be soft, then strain it & clarify it, and drink it morn and even blood warm, and use local medicines withal. 66 Chollike passion, stamp all the white part of unset Leeks & fry it with May butter, & apply it. 67 To heal wounds that are bloody and bleeding, stamp the blades with unset Leeks, with honey & wheat flower, & use it raw. 68 Ears running, drop in the juice of the heads and roots with a little vinegar. 69 Ears deaf & noise, put in the juice with Cummin warm. 70 Teethach, take up the seeds of Leeks and Henbane sodden in water. 71 Stone & griefs of the bladder, stamp unset Leeks with their roots, & seethe them in wine or ale from a gallon to the one half, & drink it ix. days with powder of Filipendula. 72 Reins impost. seethe the roots of Leeks & lilies with hyssop in milk, & use it. 73 Pissing blood, seethe the heads & roots in water to the third part, and drink it. 74 Yard swollen, apply a plaster of Leek blades about it all night. 75 Gouts general, seethe Leeks, & stamp them well, & put thereto oatmeal great, and sheeps tallow, & boil them well together, & apply thereof. 76 Apost. to break, seethe the roots with honey & oil, & apply it. 77 Wounds, stamp the heads and roots with white wine and swine's grease, and apply it. 78 Emeralds, stamp mullin and Leek beards, and fry them with May butter, and apply them hot in the nights. 79 Blood to stop, put in the juice of Leeks with oil of roses and vinegar. 80 Emeralds, stamp unset Leeks with a little honey, and apply it, or stamp unset Leeks, Columbine, & read dock leaves roasted in the embers, and apply them, and be whole in three days. proved. 81 Heart pain, stamp mints & unset Leeks, and seeth them with vinegar, and apply them to the heart and stomach. 82 Nature to restore, stamp leek heads very small, and seeth them in water with marowbones, and the flesh withal, then break them a little, and boil them a little more, then take out the marrow and put it into the pot again with words that have been boiled, than strain it, and put thereto powder of pepper, ginger, cinnamon and nutmegs, and eat thereof first and last. 83 Worms in children, stamp unset Leeks, rosemary, and plantine, of each like much, and seeth them in Malmsey, and apply it to the navel. 84 Pissing blood, boil the heads and roots in water to the third part, and drink it. 85 Worms to kill, stamp the blades with vinegar, and apply them to thy stomach, and sit in thy warm bed. 86 The seeds also kill worms: the juice stoppeth both the flowers and afterbirth. 87 Deliverance to cause, drink the juice of Leeks with warm water. 88 Seconds to cause, drink the juice of Borage, Leek blades, and patsley roots with oil. 89 Glandules, scrofules, and kernels, stamp the roots and apply them, & make ointment of the juice of the blades, oil and wax, and anoint therewith. 90 Burn, see the Leeks, and stamp them & apply them. 91 Put nine or ten fresh Leeks on a thread and hung it about thy neck, the blades upwards to stop the bleeding at the nose. 92 Nose polip, mix the juice of unsette Leeks, with green wax, and powder of Tartar, and put it into the nose with a tent. 93 Hair falling, anoint the head with the juice. 94 Coughs vehement, seeth the juice with oil and drink it. 95 To stop the bleeding of Emeralds, drink the juice before breakfast. 96 Ears noise, put in the juice with woman's milk. 97 Distil the roots in june in a Limbeck, and apply the water with bombast to the ruptures of the matrix, and bleeding of the nose. 98 Yard apostumes, seeth the blades with honey and oil olive, and apply it. 99 Hoarseness coming suddenly of heat, or cold, hold the juice of Leeks long and often in thy mouth. 100 Swelling by blood-letting, fry the blades with oil, honey and wine, and apply them lukewarm. 101 phthisic, and spitting of blood, drink the juice of Leeks boiled with oil. 102 Blood to stop, drink a violeful of the juice. 103 Deliverance to cause, scaled the blades, and bind them to the navel, and remove it assoon as the child is borne. 104 Gravel and stone, stamp the heads of unset Leeks and fry them with life honey, and a little white wine or vinegar, and apply them to the navel as hot as may be suffered. Ache 9 See Gout Apostume 21. 76 Back griefs 18. 72 Belly ache 61 See choler bound 18. 20. 34 lose 36 swollen 54. 59 Bitings venomous 24 Bladder griefs 18. 50. 71 Bleeding 7. 56. 67. 79. 91. 102 Breast griefs 21. 39 cleansing 26. 34 Bruised 79 Burn 30. 90 Bursten 46 Chaps 42 Colic 17. 51. 52. 61. 66 Conception 18. 34 Consumption 82. 101 Cough 6. 15. 26. 45. 94 Cuts 49 See Wounds. Deliverance 63. 87. 103 Drunkenness 8. 34 Dropsy 15. 32 Ears deaf 69 grief 31. 68 96. 3. 57 Emerods' 41. 53. 64. 78. 80. 95 Fistula 38 Flowers stopped 5. 24. 34 to stop 29. 86 Fluxes 36 Fundament fistula 38 Glandules 89 Gouts general 48. 75 Gravel 104 Heart pain 81 Headache 16. 22 Hardness 46. 99 Hair falling 23. 93 hoarseness 26 See Voice. jaundice 32 canker 65 Kernels 89 Kidneys apostumes 72 Lips chapped 42 Lungs griefs 6 Lust to 'cause 15. 21. 82. 55 Matrix griefs 19 27. 29. 33. 34. 97 Moules to catch 23 Nosebleeding 7. 18. 28. 91. 97. 102 Polip 92 Pissing blood 73. 84 Phthisic 101 Pushes 2 Reins running 55. 82 See Seed. Sciatica 10. 12. 18 Scrofules 89 Seconds 58. 88 Seed distilling 55 to increase 21. 55. 82 Spitting blood 6. 9 18. 60. 101 Sores 11. 21. 40. 44. 49. 67. 77 Stomach ill 20 cold 41 swollen 54. 59 Stone 18. 25. 50. 51. 52. 71. 104 Swell 9 By blood-letting 100 inward 54. 59 Teethach 3. 70 Thirst 34 Voice ill 26. 35. 99 Urine stopped 5. 18 Vomiting blood 7 Wild fire 47 women's grief 19 29. 86. 97 Worms 83. 85. 86 Wounds 11. 14. 44. 49. 67. 77 Yard apostumed 98 swollen 74 ¶ Lentils. LEntils: milk curdled in the breast, use the seeds with sea water. 2 canker to kill, apply water Lentils with Barrows grease. 3 Glandules or kernels, drink the seeds with wine to expel them. (See Milk in Dill.) 4 Belly bound, use the first decoction of Lentils. 5 Seeth Lentils, and cast away the first water, and seethe them again in fresh water, and then they bind and dry, and are good for the bloody flux, & dangerous lasks, and excess of terms, especially with some vinegar put thereto, or Cicory, or Purslan, or read Beets, or Myrtles, or the rind of a Pomegranate, or services, or unripe binding pears, or dried roses, or medlars, or quinces, or plantine, or whole galls, or the berries of Sumach, the pil or shell of Lentils doth the like and much better. 6 Swallow down thirty grains of husked or hulled Lentils against the overturning of the stomach. 7 Boil them with parched barley meal, and apply them to the ache of the gout. 8 Their meal with honey cleanseth and healeth rotten sores and ulcers. 9 Boil it with vinegar to dissolve Wens, and hard swellings strumaes. 10 With melilot, a quince, and oil of roses, they help the inflammations of the eyes, and fundament, and with sea water it helpeth shingleses, S. Anthony's fire, and such like. Ache 7 Belly bound 4 lose 5 Bloody flux 5 Breasts curdled 1 Eyes inflamed 10 Flowers to stop 5 Fluxes 5 Fundament inflam. 10 Glandules 3 Gout 7 Hardness 9 canker 2 Kernels 3. 9 Kings evil 9 Sores 8 Shingles 10 S. Anthony's fire 10 Swell 9 Stomach turning 6 Ulcers 8 Wens 9 ¶ Lettuce. LEttuce doth moisten and cool, & causeth sleep, nourisheth and breedeth good blood, it is better sodden then raw, except for than that are choleric. 2 Young Lettuce is good for the stomach, and increaseth milk in the breasts, but when it is hard, it is both dry and bitter, and hotter, and breedeth evil blood, hurteth the sight, and corrupteth the sperm. 3 But being young, it helpeth the ague, either raw or sodden being eaten. 4 Liver and milt stopped, seeth it with vinegar and a little saffron, and eat it and drink the broth. 5 Liver and milt stopped, to breed good blood, and to help the fever tertian, eat it raw or sodden with vinegar and sugar. 6 Dropsy, seeth it and mix it with oil olive, and eat it with meats. 7 Stamp it with oil olive, and apply it to apostumes to assuage them mightily. 8 Let milk women eat the seeds to increase milk & amend the sight. 9 Drink the bruised seeds in wine to cause sleep, and void venereous dreams, and abate lust. 10 Bruise the seeds with the milk of a woman that hath a woman child, and the white of an egg, and apply it to the forehead & temples to procure sleep. 11 Drink the bruised seeds with warm water for the ague. 12 Drink the seeds to stay the shedding of nature speedily. 13 Drink the juice fasting, and thou shalt not be drunken that day. 13 Pluck up Lettuce with thy left hand before the sun rising, and lay it under the covering of a sick man's bed, (he not knowing thereof) to 'cause him him to sleep: or gather five, three, or one of the leaves next the stalk, and lay them under his feet, and as many next to the top under his bolster, he not knowing of it, to 'cause him to sleep: it is not good for women with child, or would be with child, to use Lettuce much, because it causeth barrenness, and maketh the children raging of mind, and foolish, and the same is evil for them that be short wound, phlegmatic, or spit blood, being much used, especially raw, and in Winter. 15 Eat Lettuce after supper to cause sleep. Use Lettise with vinegar, salt and oil to provoke appetite, to temper the heat of the blood, to mitigate the heat of the liver and heart, but the often use of it, doth greatly hinder the increase of sperm. 16 Use Lettuce in Summer with oil, vinegar, salt and sugar, to temper the heat of the stomach and liver, but it is better sodden in broths, or in water, with some rocket, onions, leeks, or garlic. 17 The seed drunk with ale morn and even, voideth lust, evil dreams, and flowing of seed. 18 Apply the green leaves bruised to burnings, and scaldings before they be blistered, and all hot swellings, wild fire, and shingles, drink the seed with wine against the stingings of scorpions. 19 Lettuce may be laid up and kept in brine. 20 Apply the seed with oil of roses to the stomach, to destroy the hot apostume there. 21 Drink the juice or powder of the seed to heal the flux. 22 Breasts sore, seethe Lettuce & apply it hot: lust to abate, use the seeds. 23 Headache, apply the juice of houseleek, Lettuce, & morel with vinegar. 24 Mad, use syrup of the juice of Lettise and sugar. 25 Sleep to cause, seeth Lettise in vinegar, and anoint thy forehead & temples therewith. 26 Sweeting too much, stamp linseed with Lettise, and apply them to thy stomach till thou be well. 27 Cough of heat, and the urine read, make pottage with Lettuce, water and butter, and eat them: for unkind heat of the stomach, drink Lettuce with wine, or eat it daily. 28 Gomerpassion, drink the seeds with water. 29 Pissing against will, drink powder of the seeds. 30 Canker fester, and fire of hell, stamp Lettise with white vinegar, and apply it somewhat from the sore, and so nearer and nearer. 31 Headache, mix oil of roses with vinegar, woman's milk, and the juice of Lettuce, & apply it with linen cloth to the forehead and temples, or stamp the seeds of Lettuce & smallach, with the white of an egg, rose water, and woman's milk, and apply it to the forehead, temples and pulses. 32 Ears pain hot, apply bruised Lettuce. 33 Sleep to cause, mix the juice with rose water and woman's milk, of each like much, and cast thereon powder of a nutmeg, and apply it to the forehead and temples with a cloth. 34 Urine burning, use the seeds. 35 Pissing bed, drink the seeds 36 Flux to stop, make drink of the seeds of Lettuce, and white poppy, and use it. 37 Sleep to cause, anoint the head and stomach with the juice and oil of roses. 38 Milk to cause, eat Lettuce with butter. Appetite 15 Apostume 7. 20 Bitings venomous 18 Blood to increase 5 Breasts sore 22 Burn 18 Cough hot 27 Dreams 17 Drunken 13 Dropsy 6 Ears griefs 32 Eyes dull 8 Fester 30 Fire of hell 30 Fevers 3. 5. 11 Flux 21. 36 Gomerpassion 12. 17. 28 Heart hot 15 Headache hot 23. 31 canker 30 Liver hot 15. 16 stopped 4. 5 Lust to void 9 17. 22 Mad 24 Milk to 'cause 28. 38 Milt stopped 4. 5 Pissing bed 35 Pissing much 29 Reins running, See Gomor. Shingles 18 Scalding 18 Sleep to 'cause 9 10. 14. 15. 25. 33. 37. Stinging 18 Stomach hot 16. 20. 27 Sweeting too much 26 Swell hot 18 Urine burning 34 Whites, See Gomor. Wild fire 18 ¶ Lentiske or Mastic tree. LEntiske, or Mastic tree: The leaves and bark stop the common lask, and the bloody Flux, spitting blood, pissing blood, the Flux of the Matrix, and all other fluxes of blood, and are good for the falling down of the Matrix and fundament. 2 The Mastic is also good against spitting of blood, the common lask, the bloody flux, the flux of the Matrix, and all other issues of blood from any part, it strengtheneth the stomach, stayeth vomiting, and suageth all pain and griefs thereof, and reviveth the appetite. 3 Being chewed, it doth dry and comfort the brain, stayeth the falling down of rheum, and humours, and causeth a sweet breath. 4 Rub the teeth therewith to make them white and fast, and to strengthen the gums and jaws: no man can reckon the virtues of Mastic, Rosen, Turpentine, and Pitch. 5 Mastic is good in ointments to cleanse the face, and to make the skin white. 6 Turpentine, and also Rosen do cleanse wounds and sores both new and old, and do soften all hardness and Apostumes in the body, and do heal all manner of scabs and deformities of the skin of man or beast. 7 Mix powder of Mastic with the white of an egg, and anoint chaps therewith. 8 Swallow down three grains of Mastic every night when thou goest to bed, to preserve thee from pain of the stomach. 9 It is good in perfume against corrupt air. 10 The pills thereof be of singular virtue against rheum. 11 The oil thereof doth much comfort the sinews, and doth incarnate flesh. 12 And anointed on the head, helpeth the catharre or rheum. 13 Teethach, mix powder of Mastic, Coral, and galls with honey, and anoint or rub them therewith. 14 Lungs griefs, drink powder of Mastic and sugar with cold water, as the best medicine. 15 Nature or seed distilling, use powder of Mastic, Olibanum, Storax and Cardamomum. 16 Blood to stop, mix powder of Aloes and Mastic with the hair of a Hare, and the white of an egg, and apply it, or cast on powder of Mastic, and Sanguis Draconis. 17 Mouth stink, wash it first, and then chew Mastic a good while. 18 Teeth ache, chew Mastic with wine. 19 Vomit to stop, apply it with the white of an egg to the stomach. 20 Apply it with wine, & the white of an egg to the temples, helpeth the windy griefs of the head, and stayeth the falling of rheum. 21 Seethe it in water, and drink it to comfort the stomach, and make good digestion. 22 With Fenell seed, it helpeth a windy stomach. 23 With bolarmoniack, the white of an egg, and vinegar applied plasterwise to the stomach, it restraineth the choleric vanity. 24 seeth it in rain water, and drink it to stop the flux, boil it in rain water, or rose-water, and drink it to stop the flux and vomiting, but it must be sodden but a little. 25 Plague, make powder of mastic two ounces, euphorbium one ounce, spikenard five ounces, if thou be under ten years old, take one scruple, from ten to twenty dram and a half, from twenty upward one dram, and apply roasted fiveleafe to the sore, as in fiveleafe, take it with drink. 26 To keep the teeth uncorrupt, eat every morning some grains of mastic. 27 Chaps, anoint with mastic, frankincense, new wax, and oil of roses. 28 For choleric or phlegmatic vomiting, take powder of mastic, and frankincense ana one dram, with the yelke of a roasted egg every morning. 29 boil anniseedes in white wine, and dry them, and make thereof powder with mastic and cinnamon of each like much, and use it in meats for the crudity of the stomach, and to avoid the hicket. 39 Eyes blood, mix powder of mastic, & frankincense with the juice of smallach, and the white of an egg, and apply it. 40 Vomit to stop, mix powder of mastic & white frankincense, with rose leaves, and the juice of mints and apply it to the stomach. 41 Make fine powder of white pebble stones, found by the water one ounce, mastic a dram, and rub thy teeth therewith exactly every fortnight once to keep them clean. 42 Take oil of roses twelve ounces, good wine 8. ounces, mastic three ounces, seeth them in a double vessel, it comforteth the stomach, liver, sinews and joints, it softeneth hard apostumes, and suageth aches, and is right precious. 43 Chew mastic gently to cleanse the head and brain, & to help the toothache, or take up the vapours of it. 44 It stoppeth vomiting, spitting blood, and casting blood. 45 Burn gum arabic and mastic, of each like much on a tile, & mix it with flower & make thy bread thereof, and use it for the bloody flux. 46 Face scabs, and filthy sores, put three eggs into strong vinegar four or five days till they be soft, then put thereto powder of mastic, and frankincense of each three ounces & a half, and spread thereof on a linen cloth, and apply it without removing till it fall off, and the scabs with it. 47 Pissing blood, bleed in the inner saphene vein if need be, and mix powder of Mastic & Olibanum of each like much with whites of Eggs and oil of Roses, and apply it to the reins. 48 Heart griefs, use to eat one grain of Mastic with Sugar. 49 Liver griefs, seethe Mastic and Madder in water and drink it, it keepeth a man from all sickness of the Liver and stomach. 50 Wounds to heal, melt Colophony and Mastic with sheeps suet and wax ana, & use it. 51 Liver to comfort, use Mastic. 52 Vomit to stop, melt Mastic in a vessel, and apply it on a cloth to the pit of the stomach, and in like sort it healeth wounds. 53 Stomach cold, take a pill of Mastic before meals. 54 Mastic helpeth against the spitting of blood and all fluxes white and read, the terms and ulcers of the entrails, it resolveth impostumes of the stomach, and is good for the Cough. 55 Lips chapped, anoint with Mastic, new wax, Frankincense and oil of Roses made into an ointment to heal them presently. Aches 42 Air ill 9 Apost. 6. 42 Appetite 2 Bleeding 16 Bloody flux 4. 5. 54 Brain weak 3. 43 Breath ill 3. 17 Chaps 7. 27. 55 Digestion 21 Eyes bloody 39 Face deform. 5. 46 Flowers to stop 12. 54 Fluxes general 12. 24. 54 gums griefs 4 Gomor pass. 15 Heart griefs 48 Head griefs 20 Hardness 42 Impostume 54 joints griefs 42 Lips chap 27. 55 Liver griefs 49 weak 42. 51 Lungs griefs 14 Matrixe griefs 12 falling 1 Mouth stink 17 Oil 42 Pissing blood 1. 2. 47 Plague 9 25 Rheum 3. 10. 12. 20 Seed distilling 15 (See Gomor) sinews griefs 11. 42 Skabs 6 Skin deform. 6 Sores 11. 46. 52. 54 Spitting blood 1. 2 Sickness general 49 Stomach griefs general 49 cold 53 Impost 54 pain 28 raw 29 weak 2. 21. 42 windy 22. 29 Teethach 13. 18. 43 foul 4. 26. 41 lose 4 Vomiting 2. 19 23. 24. 28. 40. 44. 52. Wounds 6. 11. 50. 52. 54 ¶ Licium. LIcium stoppeth the lask, the bloody sluxe, spitting blood and the Cough. It stoppeth the terms either taken inward or applied outward. It is good against corrupt Ulcers and running skabs, and running ears, the inflammation of the Gums and Almonds under the tongue, and the chaps of the lips and fundament being applied. It cleareth the sight, and cureth the scurvy festered sores of the eyelids and corners of the eyes: it maketh the hairs Yellow, it drieth moist skabs, and is good for them that are bitten of a mad dog. It stoppeth both the read and white flowers. Bitings venomous Bloody flux Chaps Eyes dull Flowers to stop Fluxes general Fundament chaps Hair to colour Lips chapped Mad dog Mouth sores Skabs Sores Spitting blood Ulcers Whites ¶ Liquorice. Liquorice: The root is good against the roughness of the throat and breast, it openeth and cleanseth Lungs that be stuffed and laden, it ripeneth the cough, and bringeth forth phlegm being chewed, and so doth the juice of the root taken in like sort, and for the same cause they make a kind of small cakes or bread against the Cough with the juice of Lycoras mixed with Ginger and other spices: but the same serveth but for old and cold Coughs & like infirmities of the Lungs. 2 The root quencheth thirst, and doth cool and comfort the hot and dry stomach, and is good for the diseases of the Liver either chewed or drunk in a decoction. 3 The same is good against the ulcers of the kidneys and skabs, and sores of the Bladder: It cureth the sharpness and smarting of the urine, and also the filthy corruption and mattering of the same, being boiled in water & drunk often. 4 The same with Honey healeth sores and ulcers. 5 Liquorice and the juice thereof is good and wholesome to suage pain, and for all griefs of the Lungs, kidneys & bladder. 6 Throat rough, hold the juice under the tongue. 7 For the heat of the stomach breast & liver, skabs of the bladder & pain of the kidneys, drink it with malmsie. 8 It healeth wounds, griefs of the mouth, quencheth thirst, helpeth the cough & hoarseness, & softeneth impostumes. 9 The fine powder of it put into the ears, helpeth the running & sores thereof. 10 With wine and Honey it healeth wounds both inward and outward. 11 The yelowest & moistest is best. 13 For all griefs of the breast, and for the cough, seeth it with smallach seeds in water and drink it. 14 Take Liquorice scraped & bruised, powdered half a pound, seeth it with a Gallon of new Wurt in an earthen pot with Suger-rosset one dram, powder of Ginger, two ounces, clarified Honey one pound, seeth it to the one half, and strain it and use it at even hot, and at morn cold for the Cough. 15 Heart burning, chew Liquorice and swallow down the juice and spit out the rest. 16 Pipes stopped, seethe aniseeds & Liquorice in water to the one half, and strain it and drink it at even hot, and at morn cold. 17 Breast or ribs impostumed or pleurisy, seethe it in water & use it, or the juice of it. Reins & back to purge and heal, drink the powder with water that Centory hath been sodden in. 18 A dredge powder: take fine powder of Liquorice and aniseeds of each one pound, sugar candy two pound, Pepper & Ginger of each two ounces: mix them and use it for most inward griefs. 19 Scrofules, swelling, stamp Liquorice and apply it. 20 Rheum, hold two pieces of an inch long and as thick as a Barley corn between thy gums and cheek on either side one all night, fifteen nights to dry it up. 21 Sickness sudden in the stomach and breast, put a spoonful of powder of Lycoras to a spoonful of Aqua vite three hours, and drink it fasting or to bedward. 22 Lungs stuffed, mix powder of Lycoras, Aniseedes and sugar, with sack possit ale, & drink it fasting. (See beans, Fennell, Elecampana, Guiacum.) 23 Fevers general, seethe a quart of white vinegar with Saunders and Lycoras, of each one peni worth to the one half, and drink a spoonful or two at once. Back griefs 3. 5. 17 Bladder griefs 3. 5. 6. 7 Breast hot 7 griefs 11. 13 stopped 1. 16. 22 Cough 1. 8. 13. 14 Eyes sore 9 Fevers general 23 Heart burning 15 Horcenesse 8 Impost. 8. 17 Kernels 19 Kidneys grief 5 Kings evil 19 Liver hot 7 griefs 2 Lungs griefs 1. 5. 16. 22 Mouth griefs 8 Pleurisy 17 Rheum 20 Scrophuls Sickness general 18 sudden 21 Sores 4. 10 Stomach hot 27 Thirst 2. 8 Throat rough 1. 6 Ulcers 4 Urine sharp 3 Wounds 8. 10 ¶ Lyllie. lily: The oil of white lilies softeneth the Matrixe. 2 The sodden root doth ripen hard Apostumes. 3 The root roasted, with Rose water healeth the holy fire, and increaseth flesh in wounds. 4 The root sodden & mixed with swine's grease or oil Olive, softeneth impostumes mightily. 5 Take the roots of white lilies, marsh Mallows and Brankursin of each a quarter of a pound, bruise them well with four measures of wine, and seethe them with half a pint of oil Olive, unto a thickness, than strain it and put thereto a little Wax, and use this ointment for the hardness and pain of the Milt. 6 Burn, seethe the roots tender, and after seeth them with oil of Roses and anoint therewith. 7 seeth the root in wine and drink it to bedward to purge the body downward from noisome humours. 8 Wounds to heal, seeth the leaves in vinegar and apply them. 9 sinews lose or cut, apply the roasted roots with Honey. 10 The flowers is evil for the plague. 11 The ointment of Lilies softeneth the sinews well, & the hardness of the Matrixe. 12 Apply the leaves to the stingings of Serpents. 13 The same made hot, are good for burned places. 14 The juice sodden with Honey and vinegar in a brazen vessel, is a good medicine for old sores and green wounds. 15 Roast the root and mix it with oil of Roses to heal burnings, to soften the Matrixe, to bring down the terms, and to cover wounds with a skin, and with Honey it healeth cut sinews & places out of joint, scurf, scales, skabs, lepries: It skowreth away running sores in the head and face, it taketh away wrinkles. 16 And brayed with Henbane leaves, wheat meal and vinegar, it suageth the inflammation of the stones. 17 The seeds drunk, is a remedy against the bitings of Serpents. 18 The leaves and seeds are good to be laid to inflammations and Shingles, or holy fire. 19 The water restoreth the voice that is lost, and is good for feebleness or faintness deing drunk three or four spoons full at once. 20 The water of the root is excellent good against the inflammation of the Liver, the dropsy, & the pain of women in travel. 21 The oil of Lilies is good against all hot aches, burnings, and Carbuncles: especially the leaves of the flowers being applied after the anointing. 22 The flowers are the best part, than the roots, and then the leaves. 23 The roasted root with Honey and vinegar, healeth all deformities of the skin in the head, face or body. 24 Stamp the root with Henbane and Barley meal, and apply it to all inflammations and aches, hardness and swellings, or ulcers in the hands, cod or elsewhere: some seeth the roots in goats milk for all the same purposes, and for the swelling of the Paps and Genitors. 25 The fresh leaves are good for the holy fire, black bushes or whelks & the stingings of Scorpions. 26 The root sodden in Honeyed water & drunk, driveth out by siege, all corruption of blood. 27 Seethe the root in vinegar, and apply it to corns of the feet three days without removing to take them away. 28 The same mixed with oil or grease and applied, bringeth hair again upon burnings or skalding. 29 The roasted root with oil of Roses, is good for all foul breaking out, and the wild fire, for burnings, and to close up ulcers: the leaves have the same virtues, and are good also to be laid to the bitings of Serpents. 30 With the flowers is made a good ointment or oil to suppling and soften the sinews, and hardness of the Matrixe. 31 The root sodden in water, taketh away redness in the face being dressed therewith morn and even, so doth the juice of the root mixed with vinegar & used ten days. 32 lilies and Roses planted together, will both smell the pleasanter. 33 Wash a root & seethe it in white wine to the one half, and drink thereof against the pestilence, and thou shalt be full of blisters as if thou scalded, and they will dry up of themselves and become whole. 34 The roasted root applied hot, breaketh the plague sore or botch. 35 Stamp it with tallow or oil to ripen and break apostumes. 36 Stamp good store of the root with Dock seeds and Lovage roots, and steep them nine days in oil, then seeth it and strain it, and put wax to it and anoint the sore and hard milt therewith. 37 The juice healeth the venom of Adders and wounds, 38 Roast the root and mix it with oil Olive to heal burnings. 39 Drink it with ale, wine or beer against many diseases, and to comfort the sinews. 40 To draw out any prick, or an arrow head, stamp the root and seeth it in wine and apply it three days. 41 For all spots and wrinkles of the face, roast the root & use it with other ointments or with oil of Roses. 42 Dropsy, knead cakes of Rye meal with the juice of the roots, and bake them under an earthen bake-pan, & lay them to the belly hote one after another often. 43 Felon, drink the juice of Matfelon and of Lyllie, of each three spoons full at once, and dip clotheses therein, and apply them. 44 Apost. stamp Brankursin & Lyllie roots with oil and apply them. 45 Pissing against will, seethe the roots in water & apply them to the reins. 46 Squincy, apply the roots with Mallows and May butter. 47 urine stopped, seethe lilies in wine and drink it. 48 To heal a wound that no print shall be seen of it, Roast the roots and grind them with old swine's grease, and when the wound is healed, anoint therewith often. 49 Face skabby and skelfering cheeks that will not heal, roast Onions and lily roots of each like much, cleanse them, stamp them and strain them, and put thereto oil of Roses and anoint. 50 To cause an easy sweat, lay under thy feet the leaves and flowers of Eldrens, and Lyllie leaves, of each two handfuls, and lie on thy back upon them to sleep. 51 jaundice, drink water of Lilies. 52 Apostume to break, boil the root & an Onion, and stamp them and fry them with swine's grease and apply it hot. 53 Matrixe hard, fry the roots in oil, and apply them. 54 Face and hands to be white, stamp the roots of Lovage and Lilies, and seeth them in water till the third part be wasted, and wash often therewith. 55 Ears dull and impost. roast a Lyllye root and apply it. 56 Mother suffoc. anoint with oil of lilies. 57 Eyes Hawe, put in the juice of the root. 58 Matrixe hard, seeth the juice with oil and anoint therewith. 59 Matrixe griefs general, use the oil. 60 Skabs, lepry, and plowks, stamp the leaves & apply them. 61 Face read, seethe the roots in water, and wash therewith morn & even, or mix the juice of the root with vinegar, of each like much, and anoint therewith nine nights. 62 biles, Felons & Vncomes, mix Honey with wheat flower, woman's milk, black soap and Lyllie roots and apply it, and when it is broken, heal it with other salves. 63 To break a sore breast, seethe the roots in milk with leaven till it be tender, & apply it hot morn and even, and when it is broken, stamp a handful of Parsley with a piece of fat Bacon, and the Yolk of an Egg, and apply it to heal it. 64 Sores old, boil the juice of the leaves, with as much Honey and vinegar as the juice, and apply it. 65 Strangury, seethe the roots in white wine and drink it. 66 Face sauce phlegm, seethe Lilies in water, and wash therewith three days. 67 Sores, seethe thee roots with Otemeale greats in milk till it be thick as a Plaster, and use it three days. Aches hot 21. 24 Agnailes 27 Apost. hard 24. 34. 35. 44. 52. 62. 63. bile or botch 34 62. (See Apost. Bitings venem. 12. 17. 25. 29. 37 Breasts sore 63 swollen 24 Burn 6. 13. 15. 21. 28. 38 Cod inflamed 16 sores 24 swollen 24 Carbuncles 21. 34 Cuts 15 (See sores.) Deliverance 20 Dropsy 20. 42 Ears dull 55 Impost. 55 Eyes hawe 56 Face deform. 15. 23. 41. 49. 54 read 31. 61 salt phlegm 66 Faintness 19 Felon 43. 62 Flowers stopped 15 Hardness 24 (See Apost.) Heart faint 19 Hair to grow 28 Holy fire 3. 18. 25 jaundice 51 Inflammation 18. 24 joints out 15 Liver inflam. 20 Matrixe hard 1. 11. 15. 30. 53. 58 Griefs general 59 Milt hard 5. 36 pain 5. 36 Pissing against will 45 Plague 33 Plague sore 34 Pricks general 40 Purgation 7. 26 Pushes 25. 60 sinews griefs 9 15. 30. 39 11. Sickness general 3. 26 Scabs 15. 23. 24. 29. 41. 49. 60. Skin deform. (See scab.) to be white 54 Scalding 28 Shingles 18 scales (See scab.) scurf (See scab.) Sores 14. 24. 29. 64. 67 Squincy 46 Stinging 12. 17. 25. 29. 37 Stones imflamed 16 Strangury 65 Swelling 24 Sweat to 'cause 50 Venom 36 Ulcers 29 (See sores.) Vncomes 62 Voice lost 19 urine stopped 47 Wild fire 29 Wounds 3. 8. 14. 15. 29. 37. 48 Wrinkles 15. 41 ¶ Lignum aloes. LIgnum aloes: Head and brain weak and cold, use the fume of it: Milt griefs, take as much of the powder of it as will lie on a groat with broth or wine fasting three mornings, etc. ¶ Lemons. LImons: Freckle, wash with the juice and Bay salt, and let it dry in as often as need is. 2 Seethe rain water with as much verges to the one half, and as it seetheth, fill it up with the juice of Lemons, and when it is cold, put to it the Whites of four new laid eggs beaten together and use it against all sunburning & filthiness, and staining of the skin. 3 For steines of the hands, wash with the juice of Lemons and a little Bay salt, and so it helpeth skabs and scurf. Plague, drink the juice with wine, and powder of Angelica. 4 Skin to be white, and to void freckles, etc. see before in vergis and rain water. 5 Teeth to be white, distil Lemons, and wash them with the water or with the juice. The same taketh spots out of and sunburning. 6 For gravel and pissing blood, drink one ounce of the juice of green Lemons with three ounces of Malmsey when the grief cometh. 7 Put a piece of gold, or the leaves of gold into the juice of Lemons, 12. hours, then drink the juice with white wine, and powder of Angelica, or the decoction of the root of it against the plague, though it seem that all hope of remedy be past. Wash thy hands with the juice of Lemons and Baysalt, and let it dry in by itself, and after wash with cunduit water, to make them white and soft, and to avoid all deformities of them. 8 Stone, drink the juice of Lemons with white or rhenish wine and sugar fasting thrice a week, to strengthen the heart, stomach and wits, to resist poison, to expel melancholy, and 'cause a sweet breath. (See Oranges, Citrons.) Face cleansing, lay Lemons in butter milk, and wash therewith. Face freckles etc. 1. 2. 3. 7 Freckles 1 Hands foul 2. 3. 7 Heart weak 8 Gravel 6 (See Stone.) Melancholy 8 Memory ill 8 Plague 3. 7 Poison 8 Pissing blood 6 Skin deformed 1. 2. 3. 7 Sunburning 2. etc. Steines 5 Stomach weak 8 Stone 8 Teeth foul 5 ¶ Liverwort. LIuerwort cleanseth the hardness of the liver: and is good for the fever quarten, and with fresh grease it healeth wounds. 2 Stamp as much as an egg, and apply it one night to the region of the liver (but not to the stomach) for the griefs of the liver, and for all uncomes and unkind heats, blains, blisters, swellings and inflammations one night, and after anoint with new unguentum album. 3 Liver chafed, kneade thy bread with the juice of Sorrel, and Liverwort, and apply the dross to the place. 4 Liver griefs general, seeth Liverwort and the juice of Smallach in wine or water and drink it. 5 Liver corrupt and wasted, bruise it a little and seeth it in strong wort, with some Rhubarb, and use it till you be well. (See in Lungwort, Goosetansy, Fumiterre, Harts tongue. 6 For ruptures and chaps, drink it with wine daily. For the unkind heat of the liver, seethe it with Fumiterre & Harts tongue in wheye, and clarify it & drink it morn and even. 7 Liver stopped and inflamed, the fever tertian, and inflammation of the blood, use the decoction of it. 8 Wounds bleeding, bruise it and apply it to stop the blood, and to keep it from inflammation and impostumation. 9 Apply it with honey to all skurfes, spreading skabs, burnings, pocks, wild fire, and burning with iron. 10 Rheum to stop, boil it in water, and hold it in thy mouth often. Blains 2 Blisters 2 Blood to stop 8 Burn 9 Bursten Chaps 6 Fever quarten 1 tertian 7 Inflammation 2 Liver griefs 2. 3. 4. 5 Pocks 9 Rheum 10 Skabs 9 Swell 2. 8 Vncomes 2 Wild fire 9 Wounds 1. 8 ¶ Long rape. LOng rape, Navewe, or Navet gentle, is in nature much like Turnips. The seed is good against poison, and therefore used in Treacles, and preservatives. 2 The roots sodden and preserved in salt, are wholesome to be eaten. 3 They sharpen the sight, smooth the breast and throat, and heat the kidneys. They be best twice sodden. Breast to smooth 3 Eyes dull 3 Poison 1 Throat rough 3 ¶ Lovage. LOuage: The seeds may well be kept three years. 2 Drink the seeds fasting to purge both upward and downward. 3 And use them in glisters to ease the gout in the feet. 4 Steep them one night in wine, and drink it to expel the terms, and dead youngling, but because the seeds be very strong, the seeds of Anise and Fenell may be mixed with them in like weight. 5 Use the herb in baths, and rub well the body therewith to open the pores and draw forth evil humours. 6 seeth the seeds in wine or water, and drink it to open the stopping of the milt. 7 Bruise the seeds with Cummin seeds, and drink them in wine to mend the stomach and avoid wind in the belly. 8 Bruise the seeds, and seeth them in wine with Galingale and cinnamon, to help the griefs of the stomach, milt, and bowels, the pain in the belly etc. 9 Seethe the seeds in wine, and drink it to void pain in the belly, swelling in the stomach, the bitings of Snakes & Adders, and to provoke urine & terms. 10 Drink two or three drams of the distilled water morn and even for the griping of the sides and stomach, the griefs of the stone, kidneys, and bladder, hoarseness, and the dangerous swelling in the throat called the squinsy, and wash the face therewith morn and even to make it fair. 11 The decoction of the root, seed, or herb in wine or barley water, cleanseth the lungs, passages of the urine and terms, and doth heal inward wounds. 12 Apostume and hardness, seeth it and apply it. 13 Dead child, apply it warm to the belly to expel it. 14 To scour the reins and milt, to expel wind, and mend the liver, drink powder of the seeds with some thin broth, or piercing wine, and so it expelleth the seconds. 15 The seeds eaten alone provoke vomit, but used with Rue, it is good for the dropsy. 16 Let women drink the decoction of the root for the health of the matrixe, belly, precordials and breast, it warmeth and maketh good concoction. 17 The powder of the root is as good sauce to all meats as Pepper that is brought out of far countries. It is good for a cold stomach, it helpeth digestion. 18 Drink half a dram of the root in powder with good wine to cease inward pain, to expel urine, terms, poison, and all things that Angelica serveth for: the seed is more hot and effectual in all things. 19 jaundice, and Pleurisy, gargarise with the water, and also drink thereof. 20 The root may be condited in Vinegar and Salt, as the root of Elecampana, and other herbs, and kept in store. 21 in the decoction of Lovage to expel the stone and urine, and to heat all inward parts. 22 Stamp the root or seed, and apply it to any venomous bitings, or stingings of mad dogs, or serpents. 23 Teeming women, use the roots and leaves in meat and drink, and sweeting baths, that they may be purged rightly after childbirth. 24 The squinsy is healed by continual drinking of the water of it through the stalk of it. 25 The water cleanseth the face and skin from all blackness, spots, bruises, scars, scabs, and such like, being often washed therewith, and it helpeth the exulceration of the mouth, throat, fundament, and privities, being applied with linen clotheses. (See Angelica, Parsley, and Smallage: for Lovage is much of like nature to them.) 26 Use powder thereof with powder of cinnamon for the windiness and ache of the stomach and guts. 27 The root is good for all inward diseases, and so is the seed, and may be used for Pepper. 28 The infusion or decoction of the seeds with as much Fenell seed, or aniseed strained and drunk, worketh in purging the body as doth Parsley and Fennell. 29 Legs read, stamp the leaves and stalks, and distil them in a Limbek, and bathe with the water, and apply it with linen clotheses. 30 Emerods', stamp Lovage and Rue with honey, and fry them and apply them. 3 seeth it with yarrow in wine, till the third part be washed, and drink it to strengthen the stomach. 32 Thirst to void, seeth the root in wine or water, and drink it three days. (See Lillie, Centory.) 33 Knees swollen, stamp it with Rue and Hony, and apply it. 34 Face to cleanse and to make it white, mix the root with water and wash therewith, or drink Borage in wine. 35 Rising in sleep, bear the seeds about thy neck. 36 Liver and milt griefs, use the water or decoction thereof. Knees-ache sore and swollen, apply it with rue, and honey thrice. 37 For the host, stamp the roots and strain them with water, and drink it when thou goest to bed. 38 Bladder griefs, stamp Parsley, Lovage, and Fenell, and drink them with water to avoid urine well. Back griefs 9 Belly-ache 8. 9 16. 18. 26 Bitings venom. 9 22 Bladder griefs 3. 8. 9 Breast griefs 37 colic 10 Digestion 16. 17 Deliverance 4 Dead child 4. 14 Dropsy 15 Emerods' 30 Face deformed 3. 4. 25 Feet gout 5 Flowers stopped 4. 9 11. 18 Fundament sores 25 Gout 3 Hardness 12 Hoarseness 10 jaundice 19 Knees griefs 33. 36 Legs read 29 Liver griefs 14. 36 Lungs griefs 38. 11 Mad dog 22 Matrix griefs 16. 23 Milt griefs 6. 8. 14. 36 Mouth sores 25 Pleurisy 19 Poison 18 Privities sores 25 Purgation 2. 28 Reins cleansing 14 Rising in sleep 35 Seconds 4 Sickness general 27 Side pain 10 Skabs 25 Skin deformed 3. 4. 25 Sleep unquiet 35 squinsy 24 Stomach cold 17 griefs 8 pain 10. 16. 18. 26. swollen 9 weak 31 Stone 10 Swell 9 Thirst 32 Throat sores 25 swollen 10 Vomit to 'cause 2. 15 urine stopped 11. 18. 21. 38 Windiness 8. 14. 26 women's griefs 16. 23 Wounds 11 ¶ Linden tree. LInden tree: for filthy sores of children's mouths, seeth the leaves in water, and wash therewith. 2 Feet swollen, stamp the leaves and apply them. 3 Skabs and white scurf, stamp the bark with vinegar, and use it. 4 Belly-ache by the bloody flux, drink the distilled water of it. 5 Burn with tough humours on them, seeth the inner bark in vinegar, and use it. 6 The coals of it are good to make Gunpowder. 7 The distilled water is good for the falling evil. Belly-ache Bloody flux Burn Falling evil 7 Feet swollen 2 Gunpowder 6 Mouth sores 1 Skabs 3 scurf 3 ¶ Lungwort. LVngwort of the Oak, or of the ground made into powder and drunk with water, is good for the inflammations & ulcers of the lungs. 2 Wounds bleeding, cast in the powder to stop them and heal them. 3 Boil it in wine and drink it to stop the spitting of blood, pissing blood, the flowers, the flux and bloody-flux. 4 That of the oak joineth and healeth green wounds, especially of the lungs. 5 Take Lungwott iiii. drams, Aniseedes, Fenelseedes, & Liquorice, ana two. drams, the lungs of a Fox i. dram, Elecampana a dram & an half, Sugar one ounce, make them into a fine powder, & take a spoonful every day morn & even with wheye, for griefs of the lungs. 6 Coussips of Bedlam is much of like nature. 7 Hoarseness, take Lungwort, Liverwort, & Horehound, of each one handful, bruise them and boil them in oil, and strain it, and put sugar candy to it, and drink it warm morn and even. 8 Emerods', seethe it in wine, and bathe them therewith, and apply the herb to destroy them. Bleeding 2 Bloody-fluxe 3 Emerods' 8 Flowers to stop 3 Fluxes 3 Hoarseness 7 Lungs-griefes 1. 4. 5. 7 Pissing blood 3 Spitting blood 3 ¶ Lupins. LVpines: hair to fall and grow no more, apply the bran. 2 Morphue, mix powder of Lupins and mint leaves with vinegar, and anoint. 3 Worms, use the juice of Lupins. Head fistula, seethe bitter Lupins in salt water, and put vinegar to it, and strain it, and put in powder of Germander, and wash therewith. 4 Worms, apply the meal with as much ox gall as will thicken it to the belly, with wool as often as need is. 5 Worms in children, kneade the meal with honey, & apply it to the navel. 6 Hands scab, wash with the broth of Lupins. Navel swollen, (see in Flax.) 7 Belly worms & leanness of body, mix the gall of a Cow with a little meal of Lupins, and apply it with wool iiii. or v. days. 8 Their meal taken with honey or with water and vinegar, doth kill & expel all kinds of worms, & so doth the decoction thereof drunk, or stamped and applied to the navel fasting. 9 The decoction of Lupins boiled with Rue, and Pepper, and drunk, openeth the liver and milt. 10 A pessary of Lupins, Myrrh, and honey mixed together, draweth down the terms, seconds, and dead birth. 11 The decoction of Lupins doth beautify the face, and driveth away all freckles, spots, and lentils, and so doth the meal applied with water. 12 The meal, with meal of parched barley and water, suageth all apostumes and swellings. 13 The same boiled with vinegar, suageth the pain of the sciatica, dissolveth and consumeth the king's evil or swelling in the throat. It openeth and breaketh wens, botches, biles, and plaguesores. 14 Soak them long in water, till they have lost their strength or bitterness, and then they may be eaten, and so they take away the loathsomeness of the stomach, and desire to vomit, and cause appetite, but they engender gross humours. 15 The roots sodden in water provoke urine. 16 The smoke of Lupins burned, driveth away gnats. seeth Lupins in rain water till they be broken, and strain it when it is cold, wash the face with it to take away all foulness and spots. 17 Cankers to kill, apply the herb and seed with swine's grease, vinegar, & brimstone, and so it also healeth scales of the head. 18 Seethe it in Parsley water and drink it to cleanse the bladder and provoke urine. 19 Drink it with vinegar to cleanse the stomach, help digestion, and void loathing. 20 Eat the powder with vinegar or honey, to drive all worms out of the body, or seeth it with Rue and Pepper in water, and drink it, and so it openeth the liver and milt. 21 For all kind of skabs, skalles, gangrenes, bushes, whelks, pocks, and other deformities of the face, skin, and for spreading sores of the head, wash with water of the decoction of Lupins. 22 Rub the lower part of any tree with meal of Lupins, & there will no pismires come thereon. Appetite 14. 19 Apostume 12. 13 biles 13 Bladder griefs 18 Botch 13 Consumption 7 Dead child 10 Deliverance 10 digestion 19 Face deformed 11. 16. 21 Fistula 3 Flowers stopped 10 Freckles 11 Gangrenes 21 Gnats 16 Hands skabbed 6 Head Fistula 3 Hair to fall 1 Kankers 17 Kings evil 13 Leanness 7 Liver stopped 9 20 Milt stopped 9 20 Morphue 2 Plague sore 13 Pocks 21 Pushes 21 Purgation 19 Sciatica 13 Seconds 10 Scabs 6. 20 Scales 21 Skin deformed 11. 16. 21 Sores 21 Stomach loathing 14. 19 Swell 12. 13 Throat swollen 13 Urine stopped 15. 18 Wens 13 Worms 3. 4. 5. 7. 8. 20 ¶ Linaria. LInaria: wild flax, or toad flax, for the old and cold stopping of the liver and milt, and the old jaundice without Fevers, use the decoction of it. It helpeth all the stopping of the bladder, when the urine passeth by drops, and the kidneys, and provoketh urine well. 2 seeth the flowers and roots in water, and drink iiii. ounces morn and even to scour the reins & bladder. 3 Urine flux, stamp it and apply it, from the navel downward, to the neither end of the belly. Bladder stopped 1. 3 jaundice 1 Kidneys stopped 1. 2 Liver stopped 1 Milt stopped 9 20 Urine flux 3 Urine stopped 1. 3 ¶ Maces. MAces be in virtue almost like to Nutmegs, and do stop the lask, the bloody flux, and flowers. It helpeth the trembling of the heart, and is much better for all cold griefs than Nutmegs. 2 The oil of Mace laid on the stomach cureth the infirmity thereof, and the wambling, and disposition to vomit. It causeth appetite, and helpeth digestion. 3 Used in meats, they are good for the stomach, and a restorative, being used in broths, cullisses, or milk, and are very good to be drunk against spitting of blood, bloody fluxes, excessive lask, and the colic. 4 seeth it in wine, and drink it for the coldness of the stomach to help digestion. 5 Mix the fine powder of it with oil of Roses and wax, and apply it to the stomach for the feebleness thereof. 6 chew them to strengthen the brain. 7 Boil them in the juice of Fennel, and in the end put thereto a little wine, and strain it, and drink it for the weakness and coldness of the stomach and liver, the colic and all griefs of the spiritual members, and for the ache of the heart as the best medicine, and use their powder in meats and drinks. 8 Mouth griefs, seeth them in white wine and drink it, or eat Maces often, and drink a little wine to it to void the stink of the mouth. 9 Brain to restore, chew them. 10 Make powder of a Pomegranate, large Mace, long Pepper, and Sugar, and drink it with possit ale, or Malmsey, or other broth sodden together for the black jaundice: proved. 11 Rheum, bind powder of Cubebs & Maces in a cloth, and hold them in thy mouth. (See Cloves) 12 Megrem of phlegm, cause sneezing with Maces and oil of Violets. Appetite 2 Black jaundice 10 Bloody flux 1. 3 Brain weak 6. 9 Colic 3. 7 Consumption 7. 3 Digestion 2. 4 Flowers to stop 1. 3 Fluxes 1. 3 Heart ache 7. trembling 1. lask 1. 3 Liver weak 7 Megrem 12 Mouth stink 8 Restorative 3 Rheum 11 Sickness general 7 Spitting blood 3 Stomach cold 4. 5. 7. griefs 2. 3. 5. 7. ¶ Madder. MAdder. The root is sharp and bitter, and therefore purgeth the liver and the milt, provoketh much gross, and sometimes bloody urines, and scoureth meanly, and helpeth the yellow jaundice, the Sciatica and lose members. 2 seeth it with Mastic in water, and drink it to preserve thee from all griefs of the stomach and liver. 3 It cleanseth the liver, milt, kidneys and matrix very well, expelleth gross urine, the terms, seconds and birth being put into the convenient place. It expelleth the stone, and is good to be drunk against bruises and pestilence. 4 Drunk with sweet water, it helpeth the jaundice. 5 The root sodden cleanseth the liver, gall, milt, urine, matrix, bruises and pains of the joints, especially the sciatica. 6 With vinegar it taketh away the white spots or white morphue. With Mellicrate it is good for the palsy. 7 seeth it in wine and drink it for the weakness of the stomach and liver. Water of the decoction thereof coloureth hairs read. It keepeth all the parts of the body from putrefaction, & cureth the morphue. 8 For the iliak, take it with honey and hot water. 9 To provoke the flowers, steep it in wine xxiiii. hours, and drink the wine. Arms sore, seeth Madder and Roch Allom in conduit water from a pottle to a pint, and wash therewith to have help though it be in the marrow. 10 For the marmall, anoint it with oil Olive, and by and by lay to a Planten leaf: and every morning wash the sore with Madder water. For pricks, boil powder of the roots with oil Olive and apply it or anoint. 11 A read water for sores old or new, take running water a pottle, ashes of old Ash wood, tan oose that leather never came in a pottle, Madder and Allom of each one pound in fine powder, steep them together ten days, than put thereto ten ounces of green copres, and one ounce of Ginger, and seeth it to a quart, then strain it and wash with the water, and use the rest plasterwise. 12 Worms to kill, drink Madder. 13 seeth it in whey with pances, called Herba trinitatis, and give it to swine for many diseases, as botches, biles, and soreness in their throats. 14 Matrixe coming out, wash it with the juice or decoction of Madder. 15 Flowers to cause, seeth it in White wine and drink it with Triphera magna. 16 Head megrem, mix powder of Madder with Rye flower and aquavitae and apply it. Ache 5. 9 Arms sore 9 Bellyache 8 biles 13 Bruises 3 Colouring read 3 Deliverance 3 Flowers stopped 3. 9 15 Head megrem 16 jaundice 1. 4 Iliak passion 8 joints lose 1. 5 Kidneys griefs 3 Liver griefs 1. 2. 5. 6. Matrixe fallen 14. griefs 3. Milt griefs 1. 5 Marmall 10 Morphue 6. 7 Palsy 6 Plague 3 Pricks 10 Sciatica 1. 5 Seconds 3 Sickness general 7 Sores 9 10. 11 Stomach bad 2. 7 Stone 3 Swine's griefs 13 Throat sore 13 Urine stopped 1. 3. 5 Worms 12 ¶ Maidenhair. Maidenhair, Capillus veneris. seeth it in wine, and drink it for shortness and straightness of breath, the hard and uneasy cough, and to 'cause easy spitting. 2 It stoppeth the flux and spitting of blood, provoketh urine, provoketh terms, breaketh the stone, expelleth the seconds, unstoppeth the liver and milt, helpeth the griefs of the milt, and the yellow jaundice, all fluxions and moistness of the stomach, and bitings and stingings of venomous beasts. 3 Bitings of mad dogs and venomous beasts, stamp it green and apply it. 4 It restoreth hair, dispatcheth the strume or swellings in children's throats. 5 Head scurf and scales, steep it in lee, or seeth it, and wash therewith. 6 Headache, wear a garland of it, or a quilted cap of it about the head. 7 The leaves of Adianthum or Wall Rue mixed with a little Salt peter, & the urine of a young child, taketh away the shrivelled wrincklings that appear on women's bellies after their deliverance being washed therewith. 8 Venus hair driveth away wens & scrofules. 9 Given in meat to quails it maketh them to fight well. 10 The broth wherewith i. li. of the green herb hath been sodden purgeth yellow choler & phlegm from the breast & stomach. 11 Tricomanes, Polytricon or English Maidenhair hath the same virtues that Capillus veneris hath being sodden with wine or Hydromell, and drunk daily, it helpeth the obstructions of the liver, the jaundice, griefs of the lungs, difficulties of breath, it voideth melancholy by urine, it softeneth the hardness and swelling of the milt, expelleth poison, that hath been drunk, and the flowers and seconds, and breaketh the stone. Bitings venomous 2. 3 Breath short 1. 11 Cough 1 Flowers stopped 2. 11 Flux 2 Head scurf 5. head scalls 5. ache 6. Hair to grow 4 jaundice 2. 11 Kernels 4 Liver grief 2. 11 Lungs grief 11 Melancholy 11 Milt grief 2. 11 Mad dog 3 Obstructions 11 Poison 11 Purgation 10 Quails 9 Scrofules 8 Seconds 2. 11 Spitting blood 2 Stomach raw 2 Stone 2. 11 Throat swollen 4. 8 Urine stopped 2 Wens 8 women's griefs 7. 8 Wrinkles 8 ¶ Marierom. MArierom. It is to be gathered when it flowreth, and dried in the shadow, and may be kept a year. 2 Headache grievous, seeth it in lee, and wash the head therewith. 3 Stomach cold and lack of digestion, use powder of it in meat or wine. 4 Black and blue spots, mix powder of the leaves with honey, and anoint therewith. 5 Marierom comforteth the brain, openeth obstructions, and cureth the apoplexia. 6 The oil of it heateth the members both inward and outward, the joints, sinews and matrix being applied warm. It helpeth all griefs, comforteth the brain, and all members of the body. 7 Marierom heateth all the inner members, softeneth the milt, and suageth the swelling thereof. 8 For the dropsy in the beginning, gripping in the body, and to provoke urine, seeth the herb and drink it. 9 Stomach pain, apply the herb and flowers in a bag. 10 Head to cleanse, put the powder of it into the nose. 11 Matrix to cleanse, sit over the vapour of it sodden in water. 12 Flowers to cause, put in the herb as a pessary. 13 For the ache, swellings and looseness of joints or members, apply the herb with wax to strengthen them, and to help other griefs of them. 14 Rheum to stop, and to cause sneezing, blow in powder of it with vinegar. 15 Use it in salads to comfort the stomach marvelously. 16 The juice drawn into the nose, to comfort the brain, cause sneezing, to revive them that have the lethargy and the falling evil. 18 Speech lost, strike the water of it on the tongue. 19 To comfort the brain and memory, drink the water three or four ounces morn and even daily, use the herb as other pot herbs for all meats. 20 Stamp Marierom with barley flower, and apply it to the ache, inflammation and swelling of the eyes. 21 Apply the juice to congealed blood to desperse it, and to the swelling of the milt. 22 The oil of it softeneth hard sinews, and the hardness of the matrix. Isop doth the like. 23 Stamp the leaves with vinegar and salt, and apply to the biting of a scorpion. 24 A plaster of Marierom, oil, and wax, dissolveth cold swellings, and is good for members out of joint or wrenched. 25 Smelling lost, and to purge and comfort the brain, put the powder or juice into the nose. 26 Marierom is good for all cold griefs, and for fretting and consuming ulcers. 27 The oil put into the ears with wool is good against deafness. 28 Headache of murr, bruise it and put it into the nose. 29 Head sleepy or drowsy, provoke sneezing with powder of Marierom gentle. 30 Stomach griefs and windy, stamp the leaves and flowers and apply them. 31 Rheum, apply it to the head. It drieth the mother, and consumeth the superfluities thereof. 32 Drink the powder of it with wine to heat and comfort the stomach and help digestion. 33 Members out of joint, apply powder of it with wax. 34 Headache, put the juice into the nose. 35 For the white and cold flux of the matrix, distil it in a limbek in the end of May, and drink three ounces of it. 36 Bruises and black spots, anoint with the powder of it and honey. Aches 6. 13 Apoplexia 5 Bitings venomous 23 Black spots 4. 21. 36 Brain weak 5. 6. 16. 19 25. bruises 21. 36 Digestion 3. 32 Dropsy 8 Drowsiness 29 Ears deaf 27 Eyes griefs 20 Falling evil 16 Flowers stopped 12. to stop 35. Hardness 22. 34 Headache 2. 28. 34. to cleanse 10. joints grief 7. 22. out 24. 33 Lethargy 16. 29 Matrix heard 22. to cleanse 11. fluxes 35. Memory bad 19 Milt griefs 7. 22 Obstructions 5 Rheum 14. 31 Sinews griefs 6. 22 Sickness general 6 Sleepiness 29 Smelling lost 25 Sores 26 Speech lost 18 Stomach ache 9 cold 3. griefs 30. 32. weak 15. windy 30. Swell. 7. 24 Ulcers 26 Whites 35 Windiness 30 ¶ Maple. MAple. Side pain, stamp the root, and drink it with wine. 2 Tongue palsy, stamp the keys and seeth them in possit ale, and strain it and drink it with sugar morn and even daily. 3 Liver pain, stamp one ounce and a half of the root, and drink it with sweet wine. Liver grief 3 Palsy 2 Side pain 1 Speech lost 2 ¶ Marigold. Marigold. The flowers steeped in vinegar and salt, may be kept two years. 2 Drink the flowers with wine to comfort the stomach, procure appetite, to consume humours of the stomach, and to heat the stomach. 3 seeth the rind of the root in Wine, and drink it to digest evil humours, and to help the griefs of the liver. 4 Mix powder of the rind of the root with the juice of Fennell, a little wine, and a little oil, boil them together to a thickness, and put a little wax to it, and anoint the cold stomach therewith to help it greatly. 5 Ears worms, drop in the juice. 6 Apply powder of the rind to help little bushes. 7 Palsy, take the juice of the herb and root in a glister. 8 seeth the flowers of Marigold and Spikenarde in wine and drink it, and also apply it to suage the swelling of the breasts by stopping of the terms. 9 Drink the decoction of the flowers to stop pissing of blood in short time. 10 The distilled water healeth all griefs of the eyes both hot and cold, cleareth the sight, and avoideth all griefs of the eyes and head. 11 Bruise a Marigold leaf, and put it into thy nose to cleanse the head and avoid rheum. 12 The Flowers themselves, or with their plant boiled in wine and drunk, provoke terms. 13 The same with the herb dried and strawed on quick coals, draweth down the seconds and dead child, the fume thereof being received up into the natural place. 14 Take the conserve of the Flowers fasting, to cure the trembling of the heart, and to withstand the plague and evil air. 15 Drink the flowers or juice to draw down the terms taken warm. 16 Wash the mouth therewith for the toothache, it is a present remedy. 17 The flowers colour hair yellow. 18 seeth the herb in possit ale or white wine & drink it to provoke sweat in the pestilence. 19 Teethache, put in the powder of them. 20 Emerods', seeth Marigolds and Mulleine in wine, and foment therewith. 21 Frenzy, drink the juice of Marigolds, Sage, and Southrenwood. 22 Megrem, anoint the temples with the juice. preservative from death, drink three grains of Marigolds. 23 Warts, wash them in the juice of Marigolds, or wash thy hands, and then rub them with the juice of Marigolds and salt. 24 Wits lost or mad, take the juice of Marigold and Wormwood of each one spoonful. The leaves or juice boiled with milk to an unguent, healeth all ulcers, wounds, with as much white wine, at even hot, and at morn cold: the warm juice with a little vinegar, helpeth aches, bruises, swellings, apostumes, cankers, carbuncles, felons, and redness, inflammations, breasts sores, or cankers. 25 Flowers stopped, drink the juice, or make fritters of them with eggs and meal and use them. 26 Feet or toes corns, stamp Marigolds and apply them morn and even. 27 Palsy, drink the juice of a handful of Marigolds with a good draft of Ale, and a spoonful of Mustard. 28 For chafing of the liver and griefs of the milt, stamp Marigolds with Saffron, and drink them with White wine first and last. 29 Warts, apply powder of Saven with the juice of Marigolds. 30 Sat over the fume of the Flowers to bring down the seconds, or drink the decoction of them, or use them in a pessary. 31 Agnails, pair them to the quick, and stamp Marigolds and apply them. 32 Emerods' or piles, stamp them and apply them. 33 Fever quarten, drink possit ale made with Marigolds and Fennel four times before the fits if need be. 34 Head and stomach to cleanse from phlegm, xoll a Marigold leaf between thy fingers, and put it into thy nose, and to be in stead of a gargarism. 35 Cramp in children, seeth Marigolds in water, and bathe them therein, and anoint with oil of Lilies or of Privet. 36 Seconds, drink powder of the flowers and put thereof about a wax candle, and light it, and receive up the fume thereof. 37 Cankers in wounds, apply the juice of the greater Marigolds. 38 Flowers to stop, drink the juice of Marigolds. 39 Flesh mole, stamp Bentbrow with young Marigolds that never flowered, and strain it, and anoint with the juice with a crows feather. 40 Warts, apply the juice of Marigolds and onions. 41 Teethach, wash thy mouth with the juice of the flowers and leaves. air corrupt 14 Agnails 26. 31 Appetite 2 Breasts griefs 8 Corns (see Agnailes.) Cramp 35 Dead child 13 Death to prevent 22 Ears worms 5 Eyes griefs 10 Emerods' 20. 32 Fever quarten 33. phlegm 34. Flesh mole 39 Flowers stopped 12. 15. 25. 38 Frenzy 21. 24 Heart trembling 14 Head megrem 22. to cleanse 11. 34. Hair to be yellow 17 canker 37 Liver sick 3. 28 Mad 21. 24 Megrem 22 Milt-sick 28 Palsy 7. 27 piles 20. 32 Pissing blood 9 preservative 22 Pushes 24 Seconds 36 Stomach cleansing 23. 34. cold 2. 4. Sweated to 'cause 18 Teethach 16. 19 41 Warts 23. 29. 40 Wits lost 24 Wounds canker 37. 24 ¶ Marsh mallow. MArsh mallow sodden in wine or Mede, or bruised and applied, is good for wounds, hard kernels, swellings and wens, for burnings & swellings behind the ears, impostumes, burning impostumes of the Paps, bruising of the fundament, windy swellings, and for stiffness of the sinews: for it driveth away, maketh ripe, bursteth & covereth with a skin. 2 Seethe it in wine or Mede, & put to it swine's grease or Goose grease, or Turpentine, that it may be clammy, and put thereof into the Mother for the inflammation and stopping, as a pessary: the broth that the herb is sodden in, is good for the same, it draweth out also burdens of the Mother and the seconds. 3 Seethe the root in wine and drink it for the difficulty of making water, the rawness that cometh by the stone, the bloody flux, the sciatica, the trembling of any member, & the bursting. 4 Teethach, seethe the herb in vinegar and hold it in thy mouth. 5 Stamp the seeds & anoint freckles and foul spots therewith in the sun. 6 Mix the seeds with oil and anoint thee, and no venomous beast shall bite thee. 7 It is good against the bloody flux, vomiting blood, and the common flux. 8 Drink the same seeds sodden with water and vinegar or in wine, and drink it against all stinging of Bees, wasps & such like. 9 Apply the leaves with a little oil to burnings, bite & stingings, etc. 10 Take the roots of Marsh mallows or Holyokes, or common Mallows twelve ounces, Linseeds six ounces, fats or greases of hens, geese, capons or neats feet, a wine quart, wax six ounces, turpentine one ounce, rosin three ounces: bruise well the roots & seeds, steep them 48. hours in a pottle of water scalding hot, or rather in half water & half white wine, then seethe it till the broth be all slimy, than strain it & seethe a pint of the slimy broth with the fats, till the marry substance be sodden away, then melt the wax, rosin & turpentine, & seethe them a little altogether, and scum it and keep it, for all hard lumps, swellings and bruises in any place, whether it come of inward or outward cause, it is good also for horse feet that be swelled or bruised. 11 Seethe the root of Marsh mallow in wine, & drink it to help all the griefs of the lungs or breast, & of the whole body, the gnawings of the guts, the bloody flux & other griefs coming of choler, and whatsoever is before written of the Mallows, this hath the double virtues. 12 Slice the root thin & seethe it in milk or water, to heal all hardness, ulcers & uncomes. 13 The leaves or the oil of them helpeth and healeth all stingings of wasps and Bees. 14 The root sodden in water, and mixed with swine's grease, goose grease or Turpentine, and put in as a Pessary, helpeth all inflammations and piles of the Matrixe. 15 The powder of the seeds mixed with Dew gathered in May, taketh away the foul spots of the face. 16 The root or seed sodden in vinegar and holden in the mouth, helpeth the tooth ach. 17 The root boiled in wine and drunk, is good for the pain of the gravel and stone, the bloody flux, the sciatica, the trembling & shaking of any member, and cramps and burstings: and boiled in milk, it healeth the Cough. 18 The roots boiled in wine or honeyed water and stamped small, do heal new wounds, dissolve and consume all cold tumours and swellings, as wens and hard kernels, impost, behind the ears, burning impost, of the Paps, old and windy impostumes & swellings, rifts & chaps of the fundament, & trembling of the sinews and senowye parts: the leaves are good for all the aforesaid, but not so good as the root. 19 The leaves applied with oil, heal burnings, bite of men or dogs, and stinging of Bees and wasps. 20 The seed green or dried, punned and drunk, healeth the bloody flux, all issues of blood and the lask, and with vinegar they take away the foul spots of the face doth black and white being anointed in the hot sun or in a bath or stew. 21 Bloody flux, drink the juice. 22 Phthisic and infection of the Lungs, seethe the leaves and seeds in milk and drink it every morning. 23 Mouth and throat sores, seethe the leaves with wine and honey, and put thereto Roch Alom, and wash therewith cold. 24 White flaws and Apost. of the fingers, stamp the leaves with barrows grease and crumbs of bread and apply it. 25 For unquietness of Fevers, to 'cause sleep & avoid drought, Distil the herb and root in a Limbeck in the beginning of May, & rub the feet with the water. 26 Pleurisy, seethe Mallows in oil, and stamp them and apply them. Apostume 1. 18 Belly ache 11 Biting venom. 6. 8. 9 19 Bloody flux 3. 7. 11. 17. 20. 21 Breast griefs 11 Breasts sore 18 Bruised 10 Burn 1. 9 19 Bursten 3. 17 Chaps 18 Cough 17 Cramp 17 Face deform. 5. 15. 20 Fevers 25 Fluxes 7. 11. 20 Flowers stopped 2 Freckles 5. 20 Fundament griefs 18 Gravel 17 Hardness 1. 10. 12. 18 Horse hurts 10 Kernels 1. 10. 18 atrixe imflam. 2. 14 piles 14 Nails apost. 24 Lungs griefs general. 11. 22 Pleurisy 26 Phthisic 22 Sciatica 3. 17 Seconds 2 Senows stiff 1 Shaking 17. 18 Sickness general 11 Scalding 19 Stone 3. 17 Sleep to 'cause 2 Stinging 8. 9 13 Swell 1. 10. 18 Teeth ache 4. 16 Thirst 25 Throat sores 23 Trembling 3. 17. 18 Ulcers 12 Uncome 12 Vomit blood 7 urine stopped 3 Wen 1. 18 Whiteflawe 24 Wounds 1. 18 ¶ Meddlers. Meddlers: stone to break, use the powder of the stones of them. 2 Meddlers stop the belly, especially being green and hard, for after they have been kept a while, they become soft & tender, and stop not so much, but then they are more convenient to be eaten, but they nourish little or nothing at all. 3 The stones made into powder and drunk, break the stone and drive forth gravel: if one eat too much of such binding fruit, they will stop both the liver & the milt. 4 Gedlers are to be used for medicine, and not for meats. They are good after meals for them that be Laxative, but being eaten much, they breed melancholy. 5 The kernels are good against the stone, one spoonful of their powder being drunk with white wine, wherein Parsley roots have been sodden. Gravel 3 Stone 1. 5 ¶ Medowort. MEdowort: Drink the decoction or powder of it to stop the lask and all issues of blood. 2 Boil the flowers in white wine and drink it to cure the fever quarten. 3 Seethe the root in wine and Honey & drink it to lose the belly & draw down choler. 4 But sodden in read wine it stoppeth the bloody flux: Stamp the herb with Mede & apply it to swellings, & to draw forth pricks, splents. 5 Use not the seed, for it causeth headache: Seethe it in fresh butter and strain it, and anoint therewith any burning or scalding. Belly bound 3 Bloody flux 1. 4 Burn 5 Fever quarten 2 Fluxes 1 Scalding 5 ¶ Melilot. MElilot boiled by itself with sweet malmsey, or with the yolk of a roasted Egg or the meal of Fenigrek or Linseed, or with fine flower or meal, or with Cyeory, to suage all kind of hot swellings, especially of the eyes, matrixe, fundament and stones. 2 Apply it with Galls or chalk, or with good wine to heal scurf and mattering sores. 3 Stamp it raw or sodden with wine, and apply it to the pain of the stomach, and to dissolve the impostumes and swellings thereof. 4 Ears pain, drop in the juice. 5 Headache, apply it to the forehead with oil of Roses and vinegar. 6 The common Melilot is good for all the aforesaid, it is most used to suage pain, as the flowers of Camomile is. 7 The same boiled in wine and drunk, provoketh urine, breaketh the stone, suageth the pain of the kidneys, bladder and belly, and ripeth phlegm, causing it to be easily spit forth. 8 Eyes dull, spots and pearls, drop in the juice. 9 Ears pain, drop in the juice with malmsey: drink it with wine to soften the hardness of the stomach and Liver. 10 All sorts of Melilot sodden in wine and drunk with some Honey, do mollify all inward impostumes. 11 The same sodden with malmsey and drunk, helpeth the tumours of the matrixe. 12 All the kinds of it are good to mitigate all outward aches, especially the inflammations of the eyes, being stamped and applied, and are good to provoke sweat. 13 The distilled water is good for hot griefs of the eyes: Vein cut, stamp Melilot & Costmary, and apply it but once. 14 Stitch, anoint with oil of Melilot, than stamp Melilot and apply it but once on a piece of Leather, and change it but once a week. (See Claver, Honysuckle, Trifoyle.) Aches 6. 12 Backach 7 Bellyach 7 Bladder ache 7 Ears pain 4 Eyes grief 1. 8. 9 12. 13 Fundament grief 1 Headache 5 Impost. 3. 10 Liver hard 9 Matrixe grief 1. 11 Sores 2 scurf 2 Stomach grief 3. 9 Stones grief 1 Stitch 14 Stone 7 Swell 1 Vein cut 13 Urine stopped 7 ¶ Melons. Melons: Mouth stink, use the seeds. 2 Pill of the uppermost skin of the seeds of Melons, and make the rest into powder, and with Beane meal kneade cakes with Rose water, and dry them in the sun, and therewith wash the face and skin orderly to cleanse it from all spots, sun burning, and read pimples and foulness, and to make it clear and fair. 3 The same seeds eaten or drunk, cause urine, and purge the Lungs and Kidneys. 4 The root doth heal such ulcers as do stand full of matter, being applied with Hony. 5 Many eat the Melons with vinegar, Peniroyall and Onions mixed together. 6 Distil Mellous when they are ripe, & drink three or four ounces of the water in the mornings a month together, to help the stone, to provoke urine, & to purge the kidneys. 7 Eyes running, lay the uttermost pill to the forehead & temples. 8 Drink the water with sugar, to cool all inward unnatural heats, & to cease thirst and swellings in the body wheresoever it be, being also applied with linen clotheses. 9 The fruit of the garden Pepon or Pompey is best to be eaten fasting, and not to eat any other meats after them till they be half digested, and so they are good against unnatural heats and wicked Agewes. 10 The seeds purge the skin being washed with the decoction of them. 11 They must not be eaten raw, but be boiled with good flesh or sweet milk, and so it is better than the Cucumber, and is good for a hot stomach. 12 The flesh or substance of it being finely stamped, doth suage and heal the inflammation of the eyes being applied. 13 The seeds may be used as the seeds of Melons, to cleanse the skin. 14 Drink one ounce of the root with Honeyed water to cause vomit: Melons and Pompions be both of one nature. Breath stink 1 Eyes griefs 7. 12 Face deform. 2. 13 Heat inward 8. 9 Kidneys to cleanse 3. 6 Lungs to cleanse 3 Mouth stink 1 Skin to cleanse 2. 13 Stomocke hot 8. 9 11 Stone 6 Swell 8 Thirst 8 Ulcers 4 Vomit to 'cause 14 Urine stopped 3. 6. 10 ¶ Meu. MEu, Meon, or Spignel, boil or soak the roots in water, and drink it to open mightily the stops of the kidneys and bladder, to provoke urine, to help the strangury, and consume all windiness of the stomach. 2 Take it with Honey against the gripings of the Belly, the griefs of the Mother, Gout in the feet, ache in the joints, rheums, and Catharres in the breast. 3 Flowers to cause, sit over the decoction thereof. 4 Apply it to the lower part of children's backs to provoke urine. 5 The root drunk, causeth headache, (See Spikenard, Cyperus.) Aches 2 Back ache 1 Belly ache 2 Bladder stopped 1 Catharre 2 Feet Gout 2 Flowers stopped 3 Gouts 2 joints ache 2 Kidneys stopped 1 Rheum 2 Strangury 1 Urine stopped 1. 4 Windiness 1 ¶ Mints. MInts: Worms, eat powder of Mints with milk. 2 Belly bound, eat Mints. 3 Colour bad, use Mints daily. 4 Mints are healthful at any time. 5 Anoint the holy fire with the juice of Mints, brimstone & vinegar, to cease the pain forthwith. 6 Guts and kidneys pain, seethe Mints in wine and drink it. 7 Seeth Mints in wine & oil, and apply it to impostumes to dissolve them, and to help the Paps that are hard with curdled milk. 8 Mouth, gums and teeth rotten and stink, seethe garden Mints in vinegar and wash therewith, and after rub them with powder of Mints. 9 When any medicine is given against poison, it aught to be given with the juice of Mints, or else with wine of the decoction thereof: which wine or Mints with Honey doth help against stopping of the liver, milt and passage of the water, and the juice with Honey slayeth worms in the belly & in the ears being dropped in. 10 Mints put into milk, doth not suffer it to cured, although ●uen be put to it, and in like sort generation. 11 Drink the juice with vinegar against spitting of blood, to stop vomiting, to kill small worms in the body. 12 All Mints green or dry, are good for the stomach, and also the distilled water, to help digestion, to avoid the hicket, loathing & choler, especially used in sauces: it provoketh lust, and comforteth all the members, and the smell of it comforteth the brain and memory. 13 Headache, apply the juice or water with a cloth, and to swollen breasts for their curdled milk, and drop it into the ears for their ache. 14 Biting of a mad dog, stamp Mint with salt & apply it. 15 Mix powder of water Mints with leaven and apply it to the stomach to withstand belching & vomiting. 16 All Mints are good to bathe in to provoke sweat. Headache, apply Mints. 17 Tongue rough, rub it with Mints. 18 It is singular good in sauces, and for a woman that hath had hard labour, being drunk with wine. 19 Eat powder of Mints after meat to help digestion, and healeth all the griefs of the milt. 20 The juice withstandeth venom, and slayeth worms: let no wounded body use any Mint, because it hindereth the healing of the wound 21 Lethargy and forgetfulness, stampered Mints with Rue, oil and vinegar, and apply it to the nostrils. 22 Frenzy, seeth Mints in vinegar and apply them unto the head, and put the juice of ivy into the Nose. 23 Apply Mints to thy head to void all pain that cometh of cold cause. 24 Stamp water Mints, and apply them to the midst of thy brow and nape of thy neck against madness, and to provoke sleep. 25 Garden Mints in meats and drinks is very good for the stomach, it warmeth and openeth it, and drieth up all superfluous humours therein, voideth the pain and helpeth digestion. 26 Drink two or three branches with the juice of a sour pomegranate against the Hicket, vomiting, and choleric passion, which hath a lask withal. 27 seeth Mints in water, and drink it three days to cure the griping and gnawing of the belly, and the colic, and to provoke the terms. 28 Stamp Mints with parched Barley meal and apply it to tumours & swellings to consume them, and to the headache to cure it. 28 Mix the juice with Honeyed water, and drop it into the ears to cure their pain, and gargarise therewith to avoid the roughness of the tongue and throat. 30 Water Mints are much of like nature to garden Mints, and are very good for the gravel and stone in the kidneys, and the strangury or pissing by drops being boiled in wine & drunk. 31 Apply it to the stinging of Bees & Wasps. 32 Seethe three branches in wine and drink it fasting to help replection. 33 The juice mixed with good Treacle and eaten in the mornings, killeth worms in children. 34 Mints are wholesome to be sodden in windy meats, as peason, etc. and sodden in possit ale with Fennell seed, it increaseth vital seed. 35 Blood to stop, stamp Mints and apply them. 36 For swooning & weakness of the heart by fevers or other sickness, stamp them with vinegar and a little wine, and rub the lips, tongue, teeth and nose, and temples therewith, & dip a toast therein and chew it, & suck thereof and swallow it. 37 Liver, milt, kidneys & bladder stopped, seethe wild Mints in wine and drink it with sugar. 38 Gomor passion or flux of nature, use powder of Mints dried in an Oven. 39 Abhorring meat, eat new sodden eggs with sauce of Mints and vinegar. 40 Belly bound, drink the juice of Mints with warm water. 41 Headache of rheum, stamp green Mints with Laudanum and vinegar and apply it. 42 jaundice, use Mints in syrups: lepry elephantia, eat Mints. 43 Morphue, mix powder of Lupins and Mints with vinegar & anoint. 44 Put the juice of Rue and mints together into the Nose, to amend the brain and voided all stink of the mouth or nose. 45 Reins running, seeth Cassia Lignea, Mints, and houseleek in vinegar and plaster it to the reins. 40 Paps with curdled milk, seeth the roots of Holyoke, and grind them with yolks of eggs, saffron and Mints, and apply it. 47 Shingles or holy fires, mix Rue and Mints with oil and vinegar, and anoint therewith to help it the same day. 48 Pissing against will, use the juice of Mints with Treacle. 49 Spitting of matter or quyttor from the Lungs, use powder of Mints with other medicines. 50 Worms, drink the juice of Roman Mints. 51 Vomiting of read choler, eat Mints. 52 Forgetfulness or Lethargy, seethe read Mints & Rue in strong vinegar, and draw up the vapour thereof into thy Nose. 53 Headache and dasing, of cold cause, apply Mints. 54 Mouth stink, wash with the decoction of Aniseeds, Cloves & Mints, or wash with Mint water, or rub it with the powder. 55 Vomit to stop, use syrup of Mints. 56 Appetite, eat Sage, Parsley, Mints & Pepper with vinegar, with fish or flesh, or use Cardamon with the juice of Mints. 57 Hands itch and worms, anoint with the juice. 58 Heart griefs general, steep Sage & Mints in white wine, and seethe it and drink the wine, & apply the herbs to cause appetite. 59 Eyes read, stamp Mints and apply them. 60 Stomach weak and to 'cause good digestion, boil powder of Mints with twice so much sugar till it be thick, and keep it in a wide mouthed glass, and use it. 61 Head impost. put the juice into thy ear three or four nights. 62 Worms, fry wormwood and Mints ana like much with salt Butter, and put vinegar to it and a little of the Gaul of a beast, and apply it to the belly. 63 Emerods', sit over the smoke of dried Mints laid upon coals of Ash wood. 64 Ague cake, fry read Mints and read Nettles and wormwood of each an handful, with fresh butter & apply them as hot as may be suffered. 65 Mouth stink, wash with the juice, water or decoction of Mints with some white vinegar, or put the juice of Rue and black Mints into the Nose, of each like: proved. 66 jaundice, drink the broth of Mints sodden with an old cock with cinnamon and Maces. 67 Shingles, anoint with the juice of Mints. 68 Vomit to stop, Apply wheat Bran with the juice of Mints and the white of an egg, or apply the juice with Frankincense and a little vinegar boiled together to the pit of the stomach. 69 Colic, drink the juice of Mints with eight corns of Pepper and a little Hony. 70 Worms, drink the juice with goats milk. 71 Milk to dry up, use Mints. 72 Sciatica, bruise wild Mints & apply them. 73 Mad, stamp water Mints and apply them to the mids of the brow, and nape of the neck, first tickling the brow to bring sleep, but if he be far gone, clean a Tench, and apply the one half warm before, and the other behind. 74 Consumption, use powder of Mints in thy broths, and the water of them in thy drinks. 75 Vomit to stop, stamp them with bread and vinegar, and heat it on a hot tile or brick, and apply it to the stomach. 76 Loins pain, apply the seeds of wild Mints with wheat flower. 77 Loins and Belly pain, drink two drams of the powder of water Mints with three ounces of water of Radish. 78 Paps hard with concongealed milk, seeth Mints with oil and wine, and apply it. 79 For watery skabs in children's hands, mix the juice with vinegar and Brimstone and anoint therewith with a feather. 80 Ache and swelling in the stomach or belly, seethe with Rue in sweet milk, and drink it. 81 Vomiting much, seeth it with Cummin in wine, and drink it or eat it. 82 Hycket, apply powder of Dill seed with the juice of Mints to the stomach. 83 The juice of Mint Roman or white Mint, killeth worms in the belly, & in the Nostrils. 84 The powder of it cast on meats, helpeth digestion. 85 Browne or garden Mints, use the decoction of them for the stopping of the Liver & milt, kidneys and bladder. 86 Tetters, anoint with the juice of Mints, vinegar & brimstone and be whole. 87 Head wounds, stamp Mints and apply them. 88 Side pain, stamp Mints and seethe them in old wine or ale, & drink it with xx. grains of Pepper in the night. 89 Hoarseness, stamp the crops of Mints, Sage, Fiveleafe & Ginger, and Lycoras, and seethe them in stolen ale & strain it and drink it hot morn & even, as often as need is. 90 Dropsy, take nine crops of Mints, nine crops of blind Nettles, and nine crops of Sage, stamp them and drink them with stolen ale morn and even, or eat water Cresses with Mints and Parsley daily. 91 Stomach griefs, stamp Mints, Sage, Cammomile, and good store of Wormwood and sour bread, and boil them in vinegar and apply it warm to the stomach. 92 Botches, sores and swellings in the head, stamp Mint Royal and apply it. Ache and stink in the teeth, seethe it in white wine and vinegar, and wash the mouth therewith and rub them with the powder of it. 93 A sauce thereof with vinegar causeth appetite. 94 Stitch, seeth two or three handfuls of read Mints, and a handful of Sage crops in running water to the one half, and apply it as hot as may be suffered in a linen bag, and warm it again as often as need is. 95 Botch to avoid and vanish away, drink the juice of Mint roots one spoonful, with some Treacle. 96 Breast phlegm, drink the crops of read Mints, read Nettles and Wormwood, with wine or stolen ale first and last. Agewe cake 64 Appetite 56. 93 Apostume 7. 92. 95 Backach 6. 27. 77. 80 bound 2. 40 Belching 15 Bitings venem. 14 Bladder stopped 37. 85 Blood to stop 35 Brain ill 12. 44 Breasts hard 7. 13. 46. 78 Breast griefs 96 Breath stink 8. 44. 65 Botch 92. 95 Choleric pass. 26 Colic 27. 69 Consumption 74 Colour bad 2 Digestion 12. 19 25. 60. 84 Deliverance 17 Dropsy 90 Ears ache 13. 28 impost. 61 worms 9 Eyes read 59 Emerods' 63 Fevers 36 Flowers stopped 27 Forgetfulness 21. 51. 52 Frenzy 22. 24. 73 Gomor pas. 38 Gravel 30 Heart griefs 36. 58 Hands itch 57 Headache 13. 16. 23. 28. 41. 53 impost. 61 skabs 79 wounds 87 Hycket 12. 26. 82 Holy fire 5. 47. 67 hoarseness 89 jaundice 42. 45. 66 Kidneys stopped 37. 85 Lepry 42 Lethargy 21. 51 Liver stopped 9 37. 85. Loins ache 76. 77 Loathing 37 Lungs griefs 49 Lust to 'cause 12 Mad 24. 73 Mad dog 14 Memory 12 Milk to dry up 78 Milt griefs 19 stopped 9 37. 85 Mouth griefs 8 stink 54. 65 Morphue 43 Nose stink 44 Pissing bed 48 Poison 9 Reins running 38. 45 Replection 32 Sciatica 72 Seed to increase 34 Shyngles 5. 47. 67 Side ache 88 Skabs 42. 79 Sleep to 'cause 24 Spitting blood 11 matter 49 Sores 92 Stitch 94 Stomach bad 12. 25. 39 60. 91 ache 8 swollen 8 Stinging 31 Stone 30 Strangury 30 Swell 28. 92 Sweat to 'cause 16 Swooning 36 Teeth ache 92 foul 8 Stink 8. 92 Tetter 86 Throat rough 28 Tongue rough 17 Venom 20 Voice ill 89 Vomit blood 11 matter Vomiting much 11. 15. 26. 50. 55. 68 75. 81 Urine stopped 9 37 women's griefs 17 Worms 1. 9 11. 20. 33. 50. 62. 70. 83. ¶ Myrhis. MYrhis or mockcheruill. The root drunk with wine provoketh the terms, voideth the seconds and dead birth, and purgeth women after their deliverance: it provoketh urine, & is good against all venomous bitings. 2 The same boiled in the broth of flesh, doth cleanse the breast from phlegm and all corruption, and is very good for such as be lean & unlusty, or falling into a consumption. 3 It is good to be drunk with wine in the plague time, for they that have drunk it three or four times shall not be infected with the plague. 4 seeth it in drink to help the Ptysicke. 5 Some steep the sliced root in white wine all night, & drink it in the morning with sugar, and so it giveth three or four stools or sieges. 6 The juice with powder of Allom killeth the canker in the mouth or throat. Belly bound 5 Bitings venom. 1 Breast cleansing 2 Consumption 2. 4 Dead child 1 Phlegm 2 Flowers stopped 1 canker 6 Leanness 2 Mouth canker 6 Plague 3 Phthisic 4 Purgation 5 Seconds 1 Throat canker 6 urine stopped 1 ¶ Milfoyle. MIlfoile or Yarrowe: The decoction thereof doth cure the bloody flux and all other laskes, and the excessive flux of the terms, being also applied, or the suffumigation of the decoction thereof received up into the natural place. 2 Stamp it and apply it to wounds to stop the blood, to keep it from inflammation and swelling, and to cure them, and to stop bleeding at the Nose. 3 seeth it in wine by itself, or with wound herbs, to heal wounds and bitings, and to dissolve bruised blood. 4 It killeth worms, and expelleth poison out of the body, and helpeth the ache of the belly. 5 Use it in salves and plasters to cleanse, dry and heal sores. 6 Stamp the green herb and apply it to heal up wounds as if they were sowed up. 7 Stamp it and apply it to stop the terms, it is a secret experience amongst women. 8 Teethache, put it in with Butter. 9 Drink it with vinegar against the stone, stopping of the Urine, and to dissolve bruised blood. 10 Drink the juice fasting to withstand drunkenness. 11 Bloody flux, drink the juice of it and Planten with wine or ale. 12 Fluxes, stamp it and drink it every four and twenty hours. 13 The juice with oil rubbed, causeth curled hair, & with honey it causeth hair to grow. 14 Megrem, drink the juice of Yarrow three days in May, with marigolds, Balsamin and Auens, of each like much. 15 Wounds general, put in the juice & apply the herb. 16 Restorative, mix the juice with wheat flower and yolks of eggs, and bake cakes thereof & eat them thrice aday. 17 Reins griefs, drink the juice with vinegar. 18 Belly grinding, drink the juice of it and Planten ana with warm water. 19 Emeralds, stample it and apply it warm. 20 Worms in the flesh, stamp it & parietary with a little salt, and apply them twice or thrice. 21 Fundament fig, stamp it and Polypody of the oak & drink them with ale. 22 Wounds bleeding, mix powder of it & of Bole armoniak with the white of an egg, & apply it. 23 Ears worms, put in the juice. 24 Emeralds, drink the juice of Yarrowe, Mouseare and Betony often, of each like much. 25 Vomit to stop, drink the juice with wine. 26 Reins grief, drink the juice of it & Centory with vinegar, and anoint the back with Agrippa. 27 Teeth ache, sup the juice often, but swallow it not down. 28 Nose bleeding, drink it or smell to it. 29 Emerods' flowing & pain, drink it and apply it. 30 Fever quarten, drink it with wine before the fit. 31 Bloody flux, stamp it with as much Planten, and drink it with read wine three or four days. 32 Emeralds bleeding, drink the juice of it and cast on powder of Garlic, & they will die. 33 Eyes dropping and tears, stamp it with a little incense, and steep it in white wine seven days, than strain it and put in a drop or two at night into the eyes. 34 Back pain, put the juice into a glass close luted, and set it into an Oven to boil, & there will be an oil: wherewith, anoint the back. 35 Vomiting, stamp it & drink it with wine warm. 36 Teeth ache, eat the roots fasting. 37 Emerods' bleeding, stamp the roots and drink them with vinegar, or stamp the herb & apply it often hot. 38 Vomiting, boil it in wine till the third part be wasted, & drink it: some put Lovage and Rue to it. 39 Pissing blood, drink the juice with vinegar. 40 Deliverance to cause, gather it on S. john Baptists day at sun setting, & let a woman hold it in her hand to her right shoulder blade, and take it away as soon as the child is borne. 41 Bleeding to stop, drink the powder of Garlic. 42 Urine stopped, drink the juice with old ale often. 43 Stamp it with swine's grease, to heal wounds and cuts. 44 The same is good for the breast and side, and for them that cannot piss. 45 Drink the juice with vinegar to help a wound marvelously that hath taken cold. 46 Stamp it with Butter to heal wounds well. 47 Drink the juice with water to comfort the stomach and help digestion. 48 To help many griefs of the body, drink the powder or juice of it with wine or good ale. 49 It helpeth against heart burning. 50 Head ache, stamp it and apply it. 51 Bitings of mad dogs, stamp it with wheat and apply it. 52 Drink it nine days, to stop the whites. 53 Veins or sinews cut, stamp it and apply it, and keep it too three days. 54 Bloody flux, drink the juice. Ache (See Back. Back ache 17. 26. 34 Belly ache 4. 13 Bitings 3 venom 51 Blood to stop 2. 22. 41 Bloody flux 1. 11. 31. 54 Breast griefs 44 Bruise 3. 9 Consumption 16 Deliverance 40 Digestion 47 Drunkenness 10 Ears worm 23 Eyes dropping 33 Emerods' 19 24. 29. 32. 37 Fever quarten 30 Fig 21 Flowers stopped 1. 7 Fluxes 1. 12 Fundament fig 21 Heart burning 49 Headache 50 megrem 14 Hair to curl 13 to grow 13 ad dog 51 Nose bleeding 2. 28 Pissing blood 39 Poison 4 Reins grief 17. 26 Restorative 16 sinews cut 53 Sickness general 48 Side pain 44 Sores 5 Stomach weak 47 Stone 9 Teeth ache 8. 27. 36 Vein cut 53 Vomiting 25. 35. 38 urine stopped 9 42. 44 Whites 52 Worms 4 in the flesh 20 Wounds 2. 3. 5. 6. 15. 22. 43. 45. 46 ¶ Mirabolanes. Mirabolanes' citrine, or yellow, purge choler, and are good for hot complexions being steeped in vergice of Grapes, or in Rose water, or the juice of Fennell, they scour the eyes, and take away their heat. 2 The fine powder of them stop the watering and overmuch moisture of the eyes. 3 Mixed with Mastic, they heal sores. 4 They may be taken in gross powder from two drams to five drams, and in infusion from five drams to twenty drams. 5 They make not a man weak, but rather strengthen the stomach and all the inner parts. 6 They keep a man long young, and 'cause a good colour, and sweet breath. 7 They cause mirth, & voided sadness. 8 They comfort the liver, & are good for the trembling of the heart. 9 They are good for the Emerods', and quench the heat of choler. 10 Myrabolanes Chebuly preserved in syrup & eaten, preserve youth excellently well. 11 Mirabolan citrine well conserved, 'cause one to piss well, one of them taken every morning. Breath stink 6 Choler 1. 8 Eyes heat 1 running 2 Heart trembling 10 Liver griefs 8 Melancholy 7 Mirth to 'cause 7 Purgation 1. 4 Sores 3 Stomach weak 5 Urine stopped 11 Youth to preserve 6. 10 ¶ Myrtle. MYrtle berries are very good for them that spit vomit, or piss blood, for they stop all issues of blood, & the terms, the lask and the sores and ulcers of the bladder: the dried juice of Myrtles serveth well for all the aforesaid, and also for the weak and moist stomach and venomous bitings. 2 The decoction of the berries maketh the hair black, and keepeth it from falling, it cureth all the evil sores of the head, and cleanseth the same from scurf and scales being often washed therewith. 3 Wash outward ulcers & sores with wine wherein the seeds have been boiled. 4 It is good to be laid to the inflammation of the eyes that matter and run, with a little fine flower. 5 Take it aforehand to prevent drunkenness. 6 Sat over the decoction of the seeds and leaves to stop the flowers, and wash therewith members that be out of joint and burstings, to strengthen them. 7 Apply the green leaves to moist sores, and to falling down of humours in any part. 8 The same with oil of Roses or such like is good against consuming and rotten sores and ulcers, wild fire, spreading tetters, and such like hot scabs and bushes. 9 The dry leaves applied with convenient ointments or salves, do heal the exulceration of the nails, and take away the sweat of all the body. Flux, drink the juice with wine. 10 Wash filthy sores of the privities with wine of the decoction of it. 11 It cleanseth the eyes. 12 The syrup of Myrtles is good for the cough and exulceration of the lungs, & is thus made: take the juice of Myrtles well strained vi. li. boil it with iii li. of pure sugar, with a gentle fire, to the thickness of honey or a syrup & then use it. 13 Heat the seed in wine & strain it, and drink it to comfort the weak brain. 14 The broth of Myrtles healeth the white morphue. 15 The powder of the leaves is good to be cast upon agnailes, and white flaws, & the stinking sweat of the flanks & armpits, and the sweeting of the cardiak passion. 16 The raw or burned leaves with a treat made of wax, healeth burning agnailes, and white flaws. 17 The broth of Myrtles or Mirt seeds with butter, stoppeth the sweeting too much. 18 The leaves comfort the heart, and take away the trembling thereof. 19 The juice is good for the burning of the bladder & kidneys. 20 An emplaster of Myrtles is good for the piles and the falling down of the fundament. 21 Let not the Apothecaries, Physicians, nor Surgeons use the shrub growing in fens, called galtes in stead of the right Myrtle, but procure those leaves that come out of Italy. 22 Chafing & galling, cast on powder of Myrtles. 23 Whelks read or white, anoint with oil of Myrtles. 24 Sweated stinking, use the water or decoction inward & outward. Agnailes 15. 16 Bitings venomous 1 Bladder heat 19 Bloody flux 1 Bones broken 6 Brain weak 13 Bruise 6 Bursten 6 Defensive 7 Drunkenness 5 Eyes griefs 4. 11 Emerods' 20 Flowers to stop 1. 6 Fluxes 1. 9 Fundament fallen 20 Heart feeble 18. trembling 18 Head sores 2 Hair falling 2. to be black 2 Humours falling 7 joints out 6 Lungs griefs 12 Morphue white 14 Kidneys heat 19 Nails ulcers 9 piles 20 Pissing blood 1 Privities sores 10 Pushes 8. 23 Scabs 8 Sores 3. 8. 10. moist 7. Spitting blood 1 Stomach raw 1 Sweat to void 9 15. 17. 24 Tetters 8 Ulcers 3. 8 Vomiting blood 1 White flaws 15. 16 Wild fire 8 ¶ Myrrh. Myrrh. Teethach, hold it under thy tongue, and eat Sage every day twice or thrice. (See Aloes.) 2 Ears apost. and running, seeth it in oil Olive and put it in warm. 3 The fume thereof drieth and refresheth the brain. 4 Swallow as much as a bean for the old cough, shortness of breath, and pain of the sides. 5 The fume thereof cleanseth and openeth the matrixe and draweth down the terms and birth. 6 It increaseth flesh in ulcers. 7 To cause deliverance, drink as much as a good nut with good wine. 8 Pissing bed, and for the griefs of the stomach, seeth it in good wine and drink it. 9 Fundament fallen, cast powder of Myrrh, Aloes, Galls & Frankincense of each like much. 10 Head scall, shave it & wash it and cast on powder of Myrrh, Aloes, and Frankincense. 11 Impost. drink powder of Myrrh with wine. 12 Canker when it is killed, heal up the sore with powder of Myrrh. 13 Matrix fallen, drink powder of a Heart's horn, Bay leaves and Myrrh of each like much with wine or ale. 14 Noli me tangere in the nose or face, mix Ginger with the juice of Rue and anoint. 15 Yard bushes, straw on powder of Myrrh, and stamp the leaves of greent Mints and apply them. 16 Worms to kill, take Myrrh and Aloes cicatrin. in powder. 17 A powder incarnative to be thrown into wounds, take Myrrh three drams, Aloes iiii. drams, Olibanum two drams, but if you suspect bleeding, use Bolarmon. with oil of roses. 18 Fistula or canker, mix the milky juice of tithymal with fresh swine's grease, melt them, and put thereto powder of Myrrh, and put in tents to the bottom to kill them quite. 19 Worms, drink powder of Aloes, brimstone and Myrrh, or for children, anoint the stomach with aqua vitae, and cast on powder of Myrrh. 20 To fasten the gums and lose teeth, mix a little Myrrh with wine and oil, and wash therewith. Breath to be sweet, chew Myrrh. 21 Myrrh preserveth from putrefaction, both the entrails and all outward sores, wounds & ulcers. Falling evil, to preserve thee from it, smell to Myrrh daily, and also drink thereof six grains with Betony water, and so it helpeth the griefs of the lungs, killeth worms, and is good against the yellow water, but for worms apply it also to the belly. 22 It is good for the ulcers of the eyes, and glueth together broken pieces of the bones of the head. It taketh away spots of the eyes, and is good in medicines for the old cough and shortness of breath. 23 Ears running, put in the gall of a goat, woman's milk, honey and Myrrh tempered together. Gums rotten, rub them with Myrrh. 24 The fume thereof taken at the mouth purgeth the head. 25 Breasts and ribs pain, wash with water that Myrrh and gum Arabik have been sodden in. 26 Spitting blood and matter, take two drams of Leeksseeds and Myrrh. 27 Belly torments, drink Myrrh & Treacle with Malmsey. 28 Flowers stopped, drink powder of Myrrh, and Southrenwood with wine. Bellyache 27 Brain weak 3. 24 Breasts sore 25 Breath short 4. 22. stink 20. Cough 22. old 4. Deliverance 5. 7 Ears griefs 2. running 23. Eyes ulcers 22. spots 22. Face noli me tangere 14 Falling evil 21 Fistula 18 Flesh to grow 6. 17 Flowers stopped 5. 28 Fundament fallen 9 Gums rotten 20. 23 Headbroken 22. purging 24. scall 10. Impost. 11 canker 12. 18 Lungs griefs 21 Matrix to cleanse 5. falling 13. Noli me tangere 14 Pissing bed 8 Putrefaction 21 Ribs grief 25 Side grief 4. 25 Sores 6. 18. 21 Spitting blood and matter 26. Stomach griefs 8 Teethache 1 lose 20. Ulcers 6. 18. 21 Worms 16. 19 21 Yard bushes 15 Yellow water 21 ¶ Millet. MIllet. Parch it in a frying pan, and apply it in a bag to the torment of the belly, or to any other ache or pain, and any superfluous moisture, and to comfort the brain. 2 For want of corn bread may be made of it, but it bindeth the belly and provoketh urine and nourisheth little. 3 roast it, and stamp it, and make broth therewith with milk to stop the flux. 4 Flowers to stop, apply a hot bag of it to the hips. Aches general 1 Belly ache 1 Brain to comfort 1 Flowers to stop 4 Fluxes 3 Urine stopped 2 ¶ mistletoe. mistletoe. The leaves with the fruit and tar and wax, do consume and soften hard swellings & botches about the secret parts and other rebellious impostumes and cold swellings. 2 The same leaves and fruit with Frankincense, do cure all old ulcers and sores and great corrupt and evil impostumes. 3 And with Arsenic, they cure felons and naughty sores which rise in the toes and fingers ends. 4 The seed stamped with wine leeses, doth waste and cure the hardness of the milt being applied to the side. 5 The wood of that which groweth in oaks, is good against the falling sickness & the apoplexia being hanged about the neck. Lay mistletoe to the head to draw forth evil humours. 6 Drink it for the falling evil. 7 Missel birdlime, hath power to soften & ripen apostumes with rosin and wax. 8 mistletoe of the oak, hasill, or pearetree gathered, so that it touch not the ground, made into powder and drunk with wine, is good against the falling sickness, and so is beads made thereof and hanged about the neck, or put in a silver tablet and hanged about the neck. 9 The juice of any kind of mistletoe put into the ears doth cleanse them, soften them, and take away their pain. 10 mistletoe stamped and applied, driveth away knots, kernels and swellings. 11 Mixed with chalk & dregss of wine, it taketh away the roughness of the nails. 12 With vnslaked lime it draweth forth corns. 13 Drink the juice with ravensegs to help the falling-evill, or gather it in March, and hung it about thy neck. 14 To cause conception, drink it with wine before or after the terms. 15 Head turning and pain, apply mistletoe. 16 Gout, boil it in water and bathe therewith. Agnailes 12 Apoplexia 5 Apostumes 1. 2. 3. 10. 12. Botches 1. 3 Conception 14 Corns 12 Ears griefs 9 Falling evil 5. 6. 8. 13 Felons 3 Gout 16 Head ache 15. gid. 15. griefs 5. Hardness 1. 10 Kernels 10 Knots 10 Milt hard 4 Nails rough 11 Privities griefs 1 Sores 2. 3 Swell 10. 12 Ulcers 2. 3 White flaws 3 ¶ Monkshood. MOnkshood. The powder of the seed and root mixed with oil and anointed killeth louse nits and scurf. They are strong poison to be taken inward. Lice, nits and scurf 1 ¶ Mockgelover. Mockgelover, or Dwarf gentian, chop it small, etc. (See Dwarf gentian.) ¶ morel, Nightshade, etc. MOrell, Nighshade, or Petymorell. The green leaves stamped with parched barley mess, is marvelous good against S. Anthony's fire, corrupt & running ulcers, and all hot inflammations, and so is the juice with oil of Roses, ceruse and litarge. 2 The same by itself is good against headache, the heat of the stomach, and all hot distemperance of the ears, eyes, liver, milt, and bladder, being stamped and applied. 3 The same with salt, dissolveth the apost. & swellings behind the ears called Parotides being applied. 4 The juice mixed with the white of an egg and applied to the forehead, is good against all inflammations, redness, rheums, fluxions, and all other hot diseases of the eyes. 5 Ears pain, drop in the juice. 6 Flowers to stop, apply it with cotton as a supposicer. 7 morel is good against all diseases and accidents which need cooling or restraining, tetters, hot scurf and scabs. 8 The juice drunk, doth help the yellow jaundice, the burning of choler, but if one be evil at ease after it, let him drink Oximell simplex, & put his finger into his mouth to vomit. 9 Felon, drink the juice of morel and Planten, and apply the herbs. 10 Lust to void, anoint the privities often with the juice of morel. 11 Sleep to cause, drink the juice of green Berries well clarified. 12 Hands itch and worms, anoint with juice of the less morel Berries. 13 Impost. in the stomach, liver or bowels, drink the juice of morel with a ptisand of barley to ripen it and destroy it. 14 Gomer passion, anoint thy yard and clotheses with Camphire and the juice of morel. 15 Lust to void, anoint the yard with the juice of great Morel, houseleek & vinegar. 16 Sores rankling in the hand, apply the juice of morel with a possit curd. 17 Frenzy, apply the juice with vinegar to the temples. 18 Eyes ulcers, put in the juice. 19 jaundice, drink the juice. 20 Fevers hot, seeth it & apply it to the stomach. 21 For any thing fallen into the ear, put in the juice. 22 Emerods' and swelling of the fundament, heat morel on a tilestone and apply it. 23 Fundament falling, stamp morel with as much Houndstong, and seeth it in ale, and drink it, & stamp Garlic, and fill the orifice with it, & it will draw it in & heal it. 24 Wounds aching, burning, & rankling, mix the juice of morel & Planten, & Smallach, with honey, barley meal, or wheat flower, & whites of eggs, and apply it cold. 25 Pety morel, the leaves, and branches, & fruit, are best green, they are good for stopping of the milt & liver, & for the yellow jaundice, the juice drunk with a little Rhubarb. 26 Impost. in any part, seeth the juice with barley water & drink it. 27 Yard chafed, boil the juice with Linseed & barrow's grease, and apply it hot. It helpeth also the soreness of the yard & women's breasts. 28 Ache or gouts in the arms or bones, mix Morel with oil, & let it stand ix. days, then strain it & anoint therewith by the fire. 29 Nightshade for biting of a mad dog, seeth it with milk & strain it & drink it with sugar: proved. 30 Burn Nightshade, & blow the powder into the mouth for the stink thereof. 31 Guts pain, seeth it in water with ashes & apply it. 32 Hair not to fall, seeth the roots with Mustardseed in wine & wash therewith. 33 Ears noise, put in the juice of the leaves. 34 Eyes scum white or read drop in the juice. Aches general 24. 28 Apost. 3 Arms ache 28 Belly ache 31 Bitings venomous 29 Bladder hot 2 Bones ache 28 Breasts sore 27 Choler 8 Ears griefs 2. 5. 21. 33 Eyes griefs 24. 18. 34 Emerods' 22 Felon 9 Fevers hot 20 Flowers to stop 6 Fundament fallen 23. swollen 22. Frenzy 17 Gomer pas. 14 Gout 28 Hands itch 12. worms 12. Head ache 2 Hair falling 32 Hot griefs 2 jaundice 8. 19 25 Impost. 13. 26 Inflam. 1 Liver hot 2. stopped 25. Lust to void 10. 15 Mad 17 Mad dog 29 Milt hot 2. stopped 25. Mouth stink 30 Neck swollen 3 Rankling 16 Reinss running 14 S. Anthony's fire 1 Sleep to 'cause 11 Scabs 7 Scurf 7 Sores 15 Stomach hot 2 Swell 3 Tetters 7 Ulcers hot 1 Wounds 24 Yard chafed 27. sores 27. ¶ Morsus diaboli. MOrsus diaboli. seeth the herb and root in wine and drink it against all griefs that Scabious serveth for, and also against the plague, and to dissolve bruised blood. 2 seeth the root in wine and drink it against the pain of the mother, and against all poison. 3 Stamp the green herb with the root and apply it to ripen and heal carbuncles, botches, and plague sores. 4 Mix the distilly water, or the juice with Vitriall, to dry up and heal all bushes, whelks, moist scabs, etc. 5 Eat the root by it self, or drink the wine of the decoction of it, for the pain of the mother, and to save a man from the plague or pestilent air. 6 Drink the powder to kill worms. 7 Stamp the herb and apply it to bruisings and bite. 8 Throat squincy or apostume, seeth it in milk or water and gargarise therewith as hot as may be suffered. 9 Side stitch, drink the water or decoction thereof. 10 Fevers in children, hung the root and herb about their necks, and let the nurse drink powder of crystal, or steep it in wine and drink it. Apostume 3 Bitings 7 Botches 3 Bruises 1. 7 Carbuncles 3 children's fever 10 Mother 2. 5 Plague 1. 5 Plague sore 3 Poison 2 Pushes 4 Side stitch 9 Squincy 8 Scabs 4 Stitch 9 Throat swollen 8 Worms 6 ¶ Moss. MOsse. Flowers to stop, sit in the decoction of it. 2 Nose bleeding, put in Moss. 3 It is good to be put into all salves, ointments and oils that be astringent. 4 Moss of the Cedar is best, then that of the Poplar, and then that of the Oak. 5 Moss of the earth sodden in wine and drunk breaketh and expelleth the stone. 6 Stamp it and seeth it in wine and apply it to any ache or gout. 7 The same put into a vessel of wine and stopped in a few days restoreth the wine again being dead, (see in all several trees.) 8 Matrix white flux, foment with the decoction of Moss and trees. 9 Ache of knees or joints, fry Moss of trees with butter and apply it. Ache 6. 9 Gout 6 joints ache 9 Knees ache 9 Flowers to stop 1 Matrix flux 8 Nose bleeding 2 Stone 5 Wine dead 7 Whites 8 ¶ Motherwort. MOtherwort: bruise it and apply it to wounds to keep them from impostumation & inflammation, to stop the blood, and to cure them. 2 It is of wonderful force against the griefs of the heart, it helpeth cramps and palsies, it killeth worms in the body, it cleanseth the breast from phlegm, it openeth cold obstructions, it provoketh urine and terms, the juice or decoction being drunk. 3 A spoonful of the powder of it drunk, helpeth the hard labours of women, or seethe it with read nettles in wine and drink it. 4 It is good for the falling evil. 5 Matrix suffoc. drink the juice, or drink the juice of it with Feverfue, with gross pepper in old ale, and be whole. Cramps 2 Deliverance 3 Falling evil 4 Flowers stopped 2 Heart griefs 2 Matrix suffoc. 5 Palsy 2 Urine stopped 2 Worms 2 Wounds 1 ¶ Mouseare. MOuseare: seeth the root and leaves, and drink the broth to cool all wounds inward & outward, and also hernies, ruptures, and burstings. 2 Powder of the leaves cureth wounds. 3 The juice of the greater Mouseare put into the ears, cleanseth them from all filth and ache. 4 The same used in meats, cleareth the sight, and cureth the redness of the eyes. 5 Gather the root in May, and use it against all ruptures, wounds, and the whites and reds in women, and to heal a broken head. 6 If it be given any way to horses, they cannot be hurt in shooeing. 7 Teethache, put in the root. 8 Fundament fig, stamp it with yarrow, Planten, and morel, of each like much, & drink it with water. 9 Stamp it and strain it with stolen ale, and give it a wounded man, if he keep it, he shall live, or else not. 10 Fistula to heal, gather it kneeling & saying the Lord's prayer, and drink the juice 9 times, and be whole. 11 For all evils in the stomach, stamp it with agrimony, Barrow's grease & vinegar, and fry them together, & apply it to the back as hot as may be suffered. 12 Skabs dry, seeth it and herb Benit, of each like much in running water, & wash therewith. 13 Voice to be clear, drink the juice of Mouseare with wine or ale. 14 Emerods', drink the juice of Mouseare, Betony, & yarrow often. 15 Back ache, (see in agrimony.) 16 jaundice, seeth it in wine or water, and drink it. squinsy, drink Mouseare. 17 The juice healeth all wounds. For the stone & stopping of the urine, stamp Mouseare and Hilwort, of each half a handful, with ix. quick Bees, and strain all together with a little white wine or stolen ale, and drink it, for it is excellent. 18 For the wind chollike, stamp it with as much Prosper, and seeth them in a double vessel with white wine, and strain it and drink it with sugar. Backeache 15 Belly-ache 18 Bursten 1. 5 colic 18 Ears griefs 2 Eyes griefs 2 Emerods' 14 Fig in fundament 8 Fistula 9 Flowers to stop 5 Fundament fig 8 Horse grief 6 jaundice 16 Skabs 12 Squincy 16 Stomach griefs 11 Teethache 7 Stone 17 Urine stopped 17 Voice ill 13 Whites 5 Windiness 18 Wounds general 12. 17 ¶ Mugwort. MVgwort: stomach pain, stamp it with oil of sweet Almonds and apply it. 2 joints ache and shaking, anoint with the juice, and oil of Roses. 3 It helpeth also the drawing and shrinking of the sinews. 4 Put it into Beer vessels to keep it from souring. 5 Carry it about thee to keep thee from weariness and venomous bitings. 6 seeth it in oil, till the third part of the oil be wasted, & anoint any ache or gout therewith to put it away quickly. 7 Seethe it in water & apply it to a woman's navel and thighs when she is in labour, or apply it raw, that she may have speedy deliverance of the child and seconds, but if it tarry long, the matrix will follow. 8 Hands trembling, steep it in Rose water, & wash therewith. 9 Backeache, stamp it with Egrimony, Betony, old grease, and vinegar or vergis, and apply it three or iiii. times. 10 Sat over the fume of it, to bring down the flowers, dead birth; and seconds. 11 Mugwort helpeth the suffocation & inflammation of the matrix, breaketh the stone, provoketh terms & urine that is stopped. 12 Apply it to the neither part of the belly to provoke the terms, or put it into the matrix, or the juice thereof with myrrh, or drink three drams of the tops & leaves for the same purpose, and to cleanse the matrixe. 13 Stamp it & spurge with oil of sweet Almonds, & apply it to the stomach for the pain thereof, & to bring health. 14 It is good in women's baths, it comforteth, cleanseth, & warmeth the matrix, & breaketh the stone. 15 Stamp it with swine's grease, & apply it to the ache of the feet coming by weariness. 16 Drink two ounces of the juice with white wine for the grief of the bladder & the strangury. 17 Drink the powder thereof with honeyed wine or water to avoid the ache of the entrailss or bowels. 18 Mix the juice with swine's grease & vinegar, & apply it to the ache of the hips three days together. 19 The smoke of it maketh children joyful, and driveth away the incursions of the evil. 20 For ache and swelling of the sinews, stamp it with oil, & apply it. 21 For great ache of the feet, eat the roots thereof with honey, it is scarce to be credited how great virtue it hath. 22 Anoint with the juice & oil of Roses against the fever. 23 The herb being rubbed, smelleth like unto Laser. Use it in broths or salads for the colic. 24 The powder thereof and of Horehound strawed on the Emerods', healeth them. 25 Drink it with wine for the yellow jaundice, to comfort the stomach, and to 'cause a good colour. 26 Bake wheat flower with the juice of it, and eat it for the bloody flux. 27 To expel gravel & stone, drink every day half a cupful of the juice. 28 Flowers stopped, seethe it in wine, & drink it, or stamp it and apply it to the navel & thighs. 29 Fever quarten, drink it with oil three days. 30 Mix the juice of that which hath but one stalk with oil of Roses, & anoint the backebone & pulses therewith to heal the fever. 31 Weariness, drink the root at night. 32 Deliverance, apply a plaster of Mugwort, to the left thigh, & so up to the navel raw, and also seethe thereof in white wine & drink it. 33 Leapry, boil the juice with swine's grease, and put thereto some brimstone and anoint. 34 Mother suffocate, slive great store of it downwards, boil it to pap in running water, and wash therewith from the navel to the shares and grains as hot as may be suffered, and as often as need is, but not above the navel, and at thrice doing it will be well. 36 women's griefs, drink Mugwort with Ale. (See in Egrimony, Betony, Cloves, Motherwort, Bursa pastoris etc. 36 Flowers stopped, seethe it in oil, and apply it to the matrix after letting blood, or seeth it in any wine, and drink it, or stamp it, and apply it green in the night, or apply it to the navel. 37 For the strangury in a cold cause, and pain in the bladder, drink two drams of the juice. 38 For women's griefs after deliverance, boil the yolks of Eggs in wine if she hat no fever, or else in water, if she have a fever, and stamp it with the juice of Mugwort, and Cumminseede, and apply it: proved. 39 Memory to be good, lay it in wine, and distil it, and drink it fasting. Breast and ribs griefs general, bruise and apply it and be whole in three days. 40 Belly ache, stamp it & apply it: or drink the powder thereof for that grief, and many others with wine and honey. 41 Backeache, see in agrimony. 42 Mother suffoc. slip great store of the leaves downwards, and seeth them tender in running water and wash therewith from the navel downwards, but not upwards when you go to bed three nights and be whole. 43 Feet pain, (See Mallow.) 44 Gout pain, seeth a handful in sweet oil olive, till the third part be wasted, and anoint therewith. 45 colic, seeth it with Sage and Smallach, of each like much in good wine, till the third part be wasted, than strain it and drink 4. or v. ounces at once, as often as need is. 46 Feet pain, mix the leaves and flowers with swine's grease, and apply it. 47 Feet chafed and scalded with travel, stamp it & fry it with Barrow's grease, and apply it. 48 Deliverance, drink it & savoury with water hot. Fevers hot, anoint the pulses and plants with the juice. 49 Flowers stopped, stamp it with as much Rue with oil de Bay, & put it in as a pessary in a linen bag: proved. 50 Gout, apply the leaves with black soap and wheat flower. 51 Stone, seeth it with as much Parietary in a pottle of white wine to the one half, and apply it to the navel as hot as may be suffered. 52 Mugwort is good against all griefs of women. 53 Stamp it with tallow & apply it to the ache & soreness of the feet. 54 Keep it in the house, & no wicked spirit shall come there. 55 Stamp it with running water, & use it for the ache of the belly and many other griefs. 56 Stomach griefs general, drink the seeds. 57 Mugwort cleanseth the mother, causeth terms & conception. 58 To cause deliverance of a dead child, stamp it & apply it cold to the womb. Aches gen. 2. 6. 9 15. 17. 18 20. 21. 43. 44. 46. 50. 53. inward 17 Backeache 9 41 Belly-ache 40. 55. 17 Bitings venom. 5 Bladder griefs 16 Bewitched 19 54 Bloody-fluxe 26 Breast griefs 39 colic 24. 45 Colour ill 25 Conception 57 Dead child 58 Deliverance 7. 10. 32. 48 Drink to keep 4 Emerods' 24 Feete-ache 15. 21. 43. 46 47. 53 Fevers 22. 30. 48. quar. 29. 30 Flowers stopped 10. 12. 28. 36. 49. 57 Gouts 44. 50 Gravel 27 Hands shaking 2. 8 jaundice 25 joynts-ache 2 Leapry 33 Memory 39 Mirth 19 Mother suffoc. 11. 14. 34. 42. cleansing. 12. 14. 57 inflamed 11. 14 Ribs griefs 39 Sciatica 18 Sinews shrunk 3 ache 20 Seconds 7. 10 Shaking 2. 8 Skabs 33 Sickness gen. 13. 17. 55. 56 Stomach bad 25. 56. pain 1. 13. 17 Stone 11. 14. 27. 51 Strangury 16. 37 Urine stopped 11. 16. 37 Weariness 5. 15. 31. 47 women's griefs 14. 35. 38. 52 ¶ Mulberry. MVlbery: the green & unripe fruit dried, do stop the belly, the bloody-flixe, & vomiting, being drunk with read wine. 2 The ripe berries taken fasting, do loosen the belly, but after meat they are soon corrupted in the stomach, and cause windiness. Of the juice of ripe Mulberries is made a confection in manner of a syrup, very good for ulcers & hot swellings of the tongue, mouth, and almonds of the throat. 3 Burn, apply the leaves with oil. 4 Seethe the bark of the root in water, and drink it to open the liver and milt, to loosen the belly, and expel worms both long and flat. 5 Teethache, hold the decoction of the leaves and roots in thy mouth. Skotch the root about the latter end of harvest, and there will come forth a gum or juice exceeding good for the toothache, and to drive away all swellings & lumps, and will purge the belly. It is to be had under the root on the morrow after it is skotcht. 6 The fresh leaves are good in meats. 7 Stamp them with vinegar to heal burnings and skalding. The juice looseneth the belly, & taken two. ounces & a half it is good for the bitings of the field spider. 8 The leaves are a sovereign medicine for the squinsy & strangling. 9 The bark is a treacle against the poison of Henbane. 10 When the tree beginneth to bud, the chief cold of winter is past. 11 Put ripe Mulberries into wine, if they swim, the wine is pure, if they sink, it is mixed with water. 12 Drink the powder of Mulberries to stop spitting of blood and the lask. 13 Eyes dull, put in powder of the leaves. 14 Teethache, seeth the rind of the root in the juice of a cluster of grapes to the one half, and wash therewith, and they will never ache, or seeth the scrape of the root in wine, and hold it in thy mouth. 15 Apost. to break, drink very ripe Mulberries, and also apply them. Apostume 15 Belly bound 2. 7 Bitings venom. 7 Bloody-fluxe 1 Burn 3. 7 Eyes dull 13 Fluxes 1. 12 Liver stopped 4 Lumps 5 Milt stopped 4 Mouth grief 2 Poison 9 Purgation 5 Scalding 7 Spitting blood 12 squinsy 8 Swell 5 Teethache 5. 14 Throat griefs 2. 8 Vomiting 1 Wine to try 11 Worms 4 ¶ Mullin. MVllin: seethe it in wine, & skom it & drink it, & also wash the Emerods' therewith to heal them. 2 It is good for the flux. 3 Bruse, wash the sore, and anoint with the juice, & apply the bruised leaves 24. hours to heal it speedily. 4 Emerods', stamp the small leaves, & fry them with sheeps suet, & apply them in a linen bag twice a day, & keep it warm. Apply powder of Mullin with the juice of Horehound to break their swelling. 5 Horse cough, and broken wound, give him powder of it to drink in his water: Gentian will do the like. 6 Warts, stamp the flowers between two stones, and apply them, or apply the distilled water of them. 7 Eyes read and dropping, wash with the water of Mullin. 8 Matrix windy, apply the juice of Mullin and Rapes with Barley meal. 9 Cankers, burn it and apply the powder. 10 Burn, bathe it with the water distilled in a Limbeck, or with barbers lee, or anoint it presently with honey. 11 Scab and itch, distil the flowers & leaves in a Limbeck, and use the water with clouts. 12 Wounds to close up, stamp the flowers, and apply them. 13 Emerods', sit over the fume of the roots, or stamp Mullin, and seeth it in good read wine and apply it: or mix the juice with as much Barrow's grease by little and little, and anoint therewith warm: or apply Mallows sodden in running water hot. 14 Bleeding in any place, stamp it and apply it to the branches of the teats. 15 Belly lose, drink one knot of the root of it. 16 Emerods', seeth it in wine, and apply it, or apply the rust or skalles of iron, with the juice of it, or apply the juice mixed with Antimonium and silk. 17 Tenesmus, seeth it and stamp it, and apply it to the fundament, or sit over the fume of it. 18 Fever tertian, put the juice of it into the nostrils before the fit. 19 Fever quarten, drink the juice before the fit. 20 Bitings venomous & stingings, put in the juice, and apply the rest. 21 Fundament falling, fry it with sheeps tallow, and mix it with oil Olive, and apply it hot. 20 Gout cold, seeth it in wine and apply it. 23 Wounds of sword, or staff, wash it with white wine warm, & put in the juice, and apply the substance, and bind it fast to a whole day. 24 Emerods', boil two leaves with fresh butter in a sawser till they be soft, & apply them hot as may be suffered. 25 Flowers stopped, bind it to the soles of the feet, flowers to stop, bind it to the arm pits. 26 Fundament fig, an anodine infallible, stamp Mullin with as much salt, and apply it either to man or beast: proved. 27 Canker in the mouth or gums, seethe the roots in strong vinegar, and wash therewith two. or three times a day, and anoint it with alum & honey incorporated together. 28 Gout, seethe Mullin in wine, & apply it. Piles, seethe the leaves soft in water and mix them with May butter, and anoint therewith. 22 Leapry and falling of the hair, seeth it with Scabious in water, & bathe therewith. 30 Seethe the root in read wine & drink it to stop and heal the dangerous flux, & the bloody-flux. 31 For the cold cough & all ruptures, boil it in water & drink it. 32 Teethach & griefs of the mouth, seeth the root and gargarise therewith. 33 Dry Figs wrapped in Mullin leaves, may be long kept from corruption. 34 The leaves are good to wipe and cleanse the Emerods' withal. 35 Seethe the leaves in wine and wash the mouth therewith for the griefs thereof. 36 Stamp the leaves & juice, and apply it to any bruise or stroke 24. hours to heal it finely. 37 The leaves and flowers allayeth all ache both inward and outward. 38 Belly lose, drink the root. 39 The root sodden in read wine, or in a fever with water & drunk, helpeth the white flux, and is good against all ruptures, & fractures, bruises, griefs of the lungs, the cough, all inward impostumes, all aches, & inflammations. 40 Eyes inflamed, & likewise the fundament & privy parts, and for all botches and gouts, seethe the leaves and flowers in water, and apply them. 41 Use the distilled water into the eyes to stop their running. 42 Apply the same to all redness and pimples of the face, the shingles, S. Antony's fire, burnings, scabs, & leapry. 43 Stamp the herb in a leaden mortar with clarified honey, and put thereto wine and vinegar, and use it to heal ulcers & stinging of wasps, adders, & snakes. 44 Burn & skaldings apply the juice of the leaves with oil of linseed. 45 Fistula, put in the pith of the root. 46 Kings evil, seethe the flowers in vinegar, & gargarise therewith, & apply it. 47 The root, seed, or leaf sodden in wine and drunk, is good for all the griefs of the lungs, breasts, sides, and reins, and also casteth out of the flesh any thing therein fixed, as nail, thorn, or prick. 48 A good medicine for horses, kine, or swine, stamp Mullin, and put thereto Fenegreeke & Madder with warm Ale, and give it them with a horn or tunnel to cleanse and heal their lungs, and so to save many that otherways would die. 49 The leaves of that with the golden flowers sodden in water, are good for the swellings and inflammations of the eyes, and for sores and rottenness with honey or wine, but with vinegar they heal wounds. 50 The black Mullin with his pleasant yellow flowers, boiled in water or wine, is good against the diseases of the breast, lungs, spitting of rotten and corrupt matter. 51 The leaves of the same boiled with Rue, doth appease the pain of the side. 52 And the same boiled in water are good for the cold swellings, and the ulcers, and inflammations of the eyes. 53 And punned with honey and wine, they cure mortified ulcers, and with vinegar they cure the inflammation of wounds. 54 The golden flowers steeped in lee, coloureth the hair yellow, being often washed with it. 55 The seeds of Mullin is good to be drunk against burstings and falling out of joints, to cease the swelling and ache. Ache general 37. 39 55 Apostume 4 Backeache 47 Belly lose 15 Bitings venom. 20. 43 Bloody-fluxe 30 Blood to stop 14 Bones broken 39 Botches 4 Breast griefs 47. 50 Bruise 3. 36. 69 Bursten 31. 39 Burning 10. 42. 44 cattle sick 48 Cough 31. 39 Emerods' 1. 4. 13. 16. 24. 34 Eyes sore 7. 49. 52. inflamed 40. 49. running 41 Face deformed 42 Fever quarten 19 tertian 18 Figs to keep 33 Fistula 45 Flowers stopped 25 Fluxes 2. 38. 39 30 Fundament fallen 21 fig 26 inflamed 40 Gout 28. 40. 22 Hair falling 29 to be yellow 54 Horse cough 5 sick 48 Impostume 39 Inflammation 39 joints out 55 Itch 11 canker 9 Kings evil 46 Leapry 42. 29 Lungs griefs 39 47. 50 Matrix windy 8 Mouth griefs 32. 35 canker 27 Pimples 42 Pricks 47 Reins griefs 47 Saint Antony's fire 42 Side griefs 47. 51 Shingles 42 Skabs 11. 42 Scalding 44 Sores 43. 49. 53 Spitting matter 50 Stinging 20. 43 Swell 55 Teethache 32 Tenasmus 17 Warts 6 Wounds 3. 12. 23 49. 53 ¶ Mustardseed. MVstardseede: it may be kept v. years. 2 chew it, & hold it under thy tongue for the palsy thereof. 3 And for the palsy in any place, seeth a bag of the seeds in wine, and apply it especially in the beginning of the sickness. 4 Head to purge, provoke sneezing with the powder of it. Stinging, apply the seeds with vinegar. 5 The seeds do marvelously purge, break the stone, & comfort the stomach. 6 Stamp them with Elecampana, and apply them to apost. to ripen, break, and draw them without pain. 7 Gargoyle the seeds with water & honey, to help the blistering of the mouth and the squincy. 8 Dropsy, eat the seeds with Figs & Cummin. 9 Mix the seeds with Pellitory & Ginger, of each like much with roasted honey, and wash the mouth therewith, holding it therein a good while to purge the brain, & to void headache, and the falling of the roof of the mouth, and ulcers of the throat. 10 Mix meal of the seeds with honey, and make little balls of it, and swallow down thereof every morning to have a clear voice to sing in short time. 11 Chew the seeds to drawn phlegm and purge the head. 12 Honey with Mustard and vinegar together, is an excellent gargarism to purge the head, teeth, and throat. 13 Mustard is good against all the griefs of the lungs, stomach, phlegm, and rawness of the guts, & conducent food to the body, provoketh urine, helpeth the palsy, wasteth the quarten, drieth up moist rheums applied plasterwise to the head. 14 Honey and Mustard helpeth the cough, and is good for the falling sickness: but the common use of it is ill for the eyes, it is good against all cold passions of the belly. 15 sneezing with Mustardseed may be helped by holding bread to the nose. 16 Grinned Mustard with vinegar, and rub the plants of the feet therewith to help the Lethargy. 17 Lay 7. whole Eggs in vinegar till their shells be tender, and put thereto iiii. ounces of stamped Mustardseed, grind them together, and anoint therewith spots of the face to cleanse and heal them. 18 Boil Mustard with vinegar and pepper, and hold a spoonful in thy mouth, and walk up and down, and when it is cold, spit it out and take another to purge rheum. 19 The seed with vinegar is good against all venomous bitings. 20 The seeds ground with vinegar is a wholesome sauce for hard and gross meats either fish or flesh: for it helpeth digestion, warmeth the stomach, and provoketh appetite. 21 It is good in meats for them that be short wound, and stopped in the breast: for it ripeth and causeth to cast out raw phlegm from the stomach and breast. 22 The seeds chewed cleanseth the brain & helpeth the toothache, and so it doth mixed with meed and gargled. 22 Gargarise with honey, Mustard, & vinegar against the swelling of the vulva and almonds about the throat & root of the tongue, but if they be old and hard, then take the juice pressed out of the seed, & mix it with meed, and so it slaketh and consumeth such swellings & hardness. 24 Drink the seeds with honeyed water against the shake and fits of agues, and to provoke urine and the terms. 25 Sneeses with the seeds against the falling evil, and strangling of the mother. 26 Senuie draweth from the bottom of griefs & aches, and is good for the milt. 27 With vinegar it is good against all venomous bitings. 28 Stamp it with figs, and apply it to the humming and noise of the head and ears, and for deafness. 29 The juice of Senuie dried in the sun, and after dissolved in honey, cleareth the sight, and taketh away the roughness of the eyebrows. 30 Apply a plaster to the head of them that have the Lethargy and drowsy evil, to the sciatica, hardness of the milt, the dropsy of the belly, all cold griefs and diseases, especially when they are waxen old to bring into them the heat again, and to draw forth the cold humours. 31 Senuie with honey and new grease, or with a cerote of wax, cureth the naughty scurf and skabs of the head, which cause the hair to fall off. It skowreth the face from all freckles and spots, and taketh away blue marks that come of bruising. 32 Laid to with vinegar, it cureth leapries, wild skabs, running scurf, and bitings of serpents. 33 The perfume thereof driveth away all venom and venomous beasts. 34 Drink Senuie with wine to purge the brain, warm the stomach, help digestion, provoke lust, expel urine, increase natural seed, & void the continual pain of the belly. 35 Seethe it in wine, and drink it against poison and venomous bitings. 36 Grind it with vinegar, & anoint therewith read bushes, tetters, & creeping sores. 37 Seethe the meal thereof with water & honey, and use it against all hard swellings & old knots of the jaws & windpipe. 38 Mix the meal thereof with honey or fat, & anoint thy head and beard therewith against the falling of the hair, and to cleanse the face and avoid blue marks of stripes & bruises. The best seed is read & full grown, not wrinkled. 39 With a fig & vinegar, it blistreth and draweth out old aches, & dissolveth hardness. 40 Memory to be good, and to void the Lethargy, rub well the plants of the hands and feet with Mustard and vinegar. 41 For the sciatica & swelling of liver and milt, stamp the seeds with a third part of bread, dry figs, honey, and vinegar: it is a noble plaster. 42 For the Gout of what cause soever it be, grind the seeds with strong vinegar, and apply it to the place till it be hot as may be well suffered, then take it of and anoint the place against the fire with grease of a male hog for a man, and of a female hog for a woman, and chafe it well in, and do so three or four times if need be, it never faileth. 43 Headache, stamp the seeds and strain them with water, and mix it with honey, and gargarise therewith. 44 children's heads scaled, grind the seeds with honey, and grind therewith often to heal their skabs. 45 Leapry, burn Haselnut shells, and mix the ashes with powder of the seeds, and Goose grease, and anoint. 46 Lethargy, mix powder of the seeds with the juice of Smallache and vinegar, and apply it. 47 Palsy, eat powder of the seeds with sugar. 48 Reins griefs, anoint with oil of Senuie. 49 Headache to cleanse it out, mix powder of pepper with as much Mustard, and roll as much as a pease with thy tongue about thy mouth fasting. 50 Cough, chew the seeds in thy mouth, but do not swallow it down. 51 Oil of Senuy seed, grind iiii. pound of the seed, with iiii. pound of oil, and let it stand ten days, than strain it and keep it for palsies, gouts, stitches, and swellings. 52 Lethargy, anoint well thy head and forehead with Mustardseed and vinegar, and bind it thereto all night. 53 Matrix windy, foment with the decoction of the leaves. 54 Agnailes, stamp the seeds with swine's grease, and apply it. 55 Apostume to remove, (see in Eldrens.) Breast pain, (see Figs.) 56 Cough, (see Pepper.) 57 Litargy, anoint well thy head and forehead with the seeds and vinegar, and bind it to all night. 58 If a man stand in doubt of the palsy, let him eat two. or three seeds with two. corns of pepper. 59 Headache, stamp the leaves, and apply it. 60 Rheum, shave the head, and apply the seeds, or put the seeds in dry Figs, and eat them at night against rheum, and stopping of the lungs. 61 Spitting blood, fill Figs with the seeds, and seeth them in Claret wine, and eat the Figs, and drink the wine at night to open the liver, and have breath at william. 62 Dropsy, drink the seeds or wine of the decoction thereof. 63 Gout, mix the seeds with a little bread, dry Figs, honey and vinegar, & apply it. 64 Fevers cold, as quotidians, and quartens, eat the seeds before the fit. 65 Scrofules to cleanse, stamp the seeds with old grease & apply it. 66 Forgetful, rub the soles of the feet with the seeds ground with vinegar. 67 colic, grind the seeds with figs & vinegar, & apply it cold. 68 Bitings venom. apply the seeds with vinegar. Plague, (see F●gs.) 69 Hair not to fall, seeth the seeds with the roots of Nightshade, and wash therewith. 70 Matrix windy and swollen, seeth the seeds in water, and foment the place therewith. 71 Tongue heavy by much moisture, mix the seeds with honey, and hold as much as a bean in thy mouth, and also suck thereof for the old cough, and spit out the rest. 72 Stamp the seeds, and boil them with water, and drink thereof fasting to help the cough, (See Pepper, Alehoofe, Colewort. 73 Palsy & weakness of the stomach of cold cause, and for the megreme, anoint with the oil. 74 Head to purge, eat the seeds, and put some into the nose. 75 Fevers general, mix Mustard with as much Treacle as a bean, and drink it thrice before the fit. 76 Stomach ill, drink Mustard and read vinegar of each a sauser full, with as much Treacle as a bean. 77 Tongue palsy, chew the seeds, and hold them under thy tongue. 78 seeth the seeds in wine with figs, and hold thereof in thy mouth till it be almost cold v. or vi. times a day for the old pose and cough, and to cleanse the brain & lungs. 79 Seethe the seeds in water with Fenel roots, and strain it, and put honey to it, and drink it for the stopping of the milt. 80 Milt hard, seethe the leaves in wine, and apply it. To ripen and break an apostume, stamp the herb with hog's grease, and apply it. 81 Strangury, seethe the seeds in oil and wine, and apply it. 82 Sciatica, and other old sores, mix the seeds with vinegar, figs, white bread and honey, and apply it. 83 Eat the seeds to sharpen the memory and wits, to cleanse the belly, to break the stone, to purge the urine and menstrues, and to comfort the stomach. 84 Surfeit or fullness, and want of digestion, eat a spoonful of the dry seeds, & drink two. or three spoonful of water presently after it, and in the morning thou shalt be well. 85 Tetter, grind the seeds with honey, and apply it once or twice. Oil of Senuie, grind the seeds with like weight of salad oil, and let it stand 9 days, than strain it & use it for palsies, stitch, gouts, and swellings. Ache 26. 30. 39 82 Agnailes 54 Appetite 20 Apostume 6. 55 Back grief 48 Belly-ache 34. 14 Bitings venom. 19 27. 32 35. 68 Brain (see head) Breast pain 55 stopped 21 Breath short 21 Bruise 31. 38 colic 67 Cold griefs 30 Cough 14. 50. 56. 71. 72. 78 Digestion 20. 34. 84 Dropsy 8. 30. 62 Ears deaf 28 noise 28 Eyes dull 29 lids rough 29 Face deformed 17. 38 Falling evil 14. 25 Fevers 13. 64. 75 Flowers stopped 24 Forgetful (See Let. Fullness 84 Gouts general 42. 51. 63. 86 Hardness 23. 37. 39 Headache 9 43. 49. 59 73 cleansing 4. 9 11. 12. 18 22. 34. 43. 49. 74. 78 Head megrem 73 scaled 44 scales 31 scurf 31 rheum (see pose old 78) Hair falling 31. 38. 69 Kernels 37. 39 65 Knots 37. 39 65 Liver stopped 41 Leapry 32. 45 Lust to 'cause 34 Lungs griefs 13. 78. stopped 60 Lethargy 16. 30. 40. 46. 52 57 66 Matrix suffoc. 25 swollen 70 windy 53. 70 Memory ill 40. 83 Megrem 73 Milt griefs 27. 30 stopped 79 swollen 41 hard 80 Mouth sores 7. 12. 23 Oil of Senuie 51 Palsy 2. 3. 13. 47. 51. 58. 73 77. 86 Plague 69 Poison 33. 35 Pose old 78 Purgation 5 Pushes 36 Reins griefs 48 (see stone.) rheums 13. 18. 60. 78 Sciatica 30. 41. 82 Seed to increase 34 Shaking 24 Sickness general 13. 34 Side (see Liver, Milt.) Skabs' 32. 36 Skin deformed 17. 38 Scrofules 65 scurf 32 Sores 36. 82 sneezing to cause 4 to stop 15 Spitting blood 61 Stinging 5 Stitch 51. 86 Squincy 7. 9 Stomach ill 76 cold 20. 34 weak 5. 73 Stone 5 Strangury 81 Surfeit 8. 4 Swell 23. 51. 86 Teethache 22 Tetter 36. 85 Tongue palsy 2. 77. heavy 71 Throat sore 12. 23 Venom 33 Voice ill 10 urine stopped 13. 34 vulva fallen 9 23 ¶ Navewe. NAuewe sodden in two waters tender, hath indifferent nourishment between good and ill, but not well boiled, it is hard to digest, and causeth windiness, and stopping of the veins and pores, so that it were good to boil them in two waters, and the third time in fat broth of Beef or Mutton, it nourisheth less than Rape or Turnip. 2 The seeds are good against poison, and therefore put into Treacles and preservatives. 3 And being drunk, it is good against poison and venom. (See Long rape. Poison 2. 3 Venom 3 ¶ Nenupher. NEnupher, or water Lillie, The root or seed of the white boiled in wine and drunk, stoppeth the lask and bloody flux, and Tenasmus. 2 Boil it in white wine to cure the griefs of the milt and bladder. 3 The seed and root in decoctions drunk, is good against venus and fleshly lusts, or the same used in meats or powder, doth the like, and drieth up the seed of generation, and so doth the root bruised and applied to the genitors. 4 The Conserve of the flowers is also good for all the aforesaid, and for hot burning Fevers, for the headache, and to procure sweet sleep, and avoid all Venereous dreams. 5 The root stamped and applied, is good for the pain and inflammation of the bladder, and stomach. 6 The same root stamped with water, taketh away all spots of the skin, being often rubbed therewith, and applied to wounds, it stauncheth blood, and being mixed with tar, it cureth the naughty scurf of the head. 7 The root of yellow water Lily boiled in thick read wine and drunk, stoppeth the flowers, especially the whites, and so doth the seed. 8 The water of the flowers of the white, or the Conserve thereof, is good for all burning fevers in the plague time, and for the ethic and pleurisy, the dry cough and thirst, the inflammation of the liver and milt, and for the daily white flux. It quencheth lust, and so doth the oil thereof. 9 The root of the white sodden in read wine, is excellent good to stop the flowers, and so is the seed thereof. 10 The water of the white helpeth the hot griefs of the head, the inflammation of the liver & milt, and all hot bushes. It helpeth the ache of the back and kidneys, and so doth the oil thereof, which oil helpeth also carbuncles, felons, uncomes, and hot apostumes, and ulcers, in any part of the body. 11 The water healeth all hot griefs of the face, the morphewe & scurf, and all other griefs that come of hot cause. 12 To dry up the Emerods', or any sore, cast on powder of the leaves of Nenuphar or Canes. 13 Bowels griefs, and watery ruptures, distil the flowers in Balneo mariae, and drink two. ounces of the water morn and even 10. or 12. days. 14 Eyes ache, seethe the flowers in water and drop it in warm. 15 Flowers to stop, use powder of the root or seed of yellow water Lilies, it is the best medicine. 16 Yard standing, or satiriasis, stamp water Lily, and apply it. 17 Stamp the flowers with wine, and drink it to stop vomiting. Flowers to stop, use the seeds or roots. 18 Fever ephemera, use the syrup of the flowers. It helpeth also all sharp fevers. Apostume hot 10 Backeache 10 Belly-ache 13 Bladder griefs 2. 5 Bloody flux 1 Bursten 13 Consumption 8 Cough dry 8 Carbuncle 10 Dreams ill 4 Eyes ache 14 Emerods' 12 Face deformed 11 Felon 10 Fevers hot 4. 8. 18 Flowers to stop 7. 9 15. 17 Fluxes 1. 8 Headache 4 scurf 6. 10 Liver hot 10 stopped 8 Lust to void 3. 4. 8 Milt grief 2 hot 10 stopped 8 Morphewe 11 Plague 8 Pleurisy 8 Pushes hot 10 Seed to bate 3. 4 Sleep to 'cause 4 Skin defor. 6. 11 Sores 10. 12 Stomach hot 5 Tenasmus 1 Thirst 8 Vncomes 10 Vomiting 17 Ulcers 10 Whites 7 Yardstanding 16 ¶ Nettle. NEttle: The seed of Roman Nettles mixed with Honey and licked often, cleanseth the breast from all tough slimy phlegm & rotten humours, & is good for shortness of breath, the vehement cough of children, the inflammation of the Lungs, the old purify or Longsought. 2 The same drunk with sweet wine, causeth lust, and helpeth the windiness of the stomach. 3 And one scruple drunk with Mede after supper, causeth an easy vomit. 4 The leaves boiled with Mussles and drunk, do soften the belly and provoke Urine. 5 The decoction of the leaves of all kind of Nettles drunk with Myrrh provoketh the terms, and so doth Nettle seeds drunk with sweet Wine. 6 The juice of the leaves gargled, helpeth much against the falling and inflammation of the Vuula. 7 Biting of a mad dog, stamp the leaves with salt and apply them, and so it helpeth malignant Ulcers, Kankers and such like stinking sores, and all hard swellings, apostumes, botches behind the ears. Milt hard, mix the leaves with oil and wax, and apply it. 8 Nose bleeding, stamp it and apply it to the Nose and forehead: but put into the Nose, it causeth it to bleed. 9 Flowers to cause, stamp it with Myrrh, and put it in as a pessary. 10 Use the buds of read Nettles in broths at the spring of the year to cleanse the breast, break wind, and expel urine. 11 Seethe the leaves in wine and drink it to soften the belly, to expel wind and help the torments thereof, to purge the loins, to provoke urine and lust: or seethe the seeds in new wine, or mix the seeds with Honey and lick it in: it helpeth also all inward wounds. 12 Seethe the root of the great keen Nettle in wine with Honey, and use it against the old and cold cough, wheasing, hoarseness, and to cleanse the Lungs, chest and breast, and help the Pleurisy and other griefs of the breast, and of the Vuula coming of Viscus Humours. 13 Gargarise therewith for the griefs of the mouth, but the seeds with Honey is best. 14 Stamp the leaves with salt and apply it to the bitings of mad dogs, and to wounds, rotten sores, Gangrenes, evil ulcers, creeping sores and tetters, apostumes, hardness, cold swellings of the joints, milt, behind the ears. 15 Let him that is nettled, anoint the place with oil of Roses or of Olives. 16 The green leaves applied, setteth the Matrixe in the place, if it be fallen. 17 The seeds drunk with malmsey provoketh lust, and openeth the Matrixe. 18 The powder of the seeds with wine or broth, increaseth natural seed. 19 The seeds of read Nettles gathered between Saint Mary days, may serve poor men in stead of Pepper, and is as good as Pepper. 20 The juice with clarified Honey cleanseth the Lungs, stomach and sides, and drunk with Ptisan, it cleanseth the belly and Matrixe. The juice drunk with Myrrh warm, provoketh the terms. 21 The leaves sodden with fish or flesh, cleanseth the reins, back & bladder, and provoketh urine. 22 And they are good against obstructions of the Liver in cold causes, and kill worms. 23 The syrup thereof is most excellent to be drunk of women in their painful travel, and causeth speedy deliverance. 24 Stamp it and eat it with Honey for the shortness of breath and Pleurisy, and to cleanse the breast, and so doth the decoction thereof with Barley. 25 And the juice gargled, cureth the apostume of the Vuula. 26 Eaten with Onions and yolks of eggs, it moveth Venus, looseneth the Belly, provoketh urine, and helpeth the ache of the kidneys. 27 And drunk with Hemp seed, it helpeth the ache of the milt and side. 28 Anoint the arteries with the juice to mitigate the feverous heat of the Heart. 29 chew the root and hold it in thy mouth to stop any bleeding. 30 Drink one spoonful of the powder of the read Nettle with a draft of read wine every day to break the stone, though it be never so great. 31 Seethe read Nettles and Mallows in water, and drink thereof, and also sit over the fume of it. 32 Cast a sick man's water on a read Nettle, if it die by the next morning, he shall die, if not, he shall live: or steep it in his urine four and twenty hours for the same purpose. 33 Swelling of toothache, mix the juice of the seeds with the white of an Egg, Frankincense, and Wheat flower, and apply it. 34 Nose bleeding, rub the temples with the juice thereof. 35 Stomach weak, drink the seeds every morning with malmsey. 36 Make Lee of the ashes of the roots of Nettles, Colewurts and Brionye, and wash the pain of the head therewith. 37 Drink a spoonful or more of the powder of the seeds with good wine, to assuage the pain and windiness of the Matrixe. 38 lick in a scruple of the said powder, with syrup of Violets, to spit out Viscus matter and tough humours. 39 Stamp the tops of read Nettles, and seeth them in white wine in an earthen vessel to the one half, and drink a good draft morn and even ten days, and apply the herb to the Fundament against the going out thereof, to heal it perfectly. 40 Palsy, anoint the place with salad oil, and cast on powder of Pepper, and lay too Nettles, and when the warmness is come into the member, take them away, and anoint with the oil for the Palsy. 41 Whelks or ploukes, anoint with the roots of Nettles and Dockes. Melancholy, rub the body with Nettles. 42 Fear and fancy, carry Nettles and Five leaf in thy hand. 43 Spitting matter, lick in powder of the seed with syrup of Violets, or other pectoral medicines, by a little at once. 44 Children syriasis coming of inflammation of the brain, Stamp Nettles with Populeon, and apply it to the temples and wrists at every half hours end, till it be whole. 45 Anoint the forehead with the juice of Greek Nettles, to stop bleeding at the Nose, or chew Nettle roots till they may be swallowed down. 46 Gout, stamp keen Nettles and Sage of each an handful with Barrowes grease, and apply it. 47 Sciatica, bruise the seeds and apply them, or if the pain be not very vehement, apply Nettles unstamped: but if it be vehement, stamp them and apply them, or stamp read Nettles two hands full with wheat bran and dears suet, and apply it as hot as may be suffered. 48 For the Vuula, use the juice of Nettles and vinegar. 49 Wounds, stamp Nettles with salt and apply it. 50 Head ache of blood, put powder of the seeds of read Nettles into thy Nose. 51 Sweat to cause, seethe Nettles in oil of Nuts, and anoint therewith at nights. 52 Hair to void, shave it and stamp Nettle head with vinegar, and anoint when thou sweatest in thy bed two days, and it will grow no more. 53 Headache, make Lee with white wine and Colewurts, and Nettles burned, and wash therewith. 54 Sleep to cause (See Beam. 55 Cough, seeth the seeds in oil and anoint thy hands and feet. 56 Stomach phlegm, seeth good store of Nettles in running water and butter till they be tender, and eat them. 57 women's breasts to be soft, drink Nettles and salt with ale. 58 Fundament falling out, seeth read Nettle crops with white wine to the one half, and drink thereof first and last, and apply the herb hot as may be suffered, and be whole. 59 Consumption, seeth a pint of the juice of young Nettles, and scum it till it wax read, then put thereto a quart of malmsey and brew them together a good space, then put in yolks of eggs well beaten, and Sugar, and brew them well together, and take thereof a reasonable draft morn and even blood warm. 60 Flesh to grow fair and well, stamp read Nettles with two or three corns of salt and some May butter, & apply it. 61 Gout in the bones, stamp Nettles and apply them. 62 Stone to break and avoid, chop the roots of read Nettles, Parsley and parietary, in all two pound, steep them in a quart of white wine four and twenty hours, then distil them and drink the water. 63 Hair eaten with worms, seeth Sage and Nettles in wine, and wash thy head therewith, and cast on powder of Nep. 64 Blood to stop, stamp read Nettles and read Colewurts, and apply them. 65 canker, stamp read Nettles with salt, and apply it. 66 The tops of Nettles gathered when they begin to seed given to Hens with a little Bran and Hemp seed, 'cause them to lay Eggs all winter. 67 Fish to catch, anoint thy hand with the juice of Greek Nettles, and hold it in the water, and the fishes will come to it. 68 Back ache and bloody Urine, take Polypody, water Cresses, and read Nettle crops, of each one handful, seeth them in Ale and strain it and drink it morn and even with Sugar. Nose bleeding, drink the juice of read Nettles, with some Chalk if need be, or make powder of Nettle seed, Bursa pastoris, and Camphor, and make little baules thereof with the juice of Bursa Pastoris; and put them in, or drink the juice of read Nettles. 69 Bruised and voiding blood; drink the juice of the young buds of read Nettles either by itself or with vinegar, or with cold water, and there is none so corrupt blood but it will purify it, nor no lask so great but it will stop it. 70 Face false phlegm, grynd powder of Ginger and brimstone, with honey and read Nettles and anoint therewith. 71 Falling evil, drink the water of the less Nettle. 72 Ague cake, take Wormwood, read Nettles, read Mints ana one handful, fry them with fresh butter, and apply it as hot as may be suffered, and use other helps withal. 73 Stone, seeth mother Time, and read Nettle crops of each one handful in a quart of white wine to the one half, than strain it, and put in half a spoonful of sea Holly in powder, and drink thereof daily. 74 women's griefs, let her drink the juice of read Nettles with ale, and cast her on her belly, and cast her hair into her mouth, and 'cause her to vomit. 75 Wounds bleeding, stamp read Nettle crops with honey, and apply it, or bruise a good handful of Nettles, and bind them hard to, to stop it presently. 76 Sleep to cause (See Colewort.) 77 Blood to stop, chew the root well, and hold it in thy mouth, but swallow it not and thou shalt lose no blood, or blow in the powder of a Nettle into thy nose. 78 Fundament chaps and emerods, lay brimstone on hot coals, and thereon blind Nettles, and sit over the fume thereof thrice. 79 Matrix suffoc. stamp Nettles and put them into the matrix, and drink Parsnep seed with wine. 80 Matrix pain and windy, drink the seeds with wine. 81 Breasts swollen, seeth Nettles in vinegar and apply them in all increase of the same, and for all swellings and hardness with oil of Roses. 82 Gout ache, seeth Nettles that grow in a hot ground and dry, in lee of vine ashes, and wash it therewith and apply the Nettles. 83 Fever tertian apply the like Nettles stamped with salt to the pulses of the arms before the fit. 84 Fever hot, anoint the pulses with the juice. 85 Stone to break, drink one spoonful of powder of the root with white wine somewhat warm daily, 86 Fundament fallen, stamp the tops of read Nettles in a stone vessel ut supra. 87 Breast to open & to drive out gravel from the back; drink powder of the seeds. 88 F●●er quarten, stamp Nettles with cobwebs and salt in a wooden dish, and apply it to the left arm, to take away the heat of the fever. 89 Gout, seeth Nettles in oil and wine, and apply them hot two or three times. 90 For voiding of blood at the fundament, and to stop all fluxes, drink the juice of the young springs in the mornings by itself, or with some strong vinegar and cold water. 91 Pricks, stamp the roots with salt and apply them. 92 Matrixe falling out, stamp the leaves and apply them. 93 Hands scabbed by the French pocks, seeth a handful of leaves with Cinnamom, and Cloves, of each two drams, and bathe the hands with the fume thereof sodden in water. (See in Cloves.) 94 Emerods', cresty swellings of the fundament, and redness of the face, apply the juice or water of blind Nettles. 95 Apost. to ripen, stamp green Nettle seed and salt and apply it. 96 Hair not to grow, anoint the place with the warm blood of a Hare, and upon that anoint with wild Nettle seed and oil Olive. 97 Kings evil, drink Nettles with wine. 98 Dead flesh in sores, put in powder of Nettles to cleanse and cure it. 99 Cough of cold cause, stamp the seeds and wixe them with honey, and use it as an electuary, it dissolveth all cold humours. 100 Swelling, drink three vials of the juice three days. 101 Breast to cleanse, seethe Nettles in barley water and drink it. It cleanseth the stomach also, voideth vomiting, helpeth the colic, expelleth wind and cold out of the lungs, swelling of the belly, and the cause thereof. 102 The Nettle also is good for the griefs of the joints. 103 Nose bleeding, burn read Nettles and their roots, and blow in the powder. 104 The juice of read Nettles stoppeth all fluxes of blood at the Nose, bloody flux, of what cause soever they be, Emerods' and all such like, etc. 105 Ache, anoint with the juice of read Nettles. 106 Conception to know, give her the juice of read Nettles, if she cast it up, she is corrupted by man, if she keep it, she is a maid. 107 Face mesels, mix bores grease with the juice of Cresses and of Nettles of each like much, and put quicksilver to it and anoint morn & even. 108 Nostrils stink, burn green Nettles and mix their powder with as much Pepper, and blow it in to bedward. 109 Palsy, if the skin be thick by lack of flesh, rub it well with crops of read Nettles, that the ointment may the better go in, which is this, Roast three or four read Onions tender, stamp them with four times so much of the gall of an Ox or Bull all of one colour, and anoint well the place till it be drunk in, and wrap thee well in a clean sheet, and do so nine nights, it will make the flesh grow, though it be much away: and it serveth for all aches. 110 Face salsflegme, anoint with Barrowes grease, Mercury and read Nettles. 111 Palsy, distil read Nettles with juniper and read wine, and drink three spoons full morn and even daily. 112 Blood to stop of vein or senowe, stamp read Nettles and Colewurt leaves with Hog's dung and apply it. 113 Deliverance to cause, seeth read Nettles and Motherwurt in wine and drink it. 114 Lust to void, drink read Nettle seeds and the flowers of Poplar or Willow. 115 jaundice, seeth the roots of read Nettles, read Dockes and Celondine in white wine, and put Honey to it, and drink thereof morn and even 116 Drink the juice of Nettles with wine, to dissolve bruised blood. 117 Flowers to stop, bruise Nettle roots, and apply them one night. 118 Kankers and ulcers, stamp the seeds and apply them. 119 Breast phlegm, drink the crops of read Nettles, read Mints and Wormwood with read wine or stolen ale first and last. 120 If a woman piss on green Nettles, and they die, she is no maid. 121 Cast a sick man's Urine on a read Nettle while it is warm, at night, if it be dead in the morning, he shall die, or else not. Aches 102. 105 Ague cake 72 Apost. 7. 14. 72. 95 Back ache 11. 21. 26. 68 87. Belly bound 4. 11. 26. 20 swollen 101 ache 11. 101 Bitings vemom. 7. 14 Bladder grief 21 Bleeding 29. 64. 69. 75. 77. 103. 104. 112 Bloody flux 104 Blood to cleanse 69 Botches 7 Breast to cleanse 1. 10. 12. 20. 24. 38. 43. 56. 87. 101. 119. (See Lungs.) Breasts hard 81 swollen 81 Breath short 1. 24 Bruised 69. 116 Colic 101 Concept. 106. 120 Consumption 59 Cough 1. 12. 55. 99 Dead flesh 98 Deliverance 23. 113 Emerods' 78. 104 Face meseld 107. read 94. falseflegme 70. 110. Falling evil 71 Fearfulness 42 Fevers hot 28. 84. quarten 88 tertian 83. Fishing 67 Flesh to grow 60 Flowers stopped 20. 59 to stop 117. Fluxes 69. 90 Fundament bleeding 90. chaps 78. emerods (see Emerods') griefs 94. French pocks 93 Gangrenes 14 Gout 46. 61. 82. 89. 102. Gravel 87 Hands scabbed 93 Hardness 7. 14. 72 Heart hot 28 Headache 36. 53. sores 44. Hair falling 63. to void 52. 69. hens to lay 66 Hoarseness 12 jaundice 115 joints griefs 102. swollen 14. canker 7. 65. 118 Kings evil 97 Life or death 32. 121 Liver stopped 22 Loins to purge 11 Lungs grief 1. 12. 20. 38. 43. 101. Lust to cause 11. 17. 18. 26. to void 114. Mad dog 7. 14 Matrix fallen 16. 92. suffoc. 74. 79. to cleanse 20. to open 17. pain 37. 80. windy 37. 80. Melancholy 41 Maidenhood (see Concep.) Milt hard 7. 14. 27 Mouth grief 13. 24 Neck swollen 14 Nettled 15 Nose bleeding 8. 34. 45. 50. 68 77. 79. Nostrils stink 108 Palsy 40. 109. 111 Pepper wanting 19 Plowks 41 Pleurisy 1. 12. 24 Pricks 91 Purgation 11. 20. 101 Sciatica 47 Seed to increase 18 Sides grief 20. 27 Scabs 14. 93 Sleep to 'cause 54. 76 Sores 7. 14. 60. 98 Spitting matter 43 Stomach to cleanse 20. 56. 101. weak 35. windy 2. 10. Stone 30. 31. 62. 73. 85. Swell 14. 33. 100 Sweat to 'cause 51 Teethache 33 Tetters 14 Ulcers 7. 14. 118 Voice ill 12 Vomiting 101 to cause 3 urine stopped 4. 10. 11. 21. 26 vulva fallen. 6. 12. 13. 25. 48 inflamed 6 Whelks 41 Windiness 10. 11. 101 women's griefs 74 Worms 22 Wounds inward 11 outward 14. 49. 75 ¶ Nigella. NIgella or Gyth: Drink the seeds in wine to help shortness of breath, to dissolve all windiness in the body, to provoke urine and terms, to increase milk. 2 Drink it with wine or water, or apply it to the Navel to kill worms, or anoint with the oil of the seed. 3 Drink one dram with water against all poisons and venomous bite 4 The fume thereof toasted or burned, driveth away all venomous beasts, and killeth flies, bees and wasps. 5 Head ache, apply it to the forehead with oil of Arios, and put it often into the Nose against the Web and bloodshoting in the eyes in their beginning. 6 Put the powder of it into a thin bag and smell to it often to cure all Murres or Catarrhs and Poses, to dry the brain, and to restore the smelling being lost. 7 Boil it with vinegar and hold it in the mouth to suage the tooth ach. 8 Chew it dry to cure the ulcers of the mouth. 9 For lentils, Freckles and other spots in the face, to cleanse the scurf and itch, and to soften old, cold and hard swellings, stamp it with vinegar and apply it. 10 Steep it in old wine or stolen urine, to 'cause Corns and Agnailes to fall off, being first scarified round about. 11 Too much of it taken, bringeth death. 12 Apply the seeds with Rose vinegar to the forehead against the Frenzy. 13 It serveth also for the same things that Coliander is good for. 14 Drop the juice into the eyes, to heal the Epiphora, or dropping. 15 Stamp it with an Ox gall and apply it to the belly to kill worms. 16 Wild cockle that groweth in corn, is of the same kind, and the juice may be pressed forth as Opium, & kept for medicine to cause sleep. 17 Nigella Rom. provoketh sneezing. 18 phthisic, put powder thereof in a linen cloth and smell to it often. 19 Brain feeble, mix powder of the seeds with oil of Camomile or other oil, and drop thereof into thy Nose in the mornings. 20 Put the flower thereof into the Matrixe, to draw out all contents therein, as flowers, birth, seconds, etc. 21 To dry up milk in the breasts, seeth the seeds in wine and drink it. 22 Face pimples and spots, grind the seeds with flower and Honey, and anoint to bedward, and in the morning wash with Parsley water. 23 For fretting, roughness and skalie spots, bruise the seeds and boil them to pap in vinegar, and then mix it with oil of Nuts, and anoint therewith to bedward: the meal of Orobus will do the same, mix the juice of the roots of Peonye. 24 Cockle drunk with Radish and a little salt, healeth the canker and other perilous wounds, comforteth the stomach and Liver, killeth worms in the stomach, provoketh urine, & is good for the eyes. 25 The suffumigation of it maketh women fruitful without peril, and suageth the great pain of the Liver. A plaster of the meal thereof with the juice of wormwood laid to the navel, killeth worms. 26 The seed steeped all night in wine, and the wine drunk in the morning, healeth the strangury, dissurie, & Iliak passion: Nigella with flower and Honey anointed, taketh away spots and pimples, being after washed with Parsley water. Agnailes 10 Bees to kill 4 Bitings venom. 3 Brain weak 19 moist 6 Breath short 1 Colic 26 Concept. 25 Consumption 17 Corns 10 Danger 11 Deliverance 20 Dissurie 26 Eyes bloodshot 5 web 5 dropping 14 sore 24 Face deform. 9 22. 23 Flies to kill 4 Flowers stopped 1. 20 Headache 5 Iliak pas. 26 Itch 9 Liver griefs 24. 25 Matrixe to cleanse 20 Milk to 'cause 1 to dry up 21 Mouth sores 8 Murr 6 Poison 3 Pose 6 Phthisic 16 Rheum 6 Seconds 20 Skin deform. 2. 3. 22. 9 scurf 9 Sleep to 'cause 16 Smelling lost 6 sneezing to 'cause 18 Sores 24 Stomach weak 24 Strangury 20 Swell 9 Teeth ache 7 Venom. 3. 4 Urine stopped 1. 20. 24 Wasps to kill 4 Windiness 1 Worms 2. 15. 24. 25 Wounds 24 ¶ Nutmegs. NVtmegs doth heat and strengthen the stomach that is cold and weak, especially the mouth of the stomach: it maketh asweete breath, withstandeth vomiting, & taketh away the Hicket howsoever it be taken. 2 It is good against the pain and windiness of the belly, and stops of the Liver and milt, and being parched or dried at the fire, it stoppeth the lask, especially being taken with read wine. 3 It is good for the mother, kidneys & bladder: it helpeth the griefs that stop the urine in them that piss by drops, especially when the disease cometh of cold cause: it is good for other secret griefs, both in men and women. 4 It breaketh and expelleth gravel, especially being first steeped or soaked in oil of sweet Almonds. 5 It is used in cordials and wholesome receipts against coldness of the Liver, cardiaks, stopping of the milt, the dropsy, vomiting, headache, swellings, bloody fluxes: it comforteth the muscles and veins of cold and old people, it maketh the breath sweet, and putteth away trembling of the heart. 6 The powder thereof mixed with oil of Mints, and the forehead and temples anointed therewith, is good against the coldness of the head or dullness of memory. 7 It is wholesome in Plasters for the stomach, quilted in leather and silk. 8 It is good in stewed broths for them that are long sick. 9 The oil comforteth the stomach that is cold. 10 But it is not good for sanguine men to use Nutmegs much, because it will adust the blood, and maketh the face seem as a visor of Coral. 11 The best Nutmegs are read, fat, and heavy: the worst are black, light, and dry. 12 It taketh away fumes of the stomach, stoppeth the belly, digesteth meat, expelleth wind, & comforteth the stomach and liver, and is good for freckles in the face, and ringwormes: it minisheth the greatness of the milt, it softeneth impostumes of the Liver, and is good for the cold diseases of the Matrixe. 13 Bruise fresh Nutmegs and heat them in a pan and press them, and there will come out a salt oylish thing like wax, called of some, oil of Nutmegs: which is precious for all cold griefs of the joints and sinews, and of divers other parts, and is good for cold husbands that would have children. 14 Nutmegs comfort the brain, sight, liver, milt, and mouth of the stomach. 15 And taken last at night in a cawdell of Almonds or of hempseed procureth sleep. 16 It is the best spice for students of all other, taken in drink. 17 Nutmegs condyted, as they may be had at the Apothecaries, are excellent. 18 Head ache, drink powder of Nutmegs with Betony water. 19 If any man be wounded and bleed inward, take the heaviest Nutmegs that can be gotten, wash them, wipe them, and pair them, and let him eat them, and he shall deliver the blood outward, and also by his ordure, & make him as clean as ever he was, so that the wound be kept well, and the same used till he hath recovered the state of health. 20 Stomach feeble and cold, eat half a Nutmeg in the morning. 21 Boil them in wine and drink it for coldness of the stomach, and to help digestion: or boil Nutmegs and Mastic in wine, and drink it for the griefs of the stomach & bowels, and to break wind and to restore strength after sickness. 22 Smell to a Nutmeg, to comfort the brain & spiritual members. 22 Stomach cold, seethe Nutmegs, Maces, Fennel seed and Dill seed in wine and drink it. 24 It is much of the nature of Cloves. 25 Mouth stink, use powder of Nutmegs and Cloves, and forbear meats of evil digestion, and raw fruits. Belly ache 2 (See stone.) Bloody Flux 5 Brain weak 14. 21. 22 Breath ill 1. 5. 25 Consumption 8. 21 Digestion 21 Dropsy 5 Bladder grief 3 Eyes dull 14 Face deform. 12 Flux 2 Freckles 12 Gravel 4 Hart trembling 5 griefs 5 Headache 5. 18. cold 6 Hicket 1 joint griefs 13 Impost. 12 Kidneys griefs 3 Liver stopped 2. 5. 12 Lust to 'cause 13 Matrixe griefs 3. 12 cold griefs 12 Memory 6 Milt stopped 2. 5. 12 ringworm 12 sinews griefs 13 Sleep to 'cause 15 Stomach cold 1. 7. 9 20 weak 1. 7. 9 20 Swell 5 Vomiting 1. 5 Urine stopped 3 Windiness 2 Wounded 19 ¶ Nux indica. NVx indica: it increaseth seed, & moveth Venus. 2 The oil pressed out of it, is good for the Emerods', especially mixed with oil of Peaches. 3 The same is good for the ache of the knees and the Sciatica being anointed therewith, and it killeth worms. Ache 3 Emerods' 2 Knees ache 3 Lust to 'cause 1 Sciatica 3 Worms 3 ¶ Nuxmethel. NVxmethel: Four grains with wine maketh a man drunken, two drams killeth a man presently, both it and the Nux vomica are fit to catch fish, then to be taken into the body of a man: and whether fish or birds be taken therewith, let their stomachs be taken out presently. Birds and fish to take 1 Drunkenness to cause 1 ¶ Nux vomica. NVx vomica either alone or with salt, causeth a strong vomit. 2 It may be taken with twice so much seeds of Dill or Fennell, and so drunk with water warm, it causeth vomit of choler & phlegm, and of some worketh downwards. 3 Pieces thereof eaten by crows or ravens, they cannot fly away but that you may take them. Crows to kill 3 Ravens to kill 3 Vomit to 'cause 1. 2 ¶ Oak. Oak of jerusalem or of Paradise boiled in wine and drunk, is good against the stopping of the breast, shortness of the breath, and difficulty thereof, and cutteth tough humours in the lungs and breast, and provoketh urine and terms. 2 Dry it & use it in meats, as Isope, Thyme, and such like, and it yieldeth a good savour and taste. 3 Lay it into presses and wardrobes to defend clotheses from moths, and to give them a sweet smell. 4 Drink it in wine to cleanse the Lungs, and to help the cough, soreness of the chest, and shortness of breath. Breast stopped 1. 4 Breath short 1. 4 Cough cold 4 Flowers stopped 1 Lungs griefs 4 Moths 3 Urine stopped 1 ¶ Olive. Olive: The leaves applied, are good against serpige or wild fire, and creeping sores, consuming Pocks, and such like hot humours and choleric swellings. 2 The same applied with Hony do cleanse ulcers and suage all other tumours and swellings. 3 They are good against all ulcers, inflammations and impostumes of the mouth and gums of children, especially being washed with the decoction thereof. The juice of them stoppeth the terms and all other fluxes of blood, taken inwardly or applied outwardly. 4 It is good also for redness, inflammations and ulcers of the eyes, to be put into collyries and medicines for the same, and to cleanse the ears from corruption. 5 The green and unripe Olives do strengthen the stomach and cause appetite, especially being condited in brine, yet they be hard of digestion, and nourish very little. 6 The ripe Olives overturn the stomach, and cause wambling therein, they breed headache, and hurt the eyes. 7 The oil of unripe Olives called Omphacinum, doth stay and drive away the beginnings of tumours and inflammations, and doth cool the heat of burning ulcers & exulcerations: it is good also against the rotten sores and filthy moisture of the gums, it fasteneth lose teeth being applied upon the gums with cotton or fine wool. 8 The oil of ripe Olives doth mollify, suage pain, and dissolve tumours: it is good against the stiffness of members and cramps, especially when it is mixed with good herbs or flowers, for it doth easily draw out unto it the qualities of them, with which it is sunned or other ways prepared or sodden. 9 The leaves of the wild Olive tree broken and applied, do stay choleric apostumes and inflammations, creeping & running sores, apostumes of the corners of the eyes, carbuncles and whiteflawes. 10 And applied with Honey, they take away crusts about sores and wounds. 11 They scour all filthy wounds, and drive away all inflammations, and sores called Pavos, and join together the skin that is plucked off from the head. 12 They are good for sores of the mouth, especially of young children, being chewed in the mouth: & the broth hath the same virtues. 13 The juice applied, stoppeth the terms, and is good for the disease of the eye, called Vua, and for weals, sores, and falling down of humours, and is therefore put into collyries and eye medicines: it is very good for the gnawing or biting of the eye lids. 14 If you will have the juice serve you all the year through, stamp them and put wine or water to them, and dry the moisture in the sun, and make it into little cakes. 15 But the juice that is made of the wine, is stronger to be laid up, then that which is made with water: it helpeth the ears both if they be sore, and the skin off, or any matter run out. 16 The leaves applied with Barley meal, are good for the flux. 17 The leaves are burned with the flowers, that the ashes may serve in stead of spodium: and thus they be dressed, Put them into an unbaked pot that was never in the fire before, and stop the mouth of it perfectly with clay, and let the pot stand so long, till all other pots be baked enough, then quench them while they are yet hot with wine, and kneade them together, and burn them together after the same manner once again, then wash them and make them into little cakes: it is well known that this medicine is as good as spodium in the diseases of the eyes. 18 The leaves of the set Olive have the same virtues, but gentler. 19 The sweat or water that cometh forth of the tree when it is laid in the fire, healeth foul scurvy skabs being applied. 20 The seed of the Olive three applied, helpeth scurf and fretting, and wasting sores. 21 That which is within the kernels, with fat and meal, driveth away scabbed or foul rough nails. 22 The Olives that have been condited in salt, broken and applied to burnings, will suffer no bladder to arise: they scour foul wounds. 23 The brine of Olives fasteneth lose teeth and gums being washed therewith. 24 The yellow and fresh Olive is better for the stomach, but it is hard for the belly. 25 The black, that is ripe, is disposed to corruption, and is evil for the stomach, eyes, and head. 26 If it be dried, it stoppeth fretting or wasting sores, and scattereth carbunckles: it is good to wash the gums that have filthy moisture, with the oil of wild Olives, it fasteneth lose teeth being applied with wool or fine cloth, till they be white, and it will help them. 28 Not man can describe all the virtues of the oil Olive. 29 Olives eaten before meat, loosen the belly, and strengthen the stomach, cleanse the liver, etc. 30 Being eaten with vinegar, they loosen the belly. 31 Oil Olive taken with as much Rhenish wine or white wine, or powered in by Glister, helpeth much the Colic, Iliake, and pain of the stone. 32 It may be eaten with white bread in sops in stead of Butter, and so it looseneth the belly more than Butter. 33 Drink four spoons full with as much Sack or white wine warm, to provoke an easy vomit, and to cleanse the stomach. 34 Breath short or difficulty, dip a sponge in hot oil and apply it. 35 colic, seethe raw yarn in ashes and oil and apply it to the Navel and Reins. 36 Burning, boil Honey and oil togther, and anoint therewith: or boil the inner bark of Eldrens with oil or new grease with some Mastic and Frankincense, and wax, and anoint. 37 Ears deaf, boil Cummin in oil Olive and strain it, and drop it in. 38 Earmes worms, boil quick Lime in it and strain it, and put it in. 39 Eyes web, put in a very small drop of oil by itself. Face deformed, mix soot with oil and salt, and anoint. 40 Face read bushes, mix ashes of burned Mice with oil, and anoint. 41 Frenzy, seethe Raphanus in oil, and anoint the head therewith. 42 (See Harts horn, Planten.) Head skald, shave it and anoint it with oil Olive. 43 Cod swollen, anoint with the oil and whites of Eggs: it helpeth all swellings and heat, being beaten together. 44 Hair to grow, mix powder of Bees dried in a siue with oil Olive, and anoint. 45 Blood to stop, apply the oil with Lint. (See ivy, Balm.) 46 To ripen a sore, roast it in an onion and apply it. 47 Yard ulcers and bushes, Foment with wine of the decoction of the leaves. 48 Ranker in the Yard or else where, stamp the leaves with Honey & apply them. 49 Vomit to cause, drink warm water with a little oil, or dip a feather in oil, & put it into the throat. (See Fig.) 50 Burning or scalding, beat the oil with water till it wax white, and anoint. 51 Seethe half a handful of white salt in a pint of oil & dip therein, two. or three handfuls of blackewell, & bind it hot to the navel & bottom of the belly for the colic. 52 Marmoll, anoint with the oil, & apply a Platten leaf & wash the sore every morning with madder water. (See Madder.) 53 Eyes dull, put in a very small drop of the oil. Gout, & all aches, stamp iii pound of Heart's horn herb, with three pound of oil, & let it stand ix. days, then put to it a pint of water, and boil it till the water be consumed and that it be green, than strain it and use it. 54 Small pocks, drink one spoonful of oil with three spoonful of Malmsey, and as much Treacle as a bean blood warm. 55 A salve to destroy dead flesh, seeth a quart of oil with a pound of read lead, till it be almost stiff, then put half a pound of read lead more, and boil it till it be a salve. 56 Thirst to quench, drink a little warm water and oil, and cast it up again often. 57 Blood to restore, drink half a pint of Muscadel with one pennyworth of oil in the morning, and walk one hour after it. 58 Burn, beat the oil with water, and anoint, and lay on a Wort leaf. 59 Head scaled, put Brimstone and May butter to it, and use it. Ears pain and dull, roast the oil in a great Onion on the embers, and as it drinketh in, fill it with more: then pill it and strain it, and put thereof into the whole ear, and lie on the sore ear, and do so ix. nights if need be. 60 For the griefs of the stomach, and many other parts, take two spoonful of the oil with as much aqua vitae, 7. mornings together 61 Thirst great, swallow down oil with the yolk of an Egg. 62 Chafing or galling, grind oil of Roses with the yolk of an Egg in a leadden mortar with a leadden pestle, till it be thick, and anoint therewith. 63 Mix one ounce of powder of Litarge with seven ounces of oil and a little white wine, and stir it well in a porringer, till it come to a liquid ointment, and anoint the burning Canker therewith. 64 Bloody flux, drink seven Olive leaves, and seven corns of Pepper with cold water. 65 To cause deliverance whether the child be quick or dead, drink the milk of another woman mixed with oil Olive. 66 Ache and swelling, mix three parts of oil with a fourth part of Salt, and anoint therewith every other day. 67 Hoarseness of unkind humours, eat a little oil with a rear Egg and Pepper, when you go to bed. 68 Emerods', plane a new Oaken board, heat it and anoint it with Salad oil, heat it again, and sit thereon, and make a panel of cloth with a hole against the fundament, & sit on it a great while often & be whole. 69 Chincough, and other like, with pain in the breast, roast Salad oil in a great Apple in the embers, and press it flat, and apply it to the breast as often as need is. 70 Burning and scalding, beat it with the white of an Eglantine, or with cream, till it be thick, and anoint. 71 Ears dull, boil it with Frankincense, and scum it clean, and anoint the forehead and temples therewith from ear to ear. 72 Worms to kill, drink a little of the oil. 73 Short wound, anoint the tongue and ears, and about the ears with the oil and provoke vomit. 74 Itch and scab, mix it with Turpentine, and anoint. 75 Ears griefs, let one that is fasting blow in the oil into his ear out of his mouth, and turn down the head that the ordure may run out. 76 Biting of a mad dog, rub it with a new cloth dipped in the oil till it bleed. 77 Ears dull, quarter a read Onion downright, and boil it in the oil while one may say three Pater nosters, and strain out the juice, and use it: or seeth the dried gall of an Ox with the oil and honey, of each like much, with powder of litarge, and apply it. 78 Gout, take oil Olive one pint, May butter, Swine's grease and honey, of each like much, fry them with a gentle fire and put thereto incense two ounces, and anoint therewith against the fire any ache, swelling, or boneshawe, or seeth the leaves of ivy, and Lorell with oil Olive, and anoint with the oil, or temper Brimstone with oil Olive, and as much Vermilion, and anoint to cease it quickly, or stamp Henbane seed with oil Olive, and let it stand 24. hours, then fry it and strain it and apply it, it helpeth by and buy. 80 Make oil of Roses with the greenest oil Olive. 81 Wax to increase, boil oil Olive four pound with the juice of Dyers yellow till it be yellow, then put in wax, and let them incorporate, and cast it into a vessel, and use it. 82 To take an eschar of a bone out of the shin, or elsewhere, heat oil Olive till it boil, and power it in hot, then stop it in with a linen cloth, and apply a pladget of linen cloth, dipped in the oil, and above that a plaster of Basilicum, and so it will rise from the bone, and do so at every dressing. 83 Ears deaf, dip a linen clout in oil Olive, and drop it into the ear, and put in the clout after it, and lie up therewith all night. Ache 8. 66. 78. 53 Appetite 5 Apostume 3. 7. 9 46. 79 Belly bound 29. 30. 32 Bitings venomous 76 Blood to stop 45 to increase 5. 7 Bloody-fluxe 3. 64 Bones in sores 82 Breast pain 69 Breath short 34. 73 Burn 22. 36. 50 58. 70 Carbuncle 9 26 Chafing 62 Chincough 69 Chollike 31. 35. 51 Cod swollen 43 Dead child 65 Dead flesh 55 Deliverance 65 Ears griefs 15. 59 75. deaf 37. 59 71. 77. 83. worms 38 Eyes griefs 4. 9 13. 14. 17 dull 53 web 39 Emerods' 68 Face deformed 39 40 Flowers to stop 3 Fluxes 3. 16 Frenzy 41 Galling 62 Gums griefs 2. 3. 7. 26 Gout 53. 78 Hardness 8 Head hurts 11 scaled 19 42. 59 Hair to grow 44 Hoarseness 67 Iliake pass. 31 Inflammation 3. 7. 9 Itch 74 canker 48. 63 Liver griefs 29 Mad dog 76 Marmall 52 Mouth sores 3. 7. 12 Nails rough 21 Pocks 1. 54 Rose oil 8 Shortwinded 73 Sickness general 60 Scabs 74 Scales 19 scurf 19 20 Scalding 50. 70 Small pocks 54 Sores 1. 2. 9 10. 11. 13. 20. 26. 55. 82 Stomach to cleanse 33. 60 weak 5. 29 Swell 66 hot 1 28. 78 Stone 31 Teeth lose 7. 23 Thirst 56. 61 Ulcers 2. 3 Voice lost 67 Vomit to 'cause 33. 49 Weals 13 Wildfire 1 Wax to increase 81 Worms 72 Wounds 1. 11 Yard griefs 470 anchor 48 ¶ Onions. ONions eaten often raw, cause a rough throat, wind in the stomach, and headache. 2 And mixed with honey, they take away the grief of the stomach, yet the eating of them doth harm the members, by drying up the moisture of the body. 3 Temper them with vinegar, & apply them to the piles to open them. 4 The eating of them doth soften the belly and cause thirst. 5 The juice with honey mendeth the sight, the pain and web, dropped into the eye. 6 roast them under the embers, and eat them morn and even to cleanse the breast, void swelling, & purge the stomach. 7 Bruise an Onion with salt & honey, & apply it to warts to make them fall off by the roots. 8 Bruise them with vinegar, and wash the scabbed skin therewith to make it whole and fair. 9 Onions eaten raw, cause loathsomeness to the stomach, but they take away the stink of the mouth. 10 The juice drawn up into the nose, purgeth the head. 11 The juice with the juice of Rue and honey, helpeth the biting of a mad dog being anointed on. 12 The often eating of Onions harmeth the choleric, but not the phlegmatic. 13 The juice with Capon's grease anointed on, helpeth raw heels and sleepie-gasses. 14 Ears running and mattery, drop in the juice. 15 seeth Onions, and cast away the first water, then seeth them in salt broth with other good spices, and so they are good for the stomach, and cause better nourishment. 16 Stamp an Onion with honey, and lay it to any wound to heal it. 17 Roasted Onions eaten with oil, helpeth the cough. 18 Ears pain and noise, drop in the juice with woman's milk. 19 Dropsy, drink the juice with the juice of Fenell. 20 Sleepiness and lethargy, drink the juice with the juice of Rue & honey. 21 Apply the juice with reasons & figs to apostumes to break & draw them. 22 The eating of Onions causeth fearful dreams, especially in them that have been lately sick. 23 Young tender Onions eaten of labouring people in the mornings, doth greatly maintain their health, and withstand the infection of the air, especially with salt and bread, for so they less harm the head, but to others they are hurtful, and cause madness, dazzling of the eyes, and the Lethargy. 24 Onions used continually in meats, soften the belly. 25 Women slice Onions, and steep them all night in spring water, and give their children the water to kill and expel worms. 26 The continual use, especially of the seeds thereof, engendereth natural seed and lust. 27 The juice with honey cleareth the eyes, and dropped into the ear, helpeth the noise and ache, and put into the nose, it purgeth the brain, and being anointed, it restoreth hair. 28 The juice with vinegar anointed hot, taketh away the spots of the face, especially under the eyes. 29 An Onion stamped with a fig, softeneth and breaketh apostumes and ulcers, especially in the fundament. 30 An Onion put in as a suppository, purgeth the Emerods', and draweth down the flowers. 31 A great Onion roasted in the embers with some Treacle, and then peeled and applied, softeneth and openeth all pestilent and venomous ulcers, and all other gatherings of evil humours & hardness. 32 Fry Onions with an Ox gall & sheeps tallow, and apply it to any bruise to have present help. 33 Roast a spoonful of Treacle in a great read Onion, and strain it with aqua vitae & vinegar, of each one spoonful, and drink it against the plague as the best remedy and most present. 34 Stamp iiii. or v. great roasted Onions with viii. ounces of aqua vitae, and three spoonful of Neate-foote oil, and boil it till it be thick, than strain it and anoint therewith morn and even by the fire a quarter of an hour together, chafing it well in to help the sciatica. 35 Roast oil Olive in an Onion, on the ember, and always as it drinketh into the Onion, put in more, then take of the uttermost pill and strain it and put thereof into the whole ear ix. nights when thou goest to bed, and lie on the sore ear, to void the pain and deafness. 36 Against water in the ear, apply the juice of Onions with Goose grease. 37 Put Onions and Leeks into Moldholes to make them come out. 38 Onions eaten in meat open the belly gently, and cause urine abundantly. 39 Being laid to the fundament with oil or vinegar, they open the Emerods', and so doth the juice or the whole Onion mixed with roasted apples & applied thereto with cotton. 40 Onions sodden and applied with reasons and figs, do ripen and break wens, and such like cold swellings. 41 Their juice dropped into the eyes, cleareth the sight, & at the beginning removeth the spots, clouds, & haws of the eye. 42 The same is good for the noise, filthiness, & deafness of the ears, & put in as a Pessary, it bringeth down the flowers & seconds. 43 With Rue and salt it is good against the bitings of dogs. 44 It cureth the naughty scab & itch, the white spots of all the body, and also the scurf and scales of the head, and restoreth hair in peeled places being laid thereto in the sun. 45 The same with Capon's grease is good against blisters, & galling of the feet with shoes. 46 The long Onion is more vehement than the round, and the read more than the white, the grey more than the green, and the raw more than the sodden or preserved in salt. 47 They warm and cleanse the stomach, & bring good colour to the face: they are good for the new green sickness, & provoke urine. 48 Onions stamped with salt & applied, help burnings. 49 And eaten abundantly with meat, 'cause one to sleep sound. 50 Drink three ounces of the distilled water fasting with a little sugar to provoke urine abundantly. 51 Seeth Onions with oil, white Lily roots, butter and wheat flower to ripen apostumes of hard maturation. 52 Onions in plasters are good for the looseness and ache of the joints, and for the gout. 53 By themselves, or with honey, they draw out pricks & spelds, with honey they are good for the ache of the stomach. 54 The juice with the yolk of an egg, vinegar, and honey, taketh away read or wan pimples or spots in the face and body. 55 Being roasted and mixed with parched barley meal, and the heads of small fishes, they restore black scars to their colour. 56 Being sodden and eaten, they take away the pain of the sides. 57 The juice is good to be anointed on the squinsy, and helpeth bloodshotten eyes when they begin. 58 Put a piece of a bruised Onion into the nose against the dissinesse of the head and brain. 59 Head to cleanse, put the juice into the nostrils. 60 Ears pain, (See Houseleek.) Nose bleeding, put in an Onion. 61 Fluxes to stop, take Triphera magna with a great Onion. 62 Pain after childbirth, (See Cummin.) 63 Ears dull, roast a read Onion with the juice of Wormwood, and of the heads and roots of Leeks, & do off the uppermost pill, and strain it & drop thereof into the ear. 64 Teethache, roast an Onion, and apply the one half to the one wrist, and the other to the other. 65 Lethargy, put the juice of an Onion into the nostrils. 66 Apostumes, roast salt in an Onion and apply it. 67 Eyes pearl, put in the juice with honey. Plague to heal, roast Treacle in an Onion in the embers wrapped in a wet linen, & press out the juice, & drink one spoonful of it. 68 colic & stone, slice an Onion, & steep it all night in white wine, & drink it in the morning, & walk one hour after it. 69 To ripen a sore, roast oil Olive in an Onion, and apply it. 70 Bloody-fluxe roast saffron in an Onion, & apply it to the navel as hot as may be suffered, and wear Knotgrass in thy shoes. 71 roast fresh grease in an Onion, & stamp it and apply it hot to the navel to loosen the belly. 72 Ears worms, roast the grease of an Eel in an Onion, and stream it & put it into the sore ear. 73 Ague cake, roast Onions with butter, and strain it & anoint the side. 74 To scour the stomach, & cause appetite, boil three great Onions, & grinned them with thrice so much sour bread of wheat, and put thereto v. pennyworth of saffron, & one ounce of ginger, and temper them with vinegar, & make it so thick that a spoon may stand in it, & eat a little of it daily morn & even. 75 Ears pain, or watery, or worms, drop in the juice with honey, and a little powder of Bays if you william. 76 Burning and scalding to heal in iiii. days, cut an Onion overwhart, and wring out the juice upon the place twice a day. 77 Belly worms, pill Onions, and slice them small, and power spring water over them, and let it stand all night, and drink it in the morning to expel all worms. 78 Apostume, apply roasted Onions with wheat meal. 79 Burning or scalding, anoint with the juice & apply the substance. 80 Ears deaf, roast the juice of Leek blades, & powder of Cummin, in an hollow Onion, and put it in. 81 Flowers to cause, eat Onions, or drink their juice. 82 For the fever & gleete in the stomach, roast three Onions tender in the embers, and pill them and press them flat, and apply them to the stomach hot as may be suffered twelve hours, and then renew it, and do so 4. or v. times. 83 Gout of cold cause and sciatica, stamp Onions with oil de Bay, and put thereto some powder of Pepper or of Euphorbium, and apply it to the sciatica: or roast powder of Pepper in a great Onion, and work them well together, and keep it in a box, and anoint well therewith against the fire wheresoever the gout be. 84 Apostume, seeth Onions and Cummin in wine and oil, and apply it: proved. 85 Face deformed, (See Lilies.) 86 Breast mattering, eat roasted Onions with butter. 87 Cold humours in the stomach, eat raw Onions with course bread fasting. 88 Urine to cause, put the top of an Onion into the yard. 89 Hair to grow, grind read Onions small, & anoint therewith. 90 Ears watery, apply the juice with a little Goose grease. 91 colic in the stomach and belly of wind, seeth running water, and seeth therein in four several parts or waters, & press them between two trenchers, and butter them, & cast on gross pepper, and eat them morn and even. 92 Piles, roast sugarcandy in great Onions in the embers, as it were a Warden, and open it and apply it. 93 Knees ache and swelling, and the feet likewise, anoint with the juice of Onions & Hen's grease. 94 jaundice, roast as much Treacle as a Chestnut, with some powder of Saffron in a great Onion, and strain it and drink the juice of it three days & be whole. Impostume, (See Lillie.) 95 Ears deaf, put in iii or iiii. drops of the juice of a read Onion iii iiii. nights. 96 Benumbed, take out the cores of iii or iiii. Saint Omers Onions, and put in good aqua vitae, and roast them and strain them, and keep the oil, and anoint therewith. 97 Emerods', roast read Onions & apply them hot as may be suffered. 98 Plague, roast Treacle in an Onion and strain it, and drink one spoonful, and thou shalt soon mend if God will: or drink the juice of a white Onion, Hony, vinegar, and the juice of Rue and yarrow, of each like much in Ale, more than half a glassful warm, and cover thee well to sweat: do it within the vi. hour after thou art infected or pained. 99 To keep flies from flesh, lay an Onion upon it. 100 Horse foundered, stamp an Onion, and steep it in strong vinegar, and make him to swallow the Onion, and put the vinegar into his nostrils, (See Almonds.) 101 Ears griefs general, put in the juice with honey. 102 Bitings venomous, stamp an Onion with fresh Rue, Salt, and Honey, of each like much and apply it, it is marvelous. 103 Emerods', apply the juice with the gall of an Ox. 104 Urine stopped in Agues, roast an Onion, and apply it to the bladder. 105 Biting of a mad dog, apply an Onion with Salt and Walnuts. 106 Hair to grow, stamp Onions and anoint therewith. 107 Warts, bruise them with honey, and apply them, especially the read ones. 108 Speech lost, drink the juice with any liquor to restore it. 109 For swelling and pain in the left side, and shortness of breath, apply a plaster of roasted Onions. 110 Headache, roast Frankincense and Cummin in a read Onion, and apply it hot in a cloth to the nape of the neck: proved. 111 Stone, roast vi. or x. Onions, & pill them & bruise them, & put them in a quart of good Malmsey, stir them two. or three hours, than strain it & seeth it to the one half, & drink thereof three or iiii. days mornings or more. 112 To take away the heat of fire, stamp Onions with salt and apply it: proved. 113 Itch and scab, mince Onions, & seeth them in vinegar or water, and wash therewith. 114 Stone to break, bake a Rye cake, and slice it through the mids, and lay thereon Onions roasted and sliced, and apply the one part to the bottom of the belly, and the other to the reins. Aches 52 (See Gout.) Ague cake 73 Appetite 74 Apostume 29. 31. 40. 51. 66 69. 78. 84. Belly bound 4. 24. 38. 71 Benumbed 96 Bitings ven. 11. 43. 102. 105 Black spots 55 Blisters 45 Bloody-flixe 70 Breast griefs 86 to cleanse 6 Breathshort 109 Bruise 32. 55 Burn 84. 76. 79. 112 Chafing 13. 45 colic 68 91 Cough 17 Colour bad 47 Dog biting 43 Dropsy 19 Ears griefs 101 noise 18 27. 42. dull 35. 42. 63. 80. 95. pain 18. 27. 35. 75. watering 36. 75. 90 worms 72. 75 Eyes grief, bloodshot 57 dull 27 pearl 67 griefs 5. 41 Emerods' 3. 30. 39 92. 97. 103 Face spots 28. 54. 55. 85 Feet galled 45 Fever 82 Flesh to keep 99 Flies to void 99 Flowers stopped 30. 81 Fluxes 61 Fundament sores 29 Galling 13. 45 Gout 52. 83 Green sickness 47 Hardness 31 Headache 110. dizzy. 58 Head to purge 10. 27. 59 scales 44 Hair to grow 44. 80. 106 Horse foundered 100 jaundice 94 joints ache 52 stitch 113 Kibes 13 Knees ache and swollen 93 Lame 96 Lethargy 65 Lust to 'cause 26 Mad dog 11. 105 Moules to catch 37 Nose bleeding 60 Piles 3. 92 Plague 33. 67. 98 Plague sore 31 Pricks 53 Purgation 6. 74 Sciatica 34. 83 Seed to increase 26 Sides griefs 56. 109 Skabs 8. 44. 54. 113 scales 44 scurf 44 Scalding 76. 79 Sleep to 'cause 49 Speech lost 108 Squincy 57 Stomach griefs 2. 87 to cleanse 74. 82 ache 53 Stone 68 111 Swell 40. 109 Teethache 64 Tongue palsy 108 Ulcers 29. 31 Urine stopped 3. 8. 47. 50. 88 104 Warts 107 Wens 40 women's griefs 52 Worms 25. 77 Wounds general 16 ¶ Orchis. ORchis, or Standard grass, the full and sappy roots, especially of Harebollox, or Goats orchiss eaten or boiled in Goats' milk and drunk, provoketh venus, & do nourish and strengthen them that have a consumption, or fever hectike, but the withered or shrivelled roots repress lust. 2 If men eat of the full roots, they shall beget sons, but if women eat of the withered, they shall bring forth daughters. 3 The same roots boiled in wine and drunk, stop the flux. 4 The same root green consumeth all tumours, and cleanseth rotten sores and fistulas, being applied, and the powder thereof cast into fretting and devouring ulcers and sores stayeth the same from further fretting and festering. 5 The same boiled in wine with a little honey, cureth the rotten sores and ulcers of the mouth. 6 The greatest are best. 7 Satirion is much of like nature, & so is Palma christi. 8 The round and full roots of all kinds of Satirion or Orchis, are good in meat and Electuaries to provoke Venus, but especially with goats milk, or mixed with white Pepper and Hony. 9 The same bruised and anointed, are good against inflammations and swellings. 10 They purge sores that run, and do heal them, like as Aron doth, and Dragons, especially Orchis Odorata. Conception 2 Consumption 1 Fever hectike 1 Fistula 4 Flux 3 Generating 2 Inflammation 9 Lust to 'cause 1. 8 to void 1 Mouth sores 5 Sores 4. 10 Swell 4. 9 ¶ Opopanax. OPopanax is very good against cold shiverings of fevers, pain of the side, ache and gnawing in the guts, the strangury, inward bruises, being drunk with meed. 2 With wine or meed, it helpeth the scurf & griefs of the bladder. 3 Take two drams or less to purge phlegm and cold tough humours from the brain, sinews, and joints, and for all cold griefs of the head, sinews, joints, cramps, palsies, etc. and to cleanse the breast, shortness of breath, old and dangerous coughs, hardness, and other griefs of the milt and the dropsy, being steeped in wine and drunk. 4 It doth scatter, soften, and dissolve all hard cold swelling tumours being steeped in vinegar and applied. 5 Sciatica, apply it with the pulp of reasons, and the like to the gout of the legs or feet. 6 For windiness and hardness of the matrix, and to expel the flowers, dead birth, and seconds, mix it with honey, and use it as a pessary. 7 To break carbuncles, plague sores, and other tumours, soak it in vinegar and apply it. Teethache, boil it in vinegar, and put it in, or apply it. 8 Biting venomous, mix it with pitch, and apply it to bitings of mad & wild beasts. 9 Lethargy, smell to the perfume of it. 10 Fevers cold, drink it with vinegar one hour before the fit, and anoint the spin of the back with the juice of Smallach, and oil of Dill. 11 It helpeth dullness of sight, the gouts and sciatica. 12 And sodden in must after 12. weeks space it is good for the dropsy, and swollen milt. 13 And drunk with honeyed water warm, it healeth the strangury, expelleth the terms and dead birth, causeth obortion, and is good for other griefs of the matrix. 14 Milt hard, apply it with the juice of Smallach. 15 Eyes dull, put it into the eyes alone, or use it in collyries. 16 Drink as much as a Filbeard to provoke urine, and menstrues, and for the coldness of the matrixe. Belly-ache 1 Bitings venom. 8 Bladder griefs 2 Breast stopped 3 Breath short 3 Bruised 1 Carbuncles Cough 3 Deliverance 6. 13 Dropsy 3. 12 Dead child 6. 13 Eyes dull 11. 15 Fevers cold 1. 9 Flowers stopped 6. 13. 16 Gouts general 11 Hardness 3. 4 Head griefs joints griefs Lethargy Matrix griefs 6. 13. 16 Milt griefs 3. 14 Plague sore 7 Purgation 3. 13 Sciatica 5. 11 Sinews griefs 3 Side pain 5 Seconds 6. 13 Swell 4. 7 Strangury 1. 13 Teethache 7 Urine stopped 16 ¶ Organy. ORgany: drink the decoction of the flowers for griefs of the liver: put the leaves and flowers into a linen bag, and seeth it in wine, and apply it hot to the head, and cover thee well to sweat, and so it driveth forth many griefs of the head and breast, and the straightness of breath. 2 seeth it in wine, & drink it to help the stomach, and ease the bowels of grievous pain in making water, and the dropping of urine. 3 urine to cause, apply it to the belly. 4 Tenasmus, sprinkle the powder of it on the fundament. 5 seeth it in wine and oil Olive, and strike it on a linen cloth, and apply it to the matrix for the hardness thereof, and to purge it and to draw down the terms. 6 To heal the read leapry, take the juice of Organy and Horehound, a little wine, and oil of Henbane, but yet more than the juices, and put to them a little oil of Tartar, and anoint therewith in a hot house: but if any pain remain afterward, anoint with fresh goats grease melted in a frying pan, & lie down in clean sheets until it be dried in: and after that bruise Organy, and mix it with wheat bran, and heat it in a frying pan, and apply it very hot upon the blisters and leapry, and bind it to till it need heating again, and do so often & be whole out of doubt. In the mean while use those good blood, and be of easy digestion, and drink daily syrup of Fumiterie, but in winter syrup of agrimony. 7 Ears pain, drop in the juice with woman's milk warm. 8 Fundament fallen, stamp it with Roses, Calamus Aromaticus, and Wormwood, and apply it. 9 seeth it in wine with Figs, Honey, and Rue, and use it to help the spitting of matter, continual cough, shortness of breath, to cleanse the lungs, and to kill worms drunk morn and even, or use the conserve thereof to the same effects. 10 seeth it with figs, and gargoyle therewith for the squinsy, and with vinegar for the toothache. 11 Stamp it with figs, and saltpeter, and apply it to the dropsy. 12 Take up the vapour of it sodden into the ear for the noise thereof: it may be used for Time, and Time for it. 13 For difficulty of breathing of cold cause, drink three ounces of the water morn and even. 14 Matrix heard, boil it with wine, and mix it with oil Olive, and apply it. 15 Wula fallen, and palate swollen, gargarise with the water distilled in a Limbeke in june. 16 colic, drink one scruple of the powder of it with good wine. 17 Ears apost. seeth it in oil Olive, and put it in. 18 Bloody flux, drink it with wine. 19 Itch, wash with lee made thereof. 20 Teethache, take up the fume of it burned. 21 Flowers to cause, boil it in read wine and make a syrup thereof, and drink it often, or apply a plaster thereof to the womb, and over the plaster hold thy mouth and nose, and also take the suffumigation thereof for the same purpose. 22 To make any place of the body white, stamp Organy, and rub it therewith. Bladder griefs 2 Bloody-fluxe 17 Breast griefs 1. 9 13 Breath short 9 13 colic 2. 3. 16 Cough continual 9 Dropsy 11 Ears apost. 17 noise 12 Eyes pain 7 Flowers stopped 5. 21 Fundament fallen 8 Head griefs 1 Itch 19 Leapry read 6 Liver griefs 1 Lungs to cleanse 9 Matrix heard 5. 14 Mouth griefs 15 palate swollen 15 Sickness general 1. 2 Skin to be white 22 Spitting matter 9 Squincy 10 Stomach griefs 2 Teethache 20 Tenasmus 4 Urine stopped 2. 3 Wula fallen 15 Worms 9 ¶ Opium. OPium, which is the juice of black Poppy, cooleth, thicketh, and drieth. 2 Take as much as a fitch to suage pain, cause sleep, & help the flux, but too much of it is hurtful, for it taketh away the memory, & killeth. 3 Headache, power it on the head with Rose oil. 4 Ears ache, put it in with oil of Almonds, oil of Myrrh & saffron. 5 Eyes burning & inflamed, apply it with the yolk of a hard roasted Eg. 6 Apply it with vinegar to inflammations, shingles, & holy fire, and to heal wounds. 7 Apply it to the gout with woman's milk. 8 Put it into the fundament to 'cause sleep. Frenzy, smell to it to 'cause sleep. 9 Take Opium and Levin of each two. drams well beaten with honey and vinegar, & anoint the temples & pulses therewith for the frenzy, or make a plaster of Opium, Henbane seed with sugar, & the juice of lettuce, & apply it to the forehead, or use a suppository of Opium & oil of violets, or apply saffron, Mandrake, & Opium to the head, or take Opium i. dram, black Poppy two. drams, mix them with Populeon and woman's milk that suckleth a wench, & apply it to the temples, all these for the frenzy. Wash thy face with the decoction of Poppy, & thou shalt either sleep, or die out of hand. Headache dassing, turning, or giddy, take Opium & saffron, ana two. drams, oil of Roses. iiii. drams, make thereof a plaster with vinegar, & apply it to the head. 10 Opium with vinegar dissolveth the gout, or mix half a dram of Opium in powder with the yolks of three eggs, & oil of Roses, and apply plasters thereof. 11 To sleep while the surgeon do his office, drink half a dram of Opium with i. pound or more of wine. 12 As much as a wheat corn doth make a man to sleep without waking, till vinegar be put into his nose, and his head and face washed all over with vinegar. 13 Frenzy, honey and vinegar, leaven and Opium, of each like much mixed together, and the pulses anointed therewith. 14 Use it in suppositories to stop the flux. Ache 1. 2 Ears ache 4 Eyes hot 5 Fluxes 1. 2 Frenzy 8. 9 13 Gout 7. 10 Headache 3. 9 giddy 9 turning 9 Holy fire 6 Inflammation 6 Shingles 6 Sleep to 'cause 2. 8. 11. 12 ¶ Oranges. Oranges, See Citrons, Lemons. The juice & inner substance especially where the juice is very good against all contagious and corruptions of the air, the plague, and other hot fevers it preserveth, and also cureth the same, it comforteth the heart, and especially the mouth of the stomach, and helpeth the weakness thereof, the trembling of the heart, pensive heaviness, and wambling of the stomach, vomiting and loathing in agues, and such like diseases. 2 The juice quencheth thirst, and reviveth appetite, & so doth the syrup thereof. 3 The pills condited or preserved with honey or sugar, do warm the stomach, and mendeth a stinking breath, and helpeth digestion. 4 The seeds withstand all venom and poison, and killeth and expelleth worms. 5 Hung an Orange pricked full of Cloves into a wine vessel, so that it touch not the wine, to give it a fine colour and taste. 6 Flux to stop, srinke powder of the pill with posset-ale. Appetite 2 Air corrupt 1 Breath stink 3 Fever 1 Flux 6 Heart to comfort 1 trembling 1 pensiveness Plague 1 Poison 4 Stomach ill 1 Thirst 2 Venom 4 Vomiting 1 Wine to keep 5 Worms 4 ¶ Orpin. ORpin, or Livelong, hath the nature and virtues of Houseseeke. 2 Cuts to heal, stamp it & apply it. 3 Mix the juice with strong white vinegar, & anoint the morphue every hour therewith, & likewise all filthy and stinking ulcers. 4 The juice healeth filthy leprous sores. It healeth wounds new and old, and likewise fistulas and ruptures. 5 The water thereof is good against all ruptures and convulsions, and also for all wounds inward & outward. 6 For gnawing of the stomach, lungs, liver, guts, matrix, and the bloody flux being drunk daily. 7 The root sodden in wine with honey and drunk, is good for all the aforesaid. 8 The herb sodereth and healeth all wounds, especially harness and ruptures, and stoppeth the bleeding of wounds, and ceaseth the ache, being stamped and applied. 9 Bruse, stamp it with wheat flower, and apply it. 10 Finger bruised and flesh raised, stamp it with salt, and apply it in a fair cloth, and remove it not till it be whole. 11 squinsy, gargarise with the juice of it. Aches 8 Belly-ache 6. 7 Bleeding 8 Bloody-fluxe 6. 7 Bruise 9 10 Bursten 4. 5. 8 Cramp 5 Cut 2. 8 Finger bruised 10 Fistula 4 Flux (see blood.) Leapry 4 Liver-ache 6. 7 Matrix ache 6 Morphewe 3 Skabs 3. 4 Sores 4 Squincy 11 Stomach ache 6. 7 Ulcers 3 Wounds 4. 8 ¶ Oats. Oats may be used in plasters and Cataplasms in stead of Barley. 2 oatmeal tempered with vinegar, voideth lentels & spots from the face. 3 The same taken with meat stoppeth the belly. 4 Otebread nourisheth but little, & is not very agreeable to mankind. 5 The juice of Oats in suppings or broths, is good for the cough. 6 The gruel made with Oats, stoppeth the belly. 7 The meal of parched Oats drunk with honeyed water, is good for the cough. 8 Oats sodden in vinegar take away moles, blanes, and spots. 9 Hold any lame member over the fume of Oats, and then set the same member into the sodden Oats, after it hath been a good while over the vapour, & do so as often as need is till it be well. 10 colic, parch Oats in a pan, and apply them to thy navel, as hot as may be suffered. 11 Reins running, stamp good store of Otemeale, and seethe it in a pint of milk, and strain it and drink it with sugar. 12 Morphue, (See Barley, Mallows.) 13 Belly grinding, eat Ote cakes well soured. 14 Costivenesse, stamp Otemeale Greyts and seethe them with bugloss and use the broth, (See Gouts in Leeks.) 15 Legs or feet ache, or swelling, chop read water cresses small, and put thereto thick dregss of oatmeal as much, and fresh sheeps tallow, and boil it till it be thick, and apply it. 16 Belly grinding, apply Cummin, Bayes, and Otemeale to the place hot in a broad cloth. 17 Artetica passio, seeth crumbs of bread and oatmeal with wine and apply it. 18 Ache of the Gout, seeth Otemeale and smallach and apply it. 19 Cod swollen, boil Cows dung with Otemeale, with milk and dregss of oil, and apply it. 20 Apostume, boil Otemeale with sheeps suet in fair water and apply it. 21 Breath short, make Gruel of Otemeale, water, Puluill and Cummin, and use it: it openeth well and cleanseth out phlegm. 22 Bruse, boil Otemeale with sheeps suet in water and apply it. 23 Wounds, bruises, and such like, stamp Otemeale with sheeps tallow, and boil it in water and apply it: if Holyoke roots be put thereto, it is the better. 24 Swell, apply the gross meal with the white of an Egg and vinegar. 25 Head ache of melancholy, bathe some times in a bath made with Ote straw, but sit not in it too long nor too hot, and take no cold after it. 26 Oats are also good in baths for the headache. 27 Throat squincy or apostumed, use Otemeale gruel well sifted, and put ten or twelve Almonds thereto well beaten, and sugar, and eat it with bread, (See Mallows.) 28 Stomach ill after meat, eat thin pap of Otemeale made with wine. 29 Legs cold with age or sickness, seethe half a strike of Oats with two quarts of water, and one quart of wine, and stir it well that it burn not, and put it into two soft bags, and lap thy legs therein at morn, noon, and even, as long as need is. 30 Legs ache and swollen, seethe Otemeale in milk, and put thereto the juice of Houseleek and sheeps tallow and apply it. 31 Knees, legs or joints lame, seeth a black sheeps head, and the wool thereof all chopped a pieces, & cast out the bones, and seethe Otemeale therein till it be thick, and apply it. 32 Legs swollen, seeth Oats in water till they be tender, and hold thy leg over the vapour, and let out the water of the blisters, and anoint it with Butter: the like is good for any lame member, the same being also holden in the Oats hot as may be suffered four or five times, if need be. 33 To break a Bile, Felon or Uncome, stamp a handful of Otemeale and seethe it in a pint of sweet milk and sheeps suet shreaded small, and when it is thick, apply it to break it gently, then apply Turpentine upon Leather prick full of holes, to cleanse and heal it: it is good also for any bruise or sore. 34 colic, parch Oats and apply them hot to the Navel. 35 Reins running, seeth bruised oatmeal in milk, with a good piece of sugar, and eat it, (See face in Lily. Aches 15. 18. 30. 17 Apost. 20 Belly ache 13. 16 bound 14 lose 3. 6 Benumbed 9 bile 33 Breath short 21 Bruise 22. 23. 33 colic 10. 34 Cod swollen 19 Cough 5. 7 Face deform. 28 Felon 33 Feet ache 15 Fluxes 3. 6 Gout 17. 18 Head ache 25. 26 joints ache 17 Knees ache 17 lame 31 Legs ache 3 cold 29 swollen 30. 32 Lame griefs 31. 32 Moles 8 Morphue 12 Reins running 11. 35 Sores 33 Spots 8 Squincy 27 Stomach ill 28 Swell 24. 30. 32 Throat swollen 27 Uncome 33 Wounds 23 ¶ Palma Christi. PAlma Christi: The seeds taken inwardly openeth the belly, causeth vomit, draweth out slimy phlegm from far, and sometimes choleric and waterish humours. 2 The broth of meat wherein the seeds have been sodden & drunk, is good for the bellyach, gout, and sciatica. 3 The same in powder taken in whey or new milk, driveth forth superfluities and choleric humours, and is good for the dropsy and jaundice. 4 The oil drawn forth of it called Oleum Cicinum, or in shops Oleum de Cherua, heateth and drieth, and is very good to anoint and rub all rough hardness, scurf & itch. 5 The green leaves stamped with parched Barley meal, doth assuage all inflammations and swellings and soreness of the eyes. 6 And with vinegar they cure grievous inflammations & swellings called S. Ant. fire. 7 The same seeds are good to be taken with Anniseedes or Fennell seeds and some spices, as Cinamome and Ginger, etc. and so it will not torment the stomach, but work more gently and effectually. 8 The leaves laid too by themselves or with vinegar, suage swollen breast by two much milk. 9 Powder of thirty corns peeled and drunk, purgeth both upward and downward. 10 The juice cleanseth the face from pimples and spots, and maketh the skin smooth from warts being stamped with oil of Tartar, and the place anointed therewith (See Spurge.) 11 Apply the juice to any wound, to draw out Iron or Arrow head, if any such be in it. 12 The powder thereof melted with Frankincense and put into a clout and holden on the ring finger, and a ring of gold put on the same finger, and the hand washed in every corner of the pond, will make the fish come to hand. Belly bound 1 ache 2 Breasts swollen 8 colic 2 Dropsy 8 Eyes sore 4 Face deform. 10 Fishing 12 Gout 2 jaundice 3 Inflammation 6 Itch 4 Pricks 11 Purgation 3. 7. 9 S. Ant. fire 6 Sciatica 2 Skin rough 4. 10 Vomit to 'cause 1 Warts 10 Wounds 11 ¶ Pears. Pears of all sorts taken before meat, do nourish but little, but yet more than Apples, especially those that be great & sweet. 2 The sour, rough and chokie Pears and others that are not watery, eaten raw or baked before meals, do stop the common lask, and strengthen the mouth of the stomach. 3 They are good to be laid to the beginning of hot tumours and green wounds, and so are the leaves, for they close and heal new wounds. 4 To keep Pears long, put them into a vessel that they touch not one another with fine white salt and cover them close: put a Pair into wine, clean pared: if it swim, the wine is pure: but if it sink, there is water mixed with it. 5 To keep Pares dry, seethe them in fair water and Rose water with Honey, with a gentle fire, and let them drain through a cloth or colander, and then dry them in an Oven after the batch is drawn forth: if once doing so serve not, do so the second time, and then barrel them up. 6 Pares are good in Plasters that are made to stop the course of humours that run to any place. The broth of dried Pares stoppeth the belly. 7 They are evil to be eaten fasting. 8 The juice of the leaves is good for venomous bitings. 9 A syrup made of the juice of Pares, is good against choler, and the chollorike flux. 10 Pares breed the colic: it is good to drink Hippocras after them. 11 Pares without wine are poison, but sodden Pares are a treacle or preservative. 12 Sodden or roasted, they relieve and lighten the stomach. 13 After Pares drink, but after Apples go to the stool. 14 All kind of Pares do bind as Quinces do, and therefore are preserved in electuaries and syrups, to stop vomiting and fluxes. 15 The leaves are good in baths to sit in, against the falling down of the Matrixe and other griefs of women. 16 Plasters of the leaves are good to stop vomits and lasks. 17 Pares are worse than Apples, for being eaten raw, they make the blood waterish, and breed wind & colic, unless good Sack or Canary wine be drunk after them. 18 But baked, roasted or stewed, they are not unwholesome. 19 Pares and other fruits are to be eaten with salt, being first cleansed both outwarly and inwardly. 20 Pares, Apples and Quinces, may be sodden to Pap and strained, and to six pound of the Pap, put four pound of Honey, and seeth them to perfection, and use it. 21 A plaster of young Pares that have been transplanted, is good for the sinews that are pricked. 22 Vomit to stop, eat sour bitter Pares. 23 Cough, seeth Pares in wine, Ale or Beer, and take up the vapour of them at the mouth. 24 Belly lose, use roasted Pares. 25 Bloody flux, seethe dry Pares in water, and drink thereof, it helpeth also the lask. 26 Stomach and belly weak, dress Pares in meat and use them. 27 Flux, seeth them in vinegar and drink it with Mastic, or seeth them in water, and drink it. Liver griefs, stamp the kernels and drink them with Hony. 28 Burn, stamp the leaves and apply them. 29 Fundament fallen, bathe it with the decoction of the leaves. Apostume 3 Belly lose 2. 6. 24 Bitings venom. 8 Bloody flux 25 Burn 28 Cough 23 Defensive 6 Fundament fallen 29 Fluxes 9 14. 16. 27 Liver griefs 27 Matrixe fallen 15 preservative 11 sinews pricked 21 Stomach ill 2. 12. 26 Swell 3 Vomiting 14. 16. 22 Wounds 3 ¶ parietary. PArietary: it is singular good against choleric inflammations, S. Anthony's fire, spreading and running sores, burnings, and all hot ulcers, being stamped and applied. 2 An ointment made with the juice and Ceruse, is good against all hot ulcers, spreading sores, hot, burning, scurvy, and spreading skabs and such like impediments. 3 The same juice with dears suet, is good for the gout of the feet. 4 The juice with oil of Roses dropped into the ears, suageth their pain. 5 The decoction or broth drunk, helpeth the old cough, gravel, & stone: the difficulty of urine being also applied warm outwardly. 6 The leaves stamped, heal all burnings, inflammations, hard lumps, weals of the fundament called Pavos. 7 The juice with Goats' suet, or with wax & oil of Pryvet, it is good for the gout. 8 Gargoyle with the juice and apply it also to the inflammation of hot kernels under the jaws. 9 seeth it in wine or water with Honey or sugar, to help the old and dry cough, shortness of breath, obstructions of the liver, milt and kidneys, to cleanse the Matrixe and inward passages, to drive down the terms & urine, to cease the torments of the Matrixe, the water or powder doth the like. 10 The herb with Honey, helpeth the inflammations of the mouth. 11 The juice put into the ears, taketh away their pricking ache. 12 It helpeth also the shingles, holy fire, hot apost. swellings, inflammations, burnings, especially being tempered with Ceruse: and so it helpeth also creeping sores, Pocks and weals. 13 The herb with water cresses fried with wine in a frying pan, and applied to the bladder, driveth forth urine mightily, and applied to the belly, it taketh away the torments thereof. 14 And fried with Beane meal, Mallows and Wheat bran, oil and wine and so applied, it helpeth the bruised sinews and muscles. 15 seeth it with wine and apply it with bran to any ache, and to the ache of the stomach and belly coming of cold: and in this case, the best wine is white wine that is somewhat sharp. 16 Strangury and dissury, boil it in salt water and oil, and apply it. 17 Boil it and eat it against the cold, and windiness of the stomach: Fritters made thereof are good for the same purpose. 17 Not herb is better to wash glasses, being used with some salt. 18 Stamp it and apply it to the Cod & under the Navel four times a day, to avoid their pain, and the colic. 19 Drop the juice with the gleere of an Egg into the eye to heal the web, being beaten together & skummed. 20 colic, drink it with wine or apply it or foment with it. 21 Fundament swollen, seethe it and apply it. 22 Fundament fallen, seeth it in water and bathe therewith and apply it. 23 Stone in the reins or bladder, Stamp it and apply it. 24 For the host, boil the juice of parietary and Planten, with swine's grease, and strain it and anoint the breast therewith by the fire, and be whole. 25 Iliake passion and colic, boil it in oil Olive, and apply it very hot, and so it looseneth the belly. 26 Worms in the flesh, stamp it and yarrow with a little salt, and apply them twice or thrice, and drink the same herb with wine or ale. 27 Eyes spots, beat the juice with the gleire of an Egg, and scum it, and put a drop of the clearest of it often into the eye, especially when thou goest to bed. 28 colic, use to drink the decoction of it in wine, or use it in baths, plasters or glisters. 29 Cod swollen, seethe it with wheat bran in sweet wine and apply it. 30 Ears ache, put in the juice with powder of Niter. 31 Knees ache and swollen, wash them with the decoction thereof. 32 Reins ache, seeth it in wine and drink it and apply the herb. 33 Strangury, seethe it in water and apply it to the bladder. 34 Reins running, stamp it & strain it with Malmsie or white wine, or ale, and drink it often. 35 To piss well stamp it and fry it, and apply it hot to the shares. For ache and pain in the stomach and belly, seethe it in thy pottage and eat thereof. 36 Stone, bath in the decoction thereof, and also drink it in possit ale. 37 Bruised inward, seethe it in white wine or old stolen, and a part of bran of wheat and Boar's grease, and apply it hot, as often as need is. 38 Reins running, seethe it with Thyme and Parslie, of each one handful in a quart of strong ale to the one half, and drink half a pint morn and even warm ten days. 39 Distil it in a Limbeck, and drink three ounces of the water morn and even eight or ten days, to purge the Matrixe, reins and bladder, and to open the liver and milt, (See in Mallows.) 40 For cresty growings of the fundament, & piles, stamp it with Yarrow and a little salt and apply it. 41 Matrixe to purge, drink the juice of it. 42 Eyes bloody, put in the juice with Rose water. 43 Strangury, seethe it well in salt water and apply it to the reins, shares and greines. 44 Gravel and stone, use it in pottage and possit ale, with Parslie roots and Saxifrage. Ache general 15 Apost. hot 12 Back ache 32. 39 Belly ache 13. 15. 18 Bladder griefs 39 Breast stopped 24 Breath short 9 24 Bruised 14. 37 Burn 1. 6. 12 colic 18. 20. 25. 28 Cod griefs 18 swollen 29 Cough old 5. 9 Dissurie 16 Ears griefs 4. 11. 30 Eyes bloody 42 web 19 27 Emerods' 40 Feet gout 3 Flowers stopped 9 Fundament grief 6. 40 fallen 22 swollen 21 Glasses to cleanse 17 Gout 3. 7 Gravel 5. 44 Hard lumps 6 Holy fire 1. 12 Iliake 25 Inflammation 1. 6 Kernels 8 Kidneys stop 9 Knees ache and swollen 31 Liver stopped 9 39 Lungs stopped 24 Matrixe griefs 9 39 to cleanse 41 stopped 9 39 Milt stopped 9 39 Mouth inflamed 10 Piles 40 Pocks 12 Reins running 34. 38 sinews bruised 14 Shingles 12 Skabs 2 Sores 1. 2. 12 Stomach ache 15 cold and windy 17 Stone 5. 23. 36. 44 Strangury 16. 33. 43 Swell 1. 2 Throat kernels 8 Ulcers 12 Urine stopped 5. 9 13. 35 Weals 12 Windiness 17 Worms in the flesh 26 ¶ Parsnips. PArsnips: the roots sodden tender and eaten, cause urine, and are good against melancholy. 2 The garden Parsnip eaten with meat, engendereth good blood, and the wild Parsnip eaten of women, moveth terms. 3 The root hanged about the neck, helpeth the swelling of the throat, & no venomous thing shall hurt him that carrieth it about him. 4 The seed drunk with wine and also applied to the Matrixe, provoketh terms, and helpeth the straightness of making water, the pain of the side called the pleurisy. 5 The root applied plasterwise, helpeth venomous bitings or stingings. 6 The root sodden & eaten, provoketh urine & venery. 7 The leaves stamped with honey and applied, doth cleanse and heal ulcers that eat greatly into the flesh. 8 The herb with the root shreaded & distilled about the end of March, and the water drunk three ounces morn & even, and the palsy members also anointed therewith or bathed, helpeth their shaking. 9 The roots eaten in meats, yield better nourishment than Carrots. 10 The water drunk every night six ounces, provoketh venery and sperm in man, & helpeth the straightness in making of water: milk to cause, use the root or seeds. 11 The root provoketh urine, suageth pain of the side, expelleth wind of the belly, and is good for them that be bruised. 12 The roots eaten, are good for the lungs, breast and reins. 13 The seed of the wild Parsnip is good against all poison, it healeth all venomous bitings & stingings being drunk in wine, and is so excellent good for this purpose, that when stags or rather wild Hearts have eaten of it, no venomous beasts may hurt them. 15 The seed of wild Parsnips drunk, provoketh terms and urine, help the dropsy, resist poison and all venomous bitings, and help conception. 15 This herb applied into the Matrixe by a skilful Midwife stamped, draweth forth the dead child. 16 And stamped with Honey, it cureth spreading ulcers. 17 Those of the garden are more apt to meat then the wild. 18 Teeth ache and worms, rub them with the root. 19 Matrixe suffocat. drink the seeds in wine. 20 Milk to increase, seethe the roots with Fennell roots in chicken broth, and eat it with a little fresh butter. 21 Loins pain, drink the seeds. 22 Swell of women's bellies as if they were with child, drink one ounce of the seeds morn and even. 23 Parsnips engender thick blood and natural seed being much used, and therefore are good for them that have been long sick, and they may be eaten raw or sodden against melancholy humours, either green or dry. 24 To provoke lust and help digestion, boil the roots first in water and slice them, and seethe them again in fresh water, and put thereto clarified Honey, and boil them to the thickness of Honey, and in the end, put thereto Almonds if you have them, and then put thereto Ginger, Galingale, and a little Pepper and Nutmegs, and other sweet savouring spices, and use it, or seethe them soft, and cut them small, and seeth them again in Honey, some strain them and seeth them in water and Honey together, and stir them well, that they cleave not to the vessel, and in the midst of the seething, put Almonds in powder, and then Ginger, Nutmegs & Cinomom ana i. ounce, it moveth lust & helpeth digestion. Ache 21 Back ache 21 Belly swollen 22 windy 11 Bitings venom. 5. 13. 14 Blood to 'cause 2. 23 Breast grief 12 Bruised 11 Conception 14 Consumption 23. 24 Dead child 15 Deliverance 15 Digestion 24 Dropsy 14 Flowers stopped 2. 4. 14 Kidneys griefs 12 Loins ache 21 Lungs griefs 12 Lust to 'cause 6. 10. 24 Matrixe suffoc. 19 Melancholy 1 Milk to 'cause 10. 20 Palsy 8 Pleurisy 4. 11 Poison 13. 14 Seed to 'cause 10 Side pain 4. 11 Shaking 8 Stinging 13 Teeth ache 18 Throat swollen 3 Venom 3. 14 Ulcers 7. 15 urine stopped 4. 6. 11. 14 ¶ parsley. parsley pierceth and provoketh urine. 2 Both the seeds and roots prevail against the stone. 3 Bruise the dried root and drink it with pure wine, to 'cause a good memory, to purge the blood, and to provoke terms. 3 Eat the seeds for the swelling of the stomach, the dropsy, to consume evil humours, to cleanse the liver and voided the pain of the loins and bladder. 4 Use salads of Parsley, sorrel & vinegar, to help the burning fever. 5 Eat the herb raw or sodden for the stopping of the bladder, to provoke urine and terms, to cleanse the kidneys, to expel wind, gripings of the belly, and swelling of the stomach. 6 The seeds in working are best, than the roots, and then the leaves. 7 Holy fire, apply Parsley with bread. 8 For stopping of urine & griefs of the kidneys, apply parsley. 9 Kidneys griefs, bruise the seeds & seethe them in water and drink it, & apply the seeds with the white of an egg to the reins. 10 The seeds with white wine help the jaundice. 11 Neither women with child or in childbed, nor Nurses, may eat Parsley with their meat, for hindering conception, drying up the milk of the breasts, & causing the younglings to have the falling sickness: yet doth parsley being thrown into fish ponds, strengthen and revive the sick fish. 12 Breath corrupt & stinking, chew parsley. 13 Stamp it and strain it with white wine, & drink a good draft five or six times to drive out the urine and stone. 14 Stamp it with the white of an egg, and apply it to the bruise of the eyes cold. 15 Shingles, stamp it with erums of bread, & apply it. 16 Use it in meats to strengthen the stomach, cause appetite & digestion, & provoke urine. 17 The decoction of the root or seed, openeth the stopping of the liver, kidneys & all inner parts: driveth forth urine, gravel & stone, & is a remedy against all poison & venomous bitings, blasting & windiness. 18 Use the seeds in electuary, for the cough & other medicines for that purpose. 19 Stamp the leaves with bread or barley flower, & apply it to read inflamed eyes, and Paps swollen with curdled milk. 20 Parsley is ill for them that have the falling sickness, and is utterly to be shunned of them that have it: it hurteth the stones, it is good for the Hicket. 21 The seed taken afore hand, withstandeth drunkenness, it stirreth up women to conception. 22 Sat in the decoction of Parsley, to draw forth the stone, to provoke urine, and heal the kidneys. 23 Use parsley against the inflation of the stomach & belly, the colic & pain of the sides, kidneys and bladder. 24 It driveth down the dead youngling & the seconds, either drunk or put into the Matrixe. 25 Stamp parsley & apply it to skabs, morphue and bushes, to cleanse them marvelously. parsley is good for the dropsy and all obstructions, & to expel the urine, stone, flowers & seconds, & dead younglings put into the Matrixe, and for fevers that come by fits. 26 Stamp parsley with as much Fennel, and strain it & drink it for the griefs of the bladder, to expel the stone & urine, and to heal the stomach. 27 For the stone colic and Nephretica, drink the juice of Parsley with Aniseedes. 28 Flowers stopped, seeth Savin with the roots of Parsley, Smallach and Fennell with wine, and drink it. 29 sinews ache, stamp parsley & apply it, & when it is hot, apply fresh Parsley as often as need is. 30 Strangury, seethe the leaves of Parsley, Fennell, and smallach, and mix them with wheat bran, and apply it. 31 Trembling, use Parsley seed and fennel seeds together. 32 Wounds to cleanse, seethe the roots of Parsley and smallach in wine, and wash therewith. 33 To refresh the body, make thick pottage with green Parsley and flesh, and use it, or use Parsley with a good Hen-broth. 34 Side pain, seethe a quart of white wine with a sixth part of Honey, one handful of Parsley, & two ounces of parsley seed in a new earthen pot, till the sixth part be wasted, and when it waxeth cold, drink thereof morn and even, 35 urine to cause, seethe the roots of Parsley & the herb Dasye in water, & drink thereof morn & even, especially with some water of Radish. 36 Strangury, use the roots of Parsley and Fennell, (See Groundswell.) 37 Stone to void, make powder of the seeds of small ache & Parsley of each like much, with as much sugar; and take thereof on sops of bread dipped in wine after meals, & also first & last at morn & even. Fever quotidian, seethe a quarter of a Hen or chicken with water & Parsley, & iiii. leaves of lettuce, & use it. 38 Eyes black & bruised, apply it with the white of an egg. 39 Stomach hot, eat green Parsley. 40 Breast pain, stamp parsley, Isope and Sage, and apply them hot. 41 Belly hard and urine stopped, drink powder of the seeds of Parsley, Smallach and Spurge, with wine or water morn & even. 42 urine to cause, seethe a good piece of stone Pitch in a quart of white wine with the seeds of Parsley, anise and sugar, to the one half, and drink it warm morn & even. Fevers, (See Centory, Fennel.) 42 colic, bruise white Thyme and Parsley, and strain it with ale, & drink it warm with powder of grains, or of green broom seed, when need is, (See Nettle.) 43 Bladder griefs, stamp parsley, Smallach, and Fennell, of each like much, and drink them with water, (See Fennell, Cummin.) 44 Biting or stinging of an Addar, drink the juice of Parsley with vinegar. 45 To cleanse the Matrixe & expel a dead child and the seconds, put in the juice with a clout into the Matrixe, & also drink thereof with any drink. 46 To cause deliverance, drink the juice of the roots. 47 Gouts and aches, mix Parsley with oil of Roses & woman's milk, and anoint therewith. 48 Fever tertian, drink the juice before the fit, (See Basill.) 49 Parsley engendereth blood greatly, & is good for the Ptisike & the fever tertian, the grief of the sides, & the dropsy: it comforteth the heart and stomach, and is good in pottages. 50 Dropsy, eat Parsley with water Cresses and Mints daily. 51 Pissing blood, drink Ambrose, parsley and Saxifrage, with cows milk daily. 52 Bladder griefs, drink Smallach, parsley and Fennell with water, to expel urine and the stone. 53 Stone to break, make powder of black Flints, Parsley seed, Fenel seed, and Towncres seed, and use it morn & even. 54 Stone & stopping of the urine, stamp it & strain it with white wine, & drink a good draft five or vi. times, or seethe it in white wine with Thime, and into a good draft, shave a spoonful of white soap, & drink it. 55 Ache in any part, seethe parsley & Wormwood of each a handful in a quart of ale, with some sweet butter, & wash well the place therewith, and apply the herb as hot as may be suffered. 56 Bladder ache, (See Fennel.) Breasts sore, (See Lillie.) 57 Emerods', stamp a handful of Parsley with the roots and all, with salad oil, and let it stand one day, than strain it & anoint therewith against the fire, & keep thee warm, & be whole. 58 urine stopped, stamp it with groundsel, & drink it with white wine. 59 Gravel & stone, use it in pottage and possit ale with parietary and Saxifrage. 60 Stomach hot, eat green Parslie with Galingale. 61 To slake the after-throwes after deliverance, seethe the juice of a good handful of Parslie in a Cawdell or Alebrewe made fit for her, and let her drink it: if she have too much of her disease, let a spoonful of bruised Pepper be put into her Caudle: proved. 62 To keep a wound from rankling, anoint it with the juice of Parslie: proved. 63 colic, drink powder of the seeds of Parsley, Alexander and Fennell. 64 colic and stone, boil Parietary and Parslie ana one handful, Bay berries bruised half a handful, in white wine and drink thereof: proved. 65 Urine to cause, stamp Rue, Gromell & Parslie, and drink them with white wine and be whole. 66 Palsy, brew sack with sugar, & put thereto the juice of a good handful of Parslie, & drink a good draft warm. Aches 47. 55 Appetite 16 Back ache 3. 8. 23. 27 Belly ache 5 hard 41 swollen 23 Bitinging venem. 44 Bladder griefs 3. 23. 26. 43. 52. 56 stopped 5. (See urine) Blood to cause 3. 49 to cleanse 3 Breast pain 40 Breasts sore 56 swollen 19 Breath stink 12 Chollike 23. 27. 42. 63. 64 Conception 21 Consumption 33. 49 Cough 18 Dead child 24. 26. 45 Deliverance 24. 46 Digestion 16 Drunkenness 21 Dropsy 3. 26. 49. 50 Eyes bruised 14. 38 inflamed 19 Emerods' 57 Fevers 26. 42 hot 4 quotid. 37 tertian 48 Fish sick 11 Flowers stopped 3. 5. 26 Gout 47 Gravel 17. 59 Heart to comfort 49 Hicket 29 Holy fire 7 jaundice 10 Kidneys griefs 8. 9 22 to cleanse 5 (See stone.) Liver griefs 3. 17 Loins pain 3 Matrixe to cleanse 45 Memory bad 3 Milt stopped 17 Morphue 25 Obstructions general 17. 26 Palsy 66 Pissing blood 51 Pleurisy 34. 49 Poison 17 Phthisic 49 Pushes 25 Seconds 24. 26. 45 Shingles 15 Sides pain 23. 34. 49 sinews ache 29 Skabs 25 Stomach hot 39 60 swollen 3. 5. 23 weak 16. 49 Stone 2. 13. 17. 22. 26. 27. 37. 52. 53. 54. 59 64 Strangury 30. 36 Trembling 31 Venom. 17 Urine stopped 1. 5. 8. 13. 16. 17. 22. 26. 35. 41. 42. 52. 54. 58. 65 Windiness (See colic.) Women delivered 61 Wounds 32. 62 ¶ Parietary. parietary: (See 461) 1 Stitch, put two handfuls clean piked from the stalks in a pretty quantity of Malmsie, and set it in a Chafing dish of coals thoroughly soaked in the malmsey, and apply it hot as may be suffered: proved. 2 colic and stone, (See Parslie.) Seethe one handful chopped small in a pint of white wine in a double vessel to the one half, and strain it and drink thereof when need is. 3 Gouts general, and all ache and swellings, seethe it in wine or water, and apply it. 4 Stone, seeth Parietary and Mugwort, of each like much in a pottle of white wine to the one half, and drink the wine, and apply the substance to the Navel, as hot as may be suffered (See 461.) Aches 3 colic 2 Gouts 3 Stitch 1 Stone 2. 4 Swell 3 ¶ Peaches. PEaches before they be ripe, they stop the lask, but being ripe, they loosen the belly and engender ill humours: wherefore they aught not to be eaten after meat, but before. 2 The leaves open the stops of the Liver, and loosen the belly gently, and are good with other convenient herbs against the tertian fevers. 3 Worms, apply them to the Navel: dry them and straw them on new wounds to cure them. 4 The kernels open the liver and lungs, and is of virtue much like to bitter Almonds. 5 Steep them in water of pennyroyal, and use it to recover speech in the Apoplexia. 6 Stamp them very small, and boil them in vinegar till they be dissolved like Pap, and anoint therewith to restore hair. 7 Eat every day five or six of them with salt before dinner and supper to preserve thee from the pain of the side, and from drunkenness, and to preserve the brain, provoke appetite, to comfort the stomach and breast, and to kill and expel all manner of worms. 8 Peaches either of themselves or condited, are good to be used in hot fevers, but the much use of them cooleth the body too much, and breedeth rotten fevers. 9 The conserve of the flowers or blossoms, is good for the stomach. 10 The gum dissolved and boiled in wine and drunk, is good for spitting of blood, to cleanse and heal the obstructions of the liver, lungs, and passages of the breast, and to break the stone: but if some Saffron be put to it, it helpeth the horcenesse and roughness of the throat. 11 The juice of the leaves drunk and applied to the Navel, killeth worms. 12 The kernels eaten, take away torments. 13 The same stamped with Rose vinegar and applied, helpeth the head ach. 14 The gum boiled in vinegar and applied, helpeth Ringwormes, Tetters, Pocks, Whelks, etc. 15 Peaches eaten, are good against the stinking breath of hot cause being eaten fasting. 16 Ears dull, put in the oil of the kernels. Ears worms, put in the juice of the leaves. 17 For spitting blood and many griefs of the lungs, use the gum. 18 Fluxes, use the gum. 19 Belly worms, apply the leaves stamped with vinegar, or anoint the Navel with the oil. 20 Scrofules, Glandules or kernels, stamp the leaves with salt and apply them. 21 jaundice, mix powder of the kernels with vinegar and drink it first and last. 22 Eat the kernels twelve at once, for the griefs, stops and hardness of the belly. 23 Strangury, make powder of Peach kernels & Acorns of each like much, & drink it with wine, if that serve not, thou hast the stone. 24 Worms, stamp the leaves with Mints, Wormwood and vinegar, & apply it to the Navel. 25 The leaves falling before their time, betoken Murren of cattle. 26 colic, and to withstand drunkenness, eat five or six kernels before dinner and supper with salt and bread, they kill worms, cause appetite, and comfort the stomach and breast. 27 colic and pain of the side, eat four kernels daily. 28 Urine stopped, make fine powder of the kernels of Peaches and meddlers, of each like much, with as much sugar as them both, and drink thereof with good white wine. 29 Stomach pain, stamp the green leaves with old grease well purified, and apply it. 30 Blood to stop, cast thereon powder of Peaches. 31 Worms, put in a Suppositor of Peach kernels and Wormwood, or seeth the leaves of both in water, and wash therewith. 32 Ears noise, (See Almonds.) 33 Stitch or wind in the body, dry the leaves in the forepart of the year in the shadow, and drink the powder of them with a little Ale when need is. Appetite 7 Apoplexia 5. 26 Belly ache 12 bond 12. 22 lose 1 hard 22 Blood to stop 30 Brain weak 7 Breast griefs 7. 26 Breath stink 15 cattle rot. 25 Chollike 26. 27 Drunkenness 7. 26 Ears dull 16 noise 32 Fever hot 8 tertian 2 Fluxes 18 Glandules 20 Head ache 13 Hair to grow 6 Horcenesse 10 jaundice 21 Kernels 20 Liver stopped 2. 4. 10 Lungs stopped 4. 10 griefs 71 Obstructions 10 Pocks 14 Ringwormes 14 Side pain 7. 27 Scrophuls 20 Speech lost 5 Spitting blood 10. 17 Stitch 33 Stomach pain 29 weak 7. 9 26 Stone 10 Strangury 23 Tetters 14 Throat kernels 20 rough 10 Voice bad 10 urine stopped 28 Whelks 14 Wind 33 Worms 3. 7. 11. 19 24. 26. 31 Wounds 3 ¶ Pease. PEase: their broth is good against the jaundice and dropsy, it may be used in all inward griefs without peril. 2 The same sodden in water and lee, helpeth spreading sores of the head, the spots of the face, and griefs of the skin. 3 The same decoction mixed with honey and barley meal, cureth spreading sores that be hard to cure. 4 The same sodden in water with Orobus and applied, helpeth all swellings and ache, & so do beans. 5 In the new of the Moon, take for every wart a Pease, and touch the warts therewith, and bind them in a clout, and cast it behind thee. 6 Cicers and Fitches be of stronger force than Peason. 7 Heart burning, eat vi. or seven. Peason or more. 8 Vomiting of cold moist humours, eat the broth of grey Peason. 9 Pease broth is good to take purgations withal to cleanse a raw stomach, whether they be grey or white unsalted. 10 The pottage of great Peason are good for the strangury: and to take Seen withal morn and even for the ague, 11 And Rhubarb for the jaundice. 12 Nose bleeding, put in fine powder of Peason. 13 Spots or stains in clotheses, white or other colour, seeth Peason in water, and steep the cloth in the water, and wash it with river water and dry it. Aches 4 Bleeding 12 Clotheses stained 13 Dropsy 1 Face deformed 2 Fever 10 Heart burning 7 Headsores 2 jaundice 1. 11 Nosebleeding 12 Purging 9 Skin griefs 2 Sores 3 Strangury 10 Swell 4 Vomiting 8 Warts 5 ¶ Pease Earthnut. PEase Earthnut: boil the roots, and eat them as Persnips or Turnips to stop the flux boiled in wine and drunk, and so it stoppeth the terms and all issues of blood. 2 Cast the powder of them on sores and wounds to stop the blood. 3 Stamp the root, and steep it in an earthen vessel, and stir it, and with a feather gather that which swimmeth aloft, and dry it, and drink fifteen grains of it to purge both ways without peril. 4 Shepherds sometimes eat the nuts to provoke vomit. Bleeding 2 Bloody-fluxe 1 Flowers to stop 1 Fluxes general 1 Purgation 3 Vomit 3. 4 ¶ Peniwort. PEniwort, or wall Peniwort, is good against all inflammations and hot tumours, S. Antony's fire, and kibed heels being applied. 2 Apply it to the stomach to refresh it. 3 Eat the leaves and roots to break the stone, provoke urine, and help the dropsy. 4 Water-peniwort hath the virtues of Houseleek. 5 The juice of Wall-peniwort with wine applied or put in, looseth the stopping of the privities. It is good for wens. 6 The leaves and roots taken in meats or honeyed wine, is good for the stone, to provoke urine, and help the dropsy, but especially with oxymel. 7 Stamp it and apply it to read tumours. Dropsy 3. 6 Inflammation 1 Kibes 1 Privities stopped 5 S. Antony's fire 1 Stomach hot 2 Stone 3. 6 Swell 1. 7 Urine stopped 3. 6 Wens 5 ¶ Pellitory, or Magistrantia. Pellitory, or Magistrantia of Spain, drink it with wine against all poison, corrupt air and infection of the plague. 2 Stamp the roots itself, or with the leaves, and apply it to carbuncles, plague sores, botches, apost. and swellings. 3 Drink the root with wine against the rigorous fits of old fevers, and the dropsy, to provoke sweat, to comfort the stomach, and to cause appetite and digestion, to dissolve windiness of the belly & flanks, to heal bruisings & burstings, and to dissolve congealed blood in the body. 4 Stamp the roots & leaves, and apply it to bitings of mad dogs, and venomous beasts, and stingings. 5 The wild master-wort called herb Gerard, stamped and applied, is good for the gout, and cureth the Emerods' being bathed with the decoction thereof. 6 chew the root of Pellitory a good while, and hold it in thymouth to cleanse the head and brain, and to help the aching and lose teeth. 7 Mix powder of the root with milk of Wartwort, or Spourge, and Galbanum, and apply a little of it to any aching or rotten teeth, and break them, and to pluck them out. 8 It expelleth wind mightily from the stomach, guts and mother, and is good for the gnawing stomach, the colic, and to provoke the terms and urine. 9 Teethache, seeth the root in tart wine, and bathe them therewith. 10 Barrenness of cold cause, and for the strangling of the mother, and for the cold diseases, as the palsy, the falling sickness, and numbedness, drink the root with wine. 11 Fever quarten, drink half a spoonful of the powder of it before the fit. 12 It causeth a sweet breath, strengtheneth all the senses or wits, it is good against the plague, and all infectious diseases, poison, venomous bitings, shortness of breath, obstructions, the dropsy, and the griefs of the milt. 13 The herb, juice, powder or water, is good against all cold griefs of the fevers, and of the stomach, and all venom and poison, being taken moderately as the cause requireth. 14 seeth it in wine, and drink it morn and even to help the cold lungs, shortness of breath, the moist and cold cough, to expel urine, and the stones of the kidneys, the flowers, seconds, and dead birth, to mitigate the sciatica, and cold griefs, and cold aches, to provoke sweat, to drive out the dropsy, to engender natural seed, and it may be used for Lacerpitium. It is much of like nature to Angelica and Lovage. 15 The roots or juice applied, taketh away swellings, hardness, and gatherings of humours. 16 Their juice consumeth rotten flesh, and gangrenes. 17 Drink powder of the root with wine or ale against the palsy, the cramp, the falling sickness, (See Angelica, Lovage, Piretrum, Ptarum.) 18 Take one ounce of powder of the root with white wine hot fasting, to void the colic and pain of the side. 19 seeth it with figs in vinegar or wine, and gargarise therewith to cleanse the brain. 20 Tongue palsy, chew it & hold it in the mouth. 21 Palsy and gout, stamp it and seeth it in wine, and apply it: but if it be green, stamp it & soak it fifteen days in wine, then boil it well, & put thereto oil and wax, & it is the best ointment for the griefs aforesaid. 22 Head to cleanse, chew it three mornings fasting. 23 Dropsy, seeth it in wine with Hyssop and use it. 24 Frecles, seethe it in vinegar and apply it. 25 Drink water of the decoction of the root for the palsy of the tongue. 26 Teethach of worms, apply the powder with honey. 27 Cough, chew it. 28 Canker, use the powder of it. 29 Headache, chew it three mornings. 30 To draw out teeth, stamp it and steep it 40. days. in vinegar, then bray it and keep it to thy use, and when need is, cover the other teeth with wax, and cover the aching teeth with the medicine, and within one hour pluck it out with thy finger, and hold it in thy mouth. 31 Bastard Pellitory, or Bartrum, or Piretrum. 32 The root taken with honey, is good against the falling evil, the apoplexia, the long, old & cold diseases of the head & brain. 33 Seethe it in vinegar, & hold it in thy mouth for the toothache. 34 Sweat to cause, boil it in oil, and anoint therewith: it is excellent for members that are cold, benumbed, foundered, or stricken with the palsy. 35 The seed or root sodden in wine and drunk, driveth down by urine and siege, cold & tough humours: it is generally good for all diseases that come of cold causes. 36 Put it into the nose to 'cause much sneezing. 37 Stamp the leaves and flowers, and apply it to bruises to disperse the congealed blood. 38 Steep the roots in vinegar, and make them into pills, and hold them in the mouth to purge the brain, and to cease the toothache. 39 seeth the root or juice in oil, and anoint the body well with it to put away the fever, cold, tertian quarten, and it is good for the cold and swollen stomach. Ptermaca chewed and holden in the mouth, cleanseth the brain as strongly as Bartrum, and is good for the toothache, & is good in salads, as Taragon or Rocket. 40 The flowers 'cause much sneezing. 41 Stamp it and apply it to draw away swellings, and old hard lumps, and to bruises. It is of the nature of Bartrum or Piretrum. 42 Ache of the head and teeth, chew Piretrum iii or iiii. times a day three days. 43 For the palsy, choler, griefs of the stomach, woman's griefs, headache, ache of the sides, back and reins, the lunacy, and all other sicknesses, drink three spoonful of the fine powder of it with Mulse, or temper it with honey or Mulse, and drink two. cyathes. 44 Scabs and breaking out, seeth it in water till the water be clammy and yellow, and wash therewith. Aches cold 14 Air corrupt 1 Appetite 3 Apostume 2. 15. 41 Backeache 4. 43 Barrenness 10 Belly-ache windy 38 Benumbed 10. 34 Bitings venom. 4. 12 Botch 2 Breath short 12. 14 stink 12. 14 Bruise 3. 37. 41 Bursten 3 Carbuncle 2 Chollike 8. 18 Choler 43 Cramp 17 Cold griefs 10. 13 Cough 14. 27 Digestion 3 Dead child 14 Dropsy 3. 12. 14. 23 Emerods' 5 Falling evil 10. 17. 33 Fevers cold 39 old 3. 13 quarten 11 Flowers stopped 8. 14. 35 Freckles 24 Gangrene 16 Gout 5. 21 Hardness 15. 41 Headache 6. 32. 42. 43 cleansing 6. 19 22. 32. 36 38. 39 canker 28 Lungs griefs 14 Lunatic 43 Mad 12. 43 Mad dog 4 Matrix suffoc. 10 windy 8 Milt griefs 1. 2 Obstructions 12 Palsy 10. 17. 21. 25. 32. 34. 43 Plague 1. 12 Plague sore 2 Poison 1. 13 Purgation Sciatica 14 Seed to 'cause 14 Sickness gen. 10. 12. 13. 14. 35. 43 Side pain 18. 43 Skabs 44 Skin griefs 44 sneezing to 'cause 36. 40 Speech lost 20. 25 Sores rotten 16 Stomach cold 13. 19 weak 3 windy 8 griefs 43 swollen 39 Stone 14 Swell 2. 15. 41 Sweat to 'cause 3. 14. 34 Teethache 6. 7. 9 26. 30. 33 38. 39 42 lose 6 etc. Tongue palsy 20. 25 Venom 13, (See poison bitings Urine stopped 8. 14. 35 Windiness 38 women's griefs 43 ¶ Peniroyall. PEniroyall: gather it when it beareth flowers, and so it may be kept two. years. 2 Seethe it in water, and wash the itch therewith to cure it speedily. 3 Seethe it in wine, & drink it to expel the terms and seconds. 4 Stamp it with honey & salt, and apply it to the palsy and broken members. 5 Breath straight, bruise it and eat it with honey. 6 seeth it with twice so much wine, and drink it against gripping of the bowels. 7 Sleepiness, hold the fresh leaves under thy tongue. 8 Liver & lungs, drink powder of it two nights with wine to bedward. 9 Stomach raw and casting, take powder of the seed or herb. 10 If any man by bleeding be bereft of mind, apply it to his nostrils with vinegar to restore him. 11 Teethache, rub them with the powder of it. 12 Stamp it & temper it with Saffron, and anoint evil ulcers of the body, nails, or fingers, to heal them. 13 Milt swollen, bruise it and apply it. 14 Drink it warm with wine to help the dropping of the bladder, and also boil it with wine and oil, and apply it to the belly for the same purpose. 15 Stamp it and seeth it in wine and apply it twice or thrice to the nostrils to help the rheum, and distilling of the head. 16 seeth it in wine with dry figs, and drink it for the dry cough coming of clammy and waterish humours. 17 seeth it in wine, and drink it to provoke the terms, and to bring forth the seconds and dead fruit, to provoke urine and break the stone, especially of the kidneys. 18 Take it with honey to cleanse the lungs and breast of all gross and thick humours. 19 Take it with honey and Aloes to purge melancholy, and for the cramp & drawing together of the sinews. 20 Take it with water and vinegar to assuage the disposition to vomit, and for the pain of the stomach. 21 Take it in wine against the bitings of venomous beasts. 22 And with vinegar to help the falling sickness. 23 If any be constrained to drink stinking or salt water, let them put Peniroyall or the powder thereof into it, and it shall not hurt them. 24 Head pain and giddy, apply a garland of it round about the head. 25 Stamp it with vinegar and smell to it against swooning and faintness to quicken the senses. 26 Rub the gums with the powder or ashes of it to strengthen them. 27 Stamp it and rub the sciatica and pain of the gout therewith till it wax read. 28 Mix it with vinegar and honey, and apply it to the cramp and the grief of the milt. 29 Sat in the decoction of it for the windiness, hardness, and stopping of the matrix, or sit over the fume of the same decoction in a Stew or Bath. 30 The same is good also against itch, maundge or scab to wash with all. 31 The perfume of the fresh flowers driveth away flies. 32 A branch leapt amongst wool and smelled unto, or laid amongst clotheses of the bed, cureth the fever tertian. 33 Make an Electuary of it with Sugar Rosat, and use it in the plague time fasting, as much as a Chestnut at once. 34 seeth it in white wine, and drink it morning and evening to drive down the dead birth, flowers, and seconds, and to stop the whites. 35 Seethe it in vinegar and honey to stop the terms, and for loathing and vomiting. 36 seeth it in wine with Honey and Aloes to purge choler and phlegm about the lungs, to cease inward gripings, to comfort the matrix, and against venomous bitings. 37 And gargarise therewith against the Squincy and ulcers of the mouth. 38 Use the water or juice of it to make the eyes clear. 39 And wash the itch therewith to kill it. 40 Apply it to the headache or gout, till it wax read to cease the pain. 41 Stamp it with vinegar, and apply it to the nose and mouth of them that swoone, or be sleepy, or have the lethargy, to bring their senses again. 42 Apply it with Barley meal to all inflammations. 43 Stamp it with vinegar and Salt, and rub the Cramp therewith. 44 Apply it to venomous bitings. 45 Wash aches with the broth of it to avoid them. 46 seeth it with honey and Aloes, and drink it to cleanse the liver and purge the blood most excellently. 47 Put the juice with vinegar into the nose against the frenzy and lunacy. 48 To sharpen the sight, drink it fasting. 49 Drink the juice with warm wine to provoke the flowers and seconds, and to help the ulcers of the mouth. 50 To stop vomiting, drink it with wine or warm water. 51 Head whirling, drink powder of it with the water thereof. 52 Hoarseness, chap a handful small, and seeth it in a pint of vinegar, till the third part be wasted, than strain it and take a spoonful of it morning and evening. 53 Sweat to cause, sit over the decoction of it that it may strike up into thee. 54 The bath of Peniroyall refresheth the body. 55 Head turning and dasling, seeth it and apply it to the temples, and power Balm into the ears two. or three times. 56 Speech lost suddenly, stamp it and drink it with vinegar, and also apply it to the nostrils. 57 Backe-aches general, stamp it with vinegar & green oil Olive, and apply it, (see Fiveleafe, Eldrens.) 58 Breast phlegm, seeth it in water with a little salt, and drink it. 59 Appetite lost, seeth it with as much Cummin and some Pepper in Ale, and drink it at even hot, and at morn cold. 60 For evils at the heart, seethe it with Tussilago and a little salt in water, and drink it fasting daily. 61 Liver grief, anoint the side with the juice of it. Back ache, stamp it with vinegar and oil Olive, and apply it. 62 Ache in the body, stamp it and apply it to the navel. 63 Belly ache, drink the juice of it and of Smallache. 64 Worms to kill, seeth it with Tansy and Camomile, of each like much in a pint of Malmsey to the one half, and strain it and drink it. 65 Pocks, drink the juice of it and of young Tansy. 66 Milt griefs and swelling, seethe it with salt, and apply it. Flowers to cause, seeth it in wine and drink it. 67 Headache, heat the powder of it without any liquor in a skillet, and apply it. 68 For cold stops in the head, the cough and rheum, seeth it with figs in vinegar, and take a good spoonful of it, and gargarise therewith three or iiii. times. 69 seeth it in wine and drink it for the griefs of the stomach and guts, and the wind thereof. 70 Mix the powder thereof with honey, and make it into an Electuary thereof, and use it for the cough phlegm of the breast, or boil the herb with honey in wine or water, and drink it. 71 For black choler, boil the juice with wine, and drink it and be whole. 72 Ache, stamp it green, and apply it. 73 Itch, boil it in vinegar, & wash therewith warm. 74 Cough and to provoke urine, boil it in wine and drink it luke warm. 75 Belly griefs, stamp it with Cummin and water, and apply it to the navel, and be whole. 76 Liver griefs, stamp it and strain it with water and vinegar, and drink it and be whole. 77 Legs ache, stamp it with as much Eldrens leaves, and apply it. 78 Fever tertian, lap the branches in a good lock of wool, and smell to it before the fit come. 79 Headache, bind it about thy head, and be whole. 80 Dead child to avoid, stamp it and strain it with old wine and drink it. 81 Cramp, drink the juice with vinegar fasting to avoid it. 82 Speech lost, stamp it and drink it with white vinegar hot. 83 Burn it when it flowreth where fleaes be to destroy them. 84 That no headache shall come by heat of the sun put it into each ear. 85 cattle infected or sick, put it into their nostrils bruised. 86 Hickit, drink it. 87 Flowers and seconds to cause, distil it with white wine, and drink thereof iiii. ounces fasting, and also if need be, put thereto a little of the juice of Leeks. 88 For the superfluous moisture of the vulva and gums, seethe it in vinegar and dry figs, and gargarise therewith often. 89 (See Fiveleafe, Planten, Dock.) 90 Ache, bathe the place with the broth of it. 91 Headache and lightness of the brain, seethe it in vinegar and drink it, and smell to it, and apply thereof to the head all night, or drink the juice of it with water, and eat nothing till noon. Ache 45. 72. 77. 90 Appetite 59 Apostume 12 Backeache 17. 57 61 Belly-ache 6. 36. 62. 63. 64 69. 75 Bitings venom. 21. 36. 44. Bladder griefs 14 Blood to cleanse 46 Bones broken 4 Breast to cleanse 18. 58. 70 Breath straight 5 cattle sick 85 Choler 36. 71 Cough 16. 68 74 Cramp 19 28. 43. 81 Dead child 17. 34. 80 Eyes dull 38. 48 Falling evil 22 Faintness 25 Fever 32. 78 Fleaes 83 Fegme 36. 70 Flies to void 31 Flowers stopped 3. 17. 34 49. 66. 87 to stop 35 Frenzy 47 Gums griefs 26. 88 Gouts 27. 40 Heart griefs 60 Headache 24. 40. 67. 79. 84. 91. giddy 24. 55. 91. rheum 15. 68 whirling 51 Hickit 86 Hoarseness 5. 2 Inflammation 42 Itch 30. 39 73 Legs ache 77 Lethargy 7. 41 Liver griefs 8. 46. 61. 76 Loathing 35 (See vom.) Lunacy 47 Lungs griefs 8. 18. 36 Matrix griefs 29. 36 Maundgie 30 Melancholy 19 71 Milt griefs 13. 28. 66 Mouth sores 37. 49. 88 Palsy 4 Plague 33 Pocks 65 Poison 23 Purgation 19 36. 46 Rheum 15. 68 Sciatica 27 Seconds 3. 17. 34. 49. 87 Sinews griefs 19 Scab 30 Sleepiness 7. 41 Speech lost 56. 82 Squincy 37 Stomach ill 9 20. 69 Sweat to 'cause 53 Swooning 10. 25. 41 Stone 17 Teethache 11 Vncom 12 Vomiting 9 20. 35. 50 Urine stopped 17. 74. dropping 14 Vuula griefs 88 Whites 34 Windiness 69 Worms 64 ¶ Peony. PEony, the root endureth ten years, it comforteth and cherisheth the body, provoketh urine, and purgeth the liver and kidneys. 2 The root boiled in wine and drunk, purgeth the blood, and is good for women in child bed to purge their seconds and terms without harm, as much as an Almond is to be taken at once. 3 The root boiled in wine, doth help the gripings of the belly, the shedding of the gall, and the pain of the kidneys and bladder, coming by stopping of the urine. 4 The smoke of the little branches of the root received into the nose, putteth away the Kings evil. 5 The root taketh away black spots of the body. 6 The root hanged about the neck, helpeth the falling sickness, especially the root of the male Peony. 7 The root of the female boiled in wine and drunk, doth purge women after child birth, and so doth the seeds of it: and in other matters, the roots of both be of like property. 8 The fresh root worn about the neck withstandeth the vapours ascending into the head, and strengtheneth the brain: this doth the male which beareth leaves like the leaves of a Walnut tree, and a white root of a finger bigness a span long. The root is to be gathered in the wane of the Moon, and when she is under the earth, and the seeds do especially provoke terms, and sand out the dead youngling, and the seeds drunk in wine, do help a hard delivery of a woman in travel. 9 The seeds bruised with Setwell, Galingall, & Sugar, of each like much by weight, and taken every morning and evening, doth expel poison, and loosen the belly gently. 10 Ten or twelve of the seeds drunk in old wine, do stay the superfluous course of the terms. 11 And fifteen of the black seeds drunk either in water or honey, or in wine, do help the nightmare, the strangling of the secrets, and pains of the matrix. 12 Powder of the seeds given in meat and drink to children, driveth forth the stone that beginneth to breed in them. 13 Seethe the root in wine and drink it with powder of the root to help the falling sickness. 14 Drink powder of the root with white wine to ease the pain of the reins and bladder. 15 The powder of the root as much as a Bean drunk with wine, cleanseth the matrix after childbirth, and expelleth the flowers, the stone of the kidneys and bladder, and is good for the jaundice, and the ache of the belly. 16 The water distilled of the roots and flowers, strengtheneth the heart, and helpeth the falling sickness in children, being taken two or three spoonful at once. 17 The root and seeds hanged about the neck of children, is good against the falling sickness, and the haunting of the Fairies and Goblins. 18 The juice or powder drunk, is good against the stopping of the gall, liver, and kidneys. 19 And sodden with old read wine and drunk, it stoppeth the bloody-flux. 20 The read grains do stop the read menstrues. 21 And the black grains sodden in read wine, do strengthen the matrix that aboundeth with flux of blood. 22 The root sodden in wine and drunk, purgeth the belly, voideth the colic, cleanseth the guts, and defendeth against frenzies and passions of the brain, the strangury, and bitings of Serpents, but there must be taken at once but four drams. 23 Drink the powder with white Wine and Saffron for the yellow jaundice, it is a sovereign medicine. 24 Drink fifteen or sixteen of the black seeds in wine or meed against the strangling of the mother, the nightmare, and melancholy dreams. 25 Drink the powder with Sage, Rosemary, and Margerome in Hydromell, or meats for the falling sickness. 26 The read seeds eaten, help the gnawing of the mouth of the stomach. 27 Dropsy, put the seeds of Peony, Anise, and Fenell into thy drink. 28 Falling evil, drink wine of the decoction of Peony, or eat every morning and evening five grains of Peony peeled. 29 Flowers stopped, seeth it in wine and drink it. 30 Mother suffocated, drink fifteen grains of Peony. Use to drink powder of the seeds with wine to restore the wits, and comfort the senses. 31 Wear the seeds about thee, that no evil spirits do hinder thee. Drink powder of ten or twelve seeds with Wine to avoid the nightmare. 32 Use powder of the root with Sugar for the falling evil, or drink the juice three several times. 33 Flowers stopped, drink the powder or decoction of the root. 34 Deliverance to cause, stamp the black seeds with oil, and anoint the loins and privy parts therewith. 35 Mother suffocated, drink fifteen seeds with wine. 36 seeth the roots with Castory in Wine to help the Palsy and the Stone. 37 Cast the powder of it on Cotton, and put it into the fundament, and also drink thereof with wine against costiveness. 38 Falling sickness, eat it or drink it with wine, and hung the root about the neck fifteen days. 39 Milt griefs, seeth it in wine and drink it. 40 Drink the powder with water, honey, and powder of Coriander, to help the griefs of the stomach, milt, and gravel in the reins. 41 Let women seeth it in white wine, and drink it against many diseases, to help the stone, the pain of the matrix. 42 Seconds, drink powder of fifteen of the black seeds at once. 43 To cause a woman to have throws in labour, let her take four or six of the seeds of Peony. 44 The root gathered on the Sunday in the hour of ☉ in ♌, the moon increasing, and borne on them that have the falling sickness, cureth them, or hung the root of male Peony about a boy's neck for the same purpose: or use the first seeds that are round and black, especially taken with Oximell, or with syrup of Stecados, and a little Nutmeg. 45 Nose bleeding, put the root under thy tongue. (See Orobus, Nigella.) 46 For griefs, swelling, and windiness of the matrix, drink one dram of the powder of the roots in broth, especially of the flowers of Camomile. 47 For the falling evil, fear mad, and witless, drink Peony with Wine, Ale, or water: Or use powder of it with all thy drinks and broths. Backeache 14 Belly-ache 15 Bladder grief 3. 14 Biting venom. 22 Brain weak 22 Dead child 8 Deliverance 8. 34. 43 Dreams melanc. 24 Dropsy 27 Falling evil 6. 13. 16 17. 25. 28. 32. 38. 44. 47 Face deformed 5 Fairies 17 Flowers stopped 2. 7. 8. 15. 29. 33 to stop 10. 20. 21 Gall to cleanse 4. 18 Goblins 17 Gravel 40 Heart griefs 16 Head griefs 22 jaundice 4. 15. 23 Kidneys stopped 3 to cleanse 1 14. 18 Kings evil 4 Liver griefs 1. 18 Matrix griefs 11. 21. 41. 46 suffocat. 24. 30. 35 Melancholy 24 Milt griefs 39 40 Palsy 36 Poison 9 Purgation 9 22. 37 Seconds 2. 7. 8. 15. 42 Stomach griefs 26. 40 Stone 12. 15. 36. 41 Strangury 21 Urine stopped 1. 3 Wicked spirits 31 women's griefs 41. 43 in childebead 2. 7. 8. 15 ¶ Pepper. PEpper is good in sauses to give a good taste to meats, to provoke appetite and help digestion. With the tender leaves of Bay, or with Cummin, it provoketh urine, and expelleth windiness, and pain of the belly. 2 It is good against poison and venomous bitings, and therefore used in Treacles and preservatives. 3 The same drunk before the fit, or laid to, or anointed outwardly with oil, is good against the shake of Fevers. 4 The same licked in with honey, is good for the cough coming of cold cause, and all cold griefs of the breast or lungs. 5 chew it with reasons to purge the brain. 6 Apply it with honey to the Squincy to waste the swelling and tumour. 7 Apply it with pitch to dissolve the King's evil, kernels, wens, hard cold swelling, and to draw forth pricks, shards, and splents. 8 Long Pepper is good in collyries, and eye medicines for the griefs of the eyes. 9 With Niter, or natural salt Peter, it skowreth away morphues, and such like foulness of the skin. 10 Boil i ounce of fine powder of Pepper with a pint of Aqua composita, and a beasts gall to the one half, and apply plasters thereof hot to the sciatica, ache, gout, or other pain iiii. or v. times if need be at every twelve hours end. 11 Stamp it with good wine, and hold it hot in thy mouth till it be cold, and then spit it out, and it will kill worms in the teeth. 12 Gross Pepper helpeth digestion, and never hurteth the liver. 13 Dropsy, drink Pepper and Fenell seed continually with wine to cure the swelling of it. 14 Flux to stop, grate hard cheese and mix it with a portion of Pepper and drink it with read wine sodden together with a few crumbs of white bread. 15 Anoint the gout with black Pepper, or apply it. 16 Matrix suffoc. eat nine grains of Pepper, it is the best medicine. 17 Mouth griefs, hold powder of Pepper with white wine in thy mouth. 18 Sciatica, stamp Onions with oil de Bay, and put powder of Pepper, & of Euphorbium, and apply it to the place. 19 Sweat to cause, drink twenty grains of Pepper with one handful of Rue in white wine. 20 Eyes pearl & web, put in powder of burned Pepper. 21 Eyes hawe, put in powder of Pepper with the marrow of a Goose wing. 22 For the host, seeth Sage, Rue, Cummin, with honey & Pepper, and take thereof daily. 23 Cough, seeth Senuy and white Pepper in good wine and drink it. 24 Canker and fester, mix powder of Pepper, and of man's dung burned, and use it as often as need is. (See Pomegranate.) 25 Bloody-fluxe, make caudles of Vine leaves, Pepper, and hard Eggs, and use them. 26 Eyes pearl, mix fine powder of Pepper and Ginger with the gall of an Eel & clarified Honey, and it will kill it. (See Ginger, Grains, Elecampana, Fenell.) 27 Teethache, and swelling of the gums, seeth powder of Pepper & Ginger of each like much in Ale, and apply it in a little bag dipped in aqua vitae. 28 Wind colic and phlegm, boil powder of the three kinds of Pepper with Rose water and Sugar in a porringer till it be thick, and eat thereof to bedward, or when the fit cometh. 29 Gout, plaster it to the grief of the joints or sinews. 30 Scrofules in Infants, mix the powder with hard pitch, and apply it to disperse them. 31 Teethache, seeth three spoonful of the powder in a pint of good white Wine to the one half, and gargarise therewith often hote one spoonful at once. 32 Stomach cold, take a rear Egg with gross Pepper fasting. (See Bay.) 33 Mix as much as will fill up the shell of an Egg with the yolk, and burn it and mix the powder of it with Wheat meal, and make little fritters and bake them and eat them first and last to help the bloody flux. 34 Stomach griefs, drink Pepper with wine hot, and eat Butter after supper. 35 Palsy, mix powder of Pepper three ounces, and of Senuie seed two ounces, with Swine's grease a little salted and anoint. (See century.) 36 Put the powder into the nose to 'cause sneezing. 37 seeth it with Figs in Wine, and drink it to cleanse the spiritual members from tough humours, and for the pose coming of cold, and for the same eat Figs with powder of Pepper. 38 The powder with meats comforteth the stomach, and helpeth digestion, and so doth long Pepper eaten with roasted Apples. 39 Powder of Pepper fretteth away dead flesh. 40 Long Pepper comforteth more than black. 41 Pepper is not good for Sanguine or choleric folks. 42 Headache, drink Pepper, Rue, and Fenell with Wine fasting. 43 Vuula fallen, fill an Akorne shell full of powder of Pepper, and burn Alum, and apply it. 44 Mix powder of Pepper with the marrow of a Goosewing, and put it in a clout and burn it, and put thereof upon the hawe in the Eye to avoid it. 45 White Pepper helpeth the stomach, the cough, the wind, the colic, withstandeth the causes of cold Fevers, and easeth the shaking thereof. 46 Diatrion Piperion may be taken at any time of the day for a cold and windy stomach: for lack thereof, take a few grains of black Pepper grossly beaten, with a draft of Ale fasting, or a little of the powder of any of them with meat: for nothing is better against wind and phlegm than Pepper. 47 Roast powder of Pepper in a great Onion, and work them well together, and keep it in a box, and anoint the gout therewith against the fire. 48 Matrixe suffocated, eat nine corns of Pepper, and after smell to stinking things at the nose. 49 Bloody flux, make caudles of Vine leaves, hard eggs, and Pepper, and use them. 50 Emerods', burn old shoes, and mix the powder thereof with powder of Pepper, Hony, and oil Olive, or oil of Cream sodden, and apply it three days hot. 51 Face seeming leprous, mix quick silver mortified with Boar's grease & black Pepper, and anoint therewith, & keep the face from wind iiii. or v. days. 52 seeth honey, and clarify it, and put thereto powder of Pepper, and seethe it till it be black, and lay thereof upon half a Sage leaf, and apply it to the teeth that ache. 53 Drink 40. corns of Pepper with warm water to void the quarten and intermissive fevers. 54 Diatrion is very good against hoarseness and stopping of the lungs and cold rheums. 55 Use the powder in ointments against shaking fevers that come by fits. 56 It is good against venomous bitings, and expelleth the birth being drunk or often eaten. 57 It is used in Lohocks and Syrupes for the cough and pain of the breast. 58 And with Honey it helpeth the squinsy. 59 It is good to be used inward & outward for the apostume of the milt, and being much used it expelleth urine. 60 Rheum, gargoyle with Mustard, Vinegar and Pepper sodden together. 61 Fevers, drink half a pint of thine own urine with one pennyworth of Pepper bruised one hour before the fit, and cover thee well to sweat. 62 colic, drink powder of long Pepper and Fiveleafe roots with good ale. 63 Ringwormes, apply fine powder of Pepper with black soap. Aches 10 (See Gout.) Appetite 1. (See Stomach.) Belly-ache 1 (See colic.) Bitings venomous 2. 56 Bloody-fluxe 25. 33. 49 Breast griefs 4. 22. 23. 37 54. 57 colic 1. 28. 45. 62 Cough 4. 23. 45. 57 Dead child 56 Dead flesh 39 Deliverance 56 Digestion 1. 12. 38 Dropsy 13 Eyes griefs 8. 20. 21. 26. 44 Emerods' 50 Face deformed 51 Fever quarten 53 shaking 3. 4. 5. 55. 61 Fester 24 Phlegm 28. 46 Fluxes 14 Gout 10. 15. 29. 47 Headache 42 to purge 9 Hoarseness 54 canker 24 Kernels 7. 30 Kings evil 7. 30 lepry 51 Lungs griefs 4. 54 Matrixe suffoc. 16. 48 Milt apost. 59 Morphue 9 Mouth grief 17. 43 Palsy 35 Poison 2 Pose 37 Pricks 7 ringworm 62 Rheum 37. 54. 60 Sciatica 10. 18 Skin deform. 9 Scrophules 30 Squincy 6. 7. 58 sneezing to 'cause 36 Stomach griefs 34. 38 cold 32. 45. 46 Swell 6. 7 Sweat to 'cause 19 Teeth ache 27. 31. 52 worms 11 urine stopped 1. 59 Vuula fallen 43 Wen 7 Windiness 1. 28. 46 ¶ Perwincle. PErwinkle sodden in wine and drunk, stoppeth the lask, the bloody flux, terms, spitting blood & all other issues of blood. 2 Mix it with milk and oil of Roses, and put it into the Matrixe as a suppositer to take away all pains thereof. 3 Chew it to help the toothache, and all venomous bitings or stingings being applied. 4 Bruise it and put it into the Nose to stop the bleeding. 5 Seethe it in wine and drink it against all torments and fluxes of the body. 6 Stamp it and apply it to all venomous bitings. 7 Put the juice into the ears to cease their ache. 8 Put the herb into troubled wine that hath lost the colour, fifteen days to restore the colour again and the clearness. 9 The herb buried in the ground dieth not. 10 Nose bleeding, hold it in thy mouth between thy teeth, or lay a lease under thy tongue. 11 Pissing blood, drink the juice of it and of Planten. 12 Nose bleeding, hold it between thy teeth and bind the pulses of thy arms and legs, and thou shalt not bleed while it is there. Belly ache 5 Bitings venom. 3. 6 Bloody flux 1 Eats ache 7 Flowers to stop 1 Matrixe pain 2 Nose bleeding 4. 10. 12 Pissing blood 11 Spitting blood 1 Teeth ache 1 Wine dead 8 ¶ Pimpernel. PImpernell boiled in wine and drunk, is singular good against all venomous bitings, obstructions of the Liver, and pain of the kidneys. 2 The juice put into the Nose, cleanseth the head, and helpeth the toothache being put into the Nose on the contrary side to the grief. 3 Apply Pimpernell to corrupt and festered sores and to fretting sores, and to cleanse and heal them, and to pricks and splents to draw them out, and to the inflammation of the eyes. 4 The juice mixed with Hony and straken often, or put into the eyes, taketh away the dimness of sight. 5 Seethe it in wine and drink it against all venomous bitings, and also wash the wound therewith. 6 Drink a draft of it, and cover thee well to sweated, to expel the plague or any poison, to drive out the dropsy, to open the liver, to purge the kidneys, and expel the stone. 7 Apply the juice or water to venomous wounds, stingings or bite, to mitigate the ache, and to draw out the venom and stings. 8 It healeth painful sores that creep in the flesh, and the diseases that come of rheum. 9 The juice mixed with pure Honey, taketh away the mistiness and redness, and spots of the eyes, and cleanseth the sight. 10 Eyes web, mix the juice with Goose grease, and put a drop into the eyes. 11 Heart cardiake, drink Pimpernell. 12 Heart stitch, drink the water or decoction of it. 13 Speech lost, hold the juice of it and Sage under thy tongue. 14 Plague, drink powder of Pimpernell, Betony, Five leaf, Sage and scabious, with ale or beer warm fasting a week. 15 Breast sores, (See Garlic, See Dock, Celondine.) 16 Eyes web & pearl, put in the juice with the marrow of a Goose wing. 17 Apost. or bile to break, stamp it with Holyoke & Brocks grease and apply it. 18 Biting of an Addar, drink the juice of that with the read flower. 19 Nose bleeding, stamp it and put it into the Nose. 20 Fever continual, drink it with warm water, it helpeth also the fever tertian. 21 Fistulas and hollow ulcers, put in the juice, and apply the herb. 22 If the Fistula be inward, drink it: if outward, put in the juice. 23 Mix powder thereof with the distilled water and some sugar made into an electuary, and take thereof two ounces dadly, for the Phthisic of the Lungs. 24 Drink Pimpernell with Sorrel in the Plague time to defend thee, (See Aloes, Dog Fennell, Lunary.) 25 Skull hurt, apply the juice often with clouts. Fever, bind it to the Pulses, (See agrimony, Houndstong) Face sauce phlegm, anoint with the juice mixed with Pepper and Ginger. 26 Pimpernell destroyeth venom, and healeth apostumes and sores of the eyes. 27 For the griefs of the bladder, and to expel urine and the stone, drink the juice of Pimpernell, Fennell, Parsley and Smallach with water. 28 Wounds to heal, drink the juice of Sanicle, Pimpernell and Bugle with ale morn and even. 29 piles to heal, drink the juice of Pimpernell often, and be whole. 30 For wasting of nature, drink the juice with sugar, (See Bugle.) Apost. 17. 27 Back ache 16 bile 17 Bladder griefs 27 Bitings venomous 1. 5. 7. 18 Breasts sore 15 Consumption 13 Dropsy 6 Eyes griefs 3. 9 10. 16. 26 Emerods' 29 Face sauce phlegm 25 Fevers 25 continual 20 tertian 20 Fistula 21 Heart cardiake 11 stitch 12 Head broken 25 to cleanse 2 Kidneys grief 6 Liver stopped 1. 6 Lungs grief 23 Nose bleeding 19 piles 29 Plague 6. 14. 24 Poison 6 Pricks 3 Phthisic 23 Reins running 30 Sores 3. 8. 21. 22 Speech lost 13 Stinging 7 Stone 27 Sweated to cause 6 Teeth ache 2 Venom 7. 26 Ulcers 21 urine stopped 27 Wounds 28 ¶ Pine tree. PIne tree: The scales of the Pine apple with the bark of the Pine tree, do stop the lask, the bloody flux, and provoke Urine, and so doth the broth of the same drunk. 2 The same is good also against all skorching and burnings with fire, being stamped with Litarge of silver and Frankincense, if there be some Coprose put to it, than it will cleanse and heal consuming or fretting sores. 3 The leaves heal green wounds, and boiled in vinegar, they suage the tooth ach. The kernels in the Nuts are good for the lungs, they cleanse the breast, and 'cause easy spitting, they nourish well and breed good blood, and are good for the cough, and for them that begin to dry and consume away howsoever they be taken. This fruit also doth unstop the liver, mitigateth the sharpness of the urine, and is good for the gravel and stone. 4 The virtues of the Rosin and Pitch, shall be declared hereafter. 5 The bark both of the Pine tree and Pitch tree in powder sprinkled upon chafing or galling, and bore places, and burnings, with Litarge and fine powder of Frankincense, doth cure them. 6 The same received in a Treat or Cerot of Myrtles, bring sores in tender bodies to a skin, and stoppeth such as run far abroad, being laid too with Coprose. 7 The suffumigation thereof bringeth down the birth and seconds. 8 Being drunk, it stoppeth the belly, and provoketh urine. 9 Being taken in water or Mede one dram, they are good for the diseases of the liver. 10 The kernels by themselves or with Honey, are good for the cough and griefs of the breast. 11 The kernels drunk with malmsey, and the seed of a Cucumber provoke urine, and taketh away the sharpness thereof. 12 And taken with the juice of Pursten, they suage the gnawing of the mouth of the stomach. They take away the weakness of the body, and hold down the corruption of humours. 13 But the whole Nuts newly taken from the trees, bruised and sodden in malmsey, are good for the old cough and for a consumption, three Cyaths of the broth that they are sodden in, being drunk every day. 14 The kernels may be eaten with Reasins. 15 The Nuts being cleansed and eaten or drunk with the decoction of Reasins or the seeds of Cucumbers, provoke urine, and helpeth the sharpness of the kidneys and bladder, and the gnawing of the stomach. 16 And with the juice of Pursten they restore strength. 17 The middle bark of the tree drunk, stoppeth the flux, and provoketh urine. 18 One dram of the leaves drunk with Honeyed water, is good for the griefs of the liver. 19 The oil of the Nuts cureth the Palsy. 20 The powder of the bark or leaves, helpeth the chafings and gauling, and all ulcers on the outward part of the body. 21 The leaves stamped, are good for inflammations, & sodden with vinegar, they are good for the tooth ach. Stamp the sound or fresh kernels and seethe them with wine and clarified Honey to the form of Honey, and use to take thereof for the phthisic. 22 Dip a Pine apple without kernels in Skamony, and burn it, and sit over it in a close stool, to help both the flux and the Tenasmus. 23 Belly wring, seethe the rind of the tree in wine & drink it. 24 Bloody flux, lap a Pine apple in Pitch, and lay it on hot coals, and take up the fume thereof. Belly ache 23 Blood to increase 3 Bloody flux 1. 24 Breast griefs 3. 10 Burn 2. 5 Chafing 5. 20 Consumption 13. 16. 21 Cough 3. 10. 13 Deliverance 7 Fluxes 1. 8. 17. 22 Gauling 5. 20 Inflammation 21 Liver stopped 3. 9 18 Lungs griefs 3 Palsy 19 Ptisike 21 Seconds 7. 11 Skin off 6. 20 Sores 26 Stomach ache 12. 15 Stone 3 Teeth ache 3. 21 urine sharp & stopped 3. 8. 11. 15 Wounds 3 ¶ Pitch tree. PItch tree: The fruit, leaves, kernels, nuts and bark, are almost of the same nature that the like are of the Pine tree. 2 The Rosins both of the Pine tree and Pitch tree, do cleanse and heal new wounds, and is therefore used in ointments and plasters for wounds: it softeneth hard swellings, and is good for bruises being applied in oils or ointments agreeable. 3 Hairs to avoid, shave them off, and apply a plaster of the driest Pitch on Leather, that they grow no more. 4 Stone or dry Pitch, hath the virtues of Tar or liquid Pitch, but not so strong: but is better and apt to glue wounds together. 5 sinews shrunk, melt Pitch & wax with Wether's grease, and apply it. 6 Sciatica, anoint it with oil of Turpentine & Aqua vite, and apply Ceare-clothes of Pitch. 7 Fundament fallen, take up the fume of Pitch. 8 Cramp, apply ship Pitch with shall Armoniak, it helpeth the Gout in like sort. 9 Neck and throat, Pustules and scrofules, melt it with Hog's grease, and put thereto some quick brimstone and wheat bran, and apply it. 10 Swell or Apostumes, stamp Cresses with Pitch, and apply it. 11 Put powder of Pitch into a sore, to engender flesh. 12 Lethargy, mix ashes of thine own hair with vinegar and a little Pitch, and apply it to the Nostrils. 13 Seethe a good piece of stone Pitch in a quart of white wine with Aniseedes, parsley seeds and sugar to the one half, and drink thereof morn and even, to expel the urine, (See Walnuts.) 14 Head skald, seethe Pitch and wax, and lay them on a cloth, and apply it as hot as may be suffered nine days, and do so till it be whole. 15 Knees and sinews griefs, mix Pitch and wax with grease and apply it, it helpeth also shrunk sinews. 16 Belly windy, boil Pitch with Honey and Butter, and anoint. 17 Scrofules, mix powder of Pepper with stone Pitch, & apply it. 18 For a new Sciatica, mix powder of Pitch with Tar, oil Olive & unwrought wax, and strain it & keep it in rolls or in a box, and apply thereof upon Leather or Linen. Apost. 10 Belly windy 16 Bruises 2 Cramp 8 Flesh to grow 11 Fundament fallen 7 Head skald 14 Hairs to void 3 Kernels 9 Kings evil 9 Knees ache 15 Lethargy 12 Neck scrophuls 9 sinews griefs 5. 15 Sciatica 6. 18 Scrofules 9 17 Sleepiness 12 Swell 2. 10 Throat scrofules 9 Wounds 24. 11 ¶ Plane tree. PLane tree: the fruit thereof drunk with wine, helpeth venomous bitings. 2 Burn, stamp the fruit and apply it. 3 Teeth ache, seethe the bark in vinegar, and use it. 4 Stamp the tender leaves, & apply them to inflammations, swellings, and running eyes. 5 Vomit to stop, seethe the leaves in vinegar, and drink it. 6 The hoariness that cleaveth to the leaves, is ill for the eyes. 7 Stamp the leaves with grease, to heal burnings. Burning 2. 7 Bitings venomous 1 Eyes running 4 Inflammation 4 Swell 4 Teeth ache 3 ¶ Planten. PLanten: Ache, apply the leaves stamped with a little salt, (See in their proper places, Gout etc.) Apostume, apply the juice or herb stamped. Back ache or griefs, (See Kidneys, Gomer passion, Stone.) Belly ache, use the herb, seed or powder inwardly. Seethe the less kind of it and apply it. Belly worms, drink a spoonful of the juice, (See Worms.) Biles, apply the juice. To avoid Biles, stamp it with Egrimony & Goose grease, & anoint. (See Apost.) Bitings venomous, drink it with wine: or drink the juice, and apply the substance, and hung the root about thy neck: or apply the juice or water: or drink small Planten with wine. Blains, blisters, plouks, bushes or weals, apply the leaves. Bladder griefs, seethe the root by itself or with the seeds in white wine, and drink it to open the passages of the liver and kidneys being stopped, and for the jaundice and exulcerations of the bladder and kidneys, griefs of the head, stones, the Emerods' and the Gomer passion. Bladder griefs general, cut the leaves near the ground and root, and seethe them in water, and drink half a pint morn and even four or five days. The roots and leaves with good sweet wine, are good against the sores & blisters of the kidneys and bladder. Blood to stop, drink a little Cress seed with the juice when a vein is broken inwardly: or drink it also, & apply it with bol armoniak and sanguis draconis, the white of an egg & barley meal: or stamp water Planten, and apply it: or drink the juice of Planten. Bloody flux, drink the decoction of the leaves to suage it and all other fluxes of the belly: or drink the juice: or seethe the leaves with Holyoke root in water, and drink it against the grievous bloody flux: or stamp it with yarrow and strain it with read wine, and drink a good draft first and last four or five days, to stop the bloody flux: or drink the seeds with read wine: or seethe the roots therein and drink it: or eat the herb with salt and vinegar: or use it in Glisters. Breast griefs, as Ptisike and cough, fry the juice with parietary, Isope and swine's grease of a barrow hog, and strain it and anoint the breast therewith to have wind at william. Breast and heart cleansing from rotten humours, take a spoonful of the juice with Hony. Breath short, seethe Planten and eat it. Burn, Inflammations, and the holy fire, apply the juice or water with Houseleek, or anoint with the juice of Planten. Catharre and falling down of Rheum, the Cough, Ptisik, and Consumption of the Lungs, and to comfort the stomach, eat the leaves with meat or otherwise, (See Breast, Breath.) Carbuncles, apply the juice. Consumption, (See Breast griefs, Catharre.) Cough (See Catharre, Breast griefs.) Dropsy, fill a pot almost full of the juice, and do ashes on the top with a cloth, seethe it to the one half, and drink thereof fasting daily, for the Dropsy, Timpany, and jaundice. Ears dull, put in the juice with a tent, it taketh away the pain also of the ears. Eyes apostume, fester or botch, apply the juice. Eyes inflamed and pain, drop in the juice. Emerods', apply the herb, or use the herb inwardly or outwardly. Face blains, stamp the roots of Planten and Burrs with salt ana, and vinegar, and anoint therewith at night. Face pimples and ringwormes, stamp the roots with salt and vinegar, and wash therewith. Falling evil, drink the leaves, roots or buds of water Planten. Use Planten any ways, or the water thereof. Feet surbated, sore and swollen with travel, anoint with Planten juice, or stamp it with vinegar, and apply it. Felon, drink the juice of Planten and morel, and apply the herbs, apply the juice of Planten and Celondine. Fevers, stamp three roots and strain them with water, and drink it. Fevers cold, drink the juice before the fit thrice. The roots taken with wine and water three at once, cure the tertian, and four the quarten. The leaves and roots sodden in fair water, or Borage water, and drunk with sugar, do cure the tertian and quarten Fevers. Fever quarten, drink the juice with Honeyed water, two hours before the fit, and it will have a wonderful effect. Drink the juice of Ribwurt two hours before the fit. Fester, apply the juice, (See Sores, Kankers.) Fistula, use the juice and herb inward and outward, or the water: the herb stamped and applied, doth heal them speedily, put in the juice. Flowers to stop, use the decoction of it, drink the juice with Lapis Hematites. Fluxes, (See in bloody flux.) Use the decoction thereof or juice, herb or seed. Fowl evil, use it inward or outward. French Pocks, use it as before. Gums griefs and canker, use the juice with vinegar, Honey and Alum: use the juice, water, or decoction thereof. Gomer passion, use it inward and outward. Gout and all aches, and swellings of the sinews, stamp the leaves with a little salt and apply them. Gout in the feet, drink it with vinegar, bruise it and apply it to any Gout. Hardness of all sorts, stamp it with swine's grease, and apply it. Heart griefs, drink a spoonful of the juice with Honey, to expel it. Headache, use Planten, apply the juice or water with linen. Head megrem, stamp ribwort, read Fennell and Betony with woman's milk and apply it: and as the grief removeth, follow it therewith. Stamp Planten, and bind it to the neck to avoid headache. Boil it with Fenigrek in milk, and apply it in a cloth. Head skald, wash daily with the juice. Holy fire, apply it with the juice of Houseleek. Hot griefs, use it inward and outward. jaundice, take the juice of Planten, Wormwood and Smallach with sugar: or the juice of Planten and Wormwood ana with sugar, (See Dropsy.) Drink the juice of Planten and lettuce with vinegar, and also apply it to the right side, (See bladder.) Inflammations, (See burnings, hot griefs, holy fire.) Kankers, use Planten inward and outward: or the juice or water. Apply the juice with vinegar, Honey and Alum. Stamp Planten and apply it, and also drink the juice thereof. Kernels, apply Planten with old grease. Kidneys exulcerat, (See bladder.) seeth the roots and leaves with good sweet wine and drink: use the roots by themselves with the seeds in like sort. Knees swollen, stamp Planten and apply it. Liver griefs, drink the water, (See bladder.) lepry, stamp the leaves and apply them. Mad dogs biting, apply the juice or water, or leaves, and drink thereof. Megreme (See head ache.) Morphue white, drink the juice or infusion thereof. Mother moist and suffocat, put in the juice with wool. Mouth griefs, use the juice, (See Kankers.) Use the juice or decoction of the roots: for the Vuula, chew Planten. Nolimetangere, mix salgem with the juice, and make it somewhat thick and apply it, and bruise the leaves, and wring out the juice a little, and apply them and whole leaves upon them. Nose bleeding, stamp Planten, Ribwort and Houseleek with Barley meal and apply it about the neck and armpits on the same side that bleedeth, or drink the juice with vinegar, or the juice alone. Pimples (See face.) Pissing blood, drink the juice or decoction. Plague, poison, and all venom, use Planten. Poison, (See Plague.) Pocks, or swine Pocks, hung the root about thy neck. Ptisike, (See breast.) eat the leaves with meat or otherways, or use the herb, seed or powder inward. Privities griefs, use Planten. Purgation, seethe Planten in any liquor, and drink it. Take a spoonful of the juice with Hony. Pushes, stamp the leaves and apply them. Rankling, drink it and also apply it with bol armoniak, barley meal, and whites of Eggs. Reins running, use Planten. Ringwormes, apply the juice or water, (See face pimples.) Rheum, eat the leaves, or use them any ways. Saint Anthony's fire, apply it with Cimolea and white lead. sinews griefs, stamp the leaves with a little salt, and apply it. Short wound, use Planten. Sickness general, use it any way, (See Purgation.) Seethe it in any liquor, and drink it.) Serpent's biting, drink Planten with wine, drink the juice and apply the substance. scurf, use it inward and outward. Side ache, seeth the lesser kind of Planten, and apply it hot, or bruise the leaves, and apply them. Sores general, use Planten stamped and applied. Speech to cause, hold the juice under thy tongue. Spitting blood, use the decoction of the leaves. Put as much mouse dung as will lie on a groat, to half a glass full of the juice, and drink it first and last with sugar, as long as need is: drink the juice, or drink the seed with wine. squinsy and griefs of the throat, use the juice inward and outward. Stinging, (See Serpents.) Stomach weak, eat it or drink it any way. Stomach cleansing, (See Purgation.) Stones griefs, use Planten. Swell, use Planten: stamp the leaves with salt, and apply them: or with old grease. Swine Pocks, (See Pocks.) Teeth ache, use the juice or decoction of the leaves. Seethe the root and rub often therewith, and chew it. Tetters, apply the juice or water. Thirst, drink water of the decoction of Planten. Throat griefs, (See Squincy.) Throat wen, stamp the leaves with salt, and apply it, (See swellings.) Vein broken, (See bleeding, pissing blood, spitting blood.) drink Planten with the juice of Cresses. Venom, (See plague.) Ulcers, (See sores, wounds, kankers.) Vomiting, drink Planten. Urine to cause, seeth Planten, and drink the broth. Wens, (See throat.) Weals, (See Pushes.) Worms, seeth good store of Planten seeds in malmsey or ale, to the one half, and drink it fasting daily. Wounds general, use Planten of all sorts, (See bleeding, rankling,) apply the juice of Planten and Smallach with wheat flower. Yard sores and chafings, seeth the juice of Planten with a little Honey, and anoint. ¶ Plum tree. PLum tree (See Damson, Slow, Acatia.) for the lepry Impetigo, and Serpigo dissolve the gum in vinegar & anoint therewith. 2 ringworm, boil the sap in vinegar, and strain it and anoint therewith. 3 Swelling of blood letting, stamp the leaves of a white Plum tree with water, and apply them. 4 Ringwormes and tetters, apply the gum dissolved in vinegar. lepry 1 Ring worm 2. 4 Swelling of blood letting 3 Tetter 4 ¶ polypody. polypody: The root openeth the belly, and purgeth Melancholy gross and phlegmatic humours, and is good for the colic and griping in the belly, the hardness and stopping of the milt and quarten fevers, especially with Epithymum. 2 It must be boiled in broth of Mutton or Capon, or the decoction of Mallows or Beets, and a little anise, and then drunk: or the powder may be drunk with Mede. 3 Nose Polip, put in the powder to take it away. 4 That which groweth at the foot of the Oak is best. 5 The root of that of the Oak or Willow sodden with a Hen with some Anniseedes and Ginger, & the broth drunk warm, purgeth choler & melancholy: some use Beets, and some Mallows therewith. 6 A dram or more of the powder drunk with Honeyed water three or four hours before other things, doth the like. 7 The same root is good for swine again the murrain. 8 Chaps, stamp the root with Honey, & use it. 9 Milt swollen, seethe the root in wine, & use it. 10 Deliverance to cause whether the child be quick or dead, stamp it and apply it to her feet that is in travel. 11 joint out, stamp it & apply it. 12 Seethe it with a Hen, or with fish, or with Beets, or Mallows, to make a purgation to purge gross humours from the joints: it is good for all griefs that come of melancholy, as the quarten, if it be taken with Mede, Dodder of time and salt Indian. 13 All manner of ways it is good for the colic and hardness of the milt. 14 If it be taken with Mede or barley water, or the broth of Reasins, or of Cocks or Hens, or sodden with whey, it will not move the stomach to vomiting: it is good to take it with well savouring spices or seeds, as Aniseed, Carawayseed, Fennel seed, Ginger and such like, that comfort the natural power of the stomach: it will bide long seething, it may be taken from two drams to six drams: an ounce and a half of our English polypody, will scarce purge. 15 Some take powder of the dry root, at the lest one dram for a purgation. 16 The root sodden in wine and sweetened with Sugar or Honey, and drunk certain days, is good against the quarten, the Cough, shortness of wind, melancholy and heavy dreams, etc. 17 Belly bound, seethe it with as much Mallows, & drink the broth: or seethe it in water, & make pottage therewith: or steep it in wine, & drink it. 18 Seethe i handful in read wine from a gallon to a quart, with two. spoons full of clarified Honey, & drink one spoonful morn & even. 19 Stuf an old fat Hen or Cock with it & Honey, & Butter, or fresh grease, & seethe it well and drink the broth hot, & drink white wine & no other drink after it, till thou be'st soluble. 20 Fundament fig, stamp it with Yarow & drink it with ale. 21 Pricks, apply it with swine's grease. 22 (See Nettles.) King's evil, take as much powder of it as will lie on a groat, with Honey or wine one and twenty days, beginning at the quarter decreasing, & keep good order of diet, and be whole. 23 Ptisike and evil colour in the face, distil it in September, and drink three or four drams in the morning. 24 colic, seethe it with an old cock, and drink the broth. 25 To preserve health, and for the quotidian & Iliak passion, stamp half a dram or a dram with Prunes and violets, or Aniseeds in Fenel water, and strain it and drink it morn and even: or seethe it with Fenell seed in water, and make therewith a chicken broth with sweet spices, and eat it: or stamp it and boil it in wine, and after put more wine to it, and so make it a drink with sweet spices, and use it. Breath short 16 Chaps 8 colic 1. 6. 13. 24 Cough 16 Colour ill 23 Dead child 10 Deliverance 10 Dreams ill 16 Fever quart. 1 quotid 25 Fundament fig 20 Hogs murrain 7 Health to keep 25 Iliak pas. 25 joints out 11. 12 griefs 12 Kings evil 22 Milt griefs 1. 9 13 Nose polip 3 Pricks 21 Ptisike 23 Purgat 1. etc. ¶ pomegranate. POmegranate: The juice is very good for a hot and weak stomach, as the juice of Oranges or Citrons, and for all hot agewes and inflammations of the liver and blood, especially the sour Pomegranates, and next unto them, such as be of a winish taste: for the sweet are not very meet to be used in agewes. 2 The blossoms both of the tame and wild Pomegranate trees, as also the rind or shell in powder eaten, or boiled in wine & drunk, are good for the bloody flux, and the inordinate course of the mother, not only as is aforesaid, but also to sit or bathe in the decoction thereof. 3 The same bark or blossoms, stop the blood of green wounds, being applied in any sort. 4 The same bark killeth worms, and is a good remedy against the corruption in the stomach or bowels, being washed with the broth or decoction thereof. 5 Use the bark and flowers in plasters, against bruising and ruptures. 6 The seeds dried in the sun have like virtues as the flowers: it stoppeth the lask and all issues of blood, being taken in the same manner. 7 The same mixed with Hony helpeth all the sores of the mouth, privities & fundament. They that eat three flowers of the tame Pomegranate, shall be preserved one year from dropping and bleared eyes. 8 The juice and kernels are good in hot griefs and burning fevers to quench thirst and heat of the stomach: and so is the syrup of the juice of it. The kernels of the sour pomegranates dried in the sun, help all manner of fluxes, both of the belly and Matrixe. 9 And drunk with raw water, they help the spitting of blood: and so do the flowers or rinds thereof. 10 The rind sodden in wine & drunk, killeth worms: and the powder of the rind or flowers drunk or taken fasting, is good for the cold cough and the rheum. 11 The juice of the kernels mixed with Hony and sodden, is good for painful sores of the mouth, yard & fundament, and for the looseness of the skin about the nails, and for swellings and knots in any part of the body, for ache of the ears and griefs of the nostrils, especially the kernels of the sour pomegranates. 12 The rind of pomegranates powdered and mixed with Hony and anointed, sistit fluxum urinae aureae. 13 The powder of the flowers in plasters, driveth back the hernyes and swelling of the Cod, especially if some galls be put thereto. 14 Emplasters made of pomegranates, be good against hot fevers. 15 The wine of pomegranates is good to comfort the stomach after meat. 16 The flowers of wild Pomegranates stop fluxes, being used in drinks and Glisters. 17 The kernels of the sour Pomegranate dried in the sun, and either sprinkled on meat or sodden therewith, stop the belly & stomach that is lose. 18 The sour Pomegranate is good for the heart burning and the swooning that cometh by choler, the inflammation of the liver, and to cause appetite. 19 The syrup is good for women with with child, and the heat of the stomach & liver. 20 The juice of the sweet Pomegranate is good for the stomach, but in hot fevers the sower is better. 21 They are very comfortable & restorative in long sicknesses, consumptions and fluxes. 22 The powder of the rind drunk with read wine and cinnamon, helpeth any lask or flux. 23 The kernels steeped in water and drunk, are good against spitting of blood. 24 The whole Pomegranate stopped loose with clay into an earthen pot, and dried in an Oven, helpeth the bloody flux and torments of the belly, one dram & a half drunk with wine. 25 Powder of the kernels of sour pomegranates, one ounce, with one dram of Frankincense thereof drunk with Rose water, stoppeth the whites in women. 26 Eyes itch, heat and running, take up the fume of the decoction of the flowers. 27 Teeth ache, wash with the decoction of the flowers, & put powder of the same into the tooth. 28 Belching & yexing, & to restore appetite, stamp a Pomegranate whole with the rind, and boil it with a quart of Honey till it be thick, and take a little of it fasting with cold water. 29 Worms, seethe the rind with the root of an Ash in wine, and drink it fasting, it helpeth also the Tenasmus: or drink Acatia with water of the decoction of Pomegranates. 30 The decoction of the flowers fasten teeth, (See Maces.) 31 Heart faint of hot cause, make pottage of the kernels & barley meal, & use to eat thereof. 32 Thirst to voided, sup the juice of it, (See Almonds for the bloody flux.) Yard, (See Cinamome.) 33 Eyes pin and web, put in the juice of a sour Pomegranate two or three times to heal it. The same cureth sauseflegme, redness & such like in the face, and also the morphue. 34 Flux read or yellow, use the syrup of pomegranates with Mint water. 35 Wild fire, mix powder of the utter rind with vinegar, & anoint therewith. Appetite 18. 28 Belching 28 Belly ache 24 Bloody flux 26. 24. 32 Blood to stop 3 Bursten 13 Cod swollen 13 Conceived 19 Consumption 21 Cough 10 Ears ache 11 Eyes griefs 7. 26. 33 Face deform. 33 Fever hot 1. 8. 14 Flowers to stop 2. 6. 8. 12 Fluxes 6. 8. 16. 17. 21. 22. 24. 29. 34. Fundament griefs 7. 11 Heart burning 18 faint 31 Hicket 28 Inflammation 1. etc. Kernels 11 Knots 11 Liver hot 1. 8. 18. 19 Matrixe flux 2. 8 sores 7 Mouth sores 7. 11 Nails griefs 11 Nostrils grief 11 Reins running 25 Rheum 10 Spitting blood 9 23 Stomach ill 4. 15. 20 hot 18. 19 Swell 11 Swooning 18 Teethach 27 lose 30 Tenasmus 29 Thirst 8. 32 urine read 12 Whites 25 Wild fire 35 Woman conceived 19 Worms 4. 10. 29 Wounds bleeding 3 Yard sores 7. 11. 33 ¶ Pompons. POmpons, (See Melons.) make little balls or trochiskes of the juice of the inner part, and Beane flower, dry them in the shadow, and wash therewith in a Bane, to avoid all filth and spots from the skin when you begin to sweat, being broken and mixed with water. Skin to cleanse (See all.) ¶ Poplar POplar white: 1 Boil the bark in wine to provoke urine, and help the strangury and the Sciatica. 2 Ears pain and ulcers, drop in the juice of the leaves. 3 The leaves & young buds of black Poplar, stamped & applied, suageth the pain of the gout in the hands or feet. 4 The ointment that is made of the buds, is good against all inflammations, all bruisings & swellings, being applied. 5 The juice of the bark sodden in read wine, helpeth the bloody flux and the Sciatica. 6 The leaves of black Poplar applied with vinegar, are good for the gout. 7 The rosin that cometh out of Poplar, is often mixed with softening & suppling in Plasters. 8 The seed is good for the falling sickness. 9 An ounce of the bark of white Poplar, is good against the sciatica, being drunk, and likewise for the strangury. 10 The round pills which come forth at the budding time, broken & applied with Honey, heal the dullness of the sight. 11 The katlins or taklets of Poplar, come forth about the end of March & April, & then the buds thereof must be gathered to make unguentum Populeon. 12 Poplar is good in baths against most diseases of the body. 13 Lust to void, drink or eat the flowers of the tree. Gout, take one ounce of the rind, (See Feverfue.) 14 The Populeon hath these virtues. 15 Liver chafed, anoint therewith. 16 For such as can not hold their water, anoint the reins therewith. 17 Anoint the stomach or belly therewith to stop either vomit or lask. 18 Fever pestilential, anoint the spin of the back, and the plants of the hands and feet therewith, and oil of Roses, and also the region of the liver. 19 Burning and scalding, mix it with yolks of eggs and apply it, or mix it with whites of eggs, and oil of Roses, and use it. 20 Headache, anoint the temples with it. 21 Frenzy, shave the head & anoint it with it, and apply a whelp or cockerel slit through the midst of the back. 22 Reins running, anoint them therewith. 23 Strangury, anoint with it, and wear a plate of lead pricked full of holes to the reins. 24 Yard pain and chafed, mix it with oil of Roses or of Violets, and of Poppy, and the white of an Egg and use it. 25 Fistula, search it, and put in a tent that will fill it, anointed with Populeon, and the sore also, but dip the tent point in this powder: take green Coprose two ounces, burn it in a crusible, and put thereto Mercury sublimate one ounce, and grind them very fine, and so dress it two days together with this powder once in 24. hours, and then other two days with Populeon only, and when it is clean, heal it up with incarnatives etc. 26 Itch and scab, mortify Quicksilver with fasting spittle, and mix it with twice so much Populeon, and anoint the plants of the hands, and feet therewith morn and even. Bathing 12 Bloody-fluxe 5 Bruises 4 Burn 19 Ears griefs 2 Eyes griefs 10 Falling evil 8 Feet gout 3. 6. 13 Fistula 25 Fluxes 17 Frenzy 21 Fever pestilent 18 Gouts 3. 6. 13 Hands gout 3 Headache 20 Inflammation 4 Itch 26 Liver chafed 15 Lust to void 13 Pissing bed 16 Plague 18 Reins running 22 Sciatica 1. 5. 9 Sickness general 12 Skabbes 26 Scalding 19 Strangury 19 23 Swell 4 Vomiting 17 Urine stopped 1 Yard griefs 24 ¶ Poppy. poppy: white Poppy seeds gathered when they be ripe, may be kept five years, they provoke sleep, and suage pain. 2 Bruise the seeds with woman's milk and the white of an Eglantine, and apply it hot to the temples and forehead to provoke sleep. 3 The seed or herb bruised with oil of Roses, and applied, draweth out the great heat of ulcers coming of a bruise, and applied to the hot liver, it doth help it much. 4 Anoint the back with powder of the seeds, and oil Olive, to assuage the ache of the joints, and to strengthen them. 5 The juice with oil of Roses helpeth the hot gout of the feet, and the ache thereof. 6 Powder of the seeds with oil of Violets anointed on the back bone, doth help the burning of the Fever, and heat of the liver. 7 Any kind of Poppy, or the juice or water thereof applied to the forehead and temples, provoketh sleep, and helpeth the frenzy. 8 Put the juice of the herb with a tent into the nose to provoke sleep: and into the natural place to stop the terms: apply it to any pain to mitigate the same. 9 seeth heads and leaves in water, and bathe the head therewith to provoke sleep. 10 The broth is good to be drunk against too much want of sleep. 11 The heads broken with parched Barley meal, are good to be applied to inflammations both choleric and others. 12 The green heads must be brayed and fashioned into little cakes, and dried to serve in time of need. 13 The whole heads are sodden alone in water to the one half, and then strained and sodden with honey to the thickness of an Electuary, which is good for the cough, the catarrh that falleth into the pipes, & for the running of the belly, but it will be much better if Hypoquistida or Acatia be put to it. 14 Drink the seeds of black Poppy broken in wine against the flux, & all issues of women. Apply it to the temples to provoke sleep. 15 The seed of Garden Poppy is good to be mixed with bread to season it, but the white is better than the black. 16 The use of Poppy is very good of the much spitting and coughing of raw matter from the breast, by distilling of rheum from the head. 17 The white taken with honey increaseth seed. 18 The seed of black Poppy taken by itself or with wine, helpeth the cough and falling down of rheum, the flowing of women's sickness and terms, and pains of the small guts: the same doth the juice thereof. 19 Powder of white Poppy seed given to children in milk or possite drink, or an alebrew, or rather with a Caudle of Almonds and hemp seed, causeth them to sleep. 20 Stamp white Poppy & Henbane seed with the white of an Egg, and apply it to the forehead to provoke sleep in the frenzy. 21 Stamp the leaves of white Poppy and read Nettles with a little Beane flower, and bind it to the forehead to provoke sleep. 22 Wash thy face with hot water of the decoction of Poppy, and thou shalt either sleep, or dye out of hand. 23 The juice of Poppy with oil of Roses provoketh sleep. 24 Stamp the heads of green Poppy with oil of Roses and Rose water, and apply it to the forehead and temples for headache, and to provoke sleep. 25 The seeds in an Electuary are good for the cough and hoarseness. 26 The decoction of the leaves and heads in water drunk, causeth sleep, and so it doth if the head and hands be washed therewith. 27 The seed of black Poppy drunk in Wine, stoppeth the flux and terms. 28 And being mixed with water and applied to the temples causeth sleep. 29 A plaster made of the green heads before they be ripe, and parched Barley meal is good for the holy fire, and hot tumors. (See Opium and Corne-rose.) 30 Sleep to cause, stamp the seeds with woman's milk, and apply it to the forehead and temples, or anoint with the juice and woman's milk, or apply the juice of Poppy, Houseleek, and Nightshade, with the seeds of Poppy, and the white of an Egg in a sharp Fever. 31 Or seeth the tops of black Poppy in milk and drink it, or stamp them with water, and apply it blood warm to the forehead, temples, and pulses. 32 Seeth crowns of Poppy heads in milk and drink it. Fevers caused of hot meats, use Opij Zaccarum with milk of Poppy seed. 33 Costivenesse and headache, stamp the seeds and strain it with water, and drink thereof, especially at night, and apply it to thy forehead. 34 Fever of hot blood, drink water wherein the leaves of Fleawort have been sodden with a little milk of Poppy seed. 35 Sleep to cause, stamp the seeds of lettuce and white Poppy, with woman's milk, and apply it to the pulses. 36 Scrofules, seed wild Poppy, quick Brimstone, & doves dung, and linseed with pure wine, being first stamped, and apply it to all Scrofules. 37 The branches of wild Poppy and unripe Figs, draw broken bones out of ulcers. 38 Sleep to cause, apply a plaster of the seeds with woman's milk, and the white of an Egg to the temples. 39 For a hot imposthume and chafing of the liver, stamp the seeds or herb of white Poppy, with oil of Roses, and apply it. 40 For dryness in a fever hectike, stamp the seeds with oil of Violets, and anoint the small of the back therewith. 41 Sleep to cause, stamp the seeds of Poppy and Henbane, with the white of an Egg, and apply it to the forehead. 42 For great grief in the body, boil the leaves with Fiveleafe, and Peniroyall, of each like much in wine, and foment therewith. 43 Headache, apply the seeds with gum Arabike and woman's milk to the temples. 44 Bones broken, seeth Figs and Poppy sodden in water and apply it. 45 Flux to stop, make drink of the seeds of lettuce and white Poppy and use it. 46 Sleep to cause, drink a spoonful of syrup of Poppy, or anoint the temples with oil of Poppy. Sleep to cause, take one spoonful of white Poppy seed with a little possiteale made with Violets, Strawberry leaves, and Fiveleafe, and drink it warm when need is. Bruise 4. ounces of white Poppy seed, but not the ripest, steep them in a pottle of rain water 24. hours, seeth it till the better half be wasted, strain it, and to every pint put one pound of Sugar, seeth it and skomme it, and keep it in a close glass, and take one spoonful when need is to provoke sleep. Aches 4. 5. 8. 42 Apostume 11. 29. 39 Backeache 4. 6 Belly-ache 18. 42. bound 33 Bones broken 37. 44 Bruise 3 Catarrh 13 Consumption 40 Cough 13. 16. 18. 25 Feet gout 5 Fever hect. 40 hot 6. 30 32. 34 Flowers to stop 8. 14. 18. 27 Fluxes 14. 27. 45 Frenzy 7. 20 Gout 5 Headache 1. 24. 33. 43 Holy fire 29 Hoarseness 25 Impostume 39 Inflammation 11 joynts-ache 4 Kernels 36 Liver hot 3. 6. 39 Rheum 16. 18 Seed to 'cause 17 Scrofules 36 Sleep to 'cause 1. 2. 7. 8. 9 10. 14. 19 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 26. 28. 30. 31. 35. 38. 41. 46 Swell hot 29 Swine's evil 36 Thirst 4 Throat kernels 36 Ulcers 14. 18. 37 women's issues 14. 18. 27 ¶ Privet. Privet: the leaves do cure swellings, ulcers, and apost. of the mouth, and sores, pustules, and blisters of the throat being washed or gargled with the decoction or juice. 2 Straw powder of the leaves on hot ulcers and festering & consuming sores, or bruise the fruit and apply it to the same effect. 3 Burning & scalding, use the broth of the leaves. 4 Headache, apply the flowers. 5 The oil heateth and softeneth sinews being mixed with things that be of hot nature. 6 Mouth sores, chew the leaves. 7 Burn, carbuncles, inflammations, stamp the leaves and apply them. 8 The water of the leaves and tendrils or flowers distilled in May or june, helpeth the exulceration of the mouth, hot inflammations, carbuncles, ulcers of the privy parts and burnings with fire. 9 The flowers applied with vinegar, helpeth the headache. 10 Feet galled, wash with the juice of the fruit. 11 Canker, apply the water. Burn 3. 7. 8 Carbuncles 7. 8 Chafing 10 Feet galled 10 Festers 2 Headache 4. 9 Inflammation 7. 8 canker 11 Mouth sores 1. 6. 8 Privities sores 8 Sinews griefs 5 Scalding 3 Skin of 10 Sores 2 Swell 1 Throat sores 1. 6. 8 Ulcers 1. 2 ¶ Purslane. PVrslaine eaten green, helpeth a hot stomach, & the swelling of the mouth of the stomach. 2 Teethache, seethe it and hold it in thy mouth. 3 Apostume and hot ulcers, stamp it and apply it. 4 Head ulcers, seeth it in wine and wash therewith. 5 Fever hot, eat it raw with vinegar. 6 Stomach hot, bruise it with Barley meal, and apply it. 7 Flowers to stop, eat it to stay them without harm. 8 Headache, and heat of the eyes, apply it with Barley flower. Fever burning, drink the juice, which also killeth worms, and helpeth spitting of blood. 9 Belly bound, seeth it in water with Prunes, and drink the broth. 10 Warts, anoint with the juice to pluck them up by the roots. 11 Holy fire, bruise it and apply it. 12 Thirst, hold it under the tongue. 13 The eating of it raw, breedeth clammy humours in the stomach. 14 Eat it to stop fluxes, to quench burning choler, to extinguish lust, to help the reins and bladder, to kill round worms, to comfort the matrix, & to stay the abundance of terms. 15 Drink the juice in hot Fevers. 16 It may be preserved with salt, and then it is good with roasted meats. 17 The root hanged with a thread about thy neck, helpeth the falling of the vulva. 18 Teethache, and anedged, chew it. 19 It quencheth the fretting and exulcerations of the kidneys and bladder, and outrageous lust. 20 It is good in eye medicines, 21 And in glisters for the flux, and the gnawing and fretting of the matrix. 22 Head ache of heat, anoint with the juice & oil. 23 Head plouks and blains, rub it with the juice & wine. 24 Wounds rotten & numbed, apply it with parched Barley meal. 25 Drink it and apply it against all poison and venom, and to withstand unwholesome water. 26 chew it with honey & apply it to sores to heal them. 27 Apply it to children's navels that go far out. 28 chew it raw for the sores of the mouth, swellings of the gums, and the tooth ache, and to fasten lose teeth. 29 Apply it to the ache of the neck with as much of a gall and linseed. 30 The seed sodden with honey, is good against shortness of breath. 31 Purslane is good in salads, & strengtheneth the stomach. 32 With oil & parched Barley, it suageth ache of wounds, it softeneth the hardness of the sinews, it driveth away unclean dreams of venery, & minisheth seed, it hurteth the eyesight. 33 The juice, water, seed, or any part of it is good for all inward heats of the stomach, liver, and kidneys. 34 The water stoppeth the bloody flux & other fluxes, and is good for the frenzy, the inflammation, ache, or running of the eyes and ears, & all inflammations of the belly, the terms, & Emerods', spitting of blood, the cough & shortness of breath. 35 The seed, herb, or water used, stoppeth the running of the reins, abateth lust, & cooleth the blood. 36 The herb or seed stamped with flowers of parched Barley, and applied to the forehead & temples, appeaseth headache coming of heat, helpeth the frenzy, the inflammation of the eyes, & their redness: it helpeth the holy fire, the shingles, ringwormes, & tetters. 37 Mix the juice with oil of Roses or of Violets, & apply it to the temples with stuphes of Hemp to provoke sleep. 38 The distilled water drunk, worketh the same effect. 39 Mix the juice with oil of wax, & apply it to the swelling of the yard. 40 It stoppeth all issues of blood, the juice being drunk and the herb boiled & eaten. 41 The juice powered on the head with oil and vinegar of Roses, suageth the hot headache coming by heat of the sun. 42 The juice thrown up into the matrix helpeth the burning inflammations, exulcerations, gnawings and frettings in the same. 43 And put in by glister, it helpeth the flux of the guts and exulceration of the bowels. 44 Purslane cooleth all things that are too hot, & defendeth wounds from inflammation. 45 The seeds expel worms & stop the lask. 46 Wild Pursten may be used to all purposes in stead of it: it groweth in gardens, alleys and rocks, etc. 47 Purslane preserved in salt or brine, heateth & purgeth the stomach: dip a cloth in the juice of Purslane, & Gourd, or Cucumber, and apply it to the head against the frenzy with vinegar round about the head. 48 Impost. eat Purslane. 49 Strangury of hot cause, drink the juice. 50 Fevers hot, use Purslane. 51 Burn, apply it with Barley meal. 52 Purslane will not suffer choler to engender in the stomach. 53 Eyes web, drop in the juice of wild Purslane. 54 Worms, drink good store of the seeds. 55 Matrix swollen, drink Purslane and apply it, or bathe it with the decoction of it. Aches hot 32 Apostume hot 3 Back (see Kid.) Belly bound 9 inflamed 34 42. 43 Bladder griefs 14. 19 Bloody-fluxe 34. 40 Breath short 30. 34 Burn 51 Choler 14. 52 Cough 34 Dreams ill 32 Ears griefs 34 Eyes griefs 20. 34. 35. 36. 53 Emerods' 34 Fever hot 5. 8. 15. 50 Flowers to stop 7. 14. 34. 40 Flux 21. 34. 45 Frenzy 36. 47 Gums swollen 28 Headache hot 8. 22. 41 ulcers 4. 23 Holy fire 11. 36 Impostume 48 Kidneys hot 14. 19 33 Liver hot 33 Lust to void 14. 19 35 Matrix griefs 14. 21. 42. 54 Mouth griefs 17. 28 Navel out 27 Necke-ache 29 Poison 25 Reins running 35 ringworm 36 sinews hard 32 Shingles 36 Sleep to 'cause 37. 38 Sores 26 Spitting blood 8. 34 Stomach hot 1. 6. 31. 33. 52 swollen 1 Strangury 49 Teeth ache 2. 18. 29 edged 18 lose 29 Tetters 36 Thirst 12. 14 Venom 25 Ulcers hot 3 Wula fallen 17 Warts 10 Water ill 25 Worms 8. 14. 45. 54 Wound-ache 32. 44 rotten 24 Yard-ache and swollen 39 ¶ Quince. QVince: The Quince stoppeth the lask or common flux, the bloody-flux, and all other fluxes of blood, spitting blood, especially when it is raw: for when it is either boiled or roasted, it stoppeth not so much, but it is then fit to be eaten, and more pleasant to the taste. 2 Women with child that eat Quinces often in meat or otherwise, shall bring forth wise children of good understanding. 3 The Codenac, or Marmalade made with honey as it was wont to be, with sugar as they use to make it now a days, is very good to strengthen the stomach, and to keep the meat therein till it be perfectly digested. 4 Being taken before meat, it stoppeth the lask, and after meat it looseth the belly, and closeth up the mouth of the stomach so fast, that no vapours can ascend up into the brain, and cureth headache, that cometh of such vapours. 5 The decoction or broth of Quinces hath the like virtue, & stoppeth the belly, & all fluxes of blood, and the violent issues of the terms. 6 With the same it is good to bathe the lose fundament & falling down of the matrix, to make them to return into their natural places. 7 They are also good in plasters to stop the flux & vomiting, & for all hot swellings & inflammations of the breast & other places. 8 The down that groweth upon Quinces sodden in wine & applied, healeth carbuncles. 9 The oil of Quinces stayeth vomitings, gripings in the belly or stomach with the casting up of blood, if the stomach be anointed therewith. 10 The flowers of the Quince tree do stop fluxes, spitting blood and the flowers, & have the same virtues that Quinces themselves have. 11 If the stomach be very hot and moist, or the belly laxative, Quinces are best to be eaten before meat, being roasted or eaten cold, & the tarter that they be, the better they are. 12 And Pomegranates be of the same virtue. 13 But the custom of taking of Quinces in meats hurteth the sinews, but by way of medicine they be excellent. 14 And the cores taken out and preserved in honey or kept in their mussilage, they may long continued to the use of roasting or baking: for they be perilous to the stomach being eaten raw, but preserved, they do mightily prevail against drunkenness. 15 If he that hath drunk well eat a Quince roasted or otherways ordered, the drink shall not annoy his brain much. 16 Quinces well roasted or baked, are of good nourishment, and are good for the stomach, and take away belching, vomiting, and loathing, especially taken after meat. 17 The syrupes and Electuaries made of Quinces with spices, are very profitable for many griefs. 18 The juice of a raw Quince is very good for them whose wind is stopped, and cannot hold their meat. 19 Quinces preserved whole in honey, are very good to be used of them that have the bloody flux. 20 Raw Quinces applied in plasters are good to stop the flux and vomiting, the heat of the stomach, and inflammation of the breast and liver. 21 The decoction of the leaves is good against the falling down of the matrix and fundament. 22 The seed steeped in rosewater, is good against thick and gross humours, in burnings with fire. 23 Gauls and Meddlers be of the same virtue. 24 Not man can sufficiently declare the virtues of Quinces. 25 Quinces are good for the stomach, they make a man piss well, but when they are roasted, they are counted to be gentler. 26 The juice of raw Quinces is good for them that are short wound. 27 The broth of them is good to bathe the mother in that falleth down. The Quinces that are condited with honey provoke urine. 28 They that are sodden in honey, are more pleasant for the stomach. 29 They are good raw in plasters to stop the belly, for the inflammation of the stomach and paps, for vomiting, hardness of the milt, and swelling about the fundament. 30 You may make wine of them, by stamping and straining them, but it will not last, except you put to every xv. quarts one quart of honey, for without honey it will turn to vergis. 31 The wine so made is good for all the things aforesaid. 32 The oil of Quinces is made of the smallest, roundest, and best smelling Quinces. 33 The flowers both green and dry, are good in emplasters for all things that need binding, and for inflammations, & vomiting of blood. 34 And they are also good against the flux, and to stop the terms. 35 Headache, eat roasted Quinces after meals when the ache cometh of vapours. 36 Vomit to stop, steep the kernels in water and drink it, or bind the leaves unto thy wrists. They may be gathered in August, and kept all the year. 37 Flux, seeth Quinces after they be pared and cored with Oak apples & cinnamon, and sugar it and take thereof three nights. 38 To make Marmalade of Quinces, take Quinces xuj. pound, core them, seeth them, and stamp them in a stone mortar, then clarify ten pound of honey with the gleyre of an Eglantine, or white well beaten, and seethe all till it be stiff, then lay it on a marble stone, and cut it of what fashion you william. 39 A plaster of Quinces is restrictive and good for the bloody flux. 40 Tongue sharp and dry, put the seeds of Quinces, and Psilium, or one of them into a cloth, & steep it in water, and wash therewith. 41 Stamp Barley meal with half as much Quince kernels with vinegar, and apply it to burnings or inflammations of the gout. 42 Mix the pap of sodden Quinces eight ounces, with powder of Sugar four ounces, vinegar six spoonful or more, Ginger half an ounce, white Pepper one dram, seeth it to the height of a Conserve, and take thereof before and after meat to comfort the stomach. Apostume 7. 8 Belching 10 Belly-ache 9 bound 11 lose 11 Breasts griefs 6 7. 20. 29 Breath short 18. 26 Bloody-fluxe 1. 5. 19 39 Burn 22. 41 Carbuncle 8 Conserve 42 Digestion 3 Drunkenness 14. 15 Flowers to stop 5. 10. 34 Fluxes 1. 5. 7. 20. 34. 37 Fundament fallen 6. 21 swollen 29 Gout 41 Headache 4. 35 Inflammation 33. 41 Liver hot 20 Loathing 16 Marmalade 38 Matrix falling 6. 21. 27 Milt hard 29 Oil 32 Sickness general 17. 42 Spitting blood 1. 10 Stomach hot 20. 29. weak 3. 9 42 Swell hot 7 Tongue grief 40 Vomiting 7. 16. 18. 20 33. 36 Urine stopped 25. 27 Wine 30 Woman conc. 2 ¶ Radish. RAdish eaten at supper doth well digest meat, heateth the stomach, causeth a stinking breath, if any sleep by and by after the eating of it. 2 The root is hurtful to women with child. 3 Canker in old ulcers, anoint with the juice of the root, or use the powder of it. 4 Boil the juice with honey, and mix it with a little vinegar, and strain it and drink it, to help the quarten Fever and the stopping of the milt. 5 Stamp the root and apply it to the water between the skin and flesh, and to the hardness of the milt. 6 Kings evil, drink the juice of the root with the lyanor of Reasins. 7 And with honey to voided the cough, stopping the breast, and shortness of breath. 8 Bruise the roots, and steep them two or three days in vinegar, than put thereto a third part of honey, and strain it and drink of this Oximell to help the fever quotidian and quarten, except the same come of salt phlegm. 9 For cold and undigested humours in the stomach, steep the rinds of the roots in vinegar and honey mixed together, and eat daily a good quantity thereof, & drink after it a draft of warm water, & put thy finger or a feather dipped in salad oil into thy throat to procure vomit at any time, but the best time is in the morning. 10 For hardness of the liver and milt, seeth the herb alone in oil and wine, and apply it plaster wise hot, and likewise for the strangury to the bottom of the belly and root of the privity. 11 Distil water of Radish in September, and drink three or iiii. ounces of the water morn and even for the stone, to provoke urine, to cleanse the reins and bladder, and testicles, and for the King's evil, to kill worms and help digestion, and to cleanse the stomach from humours that let digestion, to open all obstructions of the entrailss and veins, and to 'cause a clear voice. 12 Gargoyle therewith in the throat, and hold thereof in thy mouth to help the swelling in the throat, and ulcers in the gums. 13 Drink thereof also iiii. ounces morning and evening three or four weeks together, and forbear much other drinking to help the water between the skin and the flesh. 14 Stamp earth worms, and put thereto the juice of Radish roots, and quench therein any knife, sword, or other tool to make it cut Iron as it were Led. 15 Boil iiii. pound of the outward rinds of Radish with viii. pound of honey to the one half, then put thereto powder of cinnamon, Cloves, Mace, Nutmegs, and black Pepper, of each half an ounce, and keep it in a close vessel, and take thereof half an ounce every morning fasting to be free from the colic and iliake. 16 Mix the juice of the roots with white wine and Turpentine burned or dried in the sun, and drink it to drive out the stone. 17 The young stems and tender crops and buds, may be boiled and eaten with oil and vinegar, and they nourish better than the roots, though their nourishment be but little. 18 The bark of the root taken before meat with Oximell stirreth vomiting, purgeth tough humours, and quickeneth the wit and understanding. 19 The decoction or broth of Radish drunk, provoketh urine, breaketh the stone, and driveth it out, ripeth gross phlegm, cleanseth the breast and stomach, and helpeth the old cough. 20 Radish is good for the Dropsy, the griefs of the liver, and stopping of the reins. 21 And eaten with Mustard, it is good against the Lethargy, drowsiness, and forgetfulness. 22 It is good also for them that are sick with eating of Todestooles or Mushrooms or Henbane, or other venom, and for the colic and griping pain in the belly: it provoketh terms, and causeth abundance of milk. The root stamped very small with vinegar & applied, cureth the hardness of the milt. 23 The same with honey helpeth fretting, festering, and consuming sores, and is good against skuruinesse and scales of the head, and restoreth hair. 24 The same with Darnel meal taketh away blue spots of bruises and all blemishes, and frecles of the face. 25 The seed causeth vomit vehemently, and provoketh urine, and being drunk with honey and vinegar, it killeth and expelleth worms. 26 The same taken with vinegar wasteth the milt, & slaketh the hardness thereof. 27 The same sodden in honeyed vinegar & often gargarised hot, is good against the Squincy. 28 The wild or water Radish hath the same virtues, but stronger, and is singular good to provoke urine. 29 Radish laid to with vinegar, doth mightily scour away gangrenes, or extreme hot sores. 30 Radish sodden with water and tempered with honey, is good against the old cough, and cleanseth the breast and lungs being used certain days. 31 The bark of the root stamped and taken with honey and vinegar, provoketh vomit, and so doth the seed taken with warm water. 32 Radish stamped finely with honey, taketh away all black spots of bruises, the spots and pimples of the face, restoreth hair, and is good against all venomous bitings and stingings. 33 And the same applied to the navel of a woman, taketh away the torments of her belly. 34 The great wild Raysart is much of like nature to Radish. 35 The young plants of Radish with vinegar at the beginning of meals, is good sauce to loosen the belly. 36 But it is best to seeth Radish, and put vinegar, sugar, and good sweet oil to it, and not to eat it raw. 37 Radish sodden in wine and drunk morn and even, breaketh and expelleth the stone, openeth the gall, diminisheth the spleen, and moveth venus. 38 Drop the juice warm into the ear to help any pain therein. 39 The ashes of burned Radish doth cleanse and dry ulcers. 40 Stamp two ounces of the root, or three drams of the seeds, & put thereto honeyed water or barley water or whey, and strain it and drink it to provoke vomit, and cleanse the stomach: it may be given to any of any age or kind. Radish is unwholesome for them that have pain of the gout or ache of the joints. 41 Stamp the leaves with old swine's grease, and apply it to botches and apostumes, and to help them. 42 Dropsy, make Oximell with Radish, and use it. 43 Ears dull, seeth the seeds of Radish, Stavesacre, and Wormwood, and strain it and put it into the ear with a tent. 44 Phlegm to void, put the root with Oximell into warm water, and drink a good deal, and put thy finger into thy mouth to provoke vomit. 45 Apply the juice of the roots to the gout. 46 Eat the roots for the jaundice, having first drunk Oximell squillitike. 47 The juice drunk is a good preservative against death drunk with wine. 48 For phlegm or rheum, stamp the roots with Figs and a little Honey, and boil it into an Electuary, and use it to cleanse the stomach of phlegm. 49 seeth one handful of the roots with four ounces of Saxifrage in wine to the third part, then put in a little Honey and drink it warm at even for the stone. 50 Stamp the roots, and apply them to the belly to kill worms and expel them. Hickit, chew the root to provoke vomit. 51 Urine to cause, seeth as much horse Radish as two eggs sliced thin in a pint of water, with as much honey as the root, and when it is well sodden drink thereof. 52 Or slice as much as both the fists, and stamp it and put thereto thrice as much course bran, seeth it in a pottle of water till the water be consumed, and lie upon it, thy belly downwards, as hot as thou canst suffer. 53 Stone and stopping of the urine, slice two. pound of the root of wild or horse Radish, stamp them and seethe them in a linen bag in a pot of water, and put to it six buckets of other water, and sit therein up to the middle, and apply the bag unto the place, and drink the distilled water of the same herb at morn, noon, and even, especially with powder of the kidneys of a Hare two drams. Or cut the said root checkerwise as dice four ounces, power thereon a quart of the best wine that can be got, and let it stand 24. hours, and drink thereof four ounces morning and evening. If you cannot have horse Radish, take common Radish. 54 Ptisike, dry the root of Radish, and make it into fine powder, and use it in meats, broths, sauces, and drinks. 55 Worms, drink the juice fasting. 56 Canker, apply the juice of Radish, and Elecampana, with wheat flower, and the white of an Egg. 57 Canker worms, apply the leaves stamped with black nesh soap. 58 Stone to break, steep the sliced roots in white wine one night, than strain it and drink it. Oil of Radish causeth hair to grow. 59 Head bushes, and sores, stamp Radish with Hog's grease, and anoint therewith. 60 Falling evil, stamp it and apply it to the brain. 61 Teethache, fill it with a piece of the root, or rub the teeth and gums therewith. 62 Nosebleeding, put in the rind of Woodbine and the scraping of Radish. 63 Fever tertian, stamp the root with wheat bran, and apply it between the navel and the share. 64 Scrofules, use to take Radish any way in meat or drink. 65 The oil of the seeds with the juice of Broome killeth louse. 66 Anoint thy hand with the juice of the root, and no serpent will hurt thee when thou handlest her. 67 Face bruised or hurt, anoint with honey and the juice of the rind of the root. 68 Hair to grow again, (See in Dog-Fenell.) 69 Skin spots, distil Radish in a Limbek, and wash therewith. 70 Fretting sores, mix well the oil of Radish with salt, and apply it. 71 Bruises and spots, anoint with the juice or with honey wherein the seeds be dissolved. 72 Eyes dull, gather the roots in an evening, slice them and lay the cut side downwards in a chafindish, and let it stand all night in the air, and gather the water, and drop it into the eyes. 73 Radish is good against all choking of mushrooms and poison, or venom. 74 To help digestion, eat Radish after meat. 75 Reins ache, cut the roots in small gobbets, and steep them all night in Malmsey, and drink it first and last nine days. Pair the roots, and put them in dishes with unpured honey, and let them stand all night, and in the morning eat nine gobbets or slices fasting, the next day eight, the next day seven, and so to one, to break the stone. Biting of a mad dog, pair the root and seeth it in wine, and stamp it, and apply it, for it will hold the hole open, and draw out the venom, if you stamp the leaves therewith, and apply it, it will do better. 76 Stomach to cleanse, seeth Elecampana, and Radish of each half a handful in a quart of water with a pint of Honey, and a farthingwoorth of bruised Liquorice, and drink thereof first and last. 77 Phlegm to void, seeth Radish in Ale, and eat it. Apostume 41 Backeache 75 Belly-ache 22. 23. bound 35 Bitings venom. 32. 75 Bladder griefs 11 Botch 41 Breast griefs 7. 19 30 Breath short 7. 19 30 Bruise 24. 32. 67. 71 colic 15. 22 Consumption 54 Cough 7. 19 30 Digestion 11. 74 Dropsy 5. 13. 20. 42 Ears griefs 38 dull 43 Eyes dull 72 Electuary 15. 48 Face deformed 24. 32. 67 69. 71 Falling evil 60 Festers 23 Fever tertian 63 quotidian 8 quarten 4. 58 Flowers stopped 22 Gall stopped 37 Gangrene 29 Gout 45 Head scales 23 sores 59 Hair to restore 23. 32. 58. 68 Hickit 50 jaundice 46 Iliacke 15 canker 3. 56. 57 Kidneys griefs 11. 20 Kings evil 6. 11. 64 Lice 65 Lethargy 21 Liver stopped 10. 20 Lungs griefs 30. 54 Lust to 'cause 37 Mad dog 75 Memory 18. 21 Milk to 'cause 22 Milt griefs 4. 10. 22. 26. 37 Mouth griefs 12 Nosebleeding 62 Obstruction 11 Oximell 8 Poison 22. 73 Ptisike 54 Purgation 76 Rheum 48 Sickness general 11. 47 Sores 23. 29. 70 Squincy 27 Steel to cut 14 Stinging 32 Stomach griefs 9 11. 19 40. 48. 76 Stone 11. 16. 19 37. 49 53. 58. 75 Strangury 10 Teethache 61 Throat griefs 12. 27. 64 Venom 22. 66. 73 ulcers 3. 39 Voice ill 11 Vomit to 'cause 9 18. 25. 31. 40. 44. 50 Urine stopped 11. 19 25 28. 51. 52. 53 Wits dull 18 Woman belly-ache 33 Worms 11. 25. 50. 55 skin spots 69. 71 ¶ Rape. RApe and Turnip: The Turnip taken in meat nourisheth meetly well being moderately taken and well digested, but taken too much, it engendereth much windiness and superfluity of humours, especially eaten raw: for than it hurteth the stomach, and causeth windy griping & torment in the small guts. 2 The same boiled in milk & applied, suageth the pain of the gout. 3 Oil of Roses put into a Turnip, and roasted in the Emberss, healeth kibed heels. 4 The broth of Rapes is good for the same purpose being washed and bathed therein sokingly, and so is the Navew or Turnip itself being either baked or roasted and applied. 5 The scrops and young springs of Turnips eaten, provoke urine, and are good for the stone. 6 The seeds of Turnips or Rapes, withstand all poison, and are therefore put into Treacles and medicines against poison, and to suage ache: and so is the oil of the seed. and taken raw, it expelleth worms. 8 The root prepared and used as is aforesaid, stirreth up Venus, and so doth the seeds being drunk. 9 The seeds are also put into medicines that are made to beautify the face, and all the body. 10 Rapes have also a marvelous property to cleanse the sight. Rapes sodden and applied hot, help the ache of the Gout, and healeth kibes: especially some oil of Roses and wax being roasted therein. 11 Wild Rapes are put into medicines to cleanse the skin, as with Lupins, Beane meal, etc. 12 There is great plenty of it made in Marsh land, near to Linne, very profitable in our common wealth. 13 The oil drunk, is a present remedy against poison & deadly drinks. 14 The Rape laid up in brine, nourish less, but causeth appetite to meat. 15 It is good that Rapes be twice sodden before they be eaten, than they nourish sufficiently, provoke urine, engender seed, and suage the roughness of the breast and throat. 16 If they be eaten with salt and vinegar, they 'cause appetite. 17 Rapes are good for white flaws and such like diseases of the nails. 18 Poisoned, drink presently the seeds or roots of Turnips. urine to cause, drink the seeds of Turnips. 19 Seethe Raphanus or Rape in oil and anoint thy head therewith for the Frenzy, and thou shalt either sleep or die. 20 Head ache of murr, seethe Rapes in a pot, and hold thy nose over it. 21 hoarsness lately come, roast a Rape root till it be black, and pair it, and eat it as hot as may be suffered, and drink a draft of hot water after it, and wet a cloth in cold water, and wring it, and bind it about thy neck, & a warm cloth on it morn & even. 22 Lameness, eat young Hog's feet sodden with Rapes and bugloss. 23 Cough and other griefs of the chest, seethe Rape in a pot, and hold thy mouth and face over it, till thy face sweat, and keep thee warm after it. 24 Matrixe, windy, foment with the decoction of Rapes. 25 Gout and pain of the joints, use water of the decoction of Rapes. 26 Matrixe windy, mix the juice of Mullin and Rapes with Barley meal, and apply it. 27 Eyes dull and misty, use Comfits of Rape seeds. 28 Matrixe swollen, and windy, seeth Rape seed in water, and foment the place therewith. 29 Skorching with fire, stamp Rapes with their root, and distil them in a Limbeck, and wash therewith often. Appetite 14. 16 Breast rough 15 Burning 29 Cough 23 Eyes dull 10. 27 Face deform. 9 11 Frenzy 19 Gout 2. 10. 25 Head ache 20 hoarsness 21 joints pain 25 Kibes 3. 4. 10 Lame 2 Lust to 'cause 8 Matrixe swollen 28 windy 24. 26. 28 Nails griefs 17 Poison 6. 13. 18 Rheum 20 Skin deform. 9 11 Sleep to 'cause 19 Seed to increase 15 Stone 5 Throat rough 15. 21 Venom 6 (See poison) urine stopped 5. 15. 18 Whiteflawes 17 ¶ Raspis. RAspis are of the same virtue that common Brier or Bramble is of: and moreover, the flower stamped with Hony & applied, is good for the inflammation of the eyes and the shingles. 2 It is good to be given with water to them that have weak stomaches. 3 It were good to keep some of the juice of Raspis berries in some wooden vessel, and to make it as it were Raspis wine, which is good for many purposes, both for a weak stomach and the flux, and divers diseases of the Gums, Teeth, Vuula, palate, and other places thereabouts. 4 The leaves and tender springs, fruit and root, are not much unlike in virtue, to the like parts of briars. (See briars.) Eyes griefs 1 Flux 3 Mouth griefs 3 Shingles 1 Stomach weak 2. 3 Vuula fallen 3 ¶ Read rattle. Read rattle sodden in wine and drunk, stoppeth the terms and all other issues of blood. ¶ Reed. REeede called Pool Reed or Canes. 2 Pricks, stamp the root small and apply it with vinegar, it suageth the pain of the joints that are out. 3 The green tender leaves finely stamped and applied, do heal cholorike inflammations or wild fire, and hot swellings and impostumes. If the down thereof happen to get into the ears, it causeth such deafness as can hardly be cured. 4 The root applied with vinegar, suageth pain of the Reins or Loins. 5 The ashes of the bark with vinegar healeth the falling of the hair. 6 Tongue hurt, seeth it with Honey, & use it, (See pricks in Elecampana.) 7 Stamp the roots with Honey and apply it to pricks. 8 And with earth worms to the ache of the joints and shrinking of the synnowes. Ache 2. 4 Apost. 3 Back ache 4 Hair falling 5 Inflammation 3 joints ache 28 joint out 2 Loins ache 4 Pricks 2. 7 sinews shrunk 8 Tongue hurt 6 Wild fire 3 ¶ Reasins. Reasons and Vine: Vine leaves, branches and tendrils stamped and the juice drunk, is good for them that vomit or spit blood, and the bloody flux, and women with child given to vomiting, and so do the branches and clasping tendrils by themselves, and likewise boiled in water & drunk. 2 The same clasping tendrils stamped with parched barley meal, are good for the headache, coming of heat, and for hot ulcers of the stomach being applied. 3 The ashes of the dry boughs or cuttings, applied with vinegar, do cure the excressence and swellings of the Fundament, being first clarified and pared. 4 The same dissolved in oil of Roses and vinegar, is good for the bitings of serpents, members out of joint, inflammations or heat of the milt. 5 Green grapes engender wind in the stomach, belly, and do loosen the belly. 6 The dried Raisins are good against the Cough and all diseases of the lungs, kidneys and bladder, and the stopping and weakness of the Liver, to open and strengthen it. 7 The broth of Raisin kernels, is good for the bloody flux and the lask, being altogether powered in by Glister. 8 A bath of the decoction of the said kernels, stoppeth the flowers being bathed therewith. 9 The fame kernels made into fine powder and applied with fault, do suage and consume hard swellings, and the swellings of the breasts. 10 White grapes are better than black, and wholesomer after three or four days gathering, then when they are new gathered: if they be sweet, they partly nourish and warm the body. 11 They be wholesome to be eaten before meat. 12 Raisins of the son be very wholesome, and do comfort digestion: but the stones and rinds would be refused, and then they be good for the milt and liver: so be Assigants: but the small Raisins be hurtful to the milt. 13 Reisins be of the nature of Figs. The sweet are best for the stomach, and yield good nourishment. 14 The juice or water of the leaves or tendrils of the Vine, are good for spitting of blood, the griefs of the stomach, and the longing of women with child. 15 The liquor that droppeth out of the wood yearly, is good for the stone being drunk. 16 The gum dropped into their eyes, is good against their mistiness and webs, it healeth bushes, skabs, lepry, scurf and such like, being rubbed on with saltpeter. 17 And the said gum laid too continually with oil, continually wasteth away hair. 18 The pulp of Raisins eaten, is good for the roughness of the throat, the Cough, and griefs of the kidneys and bladder. 19 And eaten with their stones, they are good for the bloody flux. 20 And taken in meat with Barley meal and an egg fried, they be good for the same purpose. 21 If they be laid too with Rue, and without their stones they heal read and angry night plowks and sores that have matter in them like Honey, carbuncles, rottenness about the joints, and gangrenes. 22 The same laid too with the juice of Panik, are good for the Gout, and laid to lose Nails, they make them come off. 23 Raisins eaten before meals, strengthen the stomach, provoke appetite, and comfort weak bodies. 24 And without kernels they open the liver and breast: but eaten with their kernels, they bind: without their kernels, they concoct raw humours, and withstand putrefaction, and are good for the griefs of the chest, throat, kidneys and bladder, and soften the belly being taken fasting. 25 And so chewed with fine Rhubarb, they take away crudyty and rawness of the stomach. 26 Ringwormes and Tetters, rub them with the gum, but first rub them with saltpeter. 27 Plant vines near to a Bay tree. 28 Asponge dipped in warm wine, and applied to the left Pap, is good against the Frenzy. 29 Teeth ache of hot cause, gargarise with water of the decoction of Raisins: it helpeth also the stopping of the throat. 30 Liver cold, eat Raisins. 31 Small Raisins eaten with meat, voideth belching, and stoppeth the flux. 32 Teeth ache of heat, gargarise with the decoction of Raisins. 33 Liver hard, apply a plaster of Dwale and Raisins. 34 Worms in children, eat them fasting. 35 Eat two drams of great Raisins fasting the stones taken out, to preserve youth, help digestion, diminish phlegm, comfort the liver and stomach, and increase blood, and make it thick, and after meat they strengthen and moisten the belly. 36 Ache, stamp Raisins of the sun, the stones taken out, and apply it to any ache or grief, (See Figs, Goose heyrif.) 37 Felon in any place, bruise spanish Raisins and apply them. 38 Raisins eaten or boiled in wine, are good for the cold cough, and for a cold stomach, and the Raisins so sodden, are good for cold Apostumes. 39 Stamp well the kernels of grapes, and bind them in a cloth, and steep them in rain water or spring water, four and twenty hours, and drink a good draft of it morn and even, against the looseness of the belly. 40 Emerods', take up the fume of vine. Bloody flux, (See Pepper.) 41 Vomiting to stop, for dryness of the stomach, and obstruction of the liver, use syrup of unripe grapes called Syrupus agrestis. 42 Burn sour Grapes on a tile, and put the fine powder thereof into the eyes that are read and running, (See Mulberry.) 43 Blood to stop, apply the ashes of a vine with a man's urine, (See Nettle.) 44 Fever tertain, take the juice of sour Grapes two mornings, or steep vine leaves in wine, and drink it three or four times, for the fever tertian, or quarten. 45 The gum drunk with white wine, expelleth the stone in the reins. 46 Rub Lepries, Ringwormes and Tetters therewith, and salt peter, to cure them. 47 Stamp green Grapes with some vinegar, and make little loaves, and dry them in the sun, and steep them in wine, and it will be vinegar. 48 The water that falleth from vines after they be cut, killeth warts being often washed therewith. 49 colic and stone, steep the new ashes of the branches all night in white or rhenish wine, and drink it in the mornings. 50 Mix the ashes of the wood with vinegar, and apply it to the Emerods. 51 For infection of the skin, boil the roots with Fitches and Fenigreke, and wash therewith. 52 Deliverance to cause, drink four ounces of the juice or decoction of the leaves sodden in white wine. 53 Warts or hard knobs, burn the wood, and gather the water or sap thereof at the end, and rub them therewith. 54 Iliaca passio, drink the juice of the leaves or buds. (Wine and Vinegar quaere.) Aches 36 Appetite 23 Apost. 37. 38 Back (See kidneys, stone.) Belly lose 24. 39 Belching 31 Bitings venomous 4 Bladder griefs 6. 18. 24 Bloody flux 1. 7. 19 20. 40 Breast swollen 3. 9 Breast stopped Blood to increase 35 to stop 43 Carbuncle 21 Chollike 49. 54 Cough 6. 18. 38 Deliverance 52 Digestion 12. 35 Eyes griefs 16. 42 Emerods' 40. 50 Felon 37 Fever quarten 44 tertian 44 Flowers to stop 8 Flux 31 Frenzy 28 Fundament griefs 3 Gangrene 21 Gout 22 Head ache 2 Hair to void 17 Iliak pas. 54 joints out 4 Kidneys griefs 6. 18. 24 Knobs 53 lepry 16. 46 Liver cold 30 griefs 12. 35 hard 33 stopped 6. 24. 41 Lungs griefs 6 Milt griefs 12 Nails lose 22 Ploukes 21 Ring worms 26. 46 Sickness general 35. 36 Scab 16. 46. 51 Skin grief 51 scurf 16 Sores 21. 2 Spitting blood 1. 14 Stomach griefs 14. 23. 25. 35. 41. cold 38 ulcers 2 Stone 15. 45. 49 Swell 3. 9 Teeth ache 29. 32 Tetters 26. 46 Throat grief 24. 29 rough 18 Vinegar 47 Ulcers 2 Vomiting 1. 41 Warts 48. 53 Whiteflawes 22 Women longing 14 Worms 34 ¶ Restharrow. REstharrow, Cammok, or Petywhin: The bark of the root with Honey provoketh urine, & breaketh the stone. 2 The broth or decoction thereof sodden in wine & drunk, hath the same virtue. 3 The same boiled in Hony and vinegar drunk, is good for the falling evil. 4 And boiled in water and vinegar, and holden in the mouth while it is warm, helpeth the tooth ach. 5 The tender springs and crops before they bring forth leaves, preserved in brine or salt, and sometimes eaten in salads, are good for the gravel and stone. 6 The bark of the root drunk with wine, provoketh urine, breaketh the stone, and helpeth the Emerods' and fig in the fundament. 7 seeth the leaves in water, and bathe the legs therewith up to the knees, to stop the flux. Emerods' 6 Falling evil 3 Fig in the Fundament 6 Flux 7 Fundament griefs 6 Gravel 5 Stone 1. 2. 5. 6 Teeth ache 4 urine stopped 1. 2. 6 ¶ Rice. RIce nourish meanly, but it stoppeth the belly. 2 Used with milk, it causeth a good colour, & increaseth natural seed: it must be steeped a night in water before it be sodden. 3 The flower or meal thereof in drink or glister, stoppeth the bloody flux. 4 Rice may be eaten as a restorative, with Almon milk, and so it comforteth nature. 5 Rice pottage made with good milk, & seasoned with sugar & cinnamon, is of easy digestion & restorative. 6 If the milk have hot stones quenched therein first, it is good to stop any flux, especially thus: Take a good handful of oaken bark, boil it in a gallon of running water to the one half or more, than strain it & cool it, than beat half a pound of Iorden Almonds husk and all, and strain them with that water, and so with Rice make pottage, & use it for the flux. If blanched Almonds be stamped with Rose water & strained into Rice broth, pottage or milk: it is also very good for the flux. 7 Liver cold, use Rice pottage. 8 Belly lose, use Rice with Almond milk. Fever phlegmatic, purge the body, and then use Rice pottage. 9 Face blains, pimples & spots, seethe Rice in running water, and wash therewith. 10 Bloody flux, make it into fine flower, and mix it with yolks of eggs, and fry them with sweet butter, and eat them morn and even. Belly lose 1. 8 Bloody flux 3. 8 Consumption 2. 4. 5 Colour bad 2 Digestion 5 Fevers phlegmatic 8 Fluxes 6 Liver cold 7 Seed to 'cause 2 ¶ Rye. RYe meal put into a little bag & laid upon the head, cureth the old pain of the head, and drieth the brain. 2 The levin thereof draweth forth thorns and pricks, it ripeth all swellings and apostumes better than levin of wheat meal. 3 Rye bread with butter is of the like virtue, but not so strong as the levin. 4 Rye bread is heavy and hard to digest, good and strong for labouring men. 5 The young blades distilled are good for the stone, and for any great heat in any part of the body. 6 Teeth yellow, mix Rye meal, salt and Honey, of each like much, and rub them therewith two or three times a day, & then wash them with water. 7 Spitting blood, eat a hot Rye cake. 8 Mouth canker and stink, bake a cake of sour Rye dough, with good store of salt and Pepper, and make it into powder, with powder of a Heart's horn, and a Pill of clean leeks, and apply it all night. 9 Wounds to heal, seethe swine's grease with Honey and Rye meal, and a little juice of wild Nep, called Bryony, and use it to cleanse & heal it fast. canker, seethe Slow thorn bark in water, till it be thick and black, and put Honey to it, and temper it with Rye flower, & apply it. Black jaundice, (See Celondine.) 10 Strangury, anoint thy yard with Populeon, and apply Rye meal on the yard. 11 The meal is good with other medicines for bruises. 12 Dropsy, bake cakes of Rye meal, and the juice of Lily roots, and bake them under a bake-pan of earth, and apply them hot to the belly one after another: or take sage and Rye meal of each like much, mix them finely with a little salt, and bake them finely together, and cut it into gobbets, and put it into a pot of ale, & drink the ale, and eat the cake, especially first and last. 13 Gout of hot cause, apply Rye meal with vinegar. Fistula, use Rye meal with other medicines. 14 Gout, apply Rye meal with oil of Roses. 15 Sciatica, apply Rye flower with vinegar: if it be the hot gout, the pain will mitigate, or else it is the cold gout. 16 Skabs, mix the juice of smallach with Rye meal, suet, wax and brimstone, and anoint, and the third day bathe thee. 17 Wounds ache, mix the juice of smallach with Honey, swine's grease & Rye meal, and apply it. 18 Belly grinding, bake a cake of Rye flower well soured, and heat the inside of it being cut through the midst, and anoint it with Honey, & cast thereon powder of Cummin, & apply it as hot as may be suffered, & as often as need is. 19 Cod swollen, boil Rye flower with the juice of wall wort, Honey & vinegar till it be thick, & apply it. 20 Gout in the bones, make tostes of Rye bread, steep them in vinegar, & after in Honey, & apply it three days, and lay on it a wort leaf. 21 canker & fester, burn a dog's head to powder, and mix it with Rye meal, the juice of Lovage and Hony, and apply it with tents of linen till it be whole. 22 Fester, burn Hemp seed & Rye to powder, and mix it with Honey and the juice of smallach, and apply it: or kneade a cake of Rye flower with Honey, and bake it hard, and apply it till it wax nesh, and then apply new as often as need is. Aches 17 Apost. 2. 3 Belly ache 18 Bones ache 20 Bruises 11 Cod swollen 19 Dropsy 12 Fester 21. 22 Gout 13. 14. 15. 20 Headache 1 Heat inward 5 canker 9 21 Mouth canker 8 stink 8 Pricks 2. 3 Rheum 1 Sciatica 15 Skabs 16 Spitting blood 7 Stone 5 Strangury 10 Swell 23 Teeth foul 6 Wounds 9 17 ¶ Ribwurt. RIbwurt, (See Planten.) Fever quarten, drink the juice two hours before the fit. 2 Dropsy, use it sodden. 3 Matrixe flux, drink it, or use it in Pessaries. 4 Fever tertian, drink the juice two hours before the fit. 5 Fever quarten, drink the juice with warm water & Hony. 6 Swell general, stamp it when it is new gathered, with clear grease, & apply it. 7 Burn and wild fire, stamp it and apply it. 8 Flux great, seethe it in vinegar, and drink it. 9 Fester cold, make a cake of Rye flower, whites of eggs, and juice of Ribwurt, & apply thereof often. Bursten (See in Bursa pastoris.) 10 canker, mix it with Honey & Rye meal, & apply it warm, & likewise to the marmol. 11 Palsy universal, drink the juice. 12 Wounds of all sorts, new or old, use the juice or powder of it. 13 Speech lost, use to drink it. Burn 7 Bursten 9 Dropsy 2 Fester cold 9 Fever quarten 1. 5 tertian 4 Flux great 8 canker 10 Matrixe Flux 3 Palsy 11 Speech lost 13 Swell 6 Wild fire 7 Wounds general 12 ¶ Rocket. ROcket is a good salad herb to be eaten with lettuce, Purslen and other like cold herbs, and so they will not hurt the stomach with their coldness: but eaten alone, it heateth too much, and causeth headache. 2 The use thereof moveth venus, especially the seed: also it provoketh urine, & causeth digestion. 3 The seed is good against venomous bitings, and applied with Honey, it taketh away lentils, freckles, and other deformities of the face. 4 And with the gall of an ox, it taketh away blue marks and scars. 5 He that taketh the seeds before he be beaten or whipped, shall be so hardened, that he shall easily endure the pain. 6 The root boiled in water & applied, draweth forth shords, splinters, and broken bones. 7 The seed driveth all kind of little worms out of the body. 8 With vinegar, it taketh away faint spots and freckles. 9 With Honey it healeth all the deformities of the face. 10 The seed may be used for mustard seed. Pricks, stamp the seeds, and apply it. 11 For grief coming of Ruptures, fractures or unplacing of joints, boil the roots it water and stamp them, and apply them. 12 Black spots or bruises, grind the seeds with an ox gall, of each like much, and apply it or anoint. 13 Rocket provoketh urine, and causeth lust. 14 With oil and Honey, it cleanseth the skin. 15 The juice drunk, helpeth the cough. Ache 11 Bitings venomous 3 Bones broken 6. 11 Bruise 4. 5. 12 Cough 15 Digestion 2 Face deform. 4. 8. 14 Freckles 4. 8. 14 joints out 11 Lust to 'cause 2. 13 Pricks 6. 10 Skin deformed 14 Urine stopped 2. 13 ¶ Ros solis. ROs solis: Bruise it with salt, and apply it on the bore skin, to make blisters & holes, even as Cantarides doth. 2 The distilled water of it, is singular good against consumptions, straightness of breath, ulcerations of the Lungs. 3 If it be put into a glass wherein is poison, it will make it fly out, or make the glass fly in pieces, and being heated in a cup of wine with poison, it will make it fly out. Carry it about thee, to be free from the danger of thine enemies, and to have them kind & friendly to thee, and to withstand witchcraft. 4 Apply it to a woman's belly, to 'cause speedy deliverance, though the child be dead and rotten. 5 And being carried and also eaten of every day, it preserveth from the falling evil. 6 Drink the juice thereof against the Apoplexia & drawing of the mouth awry, to have speedy help. 7 Hung it about the neck of them that be demoniak. 8 Hold it to the mouth, to staunch bleeding at the nose. 9 Drink the juice with wine to avoid weariness by travel, and to heal wounds, drink it in wine or ale ten days, & also wash the wounds therewith, and apply it with a cloth dipped therein. 10 Apply it to the aching teeth to help them. 11 To make Rosa solis, Take aqua vite one pint, the flowers of Roses solis, one gallon, a piece of Angel gold, Rosemary flowers, or the herb itself, and a quantity of fine sugar: distil them in a stillatory, and take thereof one spoonful at once by itself. Apoplexia 6 Blister to make 1 Breath straight 2 Consumption 2 Dead child 4 Deliverance 4 Demoniak 7 Distilling 11 Enemies 3 Falling evil 5 Lungs griefs 2 Mad 7 Mouth awry 6 Nose bleeding 8 Poison 3 Teeth ache 10 Weariness 9 Witchcraft 3 Wounds 9 ¶ Rose. Risen: Read Roses must be clipped off, when they be not full ripe, and dried in the son: Rosed Hony eaten, doth comfort the blood and the stomach. 2 The juice sodden with wine, taketh away the pain of the head, and helpeth the eyes & the gums, being washed therewith, & the toothache. 3 Bruise the leaves, and apply them to draw out the heat. 4 Rub the gums and teeth with powder of the seeds, to help the tooth ach. 5 Seethe the heads wherein the seeds he, and drink the broth, to loosen the belly, and for spitting blood. 6 Mix Roses with sugar and Honey, and eat it to dry up the evil humours of the stomach. 7 seeth the leaves in wine, and drink it for the griefs of the Matrixe and privy parts. 8 The fresh new leaves with Honey, do aptly purge the body. 9 A special laxative: Take the juice of Roses two ounces, mix it with whey of cows milk & a little spikenard: or take syrup of Roses made of fresh Roses, to purge the belly. 10 The Rose leaves wrought together with sugar and Honey, doth both comfort & purge the belly. 11 Steep Rose leaves one night in vinegar, & anoint hot members & places therewith, and also apply it to a hot stomach, to qualify the burning heat of it. 12 Drink the juice of Roses with sweet conduit water, to loosen the body, to purge the blood, especially from choler, and to put away the kings evil. 13 Roses do comfort the heart, & rejoice the blood. 14 The Rosed Honey doth both comfort & expel melancholy & phlegmatic matter, and taken with water wherein Fennell seeds have been sodden, and a little salt put thereto, doth purge the better. 15 Clip the Rose leaves from the whites, & boil them in oil of Olives, & sun it in a glass fifty days: and this is the best oil. 16 Apply thereof to the liver, to help the heat thereof, and the temples for the ache & beating pain of the head, and to cool it. 17 Use Rose leaves in meat, for the heat of the stomach & liver. 18 Mix powder of Roses with vinegar & the white of an egg, & apply it to the temples, to take away the pain of the eyes, to restrain the humours & the shedding of blood into the veins of the eyes. 19 Sugar Roset is good for the bloody flux, the choleric vomitings, the faintness of the body, & the cardiak passion. 20 Gather the dew that fallethon Rose leaves, and drop it on the neither lid of the eye, to amend the blearedness. 21 Boil dry Rose leaves in wine & drink it to amend the pain of the head, eyes, ears, and gums: and take the same in a glister, to amend the corruption of the bowels & matrixe. 22 Water of read Roses drunk, doth strengthen and cool the brain, heart, stomach and all inward parts, it strengtheneth the spirits & natural heat, and preserveth from rottenness. 23 To cleanse, dry and strengthen the sight of eyes, Take read Rose water one ounce, white wine a little, tutia one dram, aloes epatica and sugar candy, of each twenty grains: mix them together, & drop it into the eyes. 24 Drop Rose water with a little sugar into the eyes, for the exulceration of them, coming of heat. 25 Drink three ounces of the water fasting, to comfort the head. 26 Mix it with wine, and drink six ounces, to take away the giddiness of the head, and to strengthen the liver. 27 Smell to Rose water in time of the frenzy, to provoke sleep. 28 The juice or infusion of the reddest Roses, or the decoction of them looseneth the belly gently without danger, and purgeth choler, and openeth the stopping of the liver, and strengtheneth it, and is good for hot fevers and the jaundice, the shaking, beating and trembling of the heart, discharging all evil corrupt humours in and about the veins of the heart, and is good to be laid to the inflammation of the eyes and all other hot infirmities, especially S. Anthony's fire, or wild fire. 29 Stamp Roses small, and apply them to hot inflammations and swellings of the Paps and outrageous heat of the midrife and stomach, and also the shingles, S. Anthony's fire and Tetter. 30 boil dried Roses in wine, and drink it for the pain of the eyes, ears, and head, haws, gums, bladder, right gut and mother, either powered in by Glister, or anointed. 31 The yellow in the midst of the Rose, stoppeth the superfluous course of the flowers, and all other issues of blood, but especially the whites. 32 The fruit eaten, stoppeth the lask & all other issues of blood. 33 The wild Rose punned with Boar's grease, is very excellent good for the Alopetias or read skall, or falling of the hair. 34 The rough spongeous ball of the wild Rose bush, is of great virtue against the stone and strangury, bringing forth gravel and provoking urine. 35 Anoint the head with oil of Roses and vinegar, for the frenzy. 36 Drink the hard seeds that are in the heads of Roses made into powder, with wine, to break the stone. 37 The read fruit of Roses with all his substance, stamped, strained, and dried, and made into powder, is excellent good for the running of the reins, and for the flowers both white and read, and so do the read heads taken before they be ripe or wax soft, being kept dry and sodden in wine and drunk, which also healeth the bloody flux & spitting of blood excellently well being well strained. 38 Take i ounce of the juice of Roses, with two or three ounces of whey, and a little spikenard, to purge the body: or steep the Rose leaves in whey, and press it out with Honey, to purge without any grief. 39 The syrup of the juice of Roses, and of Roses themselves, doth also purge gently. 40 The water wherein Roses have been steeped, cleanseth, skowreth and purgeth. 41 Roses condited with Honey, scour, purge, and strengthen: but condited with sugar, they scour less: but strengthen more. 42 Vinegar of Roses staunch all inflammations & hot burnings, and cutteth and skowreth, and strengtheneth. 43 Roses, especially fresh, can abide no seething, for then their purging virtue is taken away by the fire. 44 The juice by seething measurably, is made more fine, and skowreth more mightily. 45 The juice of Roses is given from one ounce to two ounces. 46 seeth dried Roses in wine, and wash the head therewith for the headache, and likewise the eyes and ears for their pain. 47 Use the oil in lynaments to cool hot burning ulcers and inflammations, and to any stripe or bruise. 48 unguentum Rosarum extinguisheth the heat of the back and reins, and procureth sleep. 49 Few cordials can want the help of Roses, or Rose water. 50 The little yellow tufts within the Roses in powder, stauncheth blood, kill worms, and the canker in the mouth, and Polyp in the Nose. 51 The dried leaves of read Roses sodden in wine and applied, is good for the head ach, and for the ache of the ears, eyes, gums, fundament and matrixe, being used warm, they help all inflammations of the entrails, the griefs of the stomach, and the holy fire: and so doth the vinegar and oil of Roses. 52 The oil is excellent good in the plague time against the burning Pushes. 53 The water, oil, or vinegar, are good against all hot and choleric griefs and for headache, etc. 54 The Rose is chief of all flowers. 55 Roses shreaded small and sodden in clarified Honey, doth comfort, cleanse and dissolve, and digest phlegmatic and thick humours, and with cold water it stoppeth, and with hot water saxeth. 56 Sugar and Roses incorporated together, doth comfort, bind, helpeth the bloody flux, swooning, choleric vomiting, and the Cardiake passion. 57 Oil of Roses helpeth the heat of the Liver, headache, hot fierce agewes, and causeth sleep. 58 Rose water taketh away webs and foul specks of the face, and maketh the skin subtle and thin. 59 The decoction of dried Roses in rain water, stoppeth all fluxes that come of cold causes. 60 Their powder stoppeth bleeding at the Nose, and is good for the gums and lose teeth. 61 Their powder with Saffron and the white of an egg, healeth the sore ache of the eyes, and stoppeth the humour of blood that runneth into the veins of the eyes & the swelling and falling down of the matrixe. 62 The conserve of Roses doth cool & comfort the principal parts of the body, as the head, heart, stomach, liver, milt & reins, and is thus made: Take the buds of read Roses before they be ready to spread, cut away the white part, stamp them small in a stone mortar, with a wooden pestle, & put thereto thrice so much sugar by little & little, & keep it in a close galley pot, & set it in the son for a season, & so do all other conserves. 63 The water of the said leaves drunk by itself, or with sugar, or with wine, is good for all the aforesaid purposes. 64 The best way of distilling of Roses or any other thing, is in a stillatory of glass set over a pot of boiling water, which is called Balneum Mariae: for those that be distilled in metal, have some smatch of the metal, and are not so wholesome. 65 The juice of Roses is kept in a glass, with oil powered on it, & when it shallbe occupied, the oil is to be taken away with bombase or cotton dipped in it, it loosneth the belly, comforteth & strengtheneth the stomach, and cooleth the liver. 66 Steep Rose cakes in wine warm, and apply them to mitigate any ache. 67 Roses dried in the sun a little, may be kept three years. For madness and heat of the head, stamp Houseleek and Roses with woman's milk, and apply it to the forehead & temples. 68 Hicket and heat, eat sugar of Roses. 69 Faintness and heat in the night, dip a cloth in Rose water, and half as much vinegar, and hold it in thy hands, & apply it to thy wrists and soles of thy feet. 70 Eyes hot, wash them with Rose water. 71 Eyes bloody, seethe Roses in water, and wash therewith. 72 Eyes swollen, seethe Frankincense & Roses in white wine, and wash therewith often. 73 Gout, apply Rose water with linen clotheses. 74 Nose bleeding, apply Rose water all about thy head & neck with linen clotheses cold. 75 Prick to draw out, stamp the root of read Rose tree, and apply it with linen cloth. 76 Frenzy, (See Camomile.) 77 Head ache, stamp a piece of a Rose cake with oil, and heat it on a tile, and apply it to the nape of the neck, to bedward. 78 Stomach fevers, and all hot evils therein, use conserve of Roses. 79 Heart weak, drink Rose water with sugar, & powder of pearl three or four days: or drink the water only, and cast thereof in thy face. 80 Swooning, take powder of Roses with a rear Eg. 81 Consumption, make a confection with the flowers of Borage & Roses, with Aromatical spices, and use it. 82 Swooning, seethe basel in rosewater and drink it, (See Rosemary.) 83 Eyes bruised and rapture of the tunicles, seeth read Roses in water, and apply them. 84 Matrix with congealed blood, seeth read Roses in read wine in summer, but in winter take the roots of the tree, & seeth it in water with Bursa Pastoris, and apply it often hot in a cloth. 85 Put young buds of Roses when they begin to open into a reed as it groweth, and let it grow still, and so the Roses may be kept till you need to occupy them, and then take it out, and put it into lukewarm water, & it will be fresh as in May. 86 Flowers to stop, mix honey with read Rose leaves, the juice of Planten and wheat flower, and apply it plasterwise to the shares. 87 Eyes inflamed, beat the white of an Egg with rosewater and use it. 88 Syrup of Roses, take rosewater three pints, Sugar, two pound, boil them with a gentle fire till it rope, and keep it in a glass with some Salad oil powered on it. It slaketh thirst and drought in hot fevers, and comforeth the heart, stomach and liver, and suffereth no corruption to remain in the heart. 89 For a wind or colic in the belly, toast a Rose-cake at the fire, and sprinkle it with vinegar, and apply it as hot as may be suffered. 90 Sleep to cause, mix oil of Roses and rosewater of each one ounce in read vinegar half an ounce, and anoint therewith and apply it. 91 Headache, anoint with the juice of Roses and honey of each like much. 92 Belly lose, boil rosewater with Cloves and Mastic in a double vessel, and drink thereof, or use powder of Roses. 93 Fever ephemera, drink new rosewater, and anoint the pulses with oil of Roses. 94 Ache, or bruise or swelling, mix crumbs of sour bread with vinegar and Rose leaves, and apply it to heal it. 95 Backeache and heat, steep read and Rose-leaves in rosewater one night, & wash therewith. 96 To keep Roses all the year, gather them with a knife at even, when they are half blown, and set them in the air abroad all night, and in the morning put them into a earthen vessel well leaded, and stop it well, and cover it with dry sand, or put them into a reed as it groweth. 97 unguentum Rosarum, take oil of Roses iiii. ounces, white wax one ounce, melt them together over seething water, and chafe them well together with Rose water and a little white vinegar, and use it. 98 Stamp Roses with Rue & bitter Almonds with vinegar, and rub the headache therewith that cometh of too much drinking. 99 Tetters, wash in the mornings with Parsley water, and at night with Rose water. 100 Matrix sores or rent, stamp dried Rose leaves, and wash them with wine, and anoint a suppository therewith made of hare's hairs, and put it in, and wash it with a sharp lotion. 101 Bruises and cuts about the eyes, mix powder of saffron half a dram, with oil of Roses one ounce, and the yolk of an Eglantine, and apply it. 102 Fundament chaps, mix oil of Roses with Vermilion, and anoint. 103 Nostrils stink, boil Roses with honey in wine, and put them in. 104 Drink oil of Roses to moisten the belly, and cool the heat of the stomach. 105 Apply Rose oil with vinegar to all hot aches of the head, or else where, and to all outward heats. 106 Drop the oil into the ear for the ache and hot apostumes thereof. 107 Drink Rose oil with rosewater to cure the bloody flux. 108 Apply to all outward wounds, apostumes and heats. (See Cetony.) 109 Wounds to heal, wash them well, and put in the oil hot as may be suffered morn and even iiii. days, and when it is well cleansed, apply a plaster of Melrosate, to heal it up, (See Celondine.) 110 Digestion to cause, seeth a Rose cake in vergis, and apply it to the stomach in a bag of linen. 111 Flux white, seethe read Roses in water, and wash the belly therewith. (See Frankincense, lettuce.) 112 Tongue weals or bladders, seethe Roses and Violets in Rose water, and wash therewith. 113 Whelks white or read, anoint them with oil of Roses. 114 Face pimpled, anoint with rosewater. 115 Head ache, mix rosewater, vinegar, & the gleire of an egg of each like much, & apply it with flax herds. rosewater comforteth and restraineth flux & vomit. 116 Seethe it with cloves & mastic, and use it against fluxes & feebleness of virtue. 117 rosewater is good for swooning & the cardiacke passion, for sore eyes & ointments for the face, & takes away the wens & superfluities. 118 Dry Roses smelled unto, comfort the brain & the heart. For choleric fluxes, seeth them in rain water, & drink it, or apply a plaster of powder of Roses, vinegar, and the white of an Eglantine to the pit of the stomach. 119 Swooning, drink water that Roses have been sodden in. Or take the powder of Roses with a rear egg. 120 To make oil of Roses, seethe 2. li. of oil with 1. li. and a half of Roses in a double vessel till the third part be wasted, and strain it and use it. Some put Rose water in a glass, and put Roses thereto with their dew, and boil them in a double vessel, and son it, and this is the best way. 121 Head scaulde mix oil of Roses Linseed and Olives of each like much, with powder of Lytarge, and apply it. 122 Face salsflegme, eat powder of read Roses or drink the water thereof. 123 Swell of great heat, beat the white and yolk of an egg (the strening put out) with oil of Roses, and apply it with flax hards. 124 Oil of Roses, gather the brodest Roses in the morning before the dew be off of them 1. pound, clip them small, and put thereto one pound of the greenest oil Olive in a glass fast stopped with leather, and hung it in the Sun ten or twelve days, than strain it and let it rest 24. hours, then power out the water, and put the oil in a glass, and every ninth day stir it in the morning. But if you would make it cold, then hung it in water so long as it should have been sunned. 125 The yellow in the midst of Roses stoppeth the whites. 126 Piles, anoint with oil of Roses and frankincense. But if it be for a Lord, put myrrh thereto, anoint therewith to heal it easily. 127 Sugar rosat, dissolve sugar in rosewater, and seethe it well and cast it on a marble stone till it be cold and hard, then cut it in great pieces and keep it. The like may be done with Violets, Borage, bugloss, Rosemary flowers, etc. 128 To take away heat of the face, beaten the whites of 2. eggs, two spoons full of salad oil, & two spoons full of Rose water together, and anoint therewith. 129 Eyes dull, put in water of Rue & of Roses. 130 julep of Roses, take Rose water 3. pound, sugar sodden and clarified 2. pound, boil them with a soft fire. It quencheth thirst in hot fevers, and the heat of the heart & liver, it resisteth corruption of ill humours, & preserveth health. 131 Conserve of Roses, stamp them with thrice so much sugar. It comforteth the stomach, heart & all principal parts. It mollifieth those parts that be hard, & purgeth melancholy. 132 Mel Rosarum, seethe the juice of Roses with as much honey. It comforteth the stomach, & doth digest & purge phlegm in the stomach or veins. 133 Manus Christi, melt sugar in Rose water half a pound, seethe it till a sugar be hard, then put in powder of pearls or precious stones, and lay it on a marble anointed with oil of Roses or of Violets, or rosewater, and use it. 134 unguentum Galeni, take white wax one pound, oil of Roses three pound, melt them together, and wash it well and often in cold water till it be white, but rather with vinegar which is better. 13 Mell Rosarum is made of seven pound of honey, and one pound of Roses boiled meanly together, till it have a sweet odour and read colour: it doth comfort and cleanse, and may be given in summer or winter after it is three days old: for cold humours, take it with water that Fenell seed and three grains of mastic have been sodden in. 136 Sugar Rosat, stamp one pound of new gathered Roses with four pound of Sugar, and sun it in a glass thirty days, it may be kept three years. 137 Flux to stop, eat one dram of Sugar Rosat with as much mastic, and then drink rosewater sodden with mastic and Cloves. 138 Oil of Roses, fill a glass with oil and Roses, and boil it in a vessel of water, or stamp the Roses, and sun it with the oil four days: it helpeth the chafing of the liver and hot ache of the head, there must be two pound of Roses, & three pound of oil. 139 Vinegar of Roses, gather them before they be full blown in dry weather, lay them on a board half a day, than put them into vinegar close stopped 24. hours, then stamp them and set them in glasses in the sun all summer, than strain it and use it: if it be renewed with Roses every tenth day it is the better, it may be made with wine either white, red, or claret. So make vinegar of Eldrens flowers or Violets. 140 Conserve of Roses or other flowers, gather them before they spread, cut the read part from the white, grind the read in a stone mortar, with a wooden pestle with thrice the weight of sugar, keep it close stopped, it comforteth the stomach, heart, and all the bowels, and is good against black choler and melancholy. 141 Conserve of white Roses doth loosen the belly more than read: do so with all conserves of flowers. Aches gen. 66. 94. 95. 105 Apost. 108 (See Swell Backeache 95 heat 48. 95 Belly bound 5. 55. 65. 104 141 griefs 21. 30 lose 92 Bladder griefs 30 Blood to cleanse 12. 13. 50 to stop 31. 32 Bloody flux 19 37. 107 Brain weak 22 see Head.) Breasts sore 29 swollen 29 Bruise 47. 94 Cakes 66. 77. 89 Chaps 102 Colic 89 Conserve 62. 131. 140 Consumption 19 81 Dew 20 Digestion 110 Distilling 64 Dried Roses 21. 30. 46. 51 59 67. 118 Ears griefs 21. 30. 46. 51 104. 106 Eyes griefs 2. 18. 23. 24. 30 46. 51. 61. dull 129. bruised or cut 83. 101. bloody 71 101. hot 70. 87. sore 117 bleared 20. pain 21. swollen 72. web 58. Emerods' 126 Face deformed 58. 113. 114 117. 122. heat 128. Faintness 19 69. 116 Fever ephemera 93. hot 28 57 78. 88 130 Flowers to stop 31. 32. 37. 86 Fluxes 32. 37. 56. 59 92. 111 116. 118. 137 Frenzy 27. 35. 76 Fruit 32. 37 Fundament griefs 51. 102 gums grief 2. 21. 52 Gout 73 Gravel 34 Heart to comfort 1. 12. 13. 22 49. 56. 69. 79. 80. 82. 88 116. 118. 130. 140. cardiac 19 28. 56 Hardness 131 Headache 2. 16. 30. 46. 51. 53 57 66. 77. 79. 98. 104. 115 138. giddy 26. to comfort 25. skall 33. 121 Hair falling 33 Hickit 68 Holy fire 51 Hot griefs 3. 11. 28. 51. 66 108 jaundice 28 Inflammation 3. 28. 29. 47 Infusion 28. 40 juice 28. 38. 44. 45. 65 julep 130 Keeping roses 85. 96 Kings evil 12 Liver chafed 138. hot 16. 17. 57 65. 130. stopped. 28 weak 26. 28. Mad 66. See Frenzy. Manus Christi 133 Matrix grief 7. 21. 30. 51. 61 84. 100 Melancholy 140 Melrose 14. 41. 132. 135 Mouth canker 50 Nose bleeding 60. 74. polip 50. stink 103. Oil 15. 52. 53. 120. 124. 138 Piles 126 Powder 18. 80. 119. 122 Pricks 75 Privities griefs 7 Purgat. 8. 9 10. 12. 14. 28. 38 39 40. 41. 42. 44. 51. 131 132. 135 Pushes hot 52 Reins running 37 Roots 75 Seeds 35 S. Ant. fire 28. 29 Sickness general 22. 28. 62. 63. 130 Shingles 29 Syrup 39 88 Skin deformed 58 Sleep to 'cause 27. 48. 57 90 Spitting blood 5. 37 Spongy ball 34 Stomach griefs 6 to comfort 1. 22. 56. 65. 140. hot 11. 16. 17. 22. 29. 78. 104 Stone 34. 36 Strangury 34 Sugar Ros. 19 56. 127. 136 Swell 94. 123 Swooning 56. 79. 80 82. 117. 119 Teethache 24 lose 60 Tetter 29. 99 Thirst 88 130 Tongue weals 112 Vinegar 11. 42. 51 53. 139 Vomiting 19 56 unguentum Rosarum 48 97. 134 Urine stopped 34 Water 22. 53. 58. 63. 64 Wens 117 Whites 31. 37. 125 White Rose 141 Wild fire 28 Wild rose 33 Whelks 113 Windiness 89 Worms 50 Wounds 108. 109 Yellow part 31. 50. 125 ¶ Rose-campian. ROse-campian: the seed with the flower, or either of them drunk, are good against the stinking of scorpions. 2 The seed, flowers, and whole herb of wild Campians both read and white, are very good to the same effect. 3 Drink two drams of the seed to purge down hot choleric humours. Biting venom. 1. 2 Purgation 3 Stinging 1. 2 ¶ Rhubarb. RVbarbe: the root is good against the windiness, wambling, and weakness of the stomach, and all pain thereof, and it is good against cramps, the griefs of the liver and milt, gnawing and gripping of the belly, kidneys, and bladder, the ache of the breasts and mother, the sciatica, spitting of blood, sobbing, hickit, the blooddy-fluxe and lask, the fits of Fevers, all stingings and venomous bitings, one dram, taken in a Fever with Hydromell for the same purposes: and with Syrupus Acetosus, against the griefs of the liver and milt. 2 With honeyed wine against the griefs of the breast. 3 And dry without moisture, for the weakness and looseness of the stomach. 4 Rhubarb may be taken to purge one dram with wheye, or any cooling drink or potion to help hot Fevers, obstructions of the liver and milt, the jaundice, all issues of blood, inward burstings and bruises, cramps, and shrink of the sinews. 5 Being toasted and dried at the fire, and drunk with the juice of Planten or thick read wine, it cureth the bloody-flux and all laskes. 6 Eat one scruple of Rhubarb toasted at the fire fasting every morning, against spitting of blood. 7 Rhubarb purgeth choler and phlegm from the stomach and liver, cleanseth the blood, taketh away obstructions and griefs coming thereof, as the jaundice, the Dropsy, swelling of the milt, rotten Fevers, and pritching in the sides. 8 The oil of Rhubarb is good for bruises, and ache, and shrinking of the sinews. 9 Rhubarb may be preserved in good Honey, or in Fleawoort, or in Turpentine and Wax, or in Wax alone, or in Millit, or Hyrsse, or in Flax seed. 10 It may be taken with the pap of an Apple or Warden. It helpeth the Dropsy and Tympany. 11 Flux read, mix Rhubarb and Sumache with the juice of Planten, and drink it. 12 Bloody-fluxe, eat every morning half a dram of toasted Rhubarb. 13 Take Rhubarb with as much Scamony with Ale or white Wine to purge the body. 14 Liver corrupt, stamp Liverwoort, and seeth it in good strong Ale with some Rhubarb, and use to drink thereof. 15 Life and health to preserve, use to eat Rhubarb daily. Ache 8 Backach 1 Bellyach 1. lose 3. bound 4. 7. 13. Bitings venomous 1 Bladder griefs 1 Blood to cleanse 7 Bloody flux 4. 5. 11. 12 Breast griefs 2 Breast ache 1 Bruise 4. 8 Bursten 4 Colic 7 Choler 7 Cramp 4 Dropsy 10 Fevers 1 Phlegm 7 Flowers to stop 4 Fluxes 1. 5. 11. 12 Health 15 Hicket 1 jaundice 4. 7 Liver griefs 1. 4. 7. 14 Milt griefs 1. 4. 7 Mother griefs 1 Obstruct. 4. 7 preservative 15 Purgation 4. 7. 13 Sinews shrunk 4. 8 Sciatica 1 Sickness gen. 1. 15 Side griefs 7 Spitting blood 1. 6 Stinging 1 Stomach griefs 1. 3. 7 Tympany 10 ¶ Rue. RVe or herbegrace, both the leaves and seeds serve in medicine. The seeds are gotten in harvest, and may be kept five years, the dried leaves may be kept one year. 2 Eat of the herb to mend the sight, and to put away wind, but it dulleth the venerial act. 3 Eat the leaves with dry figs and walnuts, as the surest remedy against deadly poison, if it be taken in time: or take Rue one ounce, Figs half an ounce, juniper berries half an ounce, Walnuts two ounces, Vinegar four ounces, mix them all together, and swallow down a little fasting, to be free from poison and pestilent air that day. 4 Belching, seethe Rue in vinegar and drink it. 5 Seethe Rue with figs in wine, to the one half, and drink it: it doth mightily help the dropsy, the pains of the breasts, sides and loins, the Cough and griefs of the lungs, liver and kidneys, so that thou have no ague. 6 Seethe Rue in oil, and take it in a glister against the pain of the matrix and fundament. 7 Stamp Rue with oil, and apply it to the fundament or matrix against the strangling thereof, and the swelling of the great gut. 8 seeth Rue, Hyssop, and Aniseedes in wine, and drink it, and also foment therewith the grieved place to put away gripings. 9 Stamp it with oil and apply it to the navel to kill worms, 10 Eat it after Garlic and Onions, to put away their smell. 11 seeth it in oil, and anoint the body therewith before the coming of the fit, or else take it in glisterwayes to avoid the ague, & put thereof into the ears to kill the worms therein. 12 Seethe it with Myrrh in wine, and drink it to put away the water between the skin and the flesh. 13 Mix the juice with oil of Roses and vinegar, and anoint the head therewith for the beating pain thereof. 14 seeth it in Fumiterie water, and give it children to drink for the small pocks. 15 If children having the measles be not already blinded with them, hung the root of Rue and Scabious about their necks to defend them. 16 Mix Rue with oil of Roses, vinegar, and ceruse into an ointment to heal all skabs, holy fire, running sores, and hot blisters. 17 Apply Rue with Garlic, Salt, and Walnuts to the biting of a mad dog, or adder, to heal it. 18 Eyes dull, steep it in thy wine, or other drink. 19 Mix Rue with rosewater, and apply it to blear and bloodshotten eyes, to cleanse and heal them marvelously. 20 Teethache, seeth it in wine, and apply it, or burn the stalk a little, and put it into the hollow tooth. 21 Stomach cold, and for the palsy, seeth it with Castory, and drink it. 22 For stopping of the liver and milt, and streitnesse in making water, seeth Rue and Fenell roots in wine, & drink it, or powder of Fenell roots with the juice of Rue. 23 Bloody flux, and straightness of urine, seeth it in wine and oil, and apply it to the root of the yard. 24 Teeming women may not eat Rue for hindering their conception. 25 Anoint thee with the juice of Rue, and carry the herb about thee, & no venomous thing shall bite or sting thee. 26 Plant Rue near Sage, and Toads will not sit under the Sage, where they delight to be. 27 Sprinkle water with Rue about the house to expel flies & gnats. 28 Sprinkle Pultrie with the juice, and the Wesels & such like vermin will not come at them. 29 Weed not Rue with bore hands while the dew is on it, for it causeth dangerous blisters and sores, itch, and swelling, the remedy is to anoint them with Salet oil, or the juice of Hemlock to heal them in short time. 30 Rue eaten green, quencheth lust in men, and provoketh lust in women, and sharpeneth the sight and wit. 31 The water of the decoction thereof killeth fleaes being sprinkled. 32 Eat Rue & figs with sweet Almonds in the morning to withstand poison. 33 Eat two dry Walnuts, two. figs, i grain of salt, and xx. leaves of Rue to preserve thee both from poison and pestilence. 34 seeth Rue and Dill seed in wine, and drink it against the torments of the entrails: the water doth the like, & so doth the oil thereof in glisters. 35 Seethe it in rain water, and drink it to stop the white flux. 36 Seethe it with oil, & drink it to kill worms. 37 Seethe Rue and figs in wine, and drink thereof, and also anoint therewith for the dropsy. 38 Stamp Rue with Bay leaves, and apply it to the swollen privities both of men and women. 39 Put the juice into the ears to cease their ache. Mix the juice with alum, salt peter and honey, and anoint all breaking out, whelks, bushes, scabs, and tumors. 40 Anoint the head with oil of the seeds of Rue, to 'cause a good memory when it is weakened by humidity or cold. 41 seeth Rue with dried Dyll, and drink it for the gnawing in the belly, the ache in the sides and breast, pursinesse and shortness of breath, coughs, inflammations of the lungs, the sciatica, and pain of the joints, and cold that cometh by fits and courses. 42 Stamp it with honey, and put it up a good way into the matrixe against the suffocation of the mother. 43 Apply it with honey to aches, and with Figs to the dropsy, and also drink it for the same, or seeth it in wine to the one half, and rub it on for the same purpose. 44 With flower of parched Barley, it suageth the ache of the eyes, with Rose oil and vinegar it helpeth headache. 45 Bruise it, and put it into the nose against the bursting out of blood there. 46 Rub the white morphue with Rue, Salt, Niter, Wine and Pepper to heal it. 47 Apply it with Honey and Alum to heal the scurvy evil. 48 Heat the juice in the rind of a Pomegranate, and power it into the ears for their ache. 49 With the juice of Fenell & honey, it helpeth dull hearing. 50 Apply it with vinegar, Rose oil, and white-lead, to hot choleric running sores, and inflammations, tetters & running sores to heal them, & running sores in the head. 51 Drink the parched seeds of Rue seven. days against pissing in bed to do so no more. 52 Rue is good for the windy & watery dropsy, for them that have drunk Opium, or the poison called Aconitum, and for the chollike being also taken in a glister beneath. 53 Seethe it in oil, & bathe the bladder therewith against the stopping of water, being also taken in a glister, & also drunk. 54 It is good for the Lethargy & forgetfulness, for the gout or pain of the knees of waterish humours: it strengtheneth the guts, but it is not good for the choleric folks, nor for women with child. 55 Boil it in water and drink it to provoke urine & terms, and to stop the lask. 56 Stamp it and eat it, or drink it with wine, against all poison and venomous bitings, todestooles, mushrooms. The juice is good for the same purpose, and against bitings or stingings of serpents, scorpions, bees, horners, and wasps, with wine, or stamp the leaves and apply them. 57 Put the juice with clear honey into the eyes to clear the sight. 58 Stamp Rue with oil of Roses, and apply it somewhat thick to the crown of thy head when thou art sick: if thou sneesest within vi. hours after, thou shalt escape, or else not. 59 Take black soap and aqua vitae, of each one pound, salad oil half a pound, the juice of Rue a quarter of a pound, seeth them with a gentle fire, and stir them till it be somewhat thick, and apply it plasterwise upon leather to the sciatica, three days and nights, and then apply new if need be, and be whole. 60 Seethe Rue and Rosemary of each two handful with Malmsey and common oil, of each a quart half an hour, and bathe therewith any lame member, half an hour every night when thou goest to bed three weeks together, and then lay thereto the woolly side of a lambs skin, & be whole. 61 Put the juice of Rue & of read Docks into the nose to cleanse the brain. 62 Stamp Rue, read Fenell, & Wormwood, & strain them with small white wine, & drop it into the eyes when thou goest to bed to expel the superfluous blood, and to clear them. 63 Put the juice of Rue with aqua vitae into thy ear, and bind thy head hard with a cloth, and lie down with that ear to take away the pain, and to draw out the humour that causeth the pain. 64 chew Rue, and put it into hollow teeth to take away their pain. 65 Let women drink the juice of Rue with wine to purge them after their deliverance and to expel the secondines, the dead child, and unnatural birth. 66 Rue eaten a certain space, drieth up natural seed in man, and the milk of women's breasts. 67 Rue boiled in wine to the one half and drunk, is good for such as are falling into the dropsy. 68 Eat it raw, or candited otherways with salt or in meats, to clear and sharpen the sight, so doth the juice put into the eyes with honey, and the juice of Fenell, or by itself. 69 The leaves stamped with Barley meal, suageth the pain of the eyes. 70 Mix the juice with oil of Roses, or of Bays, and honey, and use it against the sounding or noise in the ear, being dropped in warm. 71 Stamp the leaves with oil of Roses and vinegar, and apply it to the headache. 72 Stamp it with Bay leaves to cure the swelling of the genitors. 73 Mix Rue with Pepper, Niter, and wine, to void all spots of the face and skin. 74 Mix it with Honey and Alum to cure the foul scab and tetter. 75 Stamp the leaves with swine's grease, to cure the ruggedness of the skin, the scurf of the head, the King's evil, or hard swellings about the throat. 76 Mix Rue with honey to mitigate the pains of the joints, and with Figs to void the swelling of the dropsy. 77 Smell to the juice with vinegar to quicken thee in the Lethargy and drowsiness. 78 Mix powder of the root with honey, to dissolve congealed blood and black bruises, being well rubbed therewith. 79 Seethe Rue in oil, or else steep it long therein, and use it to warm and chafe all cold members being anointed therewith. 80 And anoint the region of the bladder to provoke urine, 81 And the swelling and hardness of the spleen being anointed therewith. 82 And in glisters it driveth out windy gripings of the guts. 83 Stamp the leaves and apply them outwardly to the nose, to staunch the bleeding of it. 84 Mix powder of the seeds with fresh clarified butter and pitch melted together, and drink it for inward bruises. 85 Make powder of the seeds and of long Pepper, and sweet Calamus, and seeth it in white wine, and drink it warm for the wind in the small guts. 86 Set Rue in the midst of September. Backeache, stamp Rue, Wormwood, and Sage, ana one handful with Barrow's grease, and fry it and apply it, or strain it and anoint. 87 Belly gripping, drink the decoction of it. 88 colic, boil Rue in Oil or Butter, and receive it in by glister, or eat Rue often, or use the decoction thereof, especially with some Camomile. 89 To cause deliverance of a dead child, drink Betony, Rue, and Hyssop in hot water. 90 Ears griefs, put in the juice of Rue, or pun Eels blood, with the juice of Rue, and put it in. 91 Falling evil, put the juice of Rue into his nose, and he will rise straightways. 92 Fever quarten, stamp Rue, Sage and Tansy, of each like much with wine, & drink it morn and even. 93 Gout, stamp Nep, Rue, Amydum, and powder of Pepper, & Euphorbium, and apply it warm, or stamp one handful of Rue with a great deal of salt, and put honey or mustard thereto, and stir it well till it boil, and apply it in a cloth. 94 Headache, stamp Rue with honey and salt, and apply it, or seeth Rue and Fenell in water, and wash thy head therewith. 95 For the hot evil, drink the juice of Rue with stolen ale. 96 Knees swollen, stamp Rue with honey and salt, and apply it. 97 Lethargy, boil Castory in water with the juice of Rue and white vinegar, and make it an ointment, and rub the hinder part of the head well therewith, and fret it well in. 98 For alienation of the mind or madness, drink the seeds of Rue with vinegar, and put the juice of Rue into thy nostrils. 99 Nostrils stink, put in the juice of Rue & Mints, it doth also help the brain. 100 Noli me tangere, incorporate Myrrh with the juice of Rue, and anoint therewith. Palsy, anoint with oil of Roses, Rue, and vinegar. 101 Reins ache, stamp Rue with salt and honey, and apply it often. 102 Sciatica, stamp Rue and Nep of each like much, with a little Amidum, and the yolk of an Eglantine, and put thereto powder of Pepper, and of Euphorbium, & apply it. 103 Shingles, mix Rue & mints with oil and vinegar, and anoint to help it the same day. 104 Speech to cause, put the juice of Rue into thy nose. 105 Spiders biting, or crept into the body, drink Rue with thine own urine, it helpeth all stingings of serpents. 106 Stomach griefs, drink the juice of Rue and Sage twice a day. 107 Knees ache and swelling, apply Rue and Mints with salt often. 108 Venom or poison, drink the juice of Rue. 109 Worms, drink Laurel, Rue, and Stonecrop with Ale or Wine. 110 Hickit, drink the seeds of Rue. 111 Eeares deaf, seeth Rue in vinegar, and receive up the fume thereof. 112 Pocks & Measles in children, seeth Fumiterie and Rue in water & drink it. Eyes dull, drink the juice of Rue. 113 Teeth hollow, chew Rue and fill them with it. 114 Hands worms, anoint with the juice of Rue. 115 Breasts hard, seethe Rue & wheat, and apply it. For unkind heat in the stomach, eat Rue every morning. 116 Belly great, (See Arsmart.) 117 Sides impost. drink Rue often. 118 Cod swollen, stamp Rue & Wormwood with honey, & apply it raw, & after wash it with vinegar. 119 Oil of Rue, cut the leaves small, & put them in oil 10. or 12. days, then seethe it to the third part, & strain it & use it. 120 Treacle to make, See Betony, Selondine, Fenell.) 121 Eyes watering, drop in the juice with honey. 122 Ears dull, boil Rue long in water, & strain it & drop it in, & dip therein a tent, & cast on it powder of Castory, and Piretrum, & put it in warm, & lie up therewith 3. or 4. hours, and be whole, or put in the juice with Eels grease, or drop in the juice 7. times warm. 123 Speech lost, mix the juice with powder of Castori Piretrum, black Pepper, and Euphorbium, and hold little pellits thereof under thy tongue. (See Cummin.) 124 Cough, seethe wormwood two handful, Rue one handful in good wine, & drink it. 125 Reins ache, drink powder of the seeds with water & honey. 126 Gout pain, seeth the juice with white honey, than put thereto the white of two Eggs, & strain it, & anoint therewith. 127 Gout to soften, stamp Rue, read Brier crops, and Broome flowers, of each like much with Guilts grease, and boil them well together and strain it, and anoint therewith. 128 For ache and swelling in the knees, stamp Rue & Lovage with honey, and apply it. 129 Skabs general, anoint with the juice of Rue, Celondine, Centory, & wormwood. 130 Worms, stamp Wormwood, Arsmart, & Rue, and fry them with butter or grease, and apply them, or drink the juice of Centory, Rue, and Wormwood with milk. 131 For biting or stinking of an adder, stamp Rue with oil, and apply it to the wound. 132 Vomit to stop, mix mastic, Cummin, and Bays with the juice of Rue, and apply it, (See Garlic.) 133 Cod swollen, stamp Rue and apply it to have present help. 134 To heal a sore leg, stamp Rue and Sage very finely with the yolk of an Eglantine new laid, and as much black soap as the yolk, & apply it: proved. 135 Worms crept into the body, drink the juice of Rue. 136 To be delivered of a dead child, drink water of Rue, with powder of two Date stones. 137 Belly-ache, eat Rue, tansy, and Sothernwood with salt. 138 Belly swollen, drink the juice of Rue with wine or ale: proved. 139 Headache, heat Rue and Sage between two tiles or bricks, and apply it warm to thy temples, See in Planten, Mints.) 140 Falling evil, use Rue and Aniseedes in thy meats. If thou wouldst rise quickly, put the juice or powder of Rue into thy nose. 141 Heart griefs, stamp Rue with Beane flower and Ginger, and put it into a glass 30. days, and then anoint therewith. 142 Hands itch, anoint with the juice of Rue. 143 Nose stink, put in the juice of black Mints and Rue into thy nose. 144 stitch, stamp Rue, Sage, and Wormwood, of each a handful, seeth them in ale till it be thick, and apply it hot in bags one after another. 145 Headache of much drinking, stamp Rue & Roses with vinegar, and bitter Almonds, and anoint therewith, or rub thy temples therewith, and thy forehead. 146 Head scurf, seeth a handful of Rue, and half an ounce of quick Brimstone in good old wine, and wash thy head therewith, being first washed with lukewarm water, (See Fenell.) 147 Pissing blood, drink powder of Rue with ale. 148 Stinging, drink Rue with thine own urine. 149 Lethargy and forgetfulness, (See Mints.) 150 Eyes dasling, use Rue in broths. 151 Eyes dull, put in the juice with scummed honey, (See Cummin.) 152 Eyes tears, put in the juice with vinegar and honey. 153 Eyes blood, seeth it in wine to the third part, and drop it in. 154 Teethache, seeth it in wine, and apply it to the gums. 155 Nosebleeding, put in the juice. 156 Squincy and loss of speech, seeth it in vinegar, and then put thereto light Wheat Bran, and seeth it to a pulse, and sup thereof. 157 Pleurisy, drink Rue to heal it quickly. 158 colic and Iliake, (See Bay, Cummin.) 159 Tenasmus, seeth Rue, and apply it. 160 Fundament rifts and sores, stamp the stalks with ordure of a man, and the yolk of an Egg, and apply it. 161 Mother suffocate, seeth Rue, and stamp it with hens grease, and Goose grease, and apply it to the navel and share, or seeth it and stamp it, and put it in as a pessary, or take up the fume thereof. 162 Gout, seeth Rue and Sage with oil, and stamp it and apply it hot. Or stamp it with Salt and Hony, and apply it. 163 Seethe ix. handful of Rue in sufficient wine, and drink it before the fits of any Fever one hour. 164 Apostume to break, stamp Rue with Nuts, and apply it. 165 Headache, put the juice warm into the nose, or with as much white wine to purge the head. 166 Eyes dull, use to drink Rue. 167 For stopping of the liver and milt, the strangury and flux, seethe Rue in wine with Fenell roots, or powder of Rue with the juice of Fenell and drink it warm. 168 Ache and fretting, stamp Rue with powder of Cummin, and apply it. 169 Venom, drink the juice. 170 Bitings venomous, stamp it and apply it. 171 Eyes dull, distil it with Roses, and put thereof into the eyes. 172 An ointment for the eyes, stamp Rue with as much Fenell by weight, and mix them with Honey and Eyebright, and anoint the eyes therewith. 173 Grind Rue, Cummin, and Pepper, of each like much by weight with Vinegar and Honey, and use it for the ache in the breast and in the reins. 174 Headache, seeth Bay leaves and berries with Rue and Heyhove in wine and water, and anoint therewith, or with Rue and vinegar. 175 Breath stinking, drink the juice of Rue with vinegar morn & even, and put the juice of Rue and black Mints, of each like much into the nose. 176 Eyes cleansing, stamp Rue and strain it with wine, and drink it daily, and also use it in meats. 177 Ears dull, put in the clear juice of Rue. 178 Ache, stamp Rue & as much Lovage with honey, and apply it to void the ache and swelling in the knee or else where. 179 Palsy, boil Rue, Pellitory, Sage, Cammamile, Mustardseedes, and salt in oil to the one half, and anoint therewith, it will restore speech. 180 Dropsy, seethe Rue & Figs in wine and apply it often about the belly. 181 Impost. to break, drink the juice of Rue & Scabious with powder of Coral a good draft, or drink the juice of Rue often with wine. 182 Burning and skalking, stamp Rue and apply it. 183 Venom of all sorts drink the juice of Rue with thine own urine, or with fasting spittle and urine. 184 Biting of an adder or dog, drink Dragons, Rue & Betony. 185 Biting of a man, stamp Rue & garlic with honey, and flower, & apply it. 186 Worms crept into the body, drink Arnament & Rue with thine own urine, or with fasting spittle & urine. 187 Biting of an adder, seethe Rue, Fenel & Betony in butter and drink it. 188 Speaking in sleep, drink the seeds of Rue with vinegar, & put the leaves into thy nose. 189 Biting of a mad dog, stamp Rue with honey & salt, & apply it. 190 Mad, mix Gentian seed, and Rue with vinegar, and drink it hot. 191 A sovereign medicine for aches, bruises or wounds of the legs, stamp Rue, parsley, and Houseleek, of each like much, and put thereto good store of whites of eggs, and apply it without seething. 192 Cough, seethe Rue, century and Wormwood with good ale and Honey to the one half, and strain it & drink it: use some Gentian therewith, if you can have it. 193 Rue is good for the stomach, it represseth lust, killeth the canker, and provoketh terms. 194 Seethe Rue with water, and a fourth part of vinegar, and drink it for the fretting in the belly. 195 Rue helpeth the griefs of the lungs, breasts and ribs, and the sciatica. 196 Drink Rue against fevers. 197 Worms, seethe it in ale, and eat it. 198 Dropsy, seethe it in drink, and anoint with the juice. 199 Seethe it with the juice of Fennell, and as much Honey as Rue, and use it for the dropsy. 200 Headache, mix the juice with oil of Roses and vinegar, and anoint the forehead therewith. 201 Hicket, stamp Rue, sage and wormwood, of each like much, and seethe them with vinegar and May butter, and apply a plaster thereof to thy breast, and let it lie four and twenty hours, and do so thrice: if you have no May butter, take fresh butter without salt. 202 To heal a canker after it is cleansed, stamp Rue, and boil it with Honey, and apply it. 203 Headache, stamp Rue & ivy, with vinegar and oil Olive, and apply it. 204 Tongue palsy, boil Rue with powder of mustard seed & salt in oil to the one half, and anoint the tongue therewith 205 For swelling of the Knee, or hurt with a knife, stamp Rue with Honey and salt, and apply it till it be whole. 206 Appetite to cause, seethe Rue with vinegar, & drink it. 207 Ears deaf, put in the juice of Rue and sage. 208 Nose bleeding, put in powder of Rue seeds. 209 Stitch, clarify a quart of ale, and put thereto sage and Rue, of each half a handful, and boil them well, then take out the herbs, and make it hot of Pepper, and put thereto a spoonful of read sanders, and brew them well together out of one pot into another, and drink it as hot as may be suffered. 210 Green sickness, stamp Rue one handful, read sage two hands full, and strain out the juice, and put it to a pint of hot Honey well clarified, and put thereto a great spoonful of gross Pepper, and stir them well together, and give thereof one spoonful & a half blood warm, morn and even, and let her eat four or five times every day six or seven Raisins of the sun at a time, this will cure it, though it appear not at the first: if the patiented mend not at the end of ten weeks, give her this receipt again. 211 Belly ache, stamp Rue with stolen ale, and drink three spoonesful at once: or stamp Rue with salt, and drink it with ale or water, and be whole. 212 Urine to cause, stamp Rue, parsley and Gromell, and temper them with white wine, and drink thereof, and be whole. 213 Headache, seethe Rue and Fennell in water, and wash thy head therewith, and apply the herbs plaster wise. 214 Worms to kill and expel, stamp Rue with thine own urine, and drink it. 215 Ache from the girdle downward to under the feet, stamp Rue with black Soap, and a read Onion, of each like much, and apply it. 216 Teeth ache, stamp Rue seeds and seethe them with wine, and apply it. 217 Belly ache, stamp one handful, and seethe it in oil and butter, and apply it in with a Glister. 218 Breast to cleanse, seethe it in vinegar, & drink it with sugar. 219 Gout, seethe sage and Rue in oil, and stamp it, and apply it, to take away the pain by and by, and keep thy body soluble. 220 Headache, put the juice into thy Nose. 221 For the plague, and for worms, take every morning a top of Rue, a Garlic head, or half a quarter of a walnut, and one corn of salt thirty days together, and be merry. 222 A preservative in the plague time, eat every morning three little branches of Rue, a walnut, and a fig. 224 Cod swollen, stamp Rue and apply it. 225 If one have taken Todestooles, let him drink Rue or Organy with Hony, or Organy with Hony and treacle, or mithridate, with strong vinegar, or oximell squillitike, or aqua vite, or eat raw garlic. 226 Ear beetle or wig, put in the juice of Rue with aqua composita, & lie down therewith, and bind a cloth fast about thy head. 227 Mithridates medicine against the plague, mix twenty leaves of Rue with two figs, two wall nuts, and a little salt, & be sure for that day. 228 scurf to void, seethe a good handful, with half an ounce of quick brimstone in good old wine, & wash thy head therewith, being first washed with warm water. 229 Eat the leaves with vinegar, to preserve thee from the plague. 230 Hicket, stamp it & dissolve it in white wine, and drink it. 231 Vomiting in children, drink powder of Rue, and half as much incense with wine, or syrup of Roses. 232 Vuula fallen, boil powder of Rue and Colyander seed in water of Mints, and hold thereof cold in thy mouth. 233 joints griefs, stamp pulp of Reisins with green Rue, and apply it. 234 sinews shrunk, stamp Rue & apply it. 235 Blackness of wounds or sores, anoint with the juice of Rue & Hony. 236 Matrixe suffoc. stamp Rue with Hony, and dip will therein, & put it into the fundament. 237 Head giddy, (See in Horehound.) 238 Stomach belching, and wind in the body, distil the leaves in the midst of May, & drink three ounces of the water morn and even. 239 colic, drink the juice with the fat of a Peacock and Hony, of each like much with wine. 240 Burning by occasion of cold, boil the leaves of Rue in oil, and anoint. 241 Falling evil, mix half an ounce of the juice, with i. dram of Castory, and put thereof into the Nose with wool, when the party is fallen. 242 Stomach ache & swelling, and the belly likewise, seethe Rue and Mints in sweet milk, and drink it. 243 Ache and Gout of the feet, stamp it green with oil, and anoint therewith against fire often. 245 Side and breast ache, seethe it in wine, and drink it. Eyes dull, put in the juice of Rue and wormwood. 246 Nost bleeding, burn it and blow it in. 247 To kill lice & fleaes, wash the place with the juice, & they will soon die. 248 Eyes bloody, seethe Cummin in white wine, & put thereto the juice of Rue, and apply it. 249 Belly ache, drink the juice with wine or ale: or eat the crops of it, or boil it in wine, and apply it. 250 Emerods', stamp it with lovage, of each like much, & fry them with Honey, & apply them. 251 sinews or veins bruised or hurt, or shrunk, boil it with wax & oil Olive, and anoint therewith, and also apply it with wool, (See Cummin.) 252 Breast stopped with much fatness, stamp a good quantity, and seethe it long in vinegar, and drink thereof morn and even. 253 Ears worms, put in the juice of Rue, Sothernwood, & wormwood, of each like much five nights, and lay the substance on the ear. 254 Belly swollen, stamp Rue and drink it often with wine or ale. 255 Head giddy, and turning, stamp it with vinegar, and anoint. 256 Eyes tears, mix dry Rue with Hony, and anoint. 257 Flowers to cause, stamp it with as much Mugwort, with oil de Bay, and put it in as a Pessary: proved. For poison drunk, or any venomous biting, drink one dram of the seeds and leaves with wine. 258 Eyes dull, make an ointment of the juice of Rue and Fennell with Hony, and anoint therewith, or eat them, and let thy breath go into thine eyes. 259 Fleaes to avoid, seethe it in water, & sprinkle the house with it. 260 Bursten, use the juice of Rue and of Elecampana. 261 Ache, heat Rue and sage on a hot tile, and apply it hot, (See Elecampana, Gentian, Betony, Figs.) Belly worms, stamp it with salt and strain it with ale and drink it. 261 Hands itch and worms, wash them with the juice of Rue, water and salt. 262 Falling evil, use to smell to Rue. 263 Belly ache, eat it with Tansy, Sothernewood and salt, (See Mallows, Mints, Rosemary.) 264 Belly swollen, drink the juice with wine or ale, (See Betony, Cummin.) Ache 5. 41. 43. 54. 101. 168. 173. 178. 191. 215. 233. 243. 261. (See Gout, Side.) Appetite 206 Apostume 117. 164 Backeach 5. 86. 101. 125. 173 Belly ache 8. 34. 41. 54. 82. 85. 87. 88 137. 168. 194. 211. 217. 242. 249. 263. (See colic, Belch.) Great or swollen 116. 138. 242. 254. 264. Belching 4. 238 Benumbed 60 Bitings venomous 17. 25. 56. 131. 148. 169. 170. 184. 185. 187. 189 Black spots 78. 235 Blisters 16. 29. 39 50 Bloody flux 23 Blood to stop, (See Nose.) Brain grief (See Head.) Breaking out 16. 39 50. (See Scab, Itch.) Breast griefs 5. 41. 173. 195. 218. 244. 252 Breasts pain 5 hard 115 Breath stopped 41 stink 10. 175 Bruises 78. 84. 191. 151. (See ache.) Burn 182. 240 Bursten 260 Chollike 34. 85. 88 158. 239. (See Belly.) Cod's swollen 72. 118. 133. 224 Cold griefs 79 Conception 24 Cough 41. 124. 192 Dead child 65. 89. 136 Death or life 58 Deliverance 65. 89. 136 Drowsiness 77 Dropsy 5. 12. 37. 43. 52. 67. 76. 116. 108. 198. 199 Ears ache 39 48. 63. 90 dull 49. 111. 122. 177. 207 noise 70 worms 11. 226. 253 Eyes griefs 2. 18. 19 30. 57 62. 68 96. 121. 150. 151. 152. 153. 166. 171. 172. 176. 248 Dull, (See all before.) ache 44. 69 Emerods' 250 Face deformed 73 Falling evil 91. 140. 241. 262 Fevers 11. 41. 92. 163. 196. Fleaes to void 31. 247 259 Flies to void 27 Flowers stopped 55. 65. 193 257 Fluxes 35. 55. 167 Forgetful 54. 149 (See Lethargy.) Fundament pain 6. 7 rifts 160 swollen 7. 38 Gnats 27 Gout 54. 93. 126. 127. 162 219. 243. 244 Green sickness 210 Hands itch and worms 114 142. 261 Heart griefs 141 Headache 13. 44. 71. 94. 139. 145. 165. 174. 200. 203. 213. 220. 237 giddy 255 to cleanse 61. 75 sores 50 scurf 75 146. 228 Hicket 116. 201. 230 Holy fire 16 Hot evil 95 Iliak pas. 158 Impost. 117. 181 Inflammation 50 joints grief 41. 76. 79 233. 251 canker 193. 202 Kidneys grief. 5. (See back) King's evil 75. Knees ache 54. 107. 128. 178. 205. Swollen 96. 107. 128. 178 Lame 60 Leg sore 134. 191 Lice 247 Life and death 58 Lethargy 54. 77. 97. 149 Liver griefs 5. 22. 167 Loins griefs 5 Lungs griefs 5. 41. 195 Lust to void 30. 193 to cause 30 Mad 98. 190 Mad dog. 17. 189 Masels 15. 112 Matrixe griefs 6. 7. 38 suffoc. 7. 42. 161. 236 Memory 40. 98 Milk to dry up 66 Milt grief 22. 81. 167 Morphue white 46 Nolimetangere 100 Nose bleeding 45. 83. 155 208. 246. stink 99 143 Oil 79. 119 Palsy 21. 100 104. 123. 179. 204 Pissing bed 51 blood 147 Plague 3. 33. 221. 222. 223. 229 Pleurisy 157. 195 Pocks 14. 112 Poison 3. 33. 52. 56. 108. 182. 225. 257 Privities swollen 38. 72 Pushes 39 Reins ache 101. 125 Sciatica 41. 59 102. 195 Seed to abate 66 sinews griefs 251 shrunk 234 Seconds 65 Sickness general 41 Sides grief 41. 194. 244. 245 Shingles 103 Skabs 16. 39 50. 73. 74. 75. 129 Skin to cleanse 73. 75 Scurvy evil 47 Sores 16. 50. 134 Speaking in sleep 188 Speech lost 104. 123. 156. (See tongue Palsy.) Spider 105 Squincy 156 Stinging 25. 56. 131. 148 Stitch 144. 209 Stomach ache 242 cold 21 windy 238. 242 heat 115 Strangury 167 Swell 38. 39 178 ●05 Teethach 20. 64. 154. 216 hollow 113 Tenasmus 159 Tetters 50. 74 Throat swollen 75. 156 Tongue Palsy 204 Treacle 120 Veins griefs 251 Venom 25. 108. 169. 170. 183. 225. 257 Vermin 28 Vomiting 132. 231 Urine stopped 22. 23. 53. 58. 80. 212 vulva fallen 232 Windiness 24. 238 Wits lost or dull 30. (See Lethargy.) Women in child bed 65 Worms 9 36. 109. 114. 130. 135. 186. 193. 197. 214. 221. 261 Wounds 191. 205. 235 Yard swollen 38. 71 ¶ Rush. RVsh: The seed of the common Rush parched and steeped in wine, stoppeth the lask and the terms, and provoketh urine, but being taken too much at once, it causeth headache. 2 The same seeds cause sleep. 3 Oxen sick, seeth the roots in water, and give it them to drink. Flowers to stop 1 Flux to stop 1 Oxen sick 3 Sleep to 'cause 2 Urine to cause 1 ¶ Rosemary. Rosemary: Ache, seethe the flowers and leaves in water, and bathe therein. 2 Appetite to cause, distil it with the flowers thereof, and use the water in thy sauces with powder of Cloves and Cubebs. Seethe the leaves in water, and drink it with thy wine. Seethe the leaves in water, and when it is cold, put as much white wine to it, and make sops therein, and eat them, it helpeth feebleness, and unkind sweats. Seethe it in water or wine, and drink it. 3 Belly ache, boil the herb with Pellitory in wine, and drink it. Seethe it with the flowers in wine, and drink it morn and even. 4 Belly bound, seethe it with Pellitory in wine, & drink it. 5 Bitings venomous, seethe it with pellitory in wine, and drink it. 6 Blood to comfort, use the decoction with the flowers, or use them with rear Eggs. 7 Brain cleansing, (See Head rheum.) 8 Brain to comfort, seeth it in wine, and drink it. Seethe it in wine with a few Cloves, and then drink it, (See Stomach.) 9 Breast cleansing, seeth it in water, and drink it, for all the griefs of the breast, breath and lungs. 10 Grind Rosemary leaves finely, and drink it before the fit, for the fever quarten. 11 For itch and scab, drink the juice with water or wine nine days, and be whole. 12 For the web and dullness of sight, anoint with the juice and Hony. 13 To bring the flowers, and comfort the thing conceived, use fomentation therewith, and also put it into the Matrixe. 14 For tooth ache, rub them with the root, or apply the juice. 15 Sores cold, seethe the flowers and leaves with common oil, and anoint therewith. 16 Seethe Rosemary with white wine, and drink it, for the feebleness of the brain and stomach: or seeth it with white wine and Mastic, and Time, and use it for the stomach. 17 For the Strangury, and stopping of the urine, stamp the leaves and flowers in white wine, and apply it to the shares. 18 The juice, flowers, leaves, or rind drunk in water or wine, cleanseth the stomach from corruption, and keepeth the body in good order and state. 19 Make a Pastry of the flowers & leaves with Grains and Pepper, and break it into a gallon of new ale, and after it is three days old, drink thereof at even hot, and at morn cold, to help the cough and hoarseness, colic, and Iliake. 20 Use the same drink with Sage, Vinegar, Cloves, Galingale, Grains, long Pepper and Setwall: it helpeth the Yexing. 21 Rosemary helpeth all cold diseases in the body, the body being first purged, drink the decoction of the flowers in wine or water first and last. 22 seeth it in white wine, and wash the face therewith, to make it whole, clear, fair, and ruddy. 23 Carry powder of the flower about thee, to make thee merry, glad, gracious, and well-beloved of all men. 24 Keep a coal of the tree in a linen cloth, and rub thy teeth therewith, to avoid all worms and filth. 25 For the cold, pose, and stopping of the head, take up the fume of the bark, at the mouth and nose. seeth the root in vinegar or wine, and let a thief wash his feet therein, and he shall neither rob, steal, fear, nor fright any man. 26 Eat the flowers with bread and Honey fasting, against the falling sickness. 27 Lay the flowers on thy bed, to keep thee from all evil dreams. 28 seeth much Rosemary, and bathe therein, to make thee lusty, lively, joyful, liking, and youngly. 29 Seethe it in milk with Sage, Margerom, Auens, Eyebright and Honey, and when you are bathed, anoint your face and body therewith, to comfort the veins, sight, mind and heart, and for many other griefs. 30 Distil it when it flowreth, and use it in the sauce with cubebs in powder, to 'cause appetite. 31 Stamp the leaves and apply them to a canker, to destroy it for ever. Make a spoon of the wood, to give thy broth a fine taste, and thy body health. 32 Anoint any venom, or poison, or stinging, with Rosmary, to avoid it, or to preserve the place from hurt thereby. 33 For the cold cough, and the pose, Seethe it in water, and take up the fume at thy nose, and wash thy head and mouth therewith. 34 To provoke appetite, and avoid loathing, seeth the leaves in water, and drink it with thy wine. 35 Stomach griefs, use mises thereof. 36 Flux, seeth it long in vinegar, and apply it hote-thrise, plasterwayes. 37 For any sore or ache, seeth the flows and leaves in water, and bathe therein. 38 Burn it and the smoke thereof will drive adders out of their holes, or kill them. 39 For grief and heat of the stomach, seeth the leaves in Well water, and drink it cold with a little of a Pomegranate: it so taketh away thirst. 40 For the breath, and to open the pipes and cleanse them, burn the wood and take up the fume. 41 The flowers laid among clotheses, keepeth them from moths. 42 For the cough and pose, seeth the leaves in water, and drink it, or make a syrup thereof and use it. 43 For the cardiake and swelling at the heart, make a drink thereof with Rose water, or white wine: or else a syrroppe with Rose water or white wine, with the juice of parsnip, sugar, and the bone of a Stag's heart, and use thereof. 44 Worms: use the juice with honey. 45 To comfort the heart, seeth Rosemary, and the flowers with rosewater, and drink it. 46 Skin cleansing, seeth the flowers with white wine, and wash therewith, and drink thereof. 47 Fever: seeth yssop, sage, Rosemary, and the roots of Polipodie ana three ounces in a pottle of ale or beer to the one half: then strain it, and drink a little before thy fit as often as need is. 48 Itch: seeth half a pint of white vinegar with Rosemary and Celondine ana one handful, strain it, and while it is hot, put in some white coprosse and use to wash therewith. 49 Mouth canker: seeth a sprig of Rosemary in half a pint of ale, and scum it, and put in as much Alum as a nut, honey one spoonful, and two spoonful of Honiesuckle water, and use it. 50 Face to be fair, and breath to be sweet, seeth the flowers in white wine, and wash therewith, and drink thereof. 51 Emerods' to heal, apply a plaster of the leaves, the same helpeth the swelling of the fundament. 52 Fever quarten, and Intermissive, drink the juice before the fit and be whole: or drink the decoction of Rosemary, Sage and Lavender before thy fit. 53 To cleanse & comfort the brain: seeth it in white wine, and receive up the fume thereof at thy nose and mouth, and hold a cloth over thy head. 54 Ears dull, (See Camomile. 55 Head megrim, See Primrose. 56 Hair to grow, anoint with the juice of Rosemary, and let it dry in of itself. 57 jaundice: seeth Rosemary in clarified Ale, and strain it, and put in yellow turmeric, saffron and sugar, and drink thereof morn and even. 58 Sores: receive Rosemary stripped from the stalks, seeth it in running water to the one half, and then strain it, and put in alum at your discretion, and use it after it is sodden a little more, and wash therewith: and when you will heal it up, put in English honey, and use it daily: proved. 59 Kings evil: Steep it with Heart's tongue a night in wine, and drink thereof to put it away. 60 The juice of the root and herb mixed with honey, and drunk, helpeth the dullness of sight, and purgeth grossness of humours. 61 Ulcers hard: the root bruised and mixed with honey, and applied, softeneth them speedily. 62 The root boiled with Pellitory in wine, and drunk, softeneth the belly, helpeth the pain thereof, and helpeth the bitings of venomous beasts and worms. And in the same manner tempered with Mugwort, it provoketh urine and the menstrues. 63 The flowers tied in a fair linen cloth, and sodden in wine and drunk morn and even, avoideth many griefs of the body, but especially of the paps. 64 The powder of the flowers drunk in warm wine, maketh the mind merry, comforteth nature and blood, and preserveth many from diseases, which otherwise would come. 65 The smoke of the bark stoppeth the rheum, if the head be holden over it. 66 Appetite to cause: boil it in water, and drink it alone, or with Wine. 67 The powder of the flowers eaten with rear potcht eggs doth greatly strengthen nature, and amendeth the blood. 68 Drink a good draft of wine made of Rosemary morn and even to cleanse the blood, and provoke appetite, to expel all inner humours, and to help a great weakness. 69 Boil Rosemary with wild Peniroyall or Mints, in wine and oil olive, and anoint therewith to cause sweat, and help the dropsy. 70 Boil it in wine with Rue and a little pepper, and drink it to help the falling sickness. 71 Boil it in wine with Pellitory, and some gargoyle therewith to help the greatness of the Vuula. 72 seeth it with the flowers in wine, and drink it morn and even three hours before and after meat to help the kings evil, the hard fetching of breath, to open the pipes of the lungs, to 'cause easy spitting forth, to help digestion, to cease the gripings of the body, and to cleanse the blood. 73 Flux to stop, Boil the flowers in the strongest vinegar, and bind it to thy Navel. 74 The decoction of Rosemary helpeth the jaundice, provoketh urine and menstrues. 75 Rosemary helpeth the Cough being taken with pepper and honey. 76 The fume of it being burned, resisteth the Pestilence. 77 The green leaves of Rosemary being bruised and applied do stop the Emeralds. 78 Drink wine of Rosemary morn and even three or four hours before meat to stop the whites, and to heal the gnawing of the secret parts, the jaundice, shortness of breath, and to open the pipes of the Lungs, to help digestion, to resist poison, to purge the blood, and avoid stinking sweat, and cover thee well, and lie still: the like doth the herb with the flowers sodden in wine. 79 The conserve of the flowers comforteth the heart marvelously. 80 The water drunk, restoreth the speech, and serveth almost for all the diseases aforesaid. 81 Rosemary in drink, or applied, taketh away swooning, trembling, swimming of the head, cleareth the colour of the face being washed therewith, and cleareth the thin films that cover the eyes. 82 The decoction thereof with Dittander, or the water cleanseth and healeth rotten sores and wounds, as creeping sores, and Fistulas, etc. 83 seeth Rosemary in water and drink it before exercise, and enter into a bathe, and drink unwatered wine after it to heal the jaundice. 84 The seeds thereof drunk in Wine, helpeth the falling sickness, and pain in the breasts. 85 Rosemary comforteth the brains, sinews, heart and memory. It is good against shaking, and the Palsy. 86 For the griefs of the stomach: eat thereof daily with bread and salt fasting. 87 To cleanse and comfort the stomach, and to make a sweet breath: take Rosemary with the flowers, or without the flowers a handful or more, seeth it in good white wine a good space, and drink it with a little cinnamon. 88 To comfort the stomach, seeth a good handful with a quart of Wine, and a few cloaves therewith, until it be ready to burn, and use often to drink thereof. 89 Stamp thereof and strain it with Wine, and drink thereof to open the obstructions of the Liver and milt, it preserveth and keepeth health, being taken a week together at the Spring and fall of the leaf. 90 An Electuary to comfort the stomach and brain, and to make a sweet breath: Take Sage two drams, Rosemary flowers one ounce and a half, of Cloves five ounces, cinnamon one ounce and a half, Nutmegs a scruple: Stamp them well with honey or sugar, make an Electuary thereof, and take half a spoonful in the morning, and drink a little red wine boiled with a little Sage after it, and use the same daily until you have your purpose. 91 An ointment for the stomach against the Cough: stamp three handfuls of Rosemary striped downwards, and boil it with four ounces of Capon's grease till it be green, and the stronger it is, the better it is: then strain it and put thereto half an ounce of fine powder of Maces, and use it to the mouth of the stomach warm. 92 The ashes of Rosemary doth fasten lose teeth, and beautifieth them being rubbed therewith. 93 Headache: seeth Willow tops with a little Rosemary in vinegar, until the third part be wasted, and wash the head therewith. 94 Eyes to be clear: stamp Rosemary one handful, Balm one great handful, strain them with a quart of ale, and drink thereof morn and even to consume the vapours that hurt the brain and sight. 95 Brain cleansing, and Nose stinking: chew good store of Rosemary leaves half an hour together before dinner and supper, and hold down thy head. 96 Headache: seeth balm and Rosemary ana one handful, green or dry in a quart of milk as it cometh from the Cow, and drink it hot with powder of Nutmegs. 97 To preserve from sweat: steep balm, Rosemary and borage in ale or beer twelve hours or more, and drink thereof morn and even. 98 Heart to comfort, and to open the pipes, and to expel melancholy: use conserve of Rosemary flowers, put the flowers into a linen cloth, and boil them in fair water to the one half, and cool it and drink against all evils of the body. 99 To be merry and joyful, bind the flowers to thy right arm. 100 To withstand all evil swellings of the body, eat the flowers with honey fasting. 101 For the Phthisic, boil the flowers in goats milk, and let it stand all night fair covered under the air, and drink thereof. 102 To keep the face from breaking out: seeth the leaves with white wine, and wash therewith. 103 To avoid evil dreams, put the leaves under the bed's head. 104 To slay a canker: apply powder of the leaves. 105 For feebleness and unkind sweats, boil the leaves in water, and when it is cold, put thereto as much white wine and make sops therein, and eat them. 106 Flux to stop, boil the leaves in strong vinegar, and apply them to thy womb. 107 Legs swollen with the Gout, boil the leaves in water and apply them. 108 To be delivered from all evils, boil the leaves in strong vinegar, and apply them to thy stomach. 109 For the Cough, Boil the leaves in white wine, and drink thereof. 110 For the Pose, Drink powder of the rind. 111 Youth to preserve, make a box of the wood, and smell to it. 112 To withstand the danger of Serpents, put thereof in thy doors, or within thy house. 113 To withstand poison, make a barrel of the wood, and drink all thy drink out of it, and no poison shall hurt thee. 114 For loss of good smelling, and for one that cannot draw his breath, Make fire of the wood and draw in thy breath therewith. 115 Fevers of all sorts: Drink the juice of Rosemary, Sage, Mustard, Vinegar, and treacle, ana like much before thy fits thrice. 116 seeth Rosemary and Rue, ana like much two handfuls in common Oil and Malmsey, of each a quart, half an hour, and chafe any lame member well with a hot cloth, and then wash it therewith half an hour, and apply the woolly side of a Lambeskinne, and do so three weeks at the lest to bedward, and be whole. 117 Fundament swollen: Stamp Rosemary and apply it warm in a cloth. 118 For the Colic and pain in the side, seeth one handful in water, and temper your wine therewith, and none other water. 119 Face spots: Fill a glass with the flowers and bury, half in sand, being stopped with new wax, and cover the upper part, and let it rest so thirty days: then strain it, and keep the water as a thing precious for this purpose. 120 To preserve from the Gout, seeth the roots well in vinegar, and wash therewith. 121 Head cold: take up the fume of the bark at the Nose. 122 Madness and foolishness: Boil the leaves and flowers in water, and bathe therein. 123 Thirst great: seeth the leaves in water, and drink it with wine of Pomegranates. 124 Phthisic: Boil the flowers in goats milk, and let it stand all night in the open air, and drink it. 125 Brain weak and cold: seeth it in wine and drink it, and keep thy head covered. 126 Toothache: chew the root, or hold the juice in the mouth. 127 Fever quarten: stamp the flowers and leaves, & take them before thy fits. 128 Flowers to cause, seeth it in white wine, and drink it, and apply pure honey and woman's milk to the matrix as hot as may be suffered. 129 For all griefs, seeth the flowers in water in a bag to the one half, and drink it. 130 Milk to cause, seethe it in broths and drinks, and use it. 131 Stitch: seeth it with sage & Rue, ana one handful in white wine, and drink it. Ache 1. 37 Adders 38 Appetite to 'cause 30. 34. 66. 68 Bellyach 3 Belly bound 4 Belly hard 62 Bitings venomous. 5 Blood to cleanse 67. 68 72. 78 Blood to comfort 6 Brain to cleanse 7. 53 Brain cold 125 Brain to comfort 8. 83. 85. 90 Breast to cleanse 19 46. 72. 78 Breath short 72. 78 Breath to be sweet 50. 87. 90 Cardiake 43 Cold 25 Cold griefs 21 Colic 19 118 Cough 19 33. 42. 75 Digestion to help 72. 78 Dreams evil 27. 103 Dropsy 69 Ears dull 54 Emerods' to heal 51. 77 Eyes griefs 12. 29. 60. 94 Evils general 98. 108 Face breaking out 102 Face to be fair. 22. 50. 119 Falling sickness 26. 48. 70 Feebleness 105 Fever 47. 115 Fever quarten. 20. 52. 127 Fistula 82 Flux 36. 106 Foolishness 122 Fundament swollen 119 Gnawing 78 Gout 107 Griefs general 129 Heart to comfort 29. 45. 79. 95. 98 Heart swollen 43 Headache 93. 96 Head cold 121 Head stopped 25 Hair to grow 56 Hoarseness 19 jaundice 57 74. 78. 83. Iliacke 19 Itch 11. 48 canker 31. 49. 104 Kings evil 49. 72 Lameness 116 Liver stopped 89 Lust to 'cause 28 Madness 122 Melancholy 98 Megrim 55 Memory to comfort 85 Menstrues 74 Milk to 'cause 130 Milt stopped 89 Mirth to 'cause 23. 64. 99 Moths to kill 41 Nature to comfort 64. 67 Nose stinking 95 Palsy 85 Pestilence 76 Poison 32. 78. 113 Phthisic 101. 124 Rheum 65 Sinews 85 Serpents to withstand 112 Skin to cleanse 46 Smell lost 114 Sores 37. 58 Sores cold 15 Sores rotten 82 Speech lost 80 Spitting hard 72 Stinging 32 Stitch 131 Stomach to cleanse 18. 87 Stomach to comfort 87. 88 90 Stomach griefs 35. 39 86 Sweat to 'cause 69 Sweated stinking 79 Sweat to withstand 97 Swelling to withstand 100 Swooning 18 Teethach 34. 126 Teeth lose 92 Teeth worms 24 Thirst 39 123 Trembling 81 Veins to comfort 29 Venom 32 Ulcers hard 61 Urine to provoke 62. 74 vulva great 71 Weakness to help 68 Whites to stop 78 Worms 44 Yexing 20 Youth to preserve 112 ¶ Saffron. SAffron is good in medicines against the diseases of the breast, lungs, liver and bladder. 2 And in meats it is good for the stomach, and causeth good digestion. 3 Sodden in wine and drunk, it preserveth from drunkenness, and provoketh lust. 4 And taken in sweet wine, it causeth one to be long wound, and easy. 5 Mix it with woman's milk, and apply it to the eyes to preserve them from the falling down of humours, and from the small pocks and mesels, and to stop the flux of blood of the same, or bloodshooting. 6 It is good also to be laid upon inflammations, choleric impostumes, and wild fire: and is good to be mixed with all medicines for the ears, to mollify all hardness, and to ripen all raw swellings. 7 The root drunk in wine, provoketh urine that is stopped, and cometh forth by drops, and expelleth the gravel and stone. 8 If a woman anoint the corners of her eyes with ointment of Saffron, and that her spittle do afterwards savour thereof, she is not barren. 9 For the pocks in the eyes, & to preserve the sight: steep Saffron in a sawser full of fair water, and when it is yellow, drop thereof into the eyes. 10 Mix three drams of Saffron, and one dram of Opium with the yolks of four new laid eggs, and apply it to griefs of the Gout to assuage it. 11 Mix fine powder of English Saffron with fine black soap, and apply it to the navel with a piece of leather to expel the urine within one hour. 12 Drink fine powder of half a pennyworth of Saffron, with a spoonful of Malmsey often to help the colic. 13 Smell to Saffron in the frenzy to provoke sleep: and use it also in meats to provoke sleep. 14 Apply Opium, Saffron and Mandrag. to thy head to provoke sleep. 15 For turning and dasling in the head: take Opium and Saffron, of each a dram, of roses 4 drams, apply the same as a plaster with vinegar. 16 Saffron strengtheneth the heart and entrails being taken with measure, & so it is profitable for the stomach, and helpeth digestion. 17 It purgeth the blood, withstandeth poison, & is good against the plague. 18 Some roast it in an eggshell with treacle, mustard, & other spices, and make it into an Electuary to be taken to drive out the plague and inward poison. 19 Use Saffron in meats and drinks to provoke urine, help the jaundice, and drive down the terms, but especially the root thereof with Malmsey or Muscadel. 20 Saffron is good for the ulceration of the stomach, breast and kidneys, the inflammation of the liver, lungs and bladder. 21 Saffron is good for the palsy members, and all hardness of the sinews: and therefore is Oxycroceum made thereof for all the aforesaid. 22 Saffron, with woman's milk anointed, stoppeth the running of the eyes. Put powder of Saffron with oil of bitter Almonds into deaf ears to help the hearing. 23 Take powder of Saffron ten grains, walnuts 20. grains figs 2. drams, sage six leaves, stamp them together, with one dram of pimpernel water, & 3. grains of Mythridatum, & keep it in a close glass, and take thereof in the morning 12. grains, as a defensive against the plague. 24 Many goodly medicines be made of Saffron, as Diacucurma against the jaundice, and it is put into many antidotes and plasters, as Oxycroceum, etc. and with ointments against the palsy and gout. 25 Saffron, Opium, milk and Rose water tempered together, doth make a goodly medicine against the pain of the feet. 26 Stamp Saffron with beet leaves, and apply it to the forehead to provoke sleep. 27 Saffron is good against all manner of swellings in the breast, wind in the belly and guts, and stopping of the mouth of the Matrix, either in ointment or drink. 28 It is a good cordial to be used in meats of melancholy persons, to make them merry and glad: it causeth a good colour in them that use it. 29 The root drunk in sack, provoketh urine well. 30 Saffron, with the white of an egg driveth away all inflammations, but especially of the eyes. 31 It helpeth the suffocation of the mother, it is excellent good for the exulceration and going off of the skin of the stomach, lungs, liver, breast, kidneys and bladder: it is also good for the Cough and the Pleurisy. 32 It taketh away itch. 33 It is good for weak brains that cannot well bear drink. 34 It provoketh sleep. 35 It healeth phlegmatic diseases, and the drowsiness of the lethargy. 36 It is not good to take of it too much at once, but used moderately, it profiteth much. 37 Warm honey, and cows milk, of each half a pint, with six grains of wheat flower, and two penny weight of beaten Saffron, and apply it to the stitch of the side to have present help. 38 For a great pain and stitch in the side: seeth half a pound of milk, with two ounces of honey, one ounce of Wheat flower, and one penny weight of Saffron, and apply it. (See Whinne.) 39 Colic: Make powder of Saffron, the root of Five leaf, and long pepper, and drink them with ale hot. 40 Dropsy: stamp goose dung and Saffron, and strain it and drink it first and last. 41 Mix Saffron with horse grease, and anoint the hot Gout therewith. 42 Drink whole Saffron sodden in Wine, to preserve from death, and to drive away sickness at the beginning. 43 Swell: seeth Cummin, Oatmeal, and Saffron in sweet milk, and apply it to all swellings. 44 Sweat to cause, Drink powder of dried salt with Saffron, a good quantity with white wine. 45 Headache of melancholy, use Saffron in thy meats. 46 Headache of phlegm, to dry the moisture of the brain, and to warm the stomach, take aqua vitae six drams, bugloss water four drams, beaten Saffron and cinnamon, of each one penny weight, steep them together four and twenty hours, and drink it. Lameness, use beaten Saffron in thy meats. 47 Drink a penny weight of beaten Saffron with strong drink fasting, to comfort the brain and stomach, and to stop vomiting. 48 Heart feeble, and emptiness, use hot Saffron in thy drink, especially with aqua vitae, and every day about two a clock after noon, put to the yolk of a rear roasted egg, a little Saffron and salt, and sup it of to comfort the heart and the whole body. 49 To strengthen the heart, and all the whole body & members, quench fine gold nine times in the best aqua vitae, put thereto Saffron one dram, and cinnamon two drams in powder, and let it stand four days in a close vessel, and shake it often: then drink half an eggshell full every day with as much good wine morn and even. 50 To refresh the body, stew an old hen with a goblet of wine, and a dram of beaten Saffron in a pottle pot in a vessel of seething water, and use it. 51 jaundice, drink powder of Columbine seeds, and Saffron, of each a penny weight with wine, water and vinegar, of each one eggshell full, and drink it first and last. 52 Side stitch, drink Saffron. 53 Eyes hurt, grind Saffron with woman's milk, and apply it. 54 Host of the lungs, drink Saffron & sugar with the juice of coleworts, (See in Coleworts.) Teethach (See Garlic.) 55 Liver chafed, stamp marigolds with Saffron, and drink it with wine morn & even. 56 Flowers to cause, (See in Germander.) 57 Soreness in the flesh, (See Eggs.) 58 Bloody flux, (See Onion.) 59 Belly bound, mix as much May butter as a walnut with Saffron, and anoint the belly therewith, and apply it to the navel. 60 Flowers to stop, drink powder of coliander, , & Saffron with read wine in the morning. 61 Gout, (See in Flax.) jaundice, (See in Rosemary, Milt griefs, (See in Heart's tongue 62 Saffron in all meats provoketh sleep. 63 jaundice, dissolve Saffron in water, and drink it to heal it by and by, or apply Saffron to the navel. 64 Cough, (See in Apple.) 65 Stomach weak, take an halfpeniworth of Saffron in powder with Malmsey morn and even, or with salad oil, treacle, and malmsey, of each a halfpenny worth. 66 Colic, drink a halfpenny worth with a spoonful of malmsey in powder, (See Bayes, garlic. 67 phthisic, dissolve Saffron one scruple, & musk half a grain in good wine, and drink it. 68 Apost. to ripen, mix the yellow part of cock's dung with the yolk of an egg, and a little Saffron, and apply it. 69 Pleurisy, and phthisic, take gum Armoniac, a dram and a half, Saffron half a dram, make it into fifteen pills, with oxymel squillitike, and take every morning one. Eyes bruises, (See Rose.) 70 Eyes read, and tears, steep Saffron in Rose water 24. hours, than heat it, and cleanse it, and use it. 71 Belly swollen, (See in Aloes.) 72 Flowers to cause, (See Grains.) 73 Eyes bolning (See Cummin. 74 jaundice, drink wormwood, celondine, Saffron & ivory in ale. Purgation, (See Laureall. 75 Saffron causeth a good colour, resolveth apostumes, & is good to be anointed on the shingles, but it causeth headache, and hurteth the head: it causeth an easy breath, and comforteth the heart and stomach, and is good for the milt, and provoketh lust and urine: a certain woman drunk two drams in her travel, and had speedy deliverance. 76 Gout, mix Saffron with yolks of eggs, rose-water, and oil, and anoint therewith cold with a feather. 77 Poison to expel, drink two drams of it. 78 Eyes dim and dropping, drop it into the eyes with rose-water & woman's milk. 79 Mix it with rose-water, woman's milk, and Opium to take away the pain of the feet. 80 Stamp it with beet leaves and apply it to the forehead, to 'cause sleep. 81 Saffron is good against all swelling in the breast, wind in the belly, and guts, and stopping of the mouth of the matrix in ointment or in drink. It is a good cordial, and helpeth them that are melancholy, and rejoiceth the heart. 82 Side stitch, drink Saffron. 83 jaundice black, green, or yellow, make fine powder of ivory four drams, turpentine six drams, Saffron four penny weight, and drink thereof with stolen ale morn and even: but for the black jaundice, purge melancholy first. 84 Colic, stamp Saffron and thyme, and strain it and drink it with good ale to have present help. 85 Rising under the stomach, seeth powder of long pepper, grains, Saffron, ginger, aniseeds, lycoras, and sugar in good ale, till it be thick, and drink it, and be whole. Ache (See Gout Apostumes 6. 68 75. Bellyach 27 See Colic. bound 59 swollen 71. 40 Black jaundice 83 Bladder griefs 1. 20 Blood to cleanse 17 Bloody flux 58 Brain weak 47 Breast griefs 1. 31 Breath short 4 Colic 12. 39 66. 84. 85 Conception 78 Consumption 50. 65. 67 Cough 31. 64 Colour bad 28. 75 Deliverance 75 Digestion 2 Drunkenness 3. 33 Dropsy 40 Drowsiness 35 Ears griefs 6. 22 Eyes griefs 5. 9 22. 30. 53. 69. 70. 78 Gout 10. 41. 61. 76. 79 Gravel 7 Green sickness 83 Hardness 6. 21 Heart griefs 28. 48. 49 Headache 45. 46 giddy 15 Feet pain 25. 79 Fevers 57 Flowers stopped 19 56. 72 to stop 60 Frenzy 13 jaundice 19 51. 61. 63. 74. 83 Inflammations 6. 30 Itch 32 Lame 46 Lethargy 35 Liver griefs 20 chafed 55 Lungs griefs 1. 20. 31. 54 Lust to 'cause 3. 75 Matrix stopped 27. 81 Masels 6. 9 Melancholy 28 Milt griefs 61 Mirth to 'cause 28 Palsy 21 Plague 17. 18. 23 Pleurisy 31. 69 Pocks 6. 9 Poison 17. 18. 77 Phthisic 67. 69 Sinews griefs 21 Shingles 75 Sickness general 42. 48. 49. 50. 65 Side stitch 37. 38. 52. 82 Sleep to 'cause 13. 14. 26. 34. 62. 80 Soreness 57 Stomach griefs 12. 20. 31. 47. 65 rising 85 Stone 7 Swell 6. 43. 81 Sweat to 'cause 44 Teethach 54 Vomiting 47 urine stopped 7. 11. 19 29. 75 Wild fire 6 Windiness 27. 81 ¶ Sagapenum or Serapinum. SAgapenum, or Serapinum: drink one dram to purge tough and slimy humours, and all gross phlegm and choler. 2 It is also good against all old and cold diseases that are hard to cure, it purgeth the brain, and is good against all griefs of the head, the Apoplexia and falling sickness, cramps, palsies, shrink of the sinews, taken in the same sort, and for shortness of breath, the cold, and cold cough, pain in the side and breast, and cleanseth the breast of all cold humours: it cureth the hardness, stops and windiness of the milt, being also applied outwardly in ointment or plaster: and is good against the shaking off old and cold fevers drink it with honeyed water to provoke terms, and to expel the dead birth. 3 Drink it with wine against all venomous bitings and stingings. 4 Smell to it against the strangling of the mother. 5 Soak it in vinegar to scatter and dissolve all hard, old and cold swellings, tumors, botches, hard lumps, etc. about the joints. 6 Mix it with all ointments and plasters that are made to mollify and soften. 7 It cleareth the sight, and at the beginning it taketh away the haw or web, and all spots or blots in the eyes, being dropped in with the juice of rue, and for their bloodshooting & dimness, coming by gross humours. 8 It is a precious gum, the best shineth through dark in colour yellow without and white within. Apoplexia 2 Apostumes 5 Byting venomous 3 Brain griefs 2 Breast griefs 2 Breath short 2 Botch 5 Cold 2 Cough 2 Cramp 2 Dead child 2 Eyes griefs 7 Falling evil 2 Fevers cold 2 Flowers stopped 2 Hardness 5. 6 joints griefs 2 Milt griefs 2 Mother suffocat. 4 Obstruct. 2 Purgation 1 Sinews griefs 2 Side griefs 2 Swell 5 Windiness 2 ¶ Sage. SAge sodden in wine and drunk, stayeth excessive Fluxes, and the terms staying, it draweth them down, but too much running, it stayeth them. 2 seeth it with wormwood, and drink it to stop the bloody flux. 3 urine and terms stopped, seethe the leaves and stalks together & drink it. 4 Palsy: seethe it in wine & drink it, or apply it. 5 Seethe it in water, and drink it for the gout & falling sickness, and especially for the dropping of the urine, being both drunk & applied to the belly, & foment with the decoction of it, for the strangury, bloody flux, and to cleanse the matrix. 7 Boil it in wine with mullin, and sit over it hot in a close stool, to sand up the fundament that is fallen: 8 Seethe the leaves & stalks in wine, and wash the itch of the privities therewith, & sit over the hot broth for the itch of the fundament. 9 Mix the juice with honey, and wash filthy wounds therewith to cleanse them. 10 distill it when it beareth flowers & drink 2. or 3. ounces of the water morn & even to amend the griefs of the liver, to avoid the cough, & to sand down the dead youngling. 11 Bath therewith the members that be shrunk & astonished. 12 Drink it with wine to procure appetite, & to strengthen the stomach & women's natural places. 13 Drink it by itself for the pain in the sides, the shaking of the hands & the palsy: and also bathe them in the same water. 14 Drink 3. or 4. ounces of it morn & even to break any inward impost. to comfort the brain, to take away the distilings of the head, to comfort a hot liver, & put away the frenzy. 15 Mix the same water with peacocks dung to stay the fresh bleeding of wounds, being bound about with moss & cotton. 16 Eat three leaves of Sage in the morning to be free that day from all evil air. 17 Seethe Sage in wine & drink it for the health of the whole body, to expel poison, the cough, the pleurisy, to warm the liver & matrix, and to drive out the stone & menstrews. 18 Use the decoction of it to cleanse the entrails & to help the bloody flux. 19 Use powder of it as a sauce with meats, it is better than all strange spices & aromatikes. 20 Seethe Sage in water, & wash thy head therewith to make thy hair black, & to heal the skurf, ulcers, & venomous bitings. 21 Sat in the decoction of it to help the strangury, & to provoke urine, & take away the pain in the bloody flux & other diseases: and for the scab & swelling of the privities. 22 Wash thy hands in a laver, wherein is put some Sage, & let it dry in without wiping against their shaking. 23 Seethe Sage in wine & drink it to provoke urine, & break the stone, to comfort the heart, and assuage headache. 24 Let women with child eat it to close up the matrix, to 'cause their fruit to live, & to strengthen the same. 25 Let women drink the juice to become fruitful in procreation of children. 26 Drink the juice with honey against spitting of blood, & vomiting of blood, for it stoppeth the flux & blood incontinent, being taken 2. glasseful at once. 27 Seethe it in water, and drink it to cure the cough, the stopping of the liver, & pain in the side. 28 Boil it with wormwood to stop the bloody flux. 29 Apply Sage to bitings & wounds to heal them. 30 Seethe Sage in wine, & bathe or wash thee for the manginess and scurf, and itch of the privy parts. 31 Bake a loaf full of Sage, and apply it to the ears to hear well. 32 seeth Sage and drink it to provoke the flowers, & apply it also to the Matrix. 33 Sage is good for the palsy, it comforteth the sinews & brain. 34 Use to eat 7. or 8. leaves in the spring and summer with bread and butter, but in winter use as many leek blades unset, and drink a good draft of ale after it to preserve health. 35 Use Sage in sauces of veal, pigs and pork. 36 Bruise Sage and put it into a little bag, and put it into a quart of wine all night, and then strain it and use it as Sage wine to consume phlegm, and to comfort the brain and sinews. 37 Make Sage ale in like manner, or wash Sage leaves, & put them into the bottom of a vessel at the cleansing, and drink thereof after it is three or four days old: for every gallon two handful of Sage is sufficient, and it is as good as Sage wine. 38 Sage and Rue steeped in drink, are good against the infection of the plague. 39 The perfume of Sage stoppeth the flowers. If a woman drink a little Sage with a little salt and sugar four days before and after the use with her husband, and the man doing the like before procreation, without doubt conception followeth. 40 Mix half an ounce of Sage with clarified honey, and eat it fasting to stop vomiting or spitting of blood coming from the breast, lungs or stomach. 41 Sage provoketh urine, cleanseth phlegm, expelleth wind, drieth up the Dropsy, helpeth the Palsy, strengtheneth the sinews, and purgeth the blood. 42 seeth Sage with running water, roch alum and woodbine leaves, to kill the canker in the mouth, to quench the great heat, and burning, stink, filth, and matter that cometh often through corruption of nature or Meretrix manner, in the secret parts of men and women, which is helped by putting thereto a little Aristolochia rotunda in powder. 43 The broth wherein the leaves and branches are sodden, driveth forth urine, the terms and birth. 44 Drink two cyaths of the juice with an ounce of honey fasting, to stop the spitting of blood, and for the phthisic & exulceration of the lungs, which is a consumption. 45 Take spikenard two. drams, of the seed of sage parched, beaten, and searsed, fourteen drams, of pepper twelve drams, mix altogether with the juice of sage, and make pills thereof, and take three fasting, and as much at night, at each time a dram, and drink water after it for the griefs aforesaid. 46 Women that have been long without children by drinking ten ounces of the juice with a grain of salt, a quarter of an hour before accompanying with their husbands, have conceived at that time: proved. 47 Dropsy: distill Sage, century, and water cresses, of each like much, and drink the water first and last. (See Rye, Ruc. 48 Flowers stopped: drink Sage with Malmsey or honeyed wine. 49 Frenzy: drink the juice of Sage, Sothernwood, and marigolds five days. 50 Gout: stamp Sage leaves with aniseeds, and seethe them in white wine and apply it. 51 Mad: seeth Sage, marigolds, sothernwood, and bran, and drink the broth: if a man be mad suddenly, let him drink Sage, marigolds, and sothernwood with wine five days. 52 Palsy, use the decoction of Sage and Castorie. 53 Speech lost: drink Sage with water, or dry Sage in an oven, and use the powder with broths, and drinks. 54 preservative: seeth Sage in wine and drink it. 55 Speech lost: stamp Sage with wine and drink it. Voice to be clear: drink Sage with ale fasting. 56 Hickit: take Sage with vinegar. 57 For any gathering of impostumes or humours: drink treacle with the decoction of Sage or yssope. 58 Palsy: use the water. 59 Lame members: hold them over the decoction of Sage. 60 Sage in baths causeth sweated, especially with pennyroyal, mugwort and fennel well sodden: and then the water also applied with cloth, and so it healeth cold members. (See in Wormwood. 61 Tongue hot and bitter in the jaundice: lay Sage in cold water three hours, and struck thy tongue therewith. Mad, (See Marigold. 63 Ears dull: fill a loaf full of Sage, and bake it, and cut it through the midst, and apply it hot three or four times. 64 Teeth stink, bake Sage with as much salt in paste to coals, and rub them with the powder of it. 65 Mouth canker, (See Lavender-cotton.) 66 Speech to cause, (See Primrose.) 67 Teeth-stinke, rub them with a Sage leaf. Speech lost, (See Pimpernell.) 68 Appetite, (See Mints, Parsley.) Hands-ache, (See Fenell.) Heart griefs, (See Mints.) 69 Side pain & belly dropsy, & palsy, drink Sage with wine a little warmed. 70 Fever, (see Nettles, Feverfue.) 71 Canker, (see Briony.) Dropsy, (see Ysope.) 72 Gout, (see Planten.) 73 Hair falling, (see Nettle.) 74 Host, (see Cummin.) 75 Hickit, eat or drink Sage with vinegar. 76 jaundice, seethe a hen that hath yellow feet in white wine with Sage, Cummin, and saffron, and eat the flesh & drink the broth. 77 Dropsy, bake Sage great store with hyssop chopped small in wheat paste, and break it into two. or three gallons of ale that is good, or else good wine, and after it hath stood 24. hours, drink thereof daily. Headache, (see Fever-fue, Fenell.) Sores, see Rue.) 78 Biting of a mad dog, stamp Sage with one pennyworth of Treacle, and drink it with milk or ale, and use it, & be let blood. 79 Liver to restore, drink Aloes epatica with Sage & sugar. 80 Ringwormes & tetters, seeth Sage and alum in smiths water, & wash therewith. 81 Stitch, (See Rue.) 82 Teethache, seethe Sage & Piretrum in vinegar, & hold it in thy mouth hot as may be suffered. 83 Fever (see Rosemary.) 84 Itch, seeth it with agrimony in rain water, and wash therewith. 85 Head-giddy, use Sage in broth. Teethache, apply the leaves. 86 Yard bushes, seeth it in wine, and wash therewith. 87 Flowers and seconds stopped, seeth it and drink it, or apply it. 88 Gout, boil it with Rue, & stamp it & apply it. Fever quarten, (see Rue.) 89 Palsy, seethe the leaves in wine, and drink it, and apply leaves daily. 90 For the strangury, the flux, and to cleanse the matrix, use Sage in sauses, & sit over the decoction thereof sodden in water. 91 Poison & venom, seethe Sage in wine or ale, & drink it 3. days. 92 Stomach griefs, & to cleanse the body, drink the juice of Sage with water & honey, or use to eat it. 93 Itch, wash with the juice of Sage. 94 Ache of the stomach, sides & belly, drink Sage in wine with a little wormwood, it is good also for the palsy & dropsy. 95 Ache of the head & stomach, drink the juice of Sage with ale. 96 hoarseness, stamp the crops of Mints, Sage, & Fiveleafe with Ginger & Liquorice, & seethe them in stolen ale, & strain it & drink it. 97 Speech lost, stamp Sage & Primrose, & anoint under the tongue. 98 Palsy, stamp Sage, Rue, Pellitory, Mustardseed, Camomile and salt, & boil them in oil to the one half, & anoint therewith: it will restore speech. 99 Head & hands quaking, take the leaves and roots of Sage & Primrose, of each like much, Mustardseed and Bay leaves, of each like much, stamp them & mix them with May butter, and fry it & strain it, & anoint the neck, sinews, joints, veins, and hands therewith. Palsy taking one side, drink good store of Sage water, and rub thy temples & veins therewith, and look that thou have great store of mustard & Sage leaves stamped together, Fenell seed burned, & a little vinegar, and make them lukewarm, and apply them to thy side, head, temples, armpits, and wash thrice a night, and on the morrow eat Sage and sharp mustard together, till thy eyes water: if any thing help this will: but if the palsy be in one side of the head only, apply it thereto all night, or to any other member, there is no better medicine. 100 Dropsies of all sorts, take ix. read Mints, ix crops of blind Nettles, and ix. crops of Sage, stamp them and drink them with stolen Ale morn and even, ix. days. 101 Palsy, seeth Sage, Rue, and Castory in wine, and drink it. 102 Apost. stamp Sage, and apply it. 103 Yard chafed, wash it with wine that Sage was sodden it. 104 Fevers, (See in Rosemary.) A plaster for the fever, stamp two. shivers of sour bread toasted with a pint of vinegar, Sage and Aniseedes of each a handful, heat it and apply it to thy stomach hot as may be suffered. 105 Yard sores, wash with wine of the decoction of Sage. 106 Frenzy, stamp Sage, Marigolds, & Sothernwood, & drink it with ale or wine morn and even vi. days. 107 For all evil about the heart & stomach, seeth Sage & Mints of each like much in white wine, & drink the wine and apply the herbs, & do so vi. days morn & even. It is excellent, and causeth great appetite. 108 Digestion to cause, seeth Sage, Rue, Pepper, & Cummin with honey, & eat every day one spoonful fasting. 109 Stitch, seethe two. or three handful of read Mints, & one handful of Sage crops in running water to the one half, & apply it hot in a bag as often as need is. 110 Fever, seethe Sage & Bay leaves of each half a handful in a quart of clarified o●●e to the one half, than strain it & put half a spoonful of pepper to it with sugar, and drink it before the fit: proved, (see Rue.) 111 Breath stinking, rub Sage between thy hands, & put it into thy nose, and let it rest there a good while a fortnight's space, especially in the mornings. Green sickness, (see Rue.) 112 Gums impost. chop read Sage and Rosemary small, & heat them with a little honey, & apply them to the sore tooth to ease the pain. 113 Speech to restore, put the juice of Sage & Primrose into his mouth. 114 Falling evil, drink the juice of Sage & herb john gathered on midsummer morning before sunrising, & anoint the temples therewith, and fast bread & water on midsummer even. 115 Felon, stamp Sage with Castille soap, & apply it as a plaster, & when it is broken, stamp great reasons, the stones taken out, & apply them. 116 Teethach, stamp the leaves of Sage & Rosemary with a little honey & apply it warm: proved. 117 colic, boil aqua composita & vinegar, ana vi. spoonful with Sage & Rosemary, ana one handful between two. dishes, then dip a great dry tossed therein, & lay the herbs on it, & a cloth on it, & so apply them a little under the grief as warm as may be suffered, & lie down i hour: proved. 118 Flowers & seconds to cause, seethe Sage & drink it & apply it to the matrix. 119 Biles, felons, & uncomes, stamp Sage with May butter, boreas grease, & wheat flower, & fry it, & apply it to ripen, break, & draw it, (see Rue.) 120 Hands shaking, (see Bay.) 121 S. Ant. fire, stamp burr roots with Sage leaves & apply it. 122 colic, (see Mugwort.) Lethargy, (see Agnus Castus.) 123 Speech lost in sickness, hold the root of Sage & Primrose in thy mouth. 124 Sinews to comfort, use Sage inward & outward. 125 Palsy, use Sage, Primrose, Castory, Lavender & Tansy with a good piece of green coprose & a little honey, & streineit & use it, (see Primrose, Bursa Pastoris. 126 Fever in the stomach, seethe a good handful of Sage with as much oatmeal in water that runneth Eastward, & i spoonful of honey, & scum it & make it into pottage with a half pennyworth of whole saffron, & when it is thick, eat a good mess without bread, & drink not of two. hours after, & do so morn and even. 127 Pissing bed, (see Garlic.) 128 Teeth yellow, chop one handful of Sage with as much salt, & put them into past & bake them dry, & rub thereof within a linen clout. 129 Sweeting sickness, clarify a quart of ale, & put thereto Sage & Sorrel of each vi. crops, stamped and strained, & put to it a qꝪ of a li. of sugar, & seethe two. or three walmes & no more, & drink thereof as hot as may be suffered, & now & then when thou feelest thyself faint, take as much Treacle as a bean: proved. 130 Ache, wash the place with the decoction of Sage & Auens often sodden, of each like much in water. 131 Burn, stamp Sage royal with salt bacon, & apply it, (see Betony, Rosemary.) 132 Cough, see Cummin.) Ache 130 Air ill 16 Appetite 12. 68 107 Apostume 102 Astonished 11 Belly-ache 94 Benumbed 11 Biting venom. 20. 29. 78 Biles 119 Blood to cleanse 41 Bloody-flu. 2. 6. 18. 21. 26. 28 Blood to stop 15 Brain weak 33. 36 Breath stink 42. 111 Burn 131 Chollike 117. 122 Concep. 24. 25. 39 46 Consumption 44 Cough 10. 17. 27. 132 Dead child 10. 43 Deliverance 43 Digestion 108 Dropsy 41. 47. 69. 71. 77. 94. 100 Ears deaf 31. 63 Falling evil 5. 114 Felon 115. 119 Fever 70. 83. 88 104. 110. 126 Flowers stopped 1. 3. 17. 32. 43. 48. 87. 118. to stop 1. 39 Fluxes 1. 26. 90 Frenzy 14. 49. 51. 62. 106 Fundament fallen 7 itch 8 Giddiness 85 Gums impost. 112 Gout 5. 50. 72. 88 Green sickness 111 Hands shakebag. 13. 22. 99 120. ache 68 Heart griefs 23. 68 107 Headache 14. 23. 77. 95. giddy 85 scurf 20 ulcers 20 shaking 99 Hair falling 73. 20 to be black 20 Health to keep 17. 34. 54 Hickit 56. 75 Hoarseness 95 (see voice.) jaundice 61. 76 Impostume 14. 57 Itch 8. 30. 84. 93 canker 71 Lame 11. 59 Lethargy 122 Liver gri. 10 cold 17 hot 14 stopped 27 wasted 79 Lungs griefs 44. 74 Mad 51. 62 Mad dog 78 Matrix to cleanse 6. 90 cold 17 to comfort 12 Maundge 30 Mouth canker 42. 65 Palsy 4. 13. 33. 41. 52. 53. 58 59 69. 89. 98. 99 101. 120. 125 Pissing bed 127 Plague 38 Pleurisy 17 Poison 17. 91 Powder 19 Privities itch 8. 30 Ptisike 44 Purgation 92 ringworm 80 Rheum 14 Sage ale 37 wine 36 Sauce 35 Seconds 87. 118 Sinews griefs 33. 36. 41. 124 S. Ant. fire 121 Sickness gen. 17. 45. 107 Side griefs 13. 27. 69. 81. 94 Scabs 21. 80 Sores 77 Speech lost 53. 55. 66 67. 97. 113. 123 Spitting blood 26. 40. 44 Stomach griefs 12. 92. 107. 94. 95 Stone 17. 23 Stitch 81. 109 Strangury 6. 21. 90 Swell 21 Sweeting sickness 129 Sweat to 'cause 60 Teethache 82. 85. 112. 116 stink 64. 67. yellow 128 Tetters 80 Tongue bitter 61 Venom 20. 91 Voice ill 55 Vomiting blood 26. 40 Uncome 119 Urine stopped 3. 21. 23. 41. 43 dropping 5 Windiness 41 Women barren 25 with child 24 Wounds 9 15. 29 Yard chafed 103 bushes 86 sores 105 ¶ S. james wort. SAint james wort, it hath a special virtue to heal wounds, wherefore it is good for all old wounds, fistulas, and naughty ulcers. 2 The juice gargled, helpeth all inflammations or swellings and impostumes of the throat. 3 It healeth felons, fistulas, moist sores, venomous scabs, tetters, cankers, ringwormes, etc. It is called Fellon-weede. Felon 3 Fistula 1 Impostume 2 Inflammation 1 canker 3 Mouth griefs 2 Ring worm 3 Skabs 3 Sores 3 Swell 2 Tetters 3 Throat griefs 2 Venom 3 Ulcers 2 Wounds 1 S john's wort. SAint john's wort with the flowers & seeds boiled & drunk, provoketh urine, and helpeth the stone in the bladder, expelleth the terms, and stoppeth the flux. 2 Boil it in wine and drink it for the fever tertian & quarten. 3 Drink the seeds 40. days to cure the sciatica. 4 Stamp the leaves, and apply them to burnings. 5 Cast the powder of it into naughty wounds, ulcers festered, old and rotten sores to cure them. 6 Use the water, juice, syrup or powder, for the sciatica. 7 It is good for cut sinews and casting of blood. Drink the seeds with wine to drive forth the stone, & it is good against poison. 8 The water is good against the falling sickness. 9 Of the herb is made a precious Balm. 10 Great S. john's wort, or square S. john's wort, or S. Peter's wort, drink two. drams of the seed with honeyed water a long space, it cureth the sciatica. 11 Burn, stamp it & apply it. 12 Wounds to heal up, seeth the leaves in wine, and wash them therewith. 13 Drink S. john's wort with wine to cure the pleurisy. 14 Shingles, bruise it and apply it till it look white or read. 15 Worms in sores, apply the juice. Madness and melancholy, burn it with green juniper & Frankincense in thy chamber. 16 Bewitched, or enchanted, or forespoken, apply it with Treacle to the reins of the back: it stoppeth fluxes. 17 Drink the herb or decoction of it in wine or water, against all flux of the belly white or read. For carbuncles, and poison, and venomous bitings, stamp it and apply it to draw out the poison. 18 A balsam, take oil olive one pint, S. john's wort, Betony, Centory, & Selfeheale, ana one handful, stamp them and mix them well together, and let them distil in a glass all summer long, then press it out. It is most noble to cure wounds of all sorts, by only anointing them morn and even. It expelleth humours, and is wonderful in fractures, bruises, and all such like. 19 Drink water of it two. or three ounces at morn, noon, and even, with powder of the root of Peony for the falling sickness. 20 Burn & fretting sores, stamp it & apply it. 21 Navel of children coming out, stamp it & apply it. 22 Restorative, drink the juice with Treacle 3. or 4. times. 23 It stoppeth all bloody fluxes, and kept in the house, it suffereth no wicked spirit to come there. 24 Bewitched from coeating with the wife, eat or drink S. john's wort with Treacle vi. days, and also apply the herb with Treacle to the back and genitors. Falling evil, (See in Sage.) Balsam. 18 Bewitched 16. 23. 34 Biting venom. 17 Bloody-fluxe 23 Bones broken 18 Burn 11. 20 Carbuncles 17 Conception 24 Demoniake 23 Falling evil 19 Fester 5 Fever 2 Flowers stopped 1 Flux 1. 17. 23 Forespoken 16 Enchanted 16 Mad 15 Melancholy 15 Navel out 21 Pleurisy 13 Poison 7. 17 Sciatica 3. 6. 10 Sinews cut 7 Shingles 14 Sores 5. 15. 20 Spitting blood 7 Spirits evil 25 Stone 1. 7 Ulcers 5 Vomiting blood 7 Urine stopped 1 Worms in sores 15 Wounds 5. 12. 18 ¶ Sallow, willow, or withie. SAllow, willow, or withy: the leaves & bark do stay the spiting of blood, vomiting of blood, and all other fluxes of blood and the terms, being boiled in wine and drunk, and so they appease the pain of the sinews, and restore again their strength, if they be nourished with the fomentation or natural heat thereof. 2 Stamp the green leaves very small, & apply them to the privy parts to take away the desires to venus. 3 The ashes of the bark mixed with vinegar, causeth warts to fall off. It taketh away the hard brawns or skin of the hands or feet that cometh by labour, and the corns in the toes or fingers, being laid to. 4 Stamp the leaves and strain them with wine, & drink it with a little pepper against the Iliake passion. 5 The long buds or cats tails that hung down being sodden in wine & drunk, are good against spitting of blood, and so is the bark. 6 The juice gathered when the tree flowreth, is good to clarify the eyes, and to take away the darkness of them. 7 The juice of the leaves & bark mixed with oil of Roses & warmed in the rind of a Pomegranate, is good to be put into pained ears. It cleanseth away scurf, & mendeth the defaults of the skin. 8 The seed broken is good against spitting of blood, & so is the bark. 9 The broth of the leaves & bark is good to bathe the gout withal, & to drive away skurf & scales. 10 The juice is to be gathered by cutting of the bark when it flowreth. 11 The leaves glue wounds together. 12 The flowers are much used in drying plasters. The dried juice thereof is most excellent for the same purpose. 14 The bark hath like power with the flowers and leaves, and is of a drier complexion. 15 The ashes of the bark serve for all things that need a mighty drier. 16 Eyes to comfort and clarify, put in the milk of the rinds of Sallow, when it beareth flowers. So doth the ashes of the tree made into a lee, and the eyes washed therewith. 17 The dust of Sallow coals cleareth them from all filthy blood. 18 Flux to stop, dissolve Culuer dung in water of the decoction of Sallow, and wash thy feet therewith. 19 Milt to loosen and mollify, seeth the rind in water and honey, and drink it. 20 Lust to void, eat the flowers of Willow, or Sallow, or Poplar. 21 Gout, mix the juice of the roots of Willow, or Sallow, with oil of Roses, and apply it. 22 Seethe the leaves of white Willow in water, and wash thy feet therewith up to the knees, and go to bed and thou shalt sleep. Mix fine powder of the velvet coloured moss that groweth at Willow roots, with the liquor of shoemakers shreds, and anoint any sores, cankers, or wounds of legs therewith to heal them. 23 To kill worms that eat the hairs off, anoint with the mussilage of Willow leaves. 24 To cause deliverance of a dead child, drink iiii. ounces of water of Willow leaves distilled in the midst of May. 25 The juice of the leaves helpeth the hurts of the eyes. 26 Seethe Willow twigs in water, and drink it to consume the spleen utterly. 27 The flowers of a Sallow or Willow, maketh cold all heat of carnal lust. 28 The juice of the roots of Willow or Sallow, with oil of Roses, is wonderful good for the gout. 29 Hair to grow, seeth Willow leaves in oil Olive, and anoint therewith. 30 Eyes griefs, put in the juice of Willow leaves. 31 Milt ache, stamp the leaves with a little Salt, and apply them to avoid the ache. 32 Liver chafed, chop Willow leaves & seethe them in water with some honey in an earthen pot, and when it is cold, drink it fasting and lie on thy left side. 33 Head bald, boil Willow leaves in oil and apply them. 34 Eyes bruised, apply the water that cometh out of Willows when they be cut or burned. 35 Wounds to close up and heal, stamp the leaves & apply them. 36 Lust to voided, stamp Sallow flowers that hung over a river, or the juice of the branches with vinegar, and drink it x. days, it stoppeth the terms, & causeth barrenness. Agnailes 3 Barrenness 26 Bloody flux 1 colic 4 Dead child 24 Deliverance 24 Ears griefs 7 Eyes griefs 6. 17. 25. 30. 34 Feet brawns hard 3 Flowers to stop 1. 3. 6 Fluxes 1. 18 Gout 9 21. 28 Hair falling 23. 29. 33 Iliak pas. 4 canker 22 Leg sores 22 Liver chafed 32 Lust to void 2. 20. 27. 36 Milt griefs 19 26. 31 sinews griefs 1 Skin deform. 7. 8 scurf 7. 9 Sleep to 'cause 22 Sores 22 Spitting blood 1. 5. 8 Vomiting blood 1 Warts 3 Wounds 11. 22. 38 ¶ Salsaperilla. SAlsaperilla hath the virtues of Guiacum, and the root China, (See Guiacum.) ¶ Sampere. SAmpere: The leaves, seeds, or roots, or altogether boiled in wine and drunk, provoketh urine & terms, and is good against the jaundice. 2 They preserve the leaves & branches in brine or pickle, as Capers, to be eaten as Capers, because they be good for the stomach, and do open the liver, milt and kidneys. 3 It is eaten raw, or sodden in salads, or otherwise. 4 It is best to seethe it in white wine, or in water, till it be tender, than put it into so much white vinegar or vergis, (but vinegar is best,) as will cover it, and then take it out as you need: if it be too sharp of the vinegar, then steep it a while in white wine or warm water, to take away the sharpness. 5 The use of it maketh a man to look fresh. 6 And the broth that it is sodden in, looseneth the belly, and draweth moisture from the kidneys. Belly bound 6 Flowers stopped 1 Kidneys moist 6 sauce 2. 34 Urine stopped 1 Youth to preserve 5 ¶ Sanders. white, red, and yellow: The yellow is good for the trembling of the heart. 2 The read hinder the flowing of humours to the parts of the body, and strengthen the gums and stomach. 3 All the kinds are good for the trembling of the heart, joined with an ague, especially being laid to the heart. 4 Read are good with cold herbs, to be laid to the gout, and for the headache in a hot cause, and they stop humours that flow into the eyes, especially with Rose water, and likewise to the liver. 5 Sanders are good against itching, if the place be bathed with the liquor that they are sodden in. 6 They are wholesome to stop fluxes, & wounds: being applied with Rose water and a piece of a Rose cake, they are good for the headache: mix the juice of Solarium and Purslen, with Sanders, and oil of water Lilies, and anoint the raging pain of the gout, to do it away. 7 Abhorring meat, mix powder of read and white with oil of Roses, and apply it to the stomach. 8 All kind of Sanders comfort the Liver. 9 Frenzy, apply the three kinds of , with oil of Roses and vinegar to the forehead. The same is good also for the gout. 10 Liver to cleanse, use the wood Sanders. 11 Liver chafed, use in thy broths, with convenient herbs. 12 Flowers to stop, (See Saffron.) 13 Headache, mix powder of read , with Sanguis Draconis, and the white of an Egg, and apply it to the forehead and temples: proved. 14 Wounds to heal apply Sanders and Coprose in powder, of each like much, over the wound. 15 Back ache and heat, (See Roses.) 16 Fevers general, (See Lycoras.) Abhorring meat 7 Back ache and heat 15 Eyes humours 4 Fevers general 16 Flowers to stop 12 Fluxes 6 Frenzy 9 Gums griefs 2 Gout 4. 6. 9 Heart trembling 13 Head ache 4. 13 Itch 5 Liver griefs 8. 10. 11 Loathing 7 Stomach raw 2 weak 2. 7 Wounds 6. 14 ¶ Sanicle. SAnicle: The juice drunk, maketh whole and sound all inward and outward wounds & hurts, so that he that hath Sanicle, needeth no Surgeon. 2 Boil it in wine or water, & drink it to stop the spitting of blood, the bloody flux, & to cure the ulcerations and hurts of the kidneys. 3 The same or the juice thereof drunk, cureth burstings, the herb also being applied, either raw or sodden. 4 The leaves & root boiled in water and Honey, & drunk, healeth the perished lungs, and all malignant ulcers, & rotten sores of the mouth, gums and throat, being often washed therewith: it hath in manner the same virtues that Tormentill hath. 5 Being sodden in wine or water & drunk, it helpeth ruptures and inward wounds, spitting of blood, griefs of the kidneys, torments of the back and belly, & the bloody flux, both in men & women, & is good for all inward griefs, as Tormentil is. 6 The herb glueth up green wounds, & is to be used amongst wound medicines, especially the root thereof, as also the roots of Comfery, (See Tormentile, Comfery.) 7 Apply Sanicle hot to any swelling, to assuage it speedily. 8 it stoppeth the immoderate running of the reins. 9 Drink it with Pimpernell & Bugle, to heal wounds: drink it with any liquor, to heal all ruptures. 10 Lady's mantel doth the like. 11 The juice of Sanicle bindeth all looseness of the belly. Wounds to heal without salve, stamp it with Yarow & bugloss, of each like much, & strain it with wine, & drink it daily, at morn, noon and even. 12 Sanicle healeth, Yarowes cureth, & Bugle keepeth the wound open, (See Planten, Lady's mantle. 13 Horse stung with an Adder or Snake, stamp three hands full, & strain it with new milk, & give it him with a horn. 14 cattle, horses, or kine, bruised or wounded, let them drink the juice, & apply the herb to the place. Back griefs 5. 8 Belly griefs 5 lose 11 Bitings venomous 13 Bloody flux 5 Bursten 3. 9 10 cattle hurt 13. 14 Horse stinged 13 wounded 14 Kidneys griefs 2. 5. 8 Lungs wasted 4 Mouth griefs 4 Reins running 8 Sickness general 5 Spitting blood 2. 5 Stinging 13 Swell general 7 Throat griefs 4 Wounds gen. 1. 5. 6. 9 11. 12. 14 ¶ Saracens. Saracens confound, or Solidago sarasenica: it healeth all wounds and ulcers both inward & outward, in drinks, oils, ointments, and plasters. 2 The same boiled in water & drunk, stayeth the wastings of the liver, and helpeth the stopping thereof, and of the gall and the bladder, and is good against the jaundice and fevers of long continuance, and such as are falling into the Dropsy. 3 The decoction thereof is good against the ulcers and stinking of the mouth, and ulcerations of the gums and throat. Bladder griefs 2 Dropsy 2 Fevers general 2 Gaul griefs 2 Gums griefs 3 jaundice 2 Liver stopped 2 wasting 2 Mouth griefs 3 Throat griefs 3 Ulcers 1 Wounds 1 ¶ Satyrion. SAtyrion provoketh lust, nourisheth and strengtheneth the body. 2 Seethe it in pottage, to restore nature that is lost. 3 Drink it with tart read wine, against the bowing back of the neck: the herb is of like nature as the root. 4 Satyrion royal, or Palma Christi bruised & drunk in wine, provoketh vomit, and purgeth the stomach and belly, by means whereof it cureth the old fever quarten, after convenient purgation, if as much as one's thumb of the root be taken with wine before the fit come, (See Orchis.) Consumption 12 Fever quarten 4 Neck bowing back 3 Purgation 4 Vomit to 'cause 4 ¶ savoury. Savoury eaten with Cream, purgeth a cold stomach: drink of the herb, to defend thee from swooning. 2 Take it in wine for the stopping and other griefs of the milt and liver, and lungs, and to cleanse the matrixe: but women with child must refrain the drinking and smelling of it. 3 Seethe the herb in wine, and apply it to the Palsy members, to avoid their pain. 4 Stamp it and apply it to the belly, to expel the dead youngling, and to provoke urine. 5 Drink it in wine against the Lethargy and drowsiness, and also bathe the head often with vinegar. 6 Eat powder thereof with an egg, or drink it with wine to stay vomiting. 7 Drink the herb against the stinging of venomous beasts. 8 The use of Saveric in meats, doth long preserve the body in health: it helpeth swellings and gripings in the body, it helpeth digestion, it expelleth the superfluities of the stomach, provoketh urine and terms, and sharpeneth the weak sight that is dulled with evil moisture, moveth carnal lust, quickeneth the wits or brain: it helpeth the griefs of the lungs or breasts, and is much of like nature to Thime and Penyroyall, and with wheat meal, it is good for the sciatica. 9 Seethe green savoury in white wine or water, and drink it, to make the liver soft, to cleanse dropsies, cold coughs, to cleanse women's diseases, and to drive out a dead child 10 It purgeth phlegm. 11 Stamp it and seethe it with vinegar, and apply it to the hinder parts of the head against the Lethargy and forgetfulness. 12 Winter savoury is good in meats as Thyme, and savoury hath the virtues of Thyme. 13 Woman's belly swollen as if she were with child, stamp savoury and strain it with ale, and drink it with powder of jet and white Amber, and fry savoury, Isope and leeks in fresh butter, and apply them to the back & belly. 14 Biting of a mad dog, stamp it with bread, and apply it. 15 Sciatica, apply the juice with wheat flower. 16 Loathing, take the powder of it fasting, with a rear egg. 17 Congealed blood in the body, drink it or Thime. 18 Breast and stomach ache, drink it with wine and butter after supper. Dead child to cast out, drink it with wine. 19 Deliverance to cause, drink it and mugwort with hot water. 20 Milk to cause, use it in broths & drinks. 21 Seethe it in wine or water, and drink it to purge the reins, bladder, bowels, and terms, and the lungs. 22 Seethe it in wine or vinegar, and drink it, to have a good stomach. 23 Gather it when it flowreth, and boil the powder of it with clarified Honey, and drink it, to loosen tough phlegm in the breast. 24 Belly fretting, drink powder of it with wine warm, and be whole. 25 To cleanse all the spiritual members, make gruel with water, wheat, and powder of savoury, and eat thereof. 26 Boil the juice with a good quantity of Honey on a gentle fire, and put thereto fine powder of Pepper, and stir it well, and keep it in a box, and use it as an electuary for many cold and windy griefs. Abhorring meat 16 Appetite 22 Belly ache 8. 24 great 13 Bitings venomous 7. 14 Bladder griefs 21 Breast griefs 18. 23 Bruised 17 Cold griefs 26 Cough 9 Dead child 4. 9 18 Deliverance 19 Digestion 8 Dropsy 9 Drowsiness 5 Eyes dull 8 Flowers stopped 9 21 Forgetfulness 11 Phlegm 23 Health to keep 8 Lethargy 11. 5 Liver griefs 2. 9 Loathing 16 Lungs griefs 2. 8. 21 Lust to 'cause 8 Mad dog 14 Matrixe griefs 2 Milk to 'cause 20 Milt griefs 2 Palsy 3 Purgation 10 Reins griefs 21 Sciatica 15 Sickness general 8. 26 Stinging 7 Stomach ache 18 to cleanse 8 cold 1. 22 Swell 8 Swooning 1 Vomiting 6 Urine stopped 4 Windiness 26 Wits dull 8 ¶ Savin. SAuin: The leaves boiled in wine and drunk, provoketh urine so strongly that the blood followeth, and driveth down the terms, seconds, and dead births, and so doth the perfume of it. 2 The leaves stamped with Hony, and applied, cureth ulcers, and stayeth spreading and eating sores, and taketh away all spots, freckles, and deformities from the face and body, and causeth warts to fall off about the yard and secret parts. 3 The wood mixed with oils and ointments, is good. 4 And it may be mixed in stead of cinnamon, taking the double weight. 5 The berries are gathered in the harvest. 6 Savin helpeth all painful sores, biles and bushes, being stamped and applied. 7 Matrixe suffoc. burn it and smell to it. 8 Tempered with Hony, it breaketh pestilent sores. 9 Pissing blood, drink it with wine. 10 Mix it with hot ointments, for the coldness of the joints and sinews, and for Palsies. 11 When it is used in medicine, it is good to put Cinamome to it. 12 Kings evil, stamp it & apply it, or use it in plasters or ointments. 13 French Pocks, use the fume of it. 14 The powder of it with Honey anointed, healeth all painful sores which consume the flesh, and creep from place to place, Impostumes, inflammations, and gatherings of humours. 15 The same powder mixed with Cream, helpeth the skabs of children's heads, and so doth the herb sodden in Cream. 16 The fresh leaves bruised and applied, healeth the creeping canker or pocke, that runneth from place to place, and such like. 17 Flowers stopped, seethe Savin and the roots of Smallach, Parsley and Fennell in wine, and drink it. 18 Flowers to stop, lay Ginger, Savin, and Bay leaves on hot coals, and take up the fume thereof through a funnel or close chair. 19 Morphue, drink Savin with water when the evil cometh on thee. 20 The juice healeth the holy fire. 21 Skabs, stamp Savin, and seethe it well in water, & wash there with often. 22 Matrixe suffoc. steep it in wine & drink it with treacle: but if the matrixe fall, use the things beneath. 23 Costivenesse, seeth it in water with Hog's grease, & make it an ointment, & anoint the Navel. 24 Warts, apply powder of Savin with the juice of marigolds. 25 Ears deaf, take up the fume of juniper berries & Savin, in good wine. Apostume 6. 8. 14 Belly bound 23 biles 6. 8. 14 Dead child 1 Deliverance 1 Ears deaf 25 Face deformed 2 Flowers stopped 1. 17 to stop 18 French pocks 13 Head sores 15 Holy fire 20 Inflammation 14 canker 16 Kings evil 12 Matrix suff. 7. 22 falling 22 Morphue 19 Palsy 10 Plague sore 8 Pocks 16 Pushes 6 Pissing blood 9 Seconds 1 Senowes cold 10 Skabs 21 Skin to cleanse 2 Sores 2. 6. 14 Ulcers 2 Urine stopped 1 Warts 2. 24 ¶ Sausalone. SAusalone: It is used of some instead of Garlic: some ignorant Apothecaries, do use it in stead of Scordium: but not without great error. 2 It is good for a cold stomach, and to be mixed with cold herbs, to take away their coldness: but it is not good for them that are of a hot nature, or be disposed to the headache. ¶ Saxifrage. SAxifrage: The seed or root drunk in wine, or the decoction of it in wine, provoketh urine, breaketh the stone in the kidneys and bladder, and is singular against the strangury, and stops of the kidneys and bladder. 2 The root taken in the same manner, expelleth the terms, seconds, and dead birth. 3 Powder of the root taken with Sugar, comforteth and warmeth the stomach, helpeth digestion, cureth the gripings and gnawings of the belly, and the colic, and expelleth windiness. 4 The same with the seeds, are very good for any convulsion or cramp, apoplexia, cold fevers, all venomous bitings, or any inward poison. 5 The same drunk with wine and vinegar, cureth the plague: and holden in the mouth, it preserveth from the same, and purifieth the corrupt air. 6 The same chewed, purgeth the brain, suageth the toothache, restoreth speech, and is good against the Apoplexia: and so it doth, being boiled in vinegar alone: or with some water put thereto, and after holden in the mouth. 7 The juice of the leaves cleanseth all spots and freckles, beautifieth the face, and leaveth a good colour. 8 It cleanseth rotten sores, being put into them: and so do the leaves, bruised and applied. 9 The distilled water alone or with vinegar, cleareth the sight, and taketh away all darkness, being put into the eyes. 10 The roots have the nature of Parsley roots. The same dried, may be used in stead of Pepper. 11 The same used any way, in powders, potions, or electuaries is very good for the gross and viscus humours in the stomach, and the cold distemperance of the same, and for the passions of the colic and matrixe, all poison, and ache of the bowels, the stone of the kidneys, and to drive down the urine and terms. 12 The seed also doth all the aforesaid, and so doth the distilled water being drunk three or four spoons full at once. 13 And the same drunk with Castory, is good for the Palsy and many cold griefs. 14 The juice applied, healeth the sores of the head. 15 Wash the face with the water daily, to avoid the deformities thereof, and to make it fair & clear. 16 The roots may be condyted in sugar, being first sodden and used for the coldness of the stomach, the colic and stone. 17 The roots and seeds are better than the distilled water. 18 Make a plaster of the grease of Hens, Geese and Hedgehogs, with the seeds of Gromell & Saxifrage, and Goats' blood, and apply it for the strangury and stone. 19 Drink four ounces of the water, with two drams of powder of burned Turpentine, twice a week early in the morning, to break and expel the stone in the bladder. 20 Stone, seethe it in strong wine, and drink it continually. 21 Stone in the reins and bladder, make a syrup with the water of the leaves and sugar, and eat thereof: proved. (See parietary.) 22 colic, stone, and strangury, seethe the root in wine, and drink it, or use the powder of it with rear eggs. 23 Stone, stamp Filipendula, and Saxifrage, and drink the juice morn and even. 24 Pissing blood, stamp Saxifrage, Ambrose, and Parsley, of each like much, and drink if with cows milk. Apoplexia 4. 6 Belliach 3. 11. 12. 16 Bitings venomous 4 Brain to cleanse 6 Chollike 3. 11. 12. 22 Cramp 4 Dead child 2 Deliverance 2 Eyes dull 9 Face deformed 7. 15 Flowers stopped 2. 11. 12 Fevers cold 4 Head sores 14 Matrixe suffoc. 11. 12 Palsy 13 Plague 5 Poison 4. 11 Seconds 2 Skin deformed 7. 15 Sores 8 Speech lost 6 Stomach cold 3. 11. 12. 16 Stone 1. 11. 12. 16. 18. 19 20. 21. 22. 23. Strangury 1. 18. 22 Teeth ache 6 Urine stopped 1. 11. 12 Windiness 3 ¶ Scala celi. SCala celi, or Poligonatum: It is very good for wounds, and to scour away spots and freckles from the face. 2 Some make ashes of the root, and thereof make Lee to the same use. 3 The root stamped, closeth up new wounds. 4 The juice taketh away freckles, spots and bruised blood: but it is not to be taken into the body: it is called white root, or Salomons seal. 5 Sleep to cause, seeth the leaves well, and wash well thy feet therewith, up to the knees. 6 The juice put into the eyes, helpeth many infirmities thereof. 7 Eyes burning hot, anoint them with the juice, and the milk of a Bitch. 8 Lice to kill, (See Broome.) Bruises 1. 2. 4 Eyes griefs 6. 7 Face deformed 1. 2. 4 Freckles 1. 2. 4 Lice to kill 8 sleep to 'cause 5 Spots 1. 2. 4 Wounds 1. 2 ¶ Sea moss. SEa moss is good to be laid to hot tumours or swellings at the beginning, and upon all kinds of gouts that require cooling. 2 The powder thereof taken, killeth worms presently, and expelleth them mightily: it is Calcorolina. Apostumes 1 Gouts hot 1 Swell hot 1 Worms 2 ¶ Sebestens. SEbestens by themselves or in decoction, are good for burning fevers and for worms in children, for the dry cough, to suppling the breast, and to dry up the hot Rheum, and also for heat of the Urine, and the sharpness of choler in the bladder and kidneys, the strangury, and burning of the urine. Bladder griefs Fever hot Kidneys griefs Rheum hot Cough Strangury Urine hot Worms ¶ Sene. SEne: The cod and leaves taken one dram, doth purge phlegm, choler and melancholy, with the broth of a chicken, pease broth, perry, or other like liquor. 2 The leaves taken in this sort, are good for them that be sad, melancholy, pensive, dull, or them that have the falling sickness, the stopping of the liver and milt, headache, maundge, scurf, itch and lepry, and all diseases that come of melancholy or choler adust: it must be taken with Aniseedes, Ginger, and some salgem: or boiled with Aniseeds, Ginger and Raisins, and so it worketh quickly, and without griefs: or corrected with Mastic and Cloves, or with cinnamon. 3 Seine purgeth gently from the heart, stomach, lungs, liver and milt, and is good against all agewes: it causeth mirth and good colour, and openeth the stops of all the inward parts. 4 The broth of the leaves of Seine and Camomile, doth strengthen the brain and sinews, being washed therewith. 5 The same used any way, strengtheneth the sight and hearing. 6 It would be taken with a good deal of broth of a Cock or a Hen, or weather mutton, or veal: or steeped in wheye with spike of India, and after sodden, and so strained and taken. 7 Or the powder may be taken which sweet milk. 8 There may be put half an ounce or more to every gallon of Beer before the tunning up, for them that be melancholy. 9 It may be mixed with syrup of Roses solutive, and so drunk. 10 But the best way is, to steep it in cold wine or wheye, or distilled water with a piece of sugar and some Aniseedes all night in a close pot, and in the morning to strain it and drink it. 11 But if it be sodden with herbs agreeable for the sickness that it is taken for: then the herbs must be sodden tender before it be put in. 12 Or use it thus: Take Seen six drams, white Ginger one dram, the flowers of bugloss two drams, put them into a clean pot with a pint of wheye of goats milk close stopped, and let it into a vessel of seething water two hours, then cool it and strain it, and drink it in the morning against all griefs of the the head and brain, and so to the bottom of the bladder, and to help all the senses, hearing, seeing and smelling, and to strengthen all the body, and to take away all hurtful humours, and to cleanse the blood. 13 Seine is the best of all purging medicines. 14 Wash one dram & a half of the leaves, & seethe them in a new earthen pot with wine or water, as the disease requireth, with twelve cloves, and one race of Ginger sliced, Aniseedes and Fenell seeds, of each two drams: boil more than the third part away, than strain it, and put sugar to it, and drink thereof morn and even a reasonable draft four hours before and after meat, it worketh without danger in all men, women and children, & women with child, & of all ages. 15 Some put thereto a little bruised Rhubarb, to make it work more effectually. 16 One dram of the powder taken with the broth of a Hen, worketh the same effect. 17 Heart feeble of replection, take two drams of powder of Seine with Pease broth blood warm morn and even twice a week, it helpeth also the fever quotidian. 18 Stomach and belly windy, take Seen three ounces, Ginger half an ounce, Aniseedes and Cumminseedes ana three penny weight, mix their powder, and take thereof one spoonful daily. 19 Costinenesse, seethe it with Raisins the stones taken out, in white wine or wheye, and strain it and drink it, six spoons full at once: or steep one ounce and a half in a quart of white wine four and twenty hours, and seethe away the third part, than strain it, and put thereto one dram of powder of Ginger, and drink thereof a pretty draft in the morning. 20 Itch, seethe a handful in water of Roses and smallach, and a little vinegar, and wash therewith. 21 Steep eight ounces in three pints of white wine four and twenty hours, than strain it and put thereto Currants two pound, fine sugar one pound, boil it till the wine be consumed, and take one ounce or a little more of the Currants before meat when the body is stiptike. 22 colic, Stone, Dropsy, Strangury and jaundice, take Seen half an ounce, Ginger, Aniseedes, Liquorice, Nettle seed, jet and Saffron, of each one penny weight, seeds of Fennell, Carway and Spinnel, of each one penny weight, cinnamon three peniweight: use the powder of them when need is, in possit ale or pottage: proved. 23 Seethe two drams of good Seine, and one dram of bruised Aniseedes in half a pint of the broth of a chicken or pullet, till the better half be wasted, than strain it and drink it in the morning warm, to purge the body: or take one dram of the powder, with half a dram of aniseed with pottage, and eat your dinner upon it. 24 Seine is good for the falling sickness, the snicopye, the griefs of the milt, the Emerods', and the fever quarten, being boiled in water, and made into a syrup with sugar, or with the juice of Borage, made into a syrup or oximell made therewith, with vinegar and Honey, for all the griefs aforesaid. Beer 8 Belly bound 19 21 Belly windy 18 Blood to cleanse 12 Brain grief 4 Choler 1 Chollike 18. 22 Colour bad 3. 12 Dropsy 22 Ears dull 5 Eyes dull 5 Emerods' 24 Falling evil 2. 24 Fever quotidian 17 quarten 24 Phlegm 1 Heart griefs 3. 17. 24 Headache 2. 4 jaundice 22 Itch 20 Liver griefs 2. 3 Lungs griefs 3 Melancholy 1. 2 Milt griefs 3. 24 Mirth 3 Obstructions general 3 Purgation 1. 2. 6. 7. 8. 9 10. 11. 12. 14. 16. 17. 18. 19 21. 22. 23. 24. sinews griefs 4 Sickness gener. 2. 12. 14. 16 Stomach griefs 3 windy 18 Stone 22 Strangury 22 Windiness 18 ¶ Setwall. SEtwall, garden Valerian, or Phue: The decoction of the roots provoketh urine and terms, and helpeth the ache of the side and stomach, and so doth the powder drunk in wine. 2 They are used in Antidotes and medicines against poison and the plague, as in treacle and mithridate. 3 The leaves and roots of the great wild valerian boiled in water, do heal the ulceration of the mouth, and the inflammation and roughness of the throat, being washed & gargarised therewith, & it is good for them that be bursten inwardly. 4 The Greek or small Valerian is good for cuts and wounds. 5 Setwall doth heat & drive forth water, used in broth or powder: it is called of some Herba benedicta, and is not much inferior to Nard of India: but for the stone it is better. 6 Seethe it in wine with Fennell seeds and Mastic, and drink it for the colic and stone. 7 Phue drunk in wine, is good against venomous bitings and the plague, not only drunk, but also smelled unto. 8 The decoction drunk, helpeth the strangury. 9 And sodden with Aniseedes, Lycoras and Raisins, it is good against the straightness of the wind. 10 The root chewed, driveth away windiness. 11 The whole green plant bruised and anointed on the head, taketh away ache and pritching thereof. 12 The wine wherein it is sodden, dropped into the eyes, is good against their griefs. 13 It is good in potions against inward wounds. 14 The dried roots laid among clotheses, giveth them a sweet smell. 15 Drink powder of the root of Phue or Valetian, to provoke urine and terms, and for the pain in the back: or seethe it in wine, and so it helpeth also the strangury, and dropping of the urine. 16 Seethe the root with Aniseedes, Fennel-seedes, and Lycoras, and drink it against shortness of breath and the cough. 17 Stamp the herb and root, and apply it to the headache, and to biles or read apostumes, ulcers, sores, piles, wounds and such like, to heal them. 18 Eyes griefs and diseases of the head and brain, use Valerian in broths and drinks. 19 Belly griefs, chew Setwall, and swallow it fasting. 20 Fistula, put in powder of Setwall and spurge roots, to heal it speedily. 21 jaundice, seethe Setwall in white wine, and drink it. 22 Flowers to stop, stamp it and strain it with ale, and drink it: seven leaves the first day, five the next day, and three the third day, fasting. 23 Palsy, to kill it, drink powder of the root of Valerian, and forbear swine's flesh. 24 Seethe Setwall in wine and drink it, to help the swelling in the flank. 25 Brain moist, chew Setwall. 26 Heart weak, use Setwall in thy meats and broths in powder. 27 Valerian is good to be used in baths, to 'cause sweat. 28 Fever quotidian, hung the green root of Valerian about thy neck, till it be dry. 29 chew Setwall with Reisins and a little Lycoras, to preserve thee from the plague. 30 Pricks to draw out, whether it be iron or wood, put in the juice, and stamp the herb, and apply it as often as need is. 31 Pricks in wounds, put in the juice with cents, and apply the substance. 32 Setwall taketh away the smell of Garlic, Onions, Leeks, etc. 33 Valerian sodden in wine, and drunk fasting, helpeth the jaundice, and the griefs of the Liver and Milt. 34 Setwall roots preserve from the plague. 35 Eyes spots, boil the flowers and roots of Valerian in wine, and drop it into the eyes: distil it in the midst of August in a Limbeck, and apply it hot with linen clotheses to the pleurisy, and also drink thereof. 36 Falling evil, drink Valerian fasting. 37 Vomiting, drink it with yarrow, (See sores in Broome.) 38 Sores to skin, anoint with the juice of Valerian. Apost. 17 Back ache 15 Belly ache 19 biles 17 Bitings venomous 7 Brain moist 25 Bursten 3 Breath straight 9 16 Cuts 3 Cough 16 Chollike 6. 24 Eyes griefs 12. 18. 35 Emerods' 17 Falling evil 36 Fever quotidian 28 Fistula 20 Flowers stopped 1. 15 to stop 22 Heart weak 26 Headache 11. 17. 18 jaundice 21. 33 Liver griefs 33 Milt griefs 33 Mouth griefs 3 Palsy 23 Pleurisy 35 Plague 27. 29. 34 Poison 2 Pricks 30. 31 Rheum 25 Sores 17. 38 Stomach ache 1 Stone 5. 6 Strangury 8. 15 Sweat to 'cause 27 Throat griefs 3 Ulcers 17 Vomiting 37 Urine stopped 8. 15 dropping 15 Windiness 10 Wounds 4. 13. 17. 31 ¶ Shepherd's needle. Shepherd's needle, or wild chervil, called Scandix: being eaten, it is good for the stomach & belly. 2 The same boiled and drunk, openeth the stopping of the liver, milt, kidneys and bladder, and is good for all the inner parts and bowels of man, and provoketh urine. Belly griefs 1 Bladder griefs 2 Kidneys stopped 2 Liver stopped 2 Milt stopped 2 Sickness general 2 stomach griefs 1 Urine stopped 2 ¶ Skirwits'. Skirwits': The roots boiled, are good for the stomach, provoke appetite, and expel urine. 2 The juice of the root drunk with goats milk, stoppeth the lask. 3 The same drunk with wine, expelleth wind, and helpeth the gripings of the belly, and the Hicket. Appetite 1 Belly ache 3 Flux 2 Hicket 3 Urine stopped 1 Windiness 3 ¶ Skabious. SKabious boiled by itself, or with the root in wine or water and drunk, doth cleanse the breast and lungs, and is good for the old cough and impostumes of the breast and other inward parts, in cleansing, ripening, and soldering them: and so do the conserve of the flowers made with sugar, being used daily. 2 It is good against all itch and scurf, being stamped and applied, or mixed with oils or ointments fit for it. 3 The Lee wherein it hath been boiled or steeped, doth cleanse the hair from all bran and white scurf, the head being washed with it. 4 The decoction of jacea nigra gargled, or the mouth often washed with it, doth waste & consume the apostumes in the mouth & throat, that are fresh and new, and doth ripe and break them that are old. 5 The broth or juice of Scabious, used inward or outward, healeth skabs & itch: it is good for all diseases of the breast & lungs, & to be applied to pestilent sores, to ripen them & break them with speed. 6 Drink the water in the plague time with Mithridate in the mornings to preserve thee. 7 It stoppeth the bloody-flux and the Emerods. 8 Eye pricked, or bleeding, drop in the juice to heal it. 9 Ear moist and running, drop in the juice. 10 Seethe it in wine, and drink it to dry up superfluous moisture. 11 Frogs delight to be under it. 12 Seethe it in wine and drink it to help the pleurisy, the griefs of the breast, imposthume, the cough, and all griefs of the chest. 13 Take a handful of dried Scabious, Liquorice scraped and bruised one ounce, Aniseedes and Fenell seeds ana one ounce, Figs xii. Irios' half an ounce, steep them twelve hours in a pottle of water, then seethe it till the third part or somewhat more be wasted, than strain it and put thereto sugar or honey of Roses, and drink thereof hot morn and even to ripen and soften impostumes, & to 'cause them to be easily spit out with coughing. 14 The juice is good for all manner of scabs, scurf, mandge, and all such like, being washed therewith. 15 It is good in glisters against the bloody-flux. 16 The leaves stamped and applied, represseth the Emerods', and the bruised wound, or misty eyes, and dry up the blood of wounds. 17 The juice killeth worms. 18 Sat over the fume of the decoction thereof in wine to help the Emerods. Plague sore, anoint it with the juice. 19 Bruises to cure, drink two. spoonful of the juice of Comfrey and Scabious morn and even. 20 Heart griefs, stamp Scabious, and strain it with stolen ale, and drink it morn and even ix. or x. days. 21 Morphue, distil water of Scabious and Fumiterie, and use it. 22 Pocks and measles in children, if you fear blindness thereby, hung Scabious & Rue about their necks. (See in Pimpernell and Rue, Dock, Fumiterie.) 23 squinsy, mix one pound of Scabious water with one ounce of aqua vitae, and apply thereof to the grief as often as need is. 24 Impost. boil the juice with as much strong ale, & drink thereof warm: proved. Or drink the juice with as much aqua vitae, and some powder of Coral. Or wash one pound of the roots and stamp them and strain them with ale, and drink it with powder of Coral. 25 Impost. general, drink one spoonful of the powder, with adraught of small ale. 26 Squincy, mix one pound of Scabious water withone ounce of aqua vitae, and apply it, and also gargoyle therewith to be whole in three hours. 27 Emerods', stamp it and apply it, or boil it with the root of Mullin, and apply it. 28 Scabs, boil the juice with vinegar & oil, till it wax thick, and use it. 29 Emerods', seethe it in water, & sit over it. 30 Stamp it and seeth it in wine, and drink it to destroy humours in the stomach. 31 Drink it daily fasting with Eye bright, and the pestilence shall never breed in thee while thou dost use it. 32 Liver griefs, seethe it in wine and drink it. 33 Scabs general dry and moist, mix the juice with vinegar and ashes of garlic, and seeth it together and anoint. 34 Impost. to break, drink the juice of it and Rue with powder of Coral a good draft. 35 Water imperial, precious above all others, take Scabious, Dittany, Pimpernell, and Tormentill, of each like much, distil it, it helpeth all poison and the plague being drunk. 30 For the plague if one be infected, mix water of Betony and Scabious of each like much with good Treacle, and drink thereof to expel the poison from the principal parts, and to save life, (see Matfelon.) Bloody-fluxe 7. 15 Breast griefs 1. 5. 12 Bruises 19 Cough 1. 12 Ears running 9 Eyes hurt 8. 16 Emerods' 7. 16. 18. 27. 29 Heart griefs. 20 Head scurf 3 Hair falling 3 Impostume 1. 12. 13 24. 25. 34 Itch 2. 5 Liver griefs 32 Lungs griefs 1. 5 Measles 22 Maundge 14 Morphue 21 Mouth impost. 4 Plague 6. 31. 35. 36 Plague sore 5. 18 Pleurisy 12 Pocks 22 Poison 7. 35. 36 Skabs 5. 14. 28. 33 scurf 2. 3. 14 squinsy 23. 26 Stomach raw 10. 30 Throat impost. 4 Worms 17 Wounds 16 ¶ Sloes. SLoes, (see Plum, Acatia.) Belly-ache, drink the juice with wine. 2 Breast pain, stamp good store of ripe Sloes, & put them in an earthen pot, and fill it with new ale, and so drink it. 3 To avoid dead flesh, boil the bark in water till it be black and thick, and put thereto Rye meal and honey, and apply it. 4 Eyes tears, stamp the green bark with a little vinegar, & put thereof into the eyes, and be whole in three days. 5 Urine to stop, seeth the bark in water and drink it. Fleaes to void, seeth it in water, and sprinkle the house with it. 6 Canker, seethe the bark in water tender till it be thick & black, and mix it with Rye meal and honey, & apply it, (see Rye.) Seethe a quart of Sloes in a pottle of vinegar, till it be wasted, then dry them & put thereof into wine, and it willbe vinegar presently. The moss with Swine's grease draweth out pricks. Belly-ache 1 Breast pain 2 Dead flesh 3 Eyes tears 4 Fleaes to void 5 canker 6 Pissing bed 5 Pricks 6 ¶ Smallache. SMallache, or Marsh Parsley, the seeds and roots in working are like to the seeds and roots of garden Parsley. 2 The juice doth cleanse corrupt & festering sores especially in the mouth and throat, mixed with other things fit for the same purpose. 3 Frenzy, seethe it in wine and wash thy head therewith. 4 Eyes griefs, put in the juice with the white of an egg at night. 5 Eyes itch and hawe, mix the juice with soot, and the white of an egg, and let it stand 24. hours, and then anoint therewith, and wash thine eyes. 6 Teethache, hung the root about thy neck. 7 Worms, drink the seeds. 8 Emerods', dip a cloth in pitch, and cast thereon powder of the root and Mastic, and apply it. 9 Flowers to stop, put in powder of Ceruse and Smallache. 10 Paps swollen, apply the juice with crumbs of bread. 11 Cough dry, (See Fenell.) Bladder griefs, (see Fenell.) 12 Belly grinding, (see Peniroyall.) 13 Iliake passion, boil wheat bran with the juice of Smallache, gylts grease, & butter, and apply it to the pain of cold cause. 14 Fever cold, stamp one dram of the seeds, and steep it all night in three spoonful of cold water, & drink it when the fit hath taken thee. 15 Apost. (see Barley.) Fester, (see hempseed, Rye.) 16 Wounds ache, make little cakes of the juice of Smallache, honey, and wheat flower and oil, & fry it in a pan, and apply it, or mix the juice with honey & wax, whites of eggs, and wheat meal, & use it. 17 Stomach griefs, (See Flax.) 18 Gout ache, (See Oats. 19 Backeache, (See agrimony.) 20 Breast griefs, stamp one handful of Smallache with as much sour bread by itself, or with vinegar, and apply it three or iiii. times to the breast to avoid heat of the breast, thirst, and stopping of the head. Breast straight. (See Centory.) 21 Burn, (See Eldrens.) Headache, (See Betony.) 22 Sleep to cause, (See Lettufe.) 23 Belly-ache, See Peniroyall.) 24 Fever, bruise Smallache one handful with as much Bay salt, and as much Olibanum as a Walnut, and divide it into iiii. parts, and apply them one after another to the bought of the arm iiii. times before the fit. 25 Breast griefs, seeth the seeds with Liquorice in small ale or water, and drink it, (See Rye.) 26 Fry sheeps suet, or dears suet with sheeps dung, and the juice of Smallache, for any burned place. 27 Falling evil, drink the juice of Smallache, and thou shalt not fall that day, (See Savine.) 28 Gout, mix Smallache with oil of Roses and milk, and anoint. 29 Impost. eat Auens and Smallache till it break, and the matter come forth, See Mustardseed.) 30 Matrix suffoc. apply the juice of Smallache, Hyssop, Wormwood, hot to the navel with a cloth to be whole: proved. 32 Mouth griefs, eat Smallache often: proved. 33 Nose bleeding, drink the juice of Smallache. 34 Paps swollen, mix honey & powder of Cummin with the juice of Smallache, and of Onions, and crumbs of Ote bread, and apply it. 35 Swelling, apply the juice of Smallache with wheat meal. 36 Reines-ache, drink the seeds fasting with hot wine. 37 Side grief, drink the juice. 38 Strangury, drink the juice with read wine, (See Fenell,) 29 Or seethe the roots of Smallach, Parsley, Fenell, and Watercresses in white wine, and drink the broth, and apply the roots with Watercresse leaves. 30 Urine stopped, drink the decoction of the seeds of Carway & Smallache. 31 Sleep to cause, dip a spondge in the juice of Smallache and woman's milk, and apply it to the temples. 32 Wounds to cleanse, apply the juice with beane-meale & honey 33 Wounds-ache, apply the juice with old swine's grease & Rye meal. 34 Sweat to cause, use Smallache in baths. Liver griefs, seethe Liverwort with the juice of Smallache in wine or water, and drink. 35 Urine to cause, stamp Parsley, Smallache, and Fenell, of each like the reins and greines, or chop Smallache small, as much as two fists, with as much Wheat bran, and seeth it in water till it wax dry, and apply it to the bladder as often as need is. 46 The herb and seed is good for the strangury. (see Parsley.) 47 Fever phlegmatic, make an Electuary of the juice of Clary, Smallache, and Fenell, and use it. 48 Stomach hot & swollen, stamp the roots, and seeth it in wine or ale, and strain it and drink a little of it every morning ix. days fasting, (see Fenell, Betonie.) 49 Spitting blood, drink Smallache, Betony, Mints, and Rue with goats milk hot as may be suffered. 50 Breast rankled, (see Flax.) 51 Liver stopped, (see Eldrens, Aloes.) Bladder grief, (see Betony.) 52 Ache, stamp it and strain it, & boil it with aqua vitae, and bores grease, and stir them well, and anoint therewith by the fire morn and even: proved. (see Fenell.) 54 Eyes running, stamp it with the white of an Eglantine, and apply it, (see Feverfue.) 55 Bladder pain, seeth it in wine, ale, or broth, and drink it with powder of wild Cummin. 56 Bruises about the ears, stamp the seeds, and as much Ceruse with honey and apply it, or anoint. 57 colic, (see Mugwort.) To dry up milk in the breasts, use Smallache, or the seeds of it in thy meats, (see Agnus Castus.) 58 Ache in the shoulder blade, stamp the seeds and drink them with wine. 59 To void wrath, and cause joy, drink Smallache often. 60 Bleeding to stop, drink the juice. 61 Frenzy, wash thy head often times of the day with the juice of Smallache and vinegar, but most of the vinegar. 62 Eyes bloody, apply the juice with the white of an Egg. 63 Eyes itch, mix the juice with good wine, and let it stand a day, and then wash the eyes therewith. 64 Throat apostume or swollen, apply the juice with crumbs of bread & honey. 65 Sores, (see Broome.) 66 Black jaundice, (see Celondine.) 67 Stomach hot & swollen, stamp the root, & steep it 24. hours in good wine, & strain it & drink a little oil of it 8. or 9 mornings, (see Betony.) 68 Wounds and cuts to heal, mix the juice of Smallache with the white of an Egg, wheat flower, & powder of incense till it be thick, & apply it once a day daily. 69 Stomach griefs general, drink the seeds of Smallache, Linseedes, & Cummin with hot water. 70 Belly windy, drink Smallache seeds with wine fasting. 71 For cold humours in the stomach & griefs of the liver & lungs, drink powder of the seeds of Smallache, of Rue, & pepper with wine. 72 Smallache healeth wounds, ceaseth burning aching and rankling of wounds, and is good for the fever tertian. 73 Wounds of all sorts, apply the juice of Smallache and Planten with wheat flower, 74 Dropsy, seeth the roots of Smallache, Fenell, Parsley, of each like much, and make thereof a syrup with sugar, honey, and wort, and drink it morn and even daily. Uncome, (see Rue.) 75 Fever quotidian, (See Feverfue.) Ache 16. 18. 52. 58 Apostume 15 Backeache 19 36 Belly-ache 12. 23 windy 70 Black jaundice 66 Bladder griefs 11. 51. 55 Bleeding 60 Breast griefs 20. 25 Breasts swollen 10. 34 ranc. 50 Bruised 56 Burn 21. 26 Cough 11 Cuts 68 colic 13. 57 Dropsy 74 Eyes grief 4 bloody 62 itch 5. 63. running 54 Emerods' 8 Falling evil 27 Fester 15 Fever 24. 47. 75. cold 14 Flowers to stop 9 Frenzy 61. 3 Gout 18. 28 Headache 21 stopped 20 Iliake passi. 13 Impostume 29 Liver grief 44. 71 stopped 51 Lungs griefs 71 Matrix suffoc. 30 Mouth sores 2. 32 Mirth 59 Nose bleeding 33 Reins ache 36 Shoulder ache 58 Side griefs 37 Sleep to 'cause 22. 41 Sores 2. 65 Spitting blood 59 Stom. gri. gen. 69 gri. 17. 71 hot 48. 67 swollen 48. 67. Strangury 38. 46 Swell 35 Sweat to 'cause 44 Teethache 6 Thirst 20 Throat apost. 64 sores 2 Uncome 74 Urine stopped 40. 45 Windiness 70 Worms 7 Wounds 16. 42. 43. 68 72. 73 ¶ Smirnium. SMirnium: The leaves and root do appease the cough and difficulty of breathing: they stop the belly, & are very good against all venomous bitings, and the stopping of the urine. 2 The seed is good against the diseases and stopping of the milt, kidneys, and bladder. It expelleth the terms, seconds, and urine. 3 The leaves applied do dissolve wens and hard swellings that be new. It drieth up sores and exulcerations, and glueth wounds together. 4 The seeds drunk in wine, are good against the sciatica & stayeth windines of the stomach, provoketh sweat, & is very good for the dropsy & fevers that come by fifts: it is called wild Alexander. Biting venom. 1 Bladder griefs 2 Breath short 1 Cough 1 Dropsy 4 Fevers 4 Flowers stopped 2 Flux 1 Hardness 3 Kidneys griefs 2 Milt griefs 2 Sciatica 4 Seconds 2 Sores 3 Stomach windy 4 Swell 3 Venom 1 Urine stopped 1. 2 Wens 3 Wounds 3 ¶ Soldanella. SOldanella purgeth down all kind of waterish humours, and openeth the stops of the liver, and is good for the dropsy, but it must be boiled with the broth of fat meat or flesh and drunk, or else dried and taken in powder with Aniseedes, cinnamon, Ginger, and great store of sugar. 2 The leaves applied do bind and close up wounds, & drive away broad inflammations & swellings. Dropsy 1 Inflammation 2 Liver griefs 1 Purgation 1 Swell 2 Wounds 2 ¶ Sorrell. SOrrell, (See Alleluya.) Drink Sorrel with Smallache or small wine to help the jaundice to quench burning Fevers. 2 The leaves eaten fasting in the mornings in the plague time, is most wholesome. 3 Liver chafed, knead thy bread with the juice of Sorrell and Liverwort, & eat it & apply the dross of the same herbs to the place. 4 Vomit to stop, drink Sorrel, 5 Liver & stomach hot, the hot fever, & to cause appetite, drink the juice or water of Sorrell. 6 Thirst great, sup the juice. 7 Headache, stamp it with oil of Roses & apply it, see Barley.) Liver, (see Fenell.) 8 Liver & milt stopped, and for the jaundice, use the juice or syrup of Sorrell and Wormwood. 9 Breasts sore & running, apply Sorrell de Boys roasted in a Wortleafe with vinegar and honey. 10 Fever burning, drink Sorrell possitale, hot as may be suffered. 11 jaundice of hot cause, drink the juice. 12 ringworm or tetter, cut the roots very small, & steep them in strong white vinegar 48. hours, and rub therewith three or iiii. times a day, & keep them in the vinegar. 13 To heal the itch, boil the roots and wash therewith. 14 Gomor passion, carry the seeds on thee gathered by a chaste boy. 15 Phlegm to voided, (see Betony.) 16 jaundice, seeth it and the root thereof in white wine and drink it. 17 Plague, (see Pimpernell.) Drink the water with one dram of the root of Tormentill, and half a dram of Treacle. 18 Bloody-fluxe, drink the juice with wine. Sweeting sickness, (see Sage.) 19 Flux read or yellow, eat the seeds with roasted Egs. 20 Fevers hot, use Sorrell. Wild fire, and S. Ant. fire, roast it in a wet cloth half an hour, and grinned it finely with clarified honey and apply it. 21 Bitings venomous and rancklings, stamp it and apply it, and also drink it. 22 Sores hot with dead flesh in them, roast it in a paper, and apply it thrice to heal it. 23 jaundice, drink the juice of Sorrell and Yarrowe with good ale and saffron iii or iiii. times to cure it. 24 sneezing in children to stop, anoint their hand with the juice of Sorrell. 25 Eyes yellow by the jaundice, put in the juice of Acedula or small Sorrel. 26 Liver hot, use Sorrell. 27 Mix Sorrell with heart's grease & barley meal, and apply it to the temples for the headache. For the stopping and wasting of the liver, use Sorrel with some Wormwood in broths & drinks. 28 Liver wasting, seethe Sorrel, Water cresses, & read Fenel with a chicken in an earthen pot, & use it ix. days. 29 Knees-ach & swelling, apply Sorrell & Smallach with vinegar & sheeps suet boiled together. 30 Fevers, drink Sorrell possitale made by putting the juice to milk when it beginneth to seethe. 31 Vomiting to stop, drink the juice or water, it helpeth the inflammation of the liver, and quencheth great thirst. 32 Botch to break, roast it in a Wortleafe & apply it. 33 Bloody-fluxe, drink the juice with wine. 34 Stone to break, and to help the jaundice, and to expel urine and the terms, use the roots. Appetite 5 Bitings venomous 21 Bloody flux 18. 33 Botch 32 Breasts sore 9 running 9 Dead flesh 22 Eyes yellow 25 Fevers hot 1. 5. 10. 20. 30 Phlegm 15 Flowers stopped 34 Fluxes 19 Gomorpassion 14 Headache 7. 24 jaundice 1. 8. 11. 16. 23. 25. 34 Itch 13 Knees ache 29 swollen 29 Liver griefs 7. 8 chafed 3 hot 5. 26. 31 stopped 8. 27 wasted 27. 28 Milt stopped 8 Plague 2. 17 Rankling 21 ringworm 12 Reins running 14 S. Anth. fire 20 Sores hot 22 sneezing 24 Stomach hot 5 Stone 34 Sweeting sickness 18 Tetter 12 Thirst 31. 6 Venom 21 Vomiting 4. 31 urine stopped 34 Wild fire 20 ¶ Sothernwood. SOthernwood, the seed either green, or dry, in powder, or boiled in wine or water, and drunk, helpeth shortness of breath, streitenesse of wind, and hardness, burstings, and shrink of the sinews, the sciatica, stopping of the urine and terms, and all cold moisture, tough phlegm, and stopping of the milt, kidneys, bladder and matrix. 2 And drunk in wine, it is good against all poison and venom, and destroyeth worms. 3 The perfume or smell of it driveth away all venomous beasts, 4 The ashes mixed with oil of Palma Christi, or of rapes, or of radish, or old oil olive, restoreth hair, the head being anointed with it twice a day against the sun or fire, and causeth the beard to come forth speedily. 5 Stamp Sothernwood with a roasted quince, and apply it to all inflammations of the eyes. 6 Stamp it with barley meal, and seeth them together, and apply it to dissolve all cold humours and swellings. 7 Steep it in oil and anoint all members taken or benumbed with cold, and bruises, & shiverings of agues. 8 Lay it under thy bed, pillow or bolster, to provoke carnal copulation. and resist all enchantments letting the same. 9 Eyes burning, and swelling, seeth with white bread in water, and apply it, 10 The juice mixed with oil of Dill, causeth hair to grow in any place of the body. 11 The juice drunk with Wine, defendeth from the Apoplexia. Palsy, anoint with the juice. 12 Boil the herb with Quince kernels to dissolve apostumes and phlegmatic humours. 13 Boil it in oil Olive and anoint the head to avoid all intemperate coldness of it. 14 Boil it with with Wine and Sugar, and drink it to heat the stomach. Boil it with Parsley and sugar, and drink it to break and expel the stone of the bladder and kidneys. 15 The oil of it anointed beneath the navel, expelleth urine. 16 The herb drunk with Wine helpeth against poisons, and bitings of venomous beasts and worms. 17 The root drunk often, killeth the worms, and so doth the juice drunk with a little milk. 18 seeth the herb with ysope, liquorice, or sugar in Wine, and drink it for the griefs of the lungs and breast. 19 Bruise the herb with oil and salt, and apply it to the pulses of the hands, as a remedy against the fever. 20 seeth the tops of the flowers in Wine, or water, with honey or sugar, and drink it three or four times a day to help shortness and straitness of the breath, to cleanse out the griefs of the breast, to help the Cardiacke passion, and the Cough, to cleanse out the humours of the lungs, kidneys, matrix and bladder, to help the dropping of the urine, and to cease all inward griefs. 21 Stomach weak, apply the herb in a linen bag somewhat dried, to comfort it. 22 Sciatica and Gout in any place, bruise it with butter or oil, or both, and seeth them in wine till the wine be consumed, then strain it, and anoint therewith, or drink the juice of Sothernwood warm with wine. 23 Breath short, seeth it in wine and drink it. 24 Forehead ache, and Vertigo, stamp it with honey and vinegar, and drink it. 25 Mouth ulcers, stamp it with honey and anoint both inward and outward. 26 Speaking in sleep, drink it with wine. 27 Flowers to stop, stamp it and drink it with red wine. 28 Backeache, stamp it with vinegar and salt, and apply it hot. 29 Ears worms, put in the juice. 30 Hair falling, seeth the bark in water, and wash therewith. 31 Speech lost, (See Irios) women's secret griefs, use it with ale. 32 Colic, apply a plaster of it and Wormwood with vinegar, honey, and barley meal. 33 Stone, (See parietary.) Hair to grow, wash with Lee of the ashes of it. 34 Head giddy, drink it. Prick, stamp it with fresh grease, and apply it. 35 Hair to restore, mix the ashes with oil of radish, and anoint the bald place. 36 Speaking in sleep, and for the Vertigo, and swimming in the head, drink it to bedward with wine & a little honey. (See Betony, Rue. 37 Wits lost, drink the juice with stolen ale. Belliach, (see Rue. 38 Drink powder of the seeds against all venomous bitings, and of the herb to kill worms. 39 Powder of the herb with barley meal, breaketh hard apostumes. 40 Headache, stamp it with vinegar, and honey, and apply it. 41 Face salseflegme, eat tansy and Sothernwood. 42 Frenzy, stamp Marigold, Sothernwood, and sage, and strain it, and drink it with Wine or ale six days morn and even. Worms, drink it and tansy with posset-ale. 43 Sothernwood is good for the Cough and gnawing in the belly and breast, griefs of the bones, and stopping of the urine, the seed being stamped with water and drunk. 44 Sides grief, stamp it with betony and drink it. 45 Bitings venomous, and for the cold Fever, drink it with wine. 46 Teethach, seeth it in vinegar, and hold it in thy mouth. Ache 22. 43 (See Gout. Apostume 6. 12. 39 Apoplexia 11 Backach 28 Bellyach 37. 43 Benumbed 7 Bewitched 8 Bitings venomous 16. 38. 45 Bladder stopped 1 (See Urine Bones ache 43 Breast griefs 18. 19 43 Breath short 1. 19 23 Bruise 7 Bursten 1 Colic 32 Cold griefs 7 Conception 8 Cough 43 Ears worms 29 Eyes heat 9 swollen 9 Face salseflegme 4 Fevers cold 7. 19 45 Flowers stopped 1 to stop 27 Frenzy 42 Gout 22 Hardness 1 Heart griefs 20 Headache 24. 40 cold griefs 13 giddy 24. 34. 36 Hair to grow 4. 10. 30. 33. 35 Mad 37. 42 Matrix stopped 1. 20 Milt stopped 1. 20 Mouth ulcers 25 Kidneys stopped 1. 20 Lungs griefs 18. 20 Palsy 11 Poison 2. 16 Prick 34 Sciatica 1. 22 Sinews griefs 1 Sickness general 20 Sides griefs 44 Speech lost 31 Speaking in sleep 26. 36 Stomach cold 14 weak 21 Stone 14 Swell 6 Teethach 46 Venom 23. 16 Urine stopped 1. 15. 20. 43 Wits lost 37. 42 women's griefs 31 Wounds 2. 16. 17. 38. 42 ¶ Showbread. Showbread, drink a dram or a dram and a half of the powder of the root with Hydromel to purge gross and tough phlegm, and other sharp humours. 2 Bitings venomous, and all poison, apply it, and also drink it with wine. 3 For the stopping of the liver, the jaundice, and to avoid the yellow colour, drink it with Hydromel, and cover thee well to sweat. 4 To expel the flowers and dead child, drink it, or use it as a pessary. 5 Belly bound, strake the navel and the belly with the juice, or put it into the fundament with wool. 6 Fundament fallen, anoint it with the juice & vinegar to settle in the natural place it. 7 Eyes spots, pearls, haws, and all other impediments, and to clear the sight, put in the juice with honey. 8 The root maketh the skin fair and clean, and voideth all naughty skurf and mange, the falling of the hair, the marks and spots of the pocks and masels, and all other blemishes. 9 The same or the juice mixed with ointment or oils for the same purpose, wasteth the hardness of the milt. 10 Apply it with oil and vinegar to heal wounds. 11 joints out, heels kibed, Gout in the feet, & skurf of the head, wash with the broth or decoction of the root. 12 The oil wherein the root hath been boiled, closeth up wounds, and with the same and a little wax, a good ointment is made for kibes, chilblains, and griefs coming of cold. 13 The root hanged upon women in travel, causeth speedy deliverance. 14 In what sort soever this root be taken, it is dangerous for women with child, or if it be but carried about them, or that they tread over it. 15 If it be put into wine, it maketh a man drunken, a juice is pressed out of the root, and sodden to the thickness of honey, and so kept. 16 The root is sliced and laid up as Squilla is. 17 Head sores, or whelks, use the decoction thereof. 18 jaundice, stamp the root of Showbread and gladden, and drink the juice, or sit in the decoction of them. 19 Emeralds, mix the juice with powder of Agaricke, and hot oil, and apply it. 20 Nose stink, put in the water of Showbread. Belly bound 5 Bitings venomous 2 Chilblane 11. 12 Dead child 4 Eyes griefs 7 Emeralds 19 Feet gout 11 Flowers stopped 4 Fundament fallen 6 Gout 11 Head griefs 8. 17 jaundice 3. 18 joints out 11 Kibes 11. 12 Liver stopped 3 Masels 8. 9 Milt hard 9 Nose stink 20 Poison 2 Pocks 8. 9 Skin griefs 8 Wounds 10. 12 ¶ Sowthistle. SOwthistle, Stomach pain, drink the juice. It also provoketh urine, breaketh the stone, & is excellent good for the strangury, and the jaundice, it engendereth good store of good milk, and causeth the child that sucketh it to have a good colour, and so doth the broth wherein it is sodden, being drunk. 2 The juice doth cool the heat of the fundament, and privy parts, being applied with cotton, and of the ears being dropped in. 3 Stamp the green leaves, and apply them to all hot swellings, and apost. especially of the stomach. 4 Bitings venomous, stamp the leaves and roots, and apply them. 5 Great hawkweed, wild chicory, yellow devils bitten be of the same operation, and are good also for the eyesight, the juice being dropped in, especially devils bit. Apostume hot 3 Bitings venomous 4 Eyes dull 5 Ears heat 2 Fundament heat 2 jaundice 1 Matrix heat 2 Milk to 'cause 1 Stomach apostume 3 Stone 1 Strangury 1 Swell 3 Urine stopped 1 ¶ Sparewort. SParewort, stamp it and apply it in half a walnut shell seven or eight hours to the sciatica, to rear a blister, then let it out, and apply a leaf of burr or colewort. 2 To avoid dead flesh, apply it with honey and rye meal. 3 Ache in the arm, shoulder or leg, blister it with Sparewort, and lay on an ivy leaf, to draw out the humour. 4 Anoint the pulses with the juice to cure the fever. 5 It breaketh botches and biles. (See Crowfoot. Apostume 5 Arm ache 3 Ache general 1. 3 bile 5 Botch 5 Dead flesh 2 Fever 4 Leg ache 3 Shoulder ache 3 Sores 2 ¶ Sperage. SPerage helpeth the king's evil and the strangury and palsy. 2 The seeds and fruit are used in medicine, and willbe kept in virtue four years. 3 Eat Sperach with meat for the stopping of the liver & hardness of the milt. 4 seeth the root in wine, and drink it for the shedding of the gall. 5 Wash the mouth often with the decoction of Sperage to cease all the pain of the mouth & teeth. 6 Eat Sperage with cummin for swelling of the stomach, the colic, to mend the sight, to lose the belly gently, to purge the breast, bowels and reins, and to 'cause a good savour in all the body. 7 seeth it in wine, and drink it for the pain in the loins and reins. 8 Drink the root in white wine for pain of the stone, and for pain of the matrix. 9 seeth the root in vinegar to help the swelling, spots & leapry of the skin. 10 Parboil the young springs and eat them with vinegar and oil, to provoke urine, soften the belly, and for the strangury. 11 Seethe it with cy●●pease, & drink the broth to open the liver and kidneys, for the jaundice, strangury, gravel, and stone, to ease the pain of the sciatica, and members out of joint. 12 Bitings venomous, boil the root in wine, and drink it. 13 Let barren women boil the berries, & eat them with vinegar, sweet oil & sugar to become fruitful. 14 The water of the herb cleareth the eyes. 15 The syrup causeth natural seed. 16 The decoction with vinegar helpeth the white lepry. 17 Not herb is sooner converted into good blood, than Asparagus. 18 Roasted or sodden it assuageth the strangury, the difficulty in making water, and the bloody flux. 19 The root sodden with vinegar or wine helpeth members out of joint. 20 And sodden with figs and cyches, it healeth the jaundice, the sciatica, & strangury. 21 Teeth ache, stamp the root and apply it. 22 Fever quarten, seeth the root in water and drink thereof seven days. Ache 7. 11. 20 Backach 6. 7 Belly bound 6. 10 ache 6 Bitings venomous 12 Blood to 'cause 17 Bloody flux 8 Breast griefs 6 Colic 6 Conception to 'cause 13 Eyes dull 6. 14 Face deformed 9 Fever quarten 22 Gall shed 4 Gravel 11 jaundice 3. 11. 20 joints out 11. 19 Kidneys stoup 11 Kings evil 1 Leapry 9 16 Liver stopped 3. 11 Matrix pain 8 Milt hard 3 Mouth griefs 5 Palsy 1 Purgation 6 Sciatica 11. 20 Seed to 'cause 15 Skin deformed 9 16 Stomach swollen 6 Stone 8. 11 Strangury 1. 10. 11. 18. 20 Swell 9 Teethache 5. 21 Venom 12 Urine stopped 10. 18 ¶ Spinach. SPinach, Loins ache, use pottage made with barley, and Spinach, and butter. 2 seeth it and eat it with meat to soften the belly, and to avoid the pain of the breast and lungs, to qualify choler, to cleanse the body, and strengthen the stomach. 3 Drink the decoction of it to expel evil humours, to 'cause easy breathing. 4 But too much use of it, and lettuce breedeth melancholy: drink the broth against grievous pain of the back, and for the pain of the throat, coming of Choler and blood. 5 Spinach softeneth the belly, helpeth the roughness and hoarseness of the throat, and the dry cough. 6 Drink the juice or water to quench heat, and mitigate the gnawing of the stomach. 7 Apply the bruised herb to the stomach and liver, against their ache and inflammation. 8 The same is good against stingings of venomous beasts, (See Beets. 9 It is evil for phlegmatic people. 10 Apply it to hot swellings to dissolve them. Ache 1 Back-ach 1. 4 Belly bound 2. 5 Bitings venomous 8 Breast pain 2. 3 Breath stopped 6. 3 Hoarseness 5 Liver griefs 7 Loins ache 1 Lungs pain 2 Stinging 8 Somack griefs 6. 7 weak 2 Swell hot 10 Throat griefs 4. 5 ¶ Splenwort. SPlenwort, or Lonchitis, is very good against the hardness, stopping, and swelling of the milt, being drunk, or applied with vinegar. 2 Apply it to wounds to keep them from apostumation and inflammation. Milt griefs 1 Wounds 2 ¶ Spurge. SPurge, (See Palma Christi, Tithimal. 2 Six or eight seeds of it do purge choler, phlegm, and waterish humours mightily, and so doth the juice, but it is stronger in operation, it is of the very nature and faculty of Tithimal, and must be used as is said of Tithimal. 3 Seven seeds taken with figs or dates purge the belly, and so doth the leaves sodden with a cock. Fistula, and hollow ulcers, seeth it in wine, and put it in. (See Setwal, Tithimal. 4 Teethach, mix the milk thereof with wheat-floure, and fill the hollow tooth therewith, and seeth the root in wine and wash therewith morn and even, every month once, and you shall have no pain. 5 Take nine crops pulled upward in powder with ale to purge upward, and drink some warm ale soon after it, and after use some restorative. 6 The milk with wheat-meale maketh the skin white. Teeth, (See ivy.) Drink three grains with sugar clean peeled, to loosen the belly, three or four leaves seeds with warm water cause vomit, and so doth the juice. Choler 1 Fistula 3 Phlegm 2 Purgation 2. 3 Skin to cleanse 6 Teethach 4 Ulcers hollow 3 Vomit to cause 5 ¶ Squilla. SQuilla, being first covered round about with dough, or lapped in paste, and baked in an oven, or roasted in the embers till it be tender, and a spoonful thereof taken with an eight part of salt, purgeth downward plenty of tough and clammy humours, and use the same so prepared in medicines, to provoke urine, for the dropsy, jaundice, belching, or working of the stomach, and griping of the belly. 2 Take it with honey and oil to drive out worms, both long and round. 3 The same so prepared, is good for the old cough, shortness of breath, stuffing of the breast, and to cleanse the breast. 4 Mix it with honey to lose the belly very gently, and so doth the seeds taken with figs or honey. 5 A scale or twain of the root, being yet green and raw, is good to be laid under the tongue to quench thirst in the dropsy. 6 seeth Squilla in vinegar till it be tender, and stamp it, and apply it to all venomous bitings being stamped. 7 Boil the inner part of Squilla in oil or turpentine, and apply it to chaps or rifts of the feet, to kibed heels, and hanging warts, especially being roasted under the embers, and so it healeth all running sores of the head, and the scurf, scales, or bran of the head, being laid to. 8 The leaves do dissolve and waste the King's evil, and kernels about the throat, being applied four days. 9 Squilla hanged over the door, or chief entry of the house, keepeth the same from all mishap, witchcraft and sorcery. 10 When the flowers of Squilla be of a brownish colour, and do not soon fall or vade away, that year shall be very fruitful and plentiful of corn. 11 Squilla may not be taken inward raw but roasted, baked, or sodden, half a dram is sufficient to be taken at once with honey, for the jaundice, the old Cough, shortness of wind, and gnawing in the body. 12 It is good for the headache, the falling sickness, dizziness of the head, griefs of the sinews, breast, lungs and joints, especially licked in with honey, it maketh a clear voice, and so doth the vinegar and oxymel thereof. 13 It helpeth the hardness and and stopping, and swelling of the milt. 14 It withstandeth putrefaction in the body, and therefore keepeth a man in health, and maketh his body continued still in young state, but they make a man lean. 15 The Squilla helpeth lose gums, and the vinegar maketh the teeth fast, the mouth being washed therewith, voideth stink of the mouth, and causeth a sweet breath, it stauncheth ache of the stomach, it helpeth digestion, and causeth a good colour. 16 It maketh a lose body fast, and compact howsoever it be taken. 17 The sodden drink of it may be taken from ten drams to three ounces. 18 The use of Squilla quickeneth the sight, being taken with vinegar & honey, it killeth worms. 19 Lick three half penny weight of it with honey for the griefs of the stomach, when the meat swimmeth therein, the dropsy, jaundice, old cough, shortness of breath and vomiting. 20 The vinegar, oxymel, and Loch. are good for the same purposes, and to kill all manner of worms, to expel melancholy, to help the apoplexia, to break & expel the stone, to cleanse the matrix, & to help the sciatica. 21 Where Squilla is placed, it keepeth trees and plants from noyance. 22 Hickit, take a spoonful of the vinegar of it. For ruptures in the feet or hands through the French disease, divide it, and boil it in old oil till it be tender, then grind it, to an ointment and anoint therewith. 23 Emeralds, steep raw onions in Acetum Squilliticum, and apply them. 24 Milt hard, mix the fat of a Crane with the vinegar, and anoint therewith after the coming out of a bath. Apoplexia 20 Belching 1 Belly-ache 1 bound 4 Bitings venomous 6 Bewitched 9 Breast stopped 3. 12. 19 Breath short 3. 12 stink 15 Chaps 7. 22 Cough 3. 12. 19 Colour bad 15 Dropsy 1. 5. 19 Eyes dull 18 Emeralds 23 Falling evil 12 Feet ruptures 22 Gums lose 15 Hands rupt. 22 Head giddy 12 scurf 7 sores 7 Hickit 22 jaundice 1. 12. 19 Kernels 8 Kibes 7 Kings evil 8 Lean to be 14 Lungs griefs 12 Matrix to cleanse 20 Melancholy 20 Milt griefs 13. 24 Mouth stink 15 Purgation 1. etc. Sciatica 20 Sinews griefs 12 Sorcery 9 Sores 7 Stomach ache 1. 15. 19 Stone 20 Sickness general 12. 14. 16. 20 Teeth lose 15 Throat kernels 8 Thirst 5 Voice ill 12 Vomiting 19 Venom 6 Urine stopped 1 Warts 7 Worms 2. 18 Witchcraft 9 Youth to preserve 14 ¶ Squinant. SQuinant, which is like Date straw, the herb, flower, or root drunk with pepper, doth help the Dropsy, and is good for the lungs, milt, and reins being used. 2 The root is good against the wind Colic, phlegm, and raw matter in the body, or any member of the same, the powder thereof being drunk with wine. 3 Drink one dram of the root with as much pepper a few days against the loathing of the stomach, the dropsy and cramp. 4 The flowers are good against voiding of blood, and pain of the stomach, lungs, liver, and kidneys. 5 It maketh the head heavy. 6 Matrix griefs general, use Squinant. Backache 1. 4 Blood voiding 4 Colic 2 Cramp 3 Dropsy 1. 3 Kidneys 1. 4 Liver griefs 4 Lungs griefs 1. 4 Matrix griefs 6 Milt griefs 1 Stomach pain 4 raw 3 Windiness 2 ¶ Stavesacre. Stavesacre, fifteen seeds taken with honeyed water causeth to vomit gross phlegm, and slimy matter with great violence. 2 The seed mixed with oil, driveth away louse, and cureth all scurvy itch and maunginesse. 3 The seed boiled in vinegar, and holden in the mouth, suageth the toothache. 4 The same chewed in the mouth, purgeth the head and brain. 5 With vinegar it killeth louse, being rubbed on the apparel. 6 The seeds must be steeped in vinegar, and dried, and the powder drunk with honeyed water, and the receiver of it must walk continually, and drink honeyed water often, when he feeleth any kind of choking, and so it will work without danger. 7 Mix the pap of sodden Stavesacre with wine leeses, and wash the head therewith against the ulcers and scab, etc. 8 The seeds mixed with oil killeth nits, and with oil and vinegar it killeth louse. 9 Stamp it with oil, & anoint swellings therewith, especially about the nails, and all scurf, scab, and leaprie, and to kill Lice and nits both in man and beast. 10 seeth it it in vinegar, & wash the teeth therewith for their ache & looseness, and to stop rheum. 11 With honey it healeth the sores of the mouth. 12 It cleanseth the matrix being applied plasterwise. 13 Teethache, put in powder of Stavesacre, long pepper, and Piretum into a linen bag, and chew it between thy teeth, or use Stavesacre only. 14 Dropsy, seeth it in water and drink the water. 15 Ears dull, seeth it with radish seeds, and wormwood, and dip tents therein, and put them in. Fistula in the ear, boil powder of Stavesacre and bryony in vinegar, and put it in. 16 Gums rotten, seeth Stavesacre in vinegar, and wash therewith. 17 Lice to kill, mix powder of it with black soap, & anoint therewith. 18 Head to purge, hold the powder of it in a linen bag, and chew it sometimes. Head sores, seeth it in water with wine leeses, and wash therewith. 20 Lice to kill, mix it with oil and quicksilver, and anoint. 21 Morphue, mix the powder of it and Lytarge, & make a bathe, and wash therewith. 22 Dropsy; seeth it with yssop in wine, and drink it. 23 Teethache, put the powder in a clout, and dip it in aqua vitae, and apply it. Dropsy 14. 22 Ears dull 15 Fistula 15 Gums rotten 16 Head skabs 7. 19 head to purge 4. 18 Itch 2. 9 Leapry 9 Lice 25. 8. 9 17. 20 Mange 2 Matrix to cleanse 12 Morphue 2● Mouth sores 11 Nails griefs 9 Nits 8. 9 Purgation 6. etc. Scabs 9 scurf 2. 9 Swell 9 Teethach 3. 10. 13. 23 lose 10 Vomit to 'cause 1. 6 ¶ Stinking Horehound. STinking Horehound: Dogbiting, stamp it with salt, and apply it. 2 Roast the leaves in a Colewort leaf, and apply it to the swelling lumps in the fundament. 3 With honey they purge filthy & found wounds, and cure rotten ulcers. (See Horehound. Dogg-biting 1 Fundament griefs 2 Swell 2 Ulcers 3 Wounds 3 ¶ Spikenard. SPikenard, (See Lavender.) It driveth forth water, and causeth to piss well, it it be drunk: it stoppeth the Belly. 2 If it be laid to, it stoppeth the coming out of matter from the matrix. 3 Taken with cold water, it helpeth the gnawing of the stomach, it expelleth wind, helpeth the liver, the jaundice, and griefs of the kidneys, being sodden in water, and sitten over, it is good for the inflammation of the matrix, it is good to restore hair to the eye lids, and to be cast upon bodies that sweat too much, and are moist. 4 It is put into antibodies, and treacles, and it is commonly laid up in a new earthen vessel for eye medicines, being first made into powder, and then into round cakes, or trochiskes with wine. 5 French Spikenard is good for the purposes aforesaid, it driveth forth water more mightily, and is better for the stomach, it helpeth inflammations of the Liver, and the jaundice. 6 Drink it with wine against the griefs of the milt, kidneys and bladder, and against all venomous bitings. 7 Stomach windy, drink it with broth of Worm wood. 8 It is somewhat weaker than Nardus Indie, or else of like virtues in all things. 9 Use Spikenard to dry up the moisture of the dropsy. 10 Heart weak, sick, and swoning, seeth it in wine, and make a syrup, and use it. Belly lose 1 Bitings venomous 6 Bladder griefs 6 Dropsy 9 Heart griefs 10 Hair to grow 3 jaundice 3. 5 Kidneys griefs 6 Liver griefs 3. 5 Matrix flux 2 inflamed 3 Milt griefs 6 Stomach ache 3. 7 Sweeting much 3 Swooning 10 urine stopped 1 Windiness 3. 7 ¶ Stitchwort. STtchwort: If a woman drink the seeds of it three days fasting, after she hath had her natural course, and that she happen to conceive within forty days after, it shallbe a manchild. 2 Sodden in wine, it breaketh the stone, and is good against the hardness of the milt, and stopping of the liver and gall, it cleanseth the reins, bladder, and passage of the urine. 3 The seed doth vehemently purge the urine, and stoppeth vomiting. 4 Drink Stitchwort for stitches. 5 Use it with other medicines for the dropsy. 6 It healeth wounds and sore eyes. Back griefs 2. 3 Bladder stopped 2. 3 Conception 1 Dropsy 5 Eyes sore 6 Liver stopped 2 Milt hard 2 Stitch 4 Stone 2 Vomiting 3 Urine stopped 2. 3 Wounds 6 ¶ Stoncrop. SToncrop, (See in Houseleek. Small Stoncrop, Stonhore or wall-pepper, causeth vomit, taken with vinegar, and so voideth gross, slimy, and hot choleric humours, and is good against fevers, and all poison in the body, but none must take it, but they that are strong and lusty. 2 Mixed with Swine's grease, it dissolveth and driveth away wens, the kings evil, and swelling in the throat, and hard swellings. 3 Being applied alone on the bore skin, it causeth weals and blisters. 4 Stoncrop for an Impostume, stamp it with Laureall and strain it, and drink it with stolen ale twice a day, it killeth worms. Blister to make 3 Fevers 1 Impostume 4 Kings evil 2 Poison 1 Swell hard 2 Throat swollen 2 Vomit to 'cause 1 Wens 2 Worms 4 ¶ Stecados. STecados, or French Lavender sodden with the flowers, or the flowers alone, and drunk, openeth the liver, lungs, milt, kidneys, mother, bladder, and all inner parts, cleansing and expelling all evil and corrupt humours, and is good against headache, and griefs of the breast and lungs, and expelleth the terms. 2 The flowers are good in medicines to expel poison. 3 Smell often to the leaves and flowers to comfort the brain, memory, and inward senses: It strengtheneth all the senses and the whole body, and delivereth from all obstructions, and helpeth the griefs of the stomach. Bladder stopped 1 Breast griefs 1 Brain weak 3 Headache 1 Liver stopped 1 Lungs griefs 1 Matrix griefs 1 Milt griefs 1 Obstructions general 3 Poison 2 Sickness general 1. 2. 3 Stomach griefs 3 ¶ Strawberrie. STtrawberrie, The juice of the leaves with wine of Pomegranates, and a little Rose water applied, is good for hot Apostumes in their beginning and increase. 2 The leaves used in a bathe, do greatly help the Stone. 3 Stamp three or four handful of the leaves, and seeth them in water, and bate therewith the hips upward, and then anoint with this ointment: take Dealthea one ounce, honey half an ounce, wax one dram, and melt them together and use it both for the Sciatica to soften hardness, and to provoke urine. 4 The berries take away unnatural heat, and do cool and moisten dry Choleric men. 5 The herb eaten in meat is good for the milt and the griefs thereof, and so is the juice drunk. 6 The juice with white pepper helpeth them that are short wound. 7 The berries slake thirst, and are good for the stomach. 8 The decoction of the roots drunk morn and even, doth qualify the Liver. 9 And the decoction of the herb and root together, doth qualify the heat of the Liver, and doth cleanse the reins and bladder. 10 The best distilling of the berries, is when they be ripe, but not over soft, and they which grow in hilly Woods are best. 11 The water drunk, or mixed with somewhat, and drunk, qualifieth unnatural heat, & slaketh thirst. 12 Drink iiii. ounces morn and even to help the leapry. 13 To purge the blood, drink it with wine, or otherways eat it with bread to cleanse the foul scab of the body. 14 Drink it in the same manner to help the liver, the King's evil, to loosen the breast, to comfort the heart, to purge the blood, and for the stone of the kidneys and bladder. 15 Gargoyle therewith to help the ulcers and grievous swellings and stink of the mouth and throat. Let women drink it to cleanse them and sand down their terms. 16 Wash the filthy corruptions and skabs of the legs therewith morn and even, and also apply it with linen clotheses. 16 Drink thereof and also wash filthy wounds therewith to heal them. 17 Wash the face therewith for the swelling thereof. 18 Mix it with salt, and distil it over again, to cool and clear the eyes. 19 Strawberries or the water of them, is good for all inward heat of the liver and lungs, the inflammation of the whole body, to quench thirst, and to help the redness of the face being daily drunk, and the face washed therewith. And likewise it comforteth the heart, helpeth the griefs of the breast, cleanseth the blood, and helpeth the jaundice. 20 The water helpeth the ulcers of the mouth and the squincy being gargarised. 21 The same taketh away the spots and redness of the face and legs. 22 The berries put in a brazen vessel with salt in a low seller viii. days till it turn to a green water, is very good for the pain in the eyes. 23 The decoction of the plant drunk, stoppeth the task & the terms. 24 The same holden in the mouth comforteth the gums, and cureth the ulcers and sores of the mouth and stink of the same. 25 The juice of the leaves cureth the redness of the face. 26 The continual use of the berries is good for a hot stomach. 27 The leaves eaten in meats, or the juice drunk with honey, helpeth the griefs of the milt, and with pepper it helpeth shortness of wind. 28 There is a juice pressed out of Strawberries, which in time increaseth strength, and is a present remedy against the sores and weals of the face, and bloodshotten eyes. 29 Use the leaves with Borage and bugloss in meats to engender good blood. 30 Mix the juice of the leaves & of Planten, of each three drams, with one dram of Ash leaves, and seeth them together to a plaster, and apply it to a broken leg or any other member to knit the bones speedily. 31 Water of the decoction thereof is good to be drunk against the ache and heat of the head, and for sweeting and inward heat. 32 The juice taken with Cummin, is good against a stinking breath. 33 And taken with Borage, it is good against the ache of the head & heart. 34 And with the juice of Planten, it stoppeth the terms. 35 The water dropped into the eyes, helpeth their redness, itch, and inflammation. 36 They may be made in conserve as Barberies. Voice to be clear, drink the juice. 37 Heap Strawberries on one ounce of Salgem iiii. or v. days, than strain it and put it in a box, and use it to the web of the eyes. 38 Eyes pain, distil the berries with white wine, and use it for the pin and the web. 39 Teeth and gums foul, rub them with Strawberry leaves. 40 Stone to break, distil Strawberries with their leaves, and drink the water as other drink. 41 Teethache, chew the leaves. 42 They are good for bleared eyes. 43 Conserve of Strawberries, set a quart of them on the fire till they be foft, strain them and put thereto twice their weight of sugar, and seeth it till it be incorporated. It is good against a hot liver, and burning of the stomach, especially in hot fevers. 44 Face leprous, wash with the water being first putrefied in a glass before they be distilled. 45 jaundice, use the leaves and roots in pottage certain days. 46 Mix the juice with honey and a little white Pepper, and use it for the pain of the milt and the ptisike. 47 Face pimples, put ripe Strawberries into a leap of green rushes, and hung it against a wall where the sun hath most power over a glass, and anoint with the water. Apost hot 1 Bladder griefs 9 14 Blood to cleanse 14. 19 29 Bones broken 30 Breath short 6 28 stink 32 Breath stopped 14. 19 Conserve 43 Eyes griefs 18. 22. 28. 35. 37 38. 42 Face deformed 19 21. 25. 28 44. 47 swollen 17 Fevers hot 43 Gums griefs 2. 4. 39 Flowers stopped 14 to stop 23. 34 Fluxes 23 Hardness 3 Heart griefs 14. 19 33 Headache 31. 33 heat 31 Hot griefs 4. 19 31 jaundice 45 Kidneys griefs 9 Kings evil 14 Leapry 12. 13. 44 Legs scabbed 16. 21 Liver griefs 8. 9 14. 19 Lungs griefs 19 Milt griefs 5. 28. 46 Mouth griefs 15. 20. 24 Ptisike 46 Sciatica 3 Scabs 13. 16 Squincy 20 Stomach hot 26. 43 Stone 2. 14. 40 Sweeting 31 Teethache 41 foul 39 Thirst 7. 11. 19 Throat griefs 15. 20 Voice ill 36 Urine stopped 3 women's griefs 14 Wounds 16 ¶ Tamarinds. TAmarinds scour away choler, and hold down the rage of it of the heat of blood. 2 They are very good for the burning of the liver and stomach, thirst, all kinds of burnings, and the jaundice. 3 They stop vomitings, and help hot and hasty agues that had need of purgation. 4 The dose is one ounce of the flesh strained, and some are sufficed with half an ounce. It is good to put to it almost as much Cassia, and so may the Cassia be the better taken. And some Spikenard or mastic, or Maces, are good to be put to it to mitigate the coldness of it. 5 It will work more strongly with the juice of hops, or of Parsley, or of Fenell, or of Endive. The best are black, shining, fresh, and not dry. 6 They are good to be used for the griefs of the head. Head-griefes 6 Hot griefs 1 etc. jaundice 2 Liver hot 2 Stomach hot 2 Thirst 2 ¶ Tamariske. TAmariske: it is a medicine of excellent power and virtue against the stopping & hardness of the milt, if it be but drunk out of, being made into a vessel to drink it. 2 The decoction of the leaves and young springs boiled in wine with a little vinegar and drunk, doth heal the stopping and hardness of the milt, and so doth the juice drunk with wine. 3 Teethache, seeth the branches and leaves in wine, and hold it hot in thy mouth. 4 Flowers to stop, seethe the leaves in water, and sit in it hot. 5 Lice & nits, seeth it and wash therewith to kill them. 6 The fruit of the great Tamariske, is good against spitting of blood, to stop the flowers and the lask, and against venomous bitings. 7 The same fruit is used in stead of galls in medicines for the griefs of the mouth and eyes. 8 The bark is of the same virtue that the fruit is of. 9 The leaves, wood, root, and juice sodden in wine and drunk, helpeth the griefs of the lungs, milt, kidneys, & bladder: it driveth forth melancholy, it helpeth spitting of blood, and the excessive flowing of terms and all other fluxes, the jaundice, and all other griefs that come of obstructions. 10 The root sodden with Reasins and drunk, helpeth the Leapry, because it cleanseth and healeth the milt, whereof the Leapry cometh. 11 A pyggin made of the branches thereof, is good for them to drink in that be splenetike. 12 The decoction of the leaves is good for women that be pale to sit in, when they are troubled with the whites. 13 Lee made of the ashes killeth louse and nits. 14 The ashes cast upon spreading sores doth dry them up, and helpeth burnings with fire. 15 Use powder of it in bread for the quarten Fever and the Dropsy. 16 The fruit is like Galls, and may be used for them. 17 A plaster thereof suageth swellings. 18 The bark is good for the same purpose. 19 The ashes of the wood applied to the convenient place, stoppeth the outrageous flowing of the matrix. 20 The broth of the leaves is good to sit in for women that have a lose mother in peril of falling down. 21 The bark of the roots of heath may be used in stead of the bark of the root of Tamariske, rather than the bark of quickebeame. 22 The perfume of Tamariske is good for cold apostumes. 23 The broth of it sodden with Reasins drunk, is good for the Leapry. 24 Tamariske dressed after the manner of Guiacum for the French pocks, is thought to have the like virtues. 25 Milt griefs, stamp the leaves with vinegar and apply them. Apostumes 22 Biting venom. 6 Bladder griefs 9 Burn 14 Dropsy 15 Eyes griefs 7 Fever quarten 15 Flowers to stop 4. 6. 9 19 Fluxes 6. 9 French pocks 24 jaundice 9 Kidneys griefs 9 Leapry 10. 23 Lice 5. 13 Lungs griefs 9 Matrix flux 19 falling 20 Melancholy 9 Milt grief 1. 2. 9 11. 25 Mouth grief 7 Nits 5. 13 Obstructions 9 Sores 14 Spitting blood 6. 9 Swell 17 Teethache 3 Whites 12. 19 20 women's griefs 12 ¶ tansy. tansy: the seed is singular good to kill worms and expel them howsoever it be taken. 2 Sinews ache and swollen, stamp it with oil and apply it. 3 Fevers, anoint with the juice of oil of Roses to put away the fits. Bladder pain and pissing by drops, drink it with wine. 4 The root condited or preserved with sugar, is good to be taken for the pain of the gout in the feet. seeth the seeds in wine with honey, and drink it to kill worms. 5 The same hath also the nature of Camomile, it ceaseth ache, and provoketh sweat. 6 It is one of the kinds of Mugwort. 7 tansy is good for the palsy, for it voideth phlegm, and drieth the sinews. It killeth worms, and voideth the matter whereof they breed, and is good for the stone and stopping of the urine. 8 Stamp Sage, Rue, and tansy, of each like much with wine and drink it for the fever quarten. 9 Teeth worms, stamp it, and put it in. 10 Belly-ache and swelling, stamp tansy, Sothernwood and Rue with salt, and apply them hot. 11 Eyes bleared, put in the juice. 12 jaundice of cold cause, and for pissing of blood, drink the juice. 13 Worms, drink the juice of tansy, and Goose tansy. 14 Belly-ache, eat tansy, Rue, and Sothernwood with salt. 15 Cough, fill dry Figs with tansy seeds, and seeth them in white wine with one ounce of Liquorice, with a soft fire to the one half, and drink thereof every night. 16 Worms, (See Camomile.) 17 Pocks, (See Peniroyall.) 18 To purge the matrixe, stamp half an ounce, and strain it with wine and drink it. 19 Boil Tansy and wild Tansy with salt, and drink it for inward bruises. 20 Matrix to cleanse, drink half an ounce of the powder of it with good white wine. 21 Fluxes general, mix the juice with yolks of eggs, and the fatness of wheat, and bake small cakes of it, and eat them two or three days. 22 Flowers to stop, drink the juice, and apply the substance. It helpeth also burstings or ruptures, especially with Planten. 23 Worms, drink the juice. 24 jaundice, drink it often with ale. 25 Belly-ache, (See Rue.) Face sauseflegme, eat Tansy and Sothernwood. 26 Drink the juice of Tansy to void urine speedily. Worms, stamp it and seeth it in water and drink. 27 Ache in the back, kidneys, and limbs, stamp Tansy with sheeps tallow, and fry it & apply it. 28 Fever quarten, stamp Sage, Rue, and Tansy, of each like much, and drink it with wine. Ache 5. 27 Backeache 27 Bellyach 10. 14. 25 swol. 10 Bladder pain 3 Bursten 22 bruised 19 Cough 15 Eyes bleared 11 Face deformed 25 Fever 3 quarten 8. 28 Feet gout 4 Phlegm 7 Flowers to stop 22 Fluxes general 21 Gout 4 jaundice 12. 24. Matrix to cleanse 18. 20 Palsy 7 Pissing blood 12 Pocks 17 Sinews swollen 2 Swell 2 Sweat to 'cause 5 Stone 7 Teeth worms 9 Urine stopped 3. 7. 26 Worms 1. 4. 7. 13. 16. 23. 26 ¶ Tarragon. TArragon is good in Salads with lettuce as Rocket is, and is sharp and salt enough of itself, without the help of vinegar and salt. ¶ Tar. Tar, or liquid pitch, taken with Hony, doth cleanse the breast, and helpeth shortness of wind. It doth mollify and ripen all heart swellings, and is good to anoint the squinsy or swelling in the throat, and is an anodine to take away ache or pain. 2 Applied with Barley meal, it softeneth the hardness of the matrixe and fundament. 3 Mixed with quick Brimstone, it represseth fretting ulcers, skabs, and scurf. 4 With salt, it is good for venomous bitings and stingings. 5 It cureth the rifts and chaps of the fundament, hands, and feet. 6 And with fine powder of Frankincense, it healeth hollow ulcers or fistulas, and filleth them up with flesh. 7 It is good to be put into fistulas, with a tent of Bacon. 8 Matrixe rend, stitch it up and anoint it with Pix liquida. 9 To cause a siege in Tenasmus, or straining to void the excrements, take up the fume of Tar, or Turpentine. 10 It is good against poison, spitting blood and matter. With Rose oil, it helpeth the mattering of the ears. 11 With as much Wax, it helpeth the rough nails and the impetigo, ringworm, tetter, scab, and itch. 12 Sodden with Barley meal in the urine of a chaste boy, it breaketh strumes, wens and swellings. 13 And with Raisins and Hony, it healeth carbuncles and rotten ulcers, and breaketh them. 14 Fundament fallen, anoint it with Tar, and put it in. 15 Head scaled, mix it with salt, foot, and salad oil of each like weight, and anoint it daily and be whole, it bringeth also plenty of hair. 16 Matrixe fallen, cast on powder of Eg-shels wherein Chickens have been hatched, and then lay on Tar. 17 To bring a Canker out of a sore old or new, mix one spoonful of Tar with as much new cream, and apply it with a cloth thrice if need be. 19 Put it into a hollow tooth to break it, and cease the ache. 20 It taketh away blewenesse under the eyes. 21 It breaketh apostumes. In a glister it killeth worms. 22 It healeth the leapry. 23 piles, apply the reddest Tar upon new lockrome, and thereon lay bolsters, and do so once a day, and bind them to. Ache 1 Apostume 13. 21 Belly bound 9 Bitings venomous 4 Breast to cleanse 1 Breath short 1 Bruise 20 Chaps 5 Conception 18 Carbuncle 13 Ears matter 10 Emerods' 23 Face deformed 20 Fundament hard 2 fallen 14 Fistula 6. 7 Hardness 1 Head skald 15 Itch 3. 11 canker 17 Kernels 12 Leapry 11. 22 Matrixe fallen 16 hard 2 rent 8 Nails rough 11 Piles 23 Poison 10 ringworm 11 Scabs 3. 11 Skurse 3. 11 Sores 3. 6. 17 squinsy 1. 12 Spitting matter 10 Stinging 4 Swelling 1. 12 Teethach 19 Tetter 11 Tenasmus 9 Throat swollen 1. 12 Ulcers 3. 6. 13 Venom 4 Uncome 13 Wens 12 Worms 21 ¶ Tasell. TAsell: the root boiled in wine, and stamped to the thickness of an ointment, healeth chaps, and rifts, and fistulas of the fundament: but to preserve this ointment, it must be kept in a copper vessel. 2 The small worms that are found in the heads worn about the neck or arm in a thin leaf, do cure the quarten fever. It is also good for all kinds of warts. 3 The water that standeth between the leaves and stalks doth the same. 4 Frenzy, apply the leaves to the head. 5 Ears worms, put in the juice. 6 Use the distilled water of the leaves for rottenness of the mouth and gums, and chaps of the fundament, especially the root sodden in wine to pap, and then mixed with wax and put into a copper vessel, and so it helpeth chaps, fistulas, and creeping sores, shingles, pimples, and hanging warts. 7 The water that standeth in the leaves, is good for read eyes, spots of the face, especially under the eyes. 8 Dropsy, stamp the roots of tassel and Danewurt, and seethe them in wine, and drink it. 9 Gout, seethe tassel in read wine, and drink it morn and even nine days. 10 Spitting blood, seeth Tasell and Planten in rain water, and drink thereof with sugar at morn, noon, and even. 11 Flowers to stop, drink two drams of the powder of it with a Poringer full of pease broth, or stamp it and boil it in vinegar, and apply it under the Navel. 12 Wounds moist and hard to heal, stamp it and apply it. 13 Flux and excoriations of the belly, drink powder of it with good wine. 14 Yard canker, stamp the leaves and apply it often. Chaps 1. 6 Dropsy 8 Ears worms 5 Eyes read 7 Face deformed 7 Fever quarten 2. 3 Fistula 1. 6 Flowers to stop 11 Fluxes 13 Frenzy 4 Fundament griefs 1. 6 Gums rotten 6 Gout 9 canker 14 Mouth griefs 6 Sores 6 Spitting blood 10 Warts 2. 3. 6 Wounds moist 12 Yard canker 14 ¶ Thapsia. THapsia, Mesnes, Turbith: The bark of the root one dram or somewhat less, purgeth phlegm and choler from the stomach and all parts, and is good against shortness of breath, stopping of the breast, the cholike, pain in the sides, shrinking & drawing of the sinews, the gouts and ache of the joints. 2 Laid too with oil, it is good against foul scurf of the head, and causeth hair to grow again. 3 With Frankincense, it disperseth congealed blood of bruises. 4 The juice of the root with Honey, taketh away lentils, spots, and scurf of the face or elsewhere. 5 The juice with sulphur, dissolveth all swellings. 6 The root with oil and wax, is good for the old pain of the head, and ache in the side and outward parts. 7 It must be corrected with Ginger or long Pepper, and a little Sugar, when it is taken inward. 8 Tripolium, serapious, turbith: two drams taken of the root, Purgeth waterish humours, and helpeth the dropsy. 9 It is good in medicines against poison. 10 The leaves or juice heal all wounds. 11 Ranker to heal, apply powder of the root of Turbith with Hony. Ash 1. 6 Breast stopped 1 Breath short 1 Bruise 3 Dropsy 8 Face deformed 4 Head ache old 6 scurf 2 Hair to grow 2 joints ache 1 canker 11 Purgation 18 Poison 9 sinews griefs 1 Side ache 6 Skin deformed 4 Swell 5 Wounds 10 ¶ Thlaspi. THlaspi seeds eaten, purge choler both upward and downward, provoketh terms, and breaketh apostumes both inward and outward. 2 and taken with a Glister, it helpeth the sciatica, and is good also to be applied outwardly, as Mustard seed. 3 It seemeth to be that which we call penny weed among grass on lays and balks. Flowers stopped 1 Impostume 1 Purgation 1 Sciatica 2 Vomit to cause 1 ¶ Thistle. THistle: the wild Thistle, that, especially with the black long root boiled in wine and drunk, provoketh by urine, and expelleth all superfluities of the blood, and causeth the urine to stink, and so maketh the body and armpits free from such strong smell. 2 The same applied with vinegar, healeth the wild scurf and naughty scab. 3 Some use to eat the buds and roots, but it giveth no good nourishment, but waterish and nought. 4 Lady Thistles, the roots drunk in wine, is good against spitting of blood and feebleness of the stomach, and looseness of the belly: it provoketh urine, and expelleth it out. 5 Teeth ache, seethe it in wine and use it to the teeth. 6 Stamp it to cold and soft swellings, to consume them. 7 The seed is good for the cramp in children, or the drawing awry of any member, and the bitings of any venomous beast. 8 Eyes blemish, put in the juice of Lady Thistle. 9 Botch to break, stamp sow Thistle and apply it. 10 Dropsy, drink the juice of sow Thistle morn and even, or seeth the leaves of Lady Thistle in wine or water to the one half, and drink thereof morn and even nine days. 11 Dropsy in the belly and jaundice, seeth sow Thistle and the root thereof in ale, from a gallon to a quart, and drink thereof. 12 Face sauseflegme, stamp the sharp Thistle, and drink it till thou be whole. 13 To avoid all ill humours out of the stomach and other parts of the body, make broth of Saint marry Thistle, water Cress, Eldrens buds, Auens, Parsley and Isope, and use it. 14 Urine stopped, stamp the root of Thistle, and boil it in wine and drink it. 15 Pricks, apply the leaves or roots of the Thistle with Pitch, Rosin, and the white of an egg. 16 Stone, gather Thistle roots in saying the Lords prayer, and wash them eight times, and put thereto eighty one grains of Pepper, and so strain it and drink it. 17 For biting of a mad dog, and madness that cometh thereby, 18 Dry the flowers of wild Thistles in the shadow, and drink a Wall nut shell full of the powder of them with white wine, and be whole at thrice taking of it. 19 White cotton Thistle, the leaves or roots drunk, are good for the Crycke and shrinking of the sinews, by means of the cramp, (See Caltrope.) Apostume 6. 9 Back crick 19 Belly lose 4 Bitings venomous 7. 17 Botch 9 Cramp 7. 19 Dropsy 10. 11 Eyes blemish 8 Face sauseflegme 12 jaundice 11 Mad 17 Mad dog 17 Pricks 15 Purgation 1. 13 sinews griefs 7. 19 Scab 2 scurf 2 Spitting blood 4 Stinking sweat 1 Stomach weak 4 Stone 16 Swell 6 Teeth ache 5 Urine stopped 1. 4. 14 ¶ Throughwaxe. THroughwaxe boiled in water or wine and drunk, healeth wounds, and so do the green leaves bruised and applied, mixed with wax, oil or ointments fit to heal wounds: it healeth burstings of young children. 2 Stamp it with meal and wine, and lay it to the navels of young children, to keep up their bowels, and draw them to the Natural place and settle them, and to slake them when they are too much windy and swollen. 3 The like doth the powder of the seeds applied in like manner. 4 Stamp it with wax or glue, and apply it to the swelling of the Cod, burstings, inflammations and wens. 5 The herb or the water thereof, is good for the holy fire and the shingles, and it cooleth a hot stomach. 6 The whole herb is very meet to heal both inward wounds, sores and burstings, especially of children, and the going out of the navel & great gut, and so doth both the seeds and leaves. 7 The powder of the leaves drunk with wine, helpeth the herneyes. 8 The herb applied to the navel, healeth the ulceration thereof. 9 Children bursten, stamp it, and lay it to the navel: or take the powder of the seeds with wine or milk. Belly swollen 2 windy 2 Bursten 1. 4. 6. 7. 9 Cod swollen 4. 7 Fundament fallen 2. 6 Holy fire 5 Inflammation 4 Navel out 6 sore 8 Shingles 5 Sores 6 Stomach hot 5 Wens 4 Wounds 1. 6 ¶ Thyme. THyme: Running Thyme provoketh the terms and urine, and stoppeth the distilings of the head proceeding of a cold stomach being drunk in wine. 2 And helpeth the headache and frenzy being sodden in Rose water and applied. Lethargy, apply it to the head with vinegar. 3 Vomiting blood, drink two drams of the juice with vinegar. 4 Urine stopped, drink the seeds with wine. 5 Drink the hereby part daily with wine, to break and expel the stone, both of the kidneys & bladder. 6 Apply the herb to the stinging of a Bee, to heal it. 7 Seethe the herb in wine with the juice of sweet Lycoras, and drink it, to help the cough and purge the breast. 8 Seethe it with Aniseeds, & drink it to heat the stomach, to void wind in the Guts, and for the strangury. seeth it in vinegar and Honey, and drink a cupful at once, to help the spitting of blood: or drink four drams of the juice with vinegar, for the same purpose. 9 Seethe it in wine & Honey, & apply it to the squincy, to help it. 10 Seethe it in wine and drink it, to open the stops of the liver and milt, and to provoke urine. 11 Drink three ounces of the distilled water morn & even, to strengthen & amend the head and brain, and stomach, and to provoke appetite, to avoid rumbling in the belly, to soften the hardness of the stomach, to provoke urine, to comfort the sight, and to consume the distillation of the head. 12 Drink the said water with water of wormwood, to heal the fever quotidian. 13 Drink three ounces of the water at once, to amend the cold liver and milt, and for the exulceration of the guts, to open the stops of the nostrils and ears, to restore hearing, to help the giddiness of the head, to stay vomiting, to avoid the gripings in the belly, to break the stone, and to provoke urine. 14 Apply the water with linen clotheses, to bruises, to heal them. 15 Stamp the herb with Honey, & apply it to sinews shrunk, or joints out. 16 Seethe it in wine and drink it, for the ache & griefs of the stomach, gravel in the reins, and to increase milk. 17 Drink it with vinegar, to abate lust. 18 Stamp it and apply it to the head, to stop rheum. 19 Seethe it in wine or water and drink it, to drive down the terms, gravel & stone, and to provoke vomit, to stop the lask, to our gripings & cramps, and the drawings or shrink of the sinews. 20 Use it in meats & broths against all poison & venomous bitings and stingings of serpents. 21 Apply it with oil of Roses & vinegar, to the forehead & temples, to avoid headache, raving and frenzy. 22 It is called wild Thyme, running Thyme, Puliol mountain, and groweth also on banks in fields. 23 The perfume of it driveth away all venomous beasts. 24 Seethe it in wine with Honey, Aniseeds & Lycoras, for the dry clammy cough, to comfort the stomach, and to help the strangury. 25 Use it for a pot-herbe, as Parsley. 26 Garden Thyme drunk with wine, provoketh urine & terms, and purgeth the bowels. 27 Sodden with Honey, it helpeth shortness of breath, and most griefs of the breast, by spitting out of the corrupt matter. 28 Drink four drams of the fine powder with oxymel, to purge choler, and to cleanse the bladder. 29 Drink i. dram of the powder with Mellicrate, one spoonful fasting, to ease the pain of the bowels and loins. 30 Drink three drams of the powder, with one spoonful of oxymel, to avoid the wind of the breast, sides & flanks: and so it purgeth melancholy humours, and helpeth the dullness of the senses coming of melancholy, cleareth the sight, and helpeth the pain of the eyes, being taken fasting. 31 Drink the powder with wine, for the pain of the gout. 32 Use not Thime to much, because it is hot, and breedeth choler: the whitest is best, and the blackest the worst. 33 Seethe Thyme in wine, & drink it against wheasing, straightness and shortness of breath, small worms in the belly, bruised blood, to drive down the flowers, seconds, and dead younglings, and to resist poison: use it in meats & sauces, & for all things that running Thyme serveth for. 34 Apply it with vinegar, to bruises, congealed blood & warts: it may be used for wild Thyme or savoury. 35 Drink it with vinegar & salt, to purge phlegm. 36 Seethe it with Honey or Mede, to cleanse the lungs, breast, reins, matrixe & bladder, & to kill worms: use the powder in pottage, to comfort the eyesight. 37 The Bees profit most by it, of all herbs, so that plenty of Thyme flowers, bringeth plenty of Hony. 38 Drink i. ounce of dried Thyme, with iiii. drams of oxymel, with an empty stomach before dinner or supper, to help the stomach, guts, matrixe and bladder read eyes, and for the gout. 39 Mix the powder with Honey, and lick it in, to cleanse the breast. 40 Apply it in a plaster, to new swellings. 41 Take it with vinegar, to dissolve lumps of bruised blood. 42 Apply the tops to hanging warts and kernels. 43 Apply it with wine and parched barley meal, to the sciatica. 44 Gather it when it floweth. 45 Eyes rheum, eat Thyme. 46 colic and wind in the stomach, seethe it with Liquorice in wine, & drink it. 47 Liver, milt, kidneys and bladder, seethe wild Thyme in wine or ale, and drink it. 48 Belly ache, seethe it in wine and oil, and apply it. 49 colic, stamp it with saffron and strain it with oil, and drink it. 50 Ears dull, (See Camomile.) 51 Stitch, (See Cummin.) Rheum, stamp it and apply it to the head. 52 Eyes waterings and tears, seeth wild Thyme in water, and wash therewith. 53 Eyes dim, eat Thyme. 54 Breath short, seethe it in water, and when it is cold, strain it, & put Mel-rosat to it, and scum it, and drink thereof to bedward. 55 Gout & sciatica, stamp it with the white of an egg, and apply it: or apply the ashes thereof, with the white of an egg. 56 Fistula and hollow sores, stamp Thyme with salt, and apply it. 57 Stone, (See parsley.) 58 Knees swollen of cold cause, seethe one handful in a quart of malmsey to the one half, then put a piece of sweet butter to it, and boil it, and bathe therewith to bedward, and also apply it with a cloth. 59 Reins running, (See parietary.) 60 Bruises, distil wild Thime in a Limbeck, and apply it with linen clotheses. 61 Spitting blood, seethe wild Thyme in vinegar and Honey, and take four ounces every day, or take half an ounce of the juice and vinegar. 62 Chincough, seethe wild Thyme in wine, and drink it. 63 colic, stamp a good handful of unset Thyme, with three cloves of Garlic, and then strain them with ale, and make a possit, and drink the ale of it. Ache, (See Gout, Sciatica.) Appetite 11 Apost. (See swelling.) Back ache 16. 29. 36 Belly ache 8. 11. 13. 19 29. 38. 48. (See colic.) Bitings venomous 20 Bladder griefs 28. 36. 38. 47. (See Strangury.) Breast stopped, to cleanse 7. 39 griefs 27. 33. 36 Breath straight 27. 33. 54 Bruised 14. 33. 34. 41. 60 Choler 28 Chollike 30. 46. 49. 63 Chin-chough 62 Cough dry 24 Cramp 19 Dead child 33 Ears deaf 13. 50 Eyes dull 11. 30. 36. 53 read 38 rheum 45. 52 Fever quotidian 12 Fistula 56 Flank griefs 30 Phlegm 35 Flowers stopped 1. 19 26 Flux 19 Frenzy 2. 11. 21 Giddiness 13 Gout 31. 38. 55 Gravel 16. 19 Head ache 2. 11. 21 giddy 13 joints out 15 Knees swollen 58 Kernels 42 Liver cold 13 stopped 10. 47 Lungs griefs 1. 7. 36 Lust to void 17 Matrixe to cleanse 36. 38 Mad 21 Melancholy 21. 30 Milt cold 13 stopped 10. 47 Milk to 'cause 16 Nose stopped 13 Poison 20. 33 Purgation 26. 28. 30. 35 Reins running 59 Rheum 1. 11. 13. 18. 45. 51 Sciatica 43. 55 Seconds 33 Senowes griefs 15. 19 Sickness general 11. 30. 33 Side griefs 30 Sores 56 Spitting blood 8. 61 matter 27 squinsy 9 Stinging 1. 6. 20 Stitch 51 Stomach ache 16. 24 cold 18. 11 Stone 5. 13. 16. 19 57 Strangury 8. 24 Swell 40 Venom 23 Vomiting 13 to cause 19 Vomiting blood 3 Urine stopped 1. 4. 10. 11. 13. 26 Windiness 8. 33. 46 Warts 34. 42 Worms 33. 36 ¶ Tythimall. Tythimall: The juice openeth the belly, and sometimes causeth vomit, and bringeth forth tough phlegm and choleric humours: and so do the seeds and roots, especially the bark thereof: and are good for them that fall into the dropsy, being well corrected and prepared: the same mixed with Hony and anointed in the sun causeth hair to fall off: the same put into hollow and rotten teeth, suageth the toothache: but put none of the juice upon any sound teeth, but cover them with wax to preserve them from it. 2 The root boiled in vinegar and holden in the mouth, is good for the same intent. 3 The same doth cure all roughness of the skin, maundge, lepry, wild scurf, and spreading skabs, the white scurf of the head, and causeth all kinds of warts to fall off: it taketh away the knobs & hardness of Fistulas, corrupt and fretting ulcers, and is good for hot swellings and carbuncles: it killeth fish being mixed with any bait, and given them to eat. 4 The bark of the roots of the Tythimalles soaked four and twenty hours in vinegar, and then dried and made into powder with Aniseedes or Fenell seeds, or tragacanth, or mastic, and taken with some cooling liquor, as of Endive, Cycorie, or of Oranges, it will work without trouble or pain. 5 The powder of spurge or Tythimall supped up with a little cinnamon, in the broth of a Chicken or a rear egg in the morning, will purge gross phlegm very gently, and so it will being taken with Honey of Roses. 6 Seven seeds taken in a Fig, will purge melancholy and water. Twenty seeds drunk with pure sweet water, helpeth the dropsy. 7 A dram of the root drunk with Hydromell, purgeth phlegm downwards. 8 The outward bark of the roots of Tythimall or Esula steeped four and twenty hours in vinegar or milk, and then dried and powdered, and half a dram of it drunk with wine, or Hydromell, or mellicrat, expelleth all kind of waterish humours and choler, and is good for the dropsy. 9 The seeds of all Tythimalles, are of like virtue, but more hot and sharp troubling the belly and provoking strong vomits. 10 The milky juice may be mixed with the flower of Beans or Peason, and made into little cakes, and dried in the sun and kept for all purposes that it is good for. 11 Mix the juice of it with wheat flower, and fill hollow teeth therewith, to help the toothache, or seethe the root thereof in wine, and wash therewith every month once, and you shall have no toothache, (See Spurge.) 12 For swelling and aching of the cheeks and teeth, seethe it in water, and wash therewith, and apply the substance. 13 Tooth to draw out, apply the milky juice with wheat flower. 14 To kill a Fistula or canker quite, mix the milky juice with fresh swine's grease, and melt them and put thereto a little myrrh, and dip tents therein, and put them in deep enough: proved. 15 Warts, apply the milk juice. 16 Teeth to fall out, mix the milk with wheat flower, and dry it in the sun till it be hard, and so keep it and lay thereof upon the tooth and upon none other: for swelling and aching of the cheek, and for tooth ach, seethe it in water, and wash with the water, and apply the substance, (See Spurge, Esula.) Carbuncles 3 Dropsy 1. 6. 8 Fistula 3. 14 Fish to kill 3 Phlegm 7 Hardness 3 Head griefs 3 Hair to fall 1 canker 14 Knobs 3 lepry 3 Maundge 3 Melancholy 6 Plague sore 3 Purgation 1. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9 10 Scab 3 scurf 3 Sores 3 Teeth ache 1. 2. 11. 12 to fall out 13. 16 Ulcers 3 Vomit to 'cause 1. 9 Warts 3. 15 ¶ Tormentill. TOrmentill: the leaves and roots sodden in wine, or the juice drunk, provoketh sweat, and thereby expelleth all venom from the heart. 2 And eaten or drunk, they are good against all poison and pestilence: the same virtue hath the powder of the dried roots drunk in wine. 3 The root drunk with wine when there is no fever, or with water wherein Iron hath been often quenched, in a fever, cureth the bloody flux, and all other fluxes of the belly, and stoppeth the terms, and all issues of blood. 4 The decoction of the leaves and root, or the juice used both inward and outward, is good for all wounds, it openeth and healeth the stops and hurts of the liver and lungs, and the jaundice. 5 Eat the powder of the root with the white of an egg, to stay the desire to vomit, and against choler and melancholy. 6 Boil it in water, and wash the mouth therewith, to cure all evil ulcers, and the sores thereof. 7 Stamp the herb with oil, to heal the soreness of the feet and skabs in three days. 8 It closeth up new wounds, and cleanseth the eyes. 9 Drink powder of the root with the juice of Planten, against the stopping or scalding of the urine. 10 It is good against poison, the plague, and the bloody flux. 11 One dram of the root, or one handful of the herb or root sodden in wine and drunk warm, expelleth poison and the plague. 12 The herb, root, juice or powder, openeth the passages of the liver and lungs, and helpeth the jaundice, especially the juice thereof. 13 If any man be taken with sudden sickness, and cannot tell what it is, let him take one dram of treacle with wine of the decoction thereof, and cover him well, to sweated out all the venom, fever and pestilence. 14 The root used any manner of way, is good for all fluxes, both white and read. 15 The powder thereof drunk with read wine, cureth the bloody flux, if the party have no fever, but in a fever one dram of it, with the distilled water twice a day drunk, doth help it. Mix the powder with the white of an egg, half a nutmeg, and as much Ote flower, and bake it in a frying pan, and turn it now and then, and eat it, to heal all fluxes: or bake the powder with the white of an egg, on a hot brick or tile, and take one dram thereof with water of read Mints, for the same purpose. 16 The herb and root stamped & applied, taketh away all hardness, swellings, and gatherings of humours, wens, knots, kernels, & taketh away the pain of the hips. 17 And with vinegar, it helpeth the running scab, emerods, piles, and such like. 18 The water or juice stoppeth the terms. 19 The powder healeth cuts and wounds. 20 One part of the root drunk in rain water, and another part bruised with vinegar, and applied to the reins, will hold the birth, that it can not fall before the natural time. 21 It is good to be taken with Planten water, of them that cannot hold their water. 22 Let women sit in the broth of it up to the navel, to stop their flowers: or kneade the powder with Honey and spikenard, and lay it to the nethermost part of the belly. 23 Stomach full of gleym, use powder of Gentian & Tormentill. Teeth ache, apply a piece of the green root. 24 Sight to restore, seethe it in wine and drink it daily & no other drink, and apply the sodden herb every night over the eyes three or four months. 25 Bruise the root and seeth it, and drink the broth for the colic and pinching grief of the belly. 26 Fever quarten, drink Tormentill before the fit. 27 colic, drink two parts of Tormentill, and a third part of Ginger with hot wine. 28 Tooth to draw out, apply a piece of the green root. 29 Flux, drink powder of the root with Planten water. 30 Impostumes general, drink Tormentill often. 31 Fistula to heal, put in the juice with a tent. 32 Eyes dull, and yet clear, seethe it in wine, & drink it first and last sixteen days, & shut thine eyes together, and apply the herb every night warm, (See water imperial in Pimpernell, or Scabious.) 33 Tormentill comforteth the sight, & cleanseth the body from divers maladies. 34 Put the powder into the eyes. 35 Seethe the herb & root in white wine, till the third part be wasted, & drink thereof nine mornings cold, & nine nights a little warmed, to recover the sight: but if the eye be hurt, stamp it & seethe it in white wine & a little water, and bind it to the eyes. 36 Stamp it and the root of it, and put it into a little vessel of wine three months, and then drink the wine to recover the sight. 37 Belly ache, stamp the roots and drink it with a little white wine or ale. 38 Eyes read and dropping, wash them with water of Tormentill, with a little Tutia prepared put into it. 39 Sciatica, take powder of the root in winter, with ivy water, but in summer with conserve of Roses, (See Sorrel.) 40 Bloody flux, take i dram of the root often, with good read wine. 41 Itch and swelling of the Emerods', stamp the leaves & roots, and boil them in vinegar and wash therewith. 42 Consumption, boil powder of Elecampana and Tormentill with Hony, & use it. 43 Flux to stop, eat the root. Abortion 20 Apostume 16 Belly ache 25. 37 Bleeding 3 Bloody flux 3. 10. 14. 15. 40 Choler 5 Chollike 25. 27 Conception 20 Consumption 42 Cuts 19 Eyes blind 8. 24. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. read and running 38 Emerods' 17. 41 Feet griefs 7 Fevers 3 quarten 26 Fistula 31 Flowers to stop 3. 14. 18. 22. Fluxes 3. 14. 15. 29. 43 Hardness 16 jaundice 4. 12 Impostume 30 Itch 41 Kernels 16 Knots 16 Liver griefs 4. 12 Lungs griefs 4. 12 Melancholy 5 Mouth sores 6 piles 17 Pissing bed 21 Plague 2. 10. 11. 13 Poison 1. 2. 10. 11 Sciatica 16. 39 Sickness general 13. 33 Skabs 7. 17 Stomach griefs 23 Swell 16 Sweated to 'cause 1 Teeth ache 23 to draw 28 Venom 1 Vomiting 5 urine hot and stopped 9 Wens 16 Whites 14 Wounds 4. 8. 19 ¶ Tragium. TRagium or stinking motherwurt, growing by sandy ways: Smell unto it, or bind it to the navel, for strangling of the mother. ¶ Turpentine. TVrpentine: The clear Rosin of the fir tree, which is liquid, or Venice Turpentine, taken about the weight of half an ounce, looseth the belly, and driveth forth hot choleric humours: it cleanseth the kidneys, provoketh urine, and driveth forth the stone and gravel, and is good for them that have the gout. 2 The same taken with Nutmeg and sugar, as much as a Nut, cureth the strangury, and is very good against the going off of the skin, or flux of the secret parts. 3 It is also excellent for all green wounds, especially of the head: for it healeth and cleanseth much. 4 The Rosin of the Larch tree, is as good as any of the other Rosins, to be put in Plasters and ointments, to glue together, and to cleanse and heal wounds. 5 Licked in with Honey, it cleanseth the breast, looseth the belly, provoketh urine, and driveth out the stone and gravel taken inwardly: and to be short, it is of faculty very like to the right Turpentine, and may be used for the same. 6 The Rosin of the Turpentine tree, which is the right Turpentine looseth the belly, openeth the stops of the Liver and milt, cleanseth the kidneys, provoketh urine, and driveth out gravel, being taken in quantity of a wall nut. 7 In an electuary with Honey, it cleanseth the breast and lungs, ripeneth phlegm, and causeth it to be easily spit out. 8 It is good for the wild scurf and maundge, chaps and cliffs of the feet, and is used in emplasters to make smooth and soft. 9 Mixed with oil and Honey, it is good to be put into the ears against the matter and running of them, and against the itch of the privities. 10 Among all Rosins, the Rosin called Turpentine is the best, than the Mastic, than Rosin of the Pine tree, then that of the read Fir tree. 11 Turpentine with Verdigreace, Coprose, and natural saltpeter, is good against Leapries. 12 The suffumigation thereof helpeth the Tenasmus. 13 Clear venice Turpentine washed and tempered with Hony, will cleanse the lungs. 14 Taken with Sugar in Pills, it will cleanse the reins, open the bladder, purge gravel, cleanse much urine, and help the yard, and mollify the belly. 15 Take Turpentine two ounces, often washed in water of Fenell or Thyme, then put to it powder of new saffron and Hyera simplex, of each half a dram, keep it in a box for any grief of the guts or reins. Take two drams of it four mornings together. 16 The turpentine of the larch tree taken four spoonful, or thereabout with meat and drink, expelleth inward poison, it purgeth gently, and healeth the griefs of the breast, lungs, and liver. 17 The same is good against a consumption, or leanness, the old cough, shortness of breath, spitting of blood, and the Phthisic. To 'cause deliverance, Drink Turpentine. 18 To expel the seconds, smell to the smoke of Turpentine. 19 To make natural turpentine, Take oil of linseed one pound, the elder the better, Rosin of the clearest four ounces, Colophony one ounce, dissolve them in a pot, set into a pot of seething water, and clarify it into a clean vessel, all the corruption will fall into the bottom, then put to it one pint of clarified honey, and boil them all together till the third part be wasted, then power out the clearest of it, add that is natural Turpentine. 20 Tenasmus, sit over the fume of Turpentine. 21 Flowers to cause, and to cleanse the Matrix, dip Cotton therein, and put it in as a Suppositor. Mother suffocat. Take the fume thereof at the mouth. Felon (See Oates.) 22 Take up the fume laid on a hot iron into the fundament three or four days, to avoid great pain and gnawing in the belly and guts. 23 Stone to avoid, burn four ounces on a red hot plate, and drink two drams of the powder with four ounces of Saxifrage water twice a week at the break of day two months together, or wash Turpentine ten times in water, and make little balls, or boli thereof, with Saxifrage juice, and a little Sugar, and use it as aforesaid. 24 Worms, spread Venice turpentine on alomed leather, and lay it from the pit of the stomach to the top of the navel in the wane of the Moon. 25 A salve for a green wound, take one ounce of Turpentine washed in Woodbine water, and the yolks of two new laid eggs, and beat them well together: then put in two blades of Saffron, and mix them all together, and keep it in a box, it will be good one year. 26 Nails cloven, apply Turpentine and virgin's wax. Whites, and running of the reins, Use pills of Turpentine rolled in ginger and cinnamon, and use them morn and even. Matrix lose after travail, swallow Venice Turpentine with Sugar, and use comfery with Alebrewes. 27 Corns, pair them, and lay to Turpentine and red wax boiled together. 28 Blood to stop, apply Turpentine which Bole armoniac. 29 Wounds to heal, use Venice Turpentine with half as much yolks of eggs. 30 Turpentine is abstersive, attractive, mundificative, and resolutive, good for the breast, provoketh urine, laxeth the belly, and healeth scabs. 31 With brimstone it cureth the lepry, scabs, tetters, and ringwoormes. 32 Wounds, use it with the yolk of an egg and oil of roses. 33 For hardness, and stopping of the belly, to purge the lungs, liver, milt, and kidneys, and to comfort all the spiritual members, use it with honey resolved in a sawser. 34 For the falling of the fundament, take up the fume of Turpentine and pitch, and sit long on a board of juniper or Cedar. 35 Head scabbed, anoint with the gall of a Bull, Turpentine and honey. 36 Bruise, or wound, apply the yolk of an egg with Turpentine and Saffron. 37 Turpentine is good for the wounds of the sinews and muscles. 38 Ears mattering, put it in with as much honey. 39 Sinews pricked or cut, boil salt in oil, and put Turpentine to it, and apply it, or apply Turpentine with the leaves of century. 40 For the flux and great pain of the fundament, lay one ounce of Turpentine on a hot iron in a close stool, & receive up the smoke of it. 41 Stone in the bladder, burn four ounces on a red hot iron, and drink two drams of powder, with four ounces of saxifrage water twice a week, eight weeks together. 42 Wash an ounce with borage water, or other cordial water nine or ten times, and put thereto three ounces of fine sugar, and when need is, make pills thereof, and roll them in cinnamon and Sugar, and take thereof at any time for many inward infirmities and passions, especially coming of choler and phlegm, and to cause appetite. Agneyls 27 Appetite 42 Belly ache 15. 22 bound 1. 5. 6. 14 Bladder stopped 14 Bleeding 28 Breast to cleanse 5. 7 Breath short 17 Bruise 36 Chafing 2 Chaps 8 Choler 1 Consumption 17 Corns 27 Cough 17 Deliverance 17 Ears matter 9 38 Felon 21 Flowers stopped 21 Flux 40 Fundament fallen 34 pain 40 Gout 1 Gravel 1. 5. 6. 14 Head skabs 35 wounds 3 Kidneys stopped 1. 6. 14. 33 Leanness 17 Leaprie 11. 31 Liver stopped 6. 16. 33 Lungs stopped 7. 13. 16. 33 Matrixe gauled 2 flux 2 lose 26 suffoc. 21 suffocat. 21 Maundg 8 Milt stopped 6. 33 Nails rend 26 Poison 16 Privit. chafed 2 itch 9 Purgation 16 Ptisike 17 Ringwormes 31 Seconds 18 Senowes griefs 37. 39 Sickness general 15. 42 Skabs 8. 31 scurf 8 Spitting blood 17 Stone 1. 5. 6. 23. 41 Strangury 2 Tenasmus 12. 20 Tetters 31 Urine stopped 1. 5. 6. 14 Whites 26 Worms 24 Wounds 3. 4. 25. 29. 32. 36 Yard gauled 2 griefs 14 ¶ Rosin. ROsin, (See Turpentine.) Gout, anoint the place with clear Honey, & then apply a plaster of Rosin with a linen cloth, till it fall off of itself. 2 Rosin with Tartar, helpeth lepry. Bruise, boil Pitch, wax, Rosin & swine's grease, of each like much, & apply it iiii. or v. days unremoved. 3 To consume an imposthume in the stomach without breaking of it upward, take powder of Rosen with one spoonful of Ale or Beer, or mix it with Treacle, and take as much as a great Nut, and drink after it to wash it down. It is good to drive any infection from the heart, and will cleanse any stuffing or tough phlegm about the heart and stomach, and is good with Treacle for any bruise. If one take it sometimes when he is well, it will keep the body in good state and from corruption and impostumation. (See salves and plasters.) Breast griefs 3 Bruise 3 Phlegm 3 Gout 1 Heart griefs 3 Health to keep 3 Impostume 3 Leapry 2 Stomach imposthume 3 ¶ Tutsan. TVtsan: Gomor passion, boil Castory in the juice of it, and drink it. Drink two drams of powder of the seeds to purge choler, and to help the sciatica, but water must be taken after it. 2 The heat be healeth burnings, and stoppeth blood being applied, and so doth the wine wherein it is sodden, (See S. john's wort.) Bleeding 2 Burning 2 Choler 1 Purgation 1 Sciatica 1 ¶ Vergiss. Verge's, (See Vine.) Flux to stop, drink possitale of Vergiss, and keep thee warm and close. 2 Vergiss is good for all faint cattle, as kine, bulls, and oxen, so that they drink it and go presently to pasture. Or give every one a pint with a small handful of Bay salt, first rubbing their tongues therewith. 3 Vergiss represseth hot humours. 4 Burning and scalding, wash quicklime with Vergiss ix. or x. times, then mix it with oil and use it. 5 Mouth excoriate, use Vergiss of wild grapes with honey. 6 Ears noise and headache, take up the fume of Vergiss from a tin vessel. 7 Seeth Vergiss with as much rain water to the one half, and while it seetheth, fill it with the juice of Lemons, and when it is cold, put to it the whites of iiii. eggs beaten together, and use it against all sun burning, and other filthiness of the skin. 8 Vergiss comforteth a weak and faint heart, and swoonding. Burn 4 cattle sick 2 Ears noise 6 Face deformed 7 Flux 1 Heart grief 8 Headache 6 Mouth blistered 5 Scalding 4 Skin deformed 7 Swooning 8 ¶ Vinegar. Vinegar: mouth stink, swallow Vinegar when thou goest to bed. 2 Hickit, hold thy hands in hot water, and then apply Vinegar to thy stomach with a spondge. 3 For all fevers, seeth a quart of white Vinegar, with and Liquorice, of each one pennyworth to the one half, than strain it and drink a spoonful or two at once, and be whole. 4 Burn, apply the dregss of Vinegar with an Eg. 5 Swelling, boil Beane meal in Vinegar till it be thick, and apply it. 6 Bleeding, ●p thy yard in strong vinegar. 7 Breath stinking, steep tostes of bread in strong Vinegar and eat it. 8 Face pimpled and read, wash it nine days with good Vinegar. 9 Face salseflegme, seeth Elecampana in a pot with Vinegar till it be dry, then grind it with Brimstone, Swine's grease, and Quicksilver, and anoint therewith, (see Eglantine, Alom.) 10 Head megrem, toast the neither crust of a brown loaf, and soak it in Vinegar, and heat it again and apply it to the temples as hot as may be suffered, or drink Sage royal, Betony, and Wormwood thirty hours with Vinegar. 11 Ringwormes and tetters, dissolve gum of a Plumtree or Cherritree in Vinegar, and anoint therewith. 12 Stomach grief, stamp Wormwood with crumbs of bread and Vinegar, and apply it warm to the stomach. 13 Thirst, use Sirupus Acetosus with Barley water. Warts, stamp agrimony with Vinegar and apply it. 14 Sirupus Acetosus, clarify v. pound of sugar with three pound of water over a soft fire, and scum it and put thereto three pints of the best white Vinegar, and boil it till it rope. It is good for all hot diseases coming of choler, and all cold diseases coming of phlegm. It comforteth the liver, heart, and stomach, and slaketh thirst: it may be taken before and after meats. 15 Face salsflegme, mix one pennyworth of white Coprose, with one pint of white Vinegar, and wash therewith to bedward every night. 16 Itch, seeth Rosemary and Celondine of each half a handful in half a pint of white Vinegar, and strain it, and put in a quantity of white Coprose while it is hot, and wash often therewith. 17 Ache, beat the yolks of two new laid eggs, with three spoonful of white Vinegar, and one spoonful of Roses, and put thereto Beane flower, and heat it and apply it on a linen cloth, but for a swelling put thereto vi. spoonful of Barm, and apply it cold. 18 Backeache, stamp Sothernewood with Vinegar and salt, and apply it hot. 19 Bleeding, apply smooth trodden earth with Vinegar, or read Nettles stamped with Vinegar. 20 Headskalde, shave off the hair and wash the head with Vinegar and Woodashes, and be whole. 21 Hair to fall, touch the place with Vinegar and ashes of horseleeches, (see Worms.) 22 Morphue, put powder of Brimstone into a clout, and dip it in Vinegar and anoint. 23 Mouth heat in sickness, boil white Vinegar with as much Honey, and a little Alum, and anoint with a feather, and also wash the mouth often therewith, and also take up the vapour thereof. 24 Lice to kill, drink wheye that is priest out of cheese with Vinegar certain days first and last, and they will dry. 25 Ptisike and weakness of the stomach, seeth white Vinegar long, and put in good store of sugar, and stir it well till it wax thick, and use it first and last daily. 26 Fluxes general, seeth the yolk of an Egg hard in Vinegar and eat it. 27 Teethache, seethe Betony, Sage, and roche Alum in Vinegar, and hold it in thy mouth. 28 Steep an Egg iii or iiii. days in Vinegar, and it may be drawn thorough a ring: and steep a whetstone therein 7. days, and it may be driven to powder. 29 An ointment for all sores, seethe i pound of honey with half as much Vinegar, and half a pennyworth of verdigris, and use it. 30 To make Vinegar by and by, power pure Wine half sodden into a new earthen Vessel, and stop it close, and set it in hot scalding water. 31 Skin to be white, heat litarge of silver in distilled Vinegar, and wash therewith. 32 Morphue, scurf, and leapry, take powder of quick Brimstone and black Soap, of each two ounces, and hung it in a pint of strong wine Vinegar in a linen clout ix. days, and wash with the vinegar, and let it dry in by itself. 33 Flints laid in Vinegar seven days, may be rubbed into powder. 34 Lethargy, rub the plants of the hands and feet with Mustard and Vinegar. 35 Fluxes general, apply Doves dung with Vinegar to the navel. 36 Face salsflegme, seeth a pint of Vinegar with as much milk, and one handful of Barley flower and anoint therewith, and after wash it with woman's urine sodden with the juice of Houseleek. 37 Flowers to stop, seeth new horse dung in Vinegar, and apply it hot to the navel. 38 Frenzy, apply Vinegar to the forehead with a cloth. 39 Fundament fallen, seethe eggs in Vinegar, and mix their yolks with oil de Bay, and sit thereon till thou be'st well. 40 Gout, apply Vinegar with Wheat bran cold, and it will flee down from the plaster, then break it with Sparewort, and after lay on a plaster of honey and barley flower, or anoint it often with honey, and seeth Ambrose in wine, and drink it. 41 Headache, anoint with the juice of Rue and Vinegar. 42 Canker in the mouth or lips, stamp Sage with Vinegar and Salt, and apply it. 43 Memory to preserve, mix the juice of Smallache with a little Vinegar and Castory, and apply it to the hinder part of the head. 44 Nails to fall off, apply Brimstone or Arsenic with Vinegar. 45 Face rank or read, put three new laid eggs into a pint of Vinegar, and stir them well together, and let it stand iiii. days and nights, and then drink thereof first and last, and also wash therewith for the saltflegme, and heat of the liver and lungs, though the scabs be as great as a Walnut. 46 Teethache, stamp wild Dasy roots with Vinegar, and apply them. 47 Headache, seeth Puliol and Hilwort in Vinegar, and apply it. 48 Teeth to be white, rub them often with powder of Brick and Vinegar. 49 Cod swollen, apply Beane meal with Vinegar cold. 50 Corns, apply ashes of the rind of Willow, or Sallow with Vinegar. 51 Headache, seeth Vinegar with running Thyme and oil of Roses, and apply it. 52 Itch, use salt with oil of Vinegar. 53 Nose bleeding, apply Vinegar with a cloth to thy cod or paps. 54 Plague, a defensive, drink v. spoonful of Vinegar, iii spoonful of running water, half a spoonful of Treacle, and as much Bowl Armoniake as a small nut first and last at morn and even. 55 Ringwormes, anoint with glue dissolved in Vinegar, or grind one ounce of Verdigrece with v. ounces of Vinegar, and put thereto three ounces of honey, and boil them to the thickness of honey, and use it. 56 Heat outward, mix Vinegar and milk with Coprose, and apply it with clouts, or hurds. 57 Hickit, stamp Sage with Vinegar and swallow it. 58 Burning, mix five parts of the juice of Lily leaves with one part of Vinegar and a little honey, and use it. 59 Lice to kill, anoint with Mustard, Vinegar, and a little Saltpetre, or with Stavesacre, Brimstone and Vinegar. 60 Teethache, seeth a little Camphor in Vinegar, and hold it in thy mouth, or seeth Henbane roots in Rosewater and Vinegar, and hold it in thy mouth. 61 Teeth to be white and fast, rub them with Vinegar of squilles. 62 Mouth stink, wash it with Vinegar, & chew mastic a good while. 63 Heart beating, trembling, or cardiake, use Vinegar of Roses. 64 Heart swooning, cast cold water with rosewater, and Vinegar into his face. 65 Vinegar to make, put wine into a vessel that Vinegar hath been in, and set it in the sun or by the fire, and put thereinto new bricks or tiles hot. 66 Nose bleeding, put Vinegar into the ear on the same side that bleedeth. 67 Ears sounding, put in Vinegar with oleum Irinum, that is of Flowerdeluce, or Ellebore sodden with Vinegar. 68 Leave to be, drink iiii. ounces of Vinegar with powder of Pepper fasting as often as need is. 69 Eyes sore, put Plumtree flowers into Vinegar in a clean basin covered three days, than put it in a box, and anoint therewith. 70 Nose bleeding, drink the juice of Fiveleafe, and wash thy face with Vinegar. 71 Breast stopped, seethe Rue in Vinegar, and drink it. 72 Morphue, anoint with black soap and Vinegar and Brimstone, of each like much. 73 Head bushes, wash it often with Vinegar, or seeth Tartar in Vinegar and wash therewith. 74 Head scurf, use Tartar with oil and Vinegar. 75 Drowsiness, forgetfulness, or Lethargy, burn thine own hair and apply it to thy nose with Vinegar and Pitch, or apply Rue and read Mints with oil and strong Vinegar to thy nostrils, or stamp savoury and seeth it in Vinegar, and apply it to the hinder part of thy head. 76 Frenzy, anoint thy temples with the juice of Planten or of Moral and Vinegar. 77 Ringwormes, stamp the roots of Burrs, and seeth them in Vinegar, and anoint therewith, or stamp Planten roots with Vinegar and salt, and anoint therewith warm. 78 Morphue and foulness, anoint with Doves dongue and Vinegar ground together. 79 Teethache, seeth Coloquintida in Vinegar and hold it in thy mouth, or boil Hyssop in Vinegar and wash therewith. 80 Nosebleeding, apply a plaster of clay, Vinegar, and whites of eggs to thy cod, or put in Hare's hair with Vinegar and water, or seeth Beans in Vinegar and eat them, or use them plasterwayes, or seethe Pears with Vinegar and drink it with mastic. 81 Bloody flux, seethe the livers of any beasts in Vinegar, and eat them, or apply Doves dung stamped with Vinegar. 82 colic, seeth old oil with butter and strong Vinegar of each like much, till it be thick, and apply it often to the belly. 83 Milt swollen, stamp Dock leaves, and seeth them in Vinegar and apply them. 84 Mother rising, squirt rain water and strong Vinegar into her nostrils. 85 Fever quarten, drink the rinds and leaves of a Nut tree with Vinegar. 86 Burn and wild fire, apply Vinegar. 87 Pricks, apply ashes of Swallows with Vinegar. 88 Drunken, rub the plants of the hands and feet with Vinegar and salt. 89 Dropsy, apply goats dung with Vinegar one night. 90 Ears ache, take up the fume of Vinegar, or seeth one dram of the root of black Ellebore in one pound of Vinegar, and take up the fume of it, and also put thereof into the ear. 91 Eyes ache, seeth Roses in Vinegar, and apply it. 92 Eyes web, mix Doves dung with Vinegar and oil of Roses, and strain it, and anoint therewith with a feather. 93 Headache great and heavy, mix powder of Aloes, Mastic, Frankincense with Vinegar and whites of Eggs, and apply it with stuphes to the temples, or stamp green Mints with Vinegar and anoint, or anoint with ashes of garlic & Vinegar, or apply goats dung with Vinegar seven. days to cure it for ever, or rub the place with a Spider's web, and oil, and Vinegar, or seeth Wormwood in Vinegar and apply it, or anoint with the juice of ground ivy, oil, and Vinegar. 94 Head ache and vertigo, stamp Sothernwood with honey and Vinegar, and drink it, or anoint with Rue and Vinegar, or with the juice of Cicory, oil of Roses and Vinegar. 95 Canker, wash it iiii. or v. times a day with warm Vinegar, and sprinkle on some powder that is good for it. 96 Wash thy gums with Vinegar, then mix alum with it, & keep it in a box, and anoint therewith iiii. or v. times a day. 97 Leapry, anoint with the gum of a Plumtree dissolved in Vinegar, or with Aspaltum & Vinegar. 98 Lethargy, shave thy head or nape, and anoint it with the juice of Smallache, oil of Roses, and Vinegar, or apply the juice of Smallache with Vinegar, & powder of mustard-seed. 99 Mad, drink Rue seeds with Vinegar, or Gentian with honey and Vinegar. 100 Mother rising, put Vinegar into her nose with a feather. 101 Paps swollen, apply Vinegar with earth, or mill dust. 102 Face pimples, stamp Planten roots with Vinegar and salt, and wash therewith. 103 Backeache old, seeth salt in strong Vinegar, and chafe it well therewith three days against the fire, but if the matter be broken, wine will serve in stead of Vinegar. 104 Sciatica, apply a plaster of Rye flower and Vinegar. 105 Sores and swelling of the legs, mix goats dung with Barley meal & Vinegar, and apply it, or apply gross meal of Oces with the white of an Eglantine & Vinegar. 106 Teethach, seethe galls in Vinegar, & hold it in thy mouth. 107 Teeth to be white, kneade a cake of Barley meal & Vinegar, and burn it on the coals, and rub thy teeth with it, or the powder thereof. 108 Thighache, anoint with sheeps dung and Vinegar often. 109 Sleep to void, seeth Rue with Vinegar in a close vessel, and smell to it, and put thereof into thy nose with a feather. Peniroyall dipped in Vinegar doth the like. 110 Hoarseness, drink hot water at morn, noon, and even, and dip a linen cloth therein with as much Vinegar, and bind it warm about thy neck often, and forbear cold and cold things. 111 Vomiting, steep a piece of bread in salt and Vinegar, and bruise it and apply it to the pit of the stomach, and strike some of it on thy mouth. 112 Stomach wambling, drink an Egg shell full of springing water with as much Vinegar. 113 Fever general, take half a spoonful of Vinegar, with as much juice of the green bark of Eldrens. 114 Head frenzy, and lethargy, anoint with Vinegar and oil of Roses. 115 Blood casting, drink half an ounce of Vinegar with wine. 116 Lethargy, seeth Castory in strong Vinegar, and put thereto powder of Anacardium, and anoint the hinder part of the head therewith. 117 Teethach, seethe Henbane root in Vinegar, hold it in thy mouth, and chew the root. 118 Speech lost, drink Peniroyall with Vinegar, and also apply them to the stomach hot. 119 Appetite to cause, use Vinegar in meats & sauses, especially with Sage, Mints, Parsley, and Pepper. 120 Vinegar on a full stomach softeneth the belly, but on an empty stomach it bindeth it. 121 For weakness in sickness or after it, weet tostes of bread in Vinegar, and rub thy mouth and nostrils therewith, and bind it to thy pulses. 122 Swell of wounds in the hands, seeth wheat bran with Vinegar, and the juice of Wormwood, and apply it. 123 Spitting blood, use honey and Vinegar boiled together. 124 Breasts swollen with too much milk, boil honey with Vinegar, and spread it on a cloth, and cast thereon powder of Cummin, and apply it. 125 Liver and milt chafed, mix yellow Rhubarb, and Barley meal and Vinegar, and apply it to the right side, and bleed in the milt vein, and in summer drink Scabious, but in Winter sugar Roset, (See Bread.) 126 Corns, quench unslecked lime in strong Vinegar, and when you will occupy it, pair the corn, and mix it with rosewater, and apply it. 127 Fever, stamp iiii. handful of Groundswell with Bay salt and Vinegar, of each three spoonful, and boil it till it be almost dry, and bind it to the wrists an hour before the fit. 128 A skinning water for a Fistula, steep one pound of fine powder of Litarge of gold, in a quart of strong white Vinegar iiii. days, and strain it well twice a day, then let it settle and use the clearest of it, and so have you the mother. 129 Morphue white and black, stamp Mustardseed with Vinegar & salt, & anoint. 130 Plague, take water and Vinegar of each one spoonful, Treacle as much as a Walnut, and drink it luke warm within 24. hours after the infection. 131 Bones broken, stamp Dasy, Comfery, and agrimony with Vinegar, and apply it. 132 Hoarseness, seeth a pint of white Vinegar with as much honey, & use it. 133 joints out, stamp Mugwort with Vinegar and swine's grease, and apply it. 134 To know which gout is hot and which is cold, apply a plaster of Rye meal with Vinegar: if it comfort, it is the hot gout, if it grieve, it is the cold gout. 135 Speech lost suddenly, drink Puliol with Vinegar, and also apply it to the nostrils. 136 maidens milk, put litarge of silver into fine Vinegar 24. hours, and it will turn white, and is good for the scurf and falsflegme. 137 To make old wax fair and new, and good, boil fair Vinegar in an earthen pot, and put in the wax till it melt and boil, then let it cool, after take the wax and clarify it, and put therein a little oil Olive, and then work it. 138 Wash any grievous sore with possite Ale made with white Vinegar, and apply the curd. 139 Stomach hot, drink possite ale made with good read Vinegar with sugar. 140 Vinegar of Roses, gather the Roses before they be full blown in dry weather, lay them on a board half a day, and then put them into the Vinegar close stopped 24. hours, then stamp them and set them in glasses in the sun all summer, than strain it and use it, if it be renewed with Roses, it is the better: it may be made with wine either white, or read, or claret. And so make Vinegar of Eldrens flowers or Violets, etc. 141 Backeache, stamp agrimony, and Mouseare, and fry them with Vinegar and Boar's grease and apply it. 142 Headache, seeth Willow tops with a little Rosemary in Vinegar till the third part be wasted and wash therewith. 143 Thorns in the fingers, stamp Sothernwood with Vinegar and apply it. 144 Teethache, scrape a Henbane root and slice it and seeth it in a good quantity of wine Vinegar, till it be almost wasted, with three spoonful of rosewater, and hold of the root between the teeth, and hold the liquor in thy mouth iii or iiii. times. 145 Nose bleeding, apply read Vinegar to the navel. Ache 17 Agneile 5. 126 Appetite 119. 121 Belly-ache 18. 103. 141 Belly-bound 120 lose 120 Bleeding 6. 9 (see nose.) Bloody-fluxe 81 Blood casting 115 Bones broken 131 Breast stopped 71 Breasts swollen 101. 124 Breath stink 7. 62 Burn 4. 58. 86 colic 82 Cod swollen 49 Consumption 25. 121 Corns 50. 126 Drunken 88 Dropsy 89 Drowsy 75 Ears ache 90 noise 67 Eyes ache 91 sore 69 web 92 Egg 28 Face deformed 8. 9 15. 36. 45 102. 136 Fevers general 3. 113. 127 quarten 85 Fistula 128 Flowers to stop Fluxes general 26. 35 Frenzy 38. 76. 114 Fundament fallen 39 Giddy 94 Gout 40. 134 Heart grief 14. 63 Headache 41. 47. 51. 93. 94 142 bushes 73 megrem 10 giddy 94 skald 20 Hair to fall 21 Heat outward 56 Hoarseness 110. 132 Hickit 2. 57 64 joints out 133 Itch 16. 52 canker 95 Leapry 97 Lean to be 68 Leg sore 105 swollen 105 Lice 24. 59 Lips canker 42 Liver grief 14. 125 Lethargy 34. 75. 98. 109 114. 116 Mad 99 (see frenzy.) maidens milk 136 Memory 43 Milt swollen 83. 125 Morphue 22. 32. 72. 78. 129 Mother rising 84. 100 Mouth heat 23 canker 42 95. 96 stink 1. 7. 62 Nails to fall 44 Nose bleeding 53. 66. 70. 80. 145 Plague 54. 130 Pricks 87. 143 Ptisike 25 ringworm 11. 55. 77 Rose vinegar 140 Sciatica 104 Sickness general 14 Syrup 14 Skin cleansing 31 scurf 136 Sleepiness 109 Sores 29. 105. 138 Speech lost 118. 135 Spitting blood 115. 123 Stomach griefs 12. 14. 25 119 hot 139 Stones to be soft 28. 33 Swell 5. 105. 122 Swooning 64 Teethache 27. 46. 60. 79 106. 117. 144 to be white 48. 61. 107 Tetter 11 Thigh ache 108 Thirst 13. 14. 139 Vinegar to make 30 65. 140 Voice hoarse 110 Vomiting 111. 115 Warts 13 Wax to renew 137 Weakness 121 Wild fire 86 Wounds swollen 122 ¶ Veruine. vervain, the root or leaves, or both together sodden in water, are good for sores and ulcers of the mouth and jaws being often washed therewith. 2 It helpeth the toothache, and fasteneth and strengtheneth them and the gums. 3 And being drunk v. days continually, it cureth the gripings of the belly. Veruine mixed with oil of Roses and vinegar, or boiled in oil and laid to the forehead, cureth the headache, and so doth a garland of it worn round about the head. 4 The leaves stamped with swine's grease or oil of Roses applied to the matrix, doth mitigate the pain thereof. 5 The same stamped with vinegar, helpeth Saint Antony's fire, and old rotten sores, and stamped with honey it cureth green wounds, and closeth up old wounds. 6 It is good for the tertian and quarten fever. 7 Drink i. dram of the herb with three halfpenny weight of Olibanum in ix. ounces of old wine 40. days together fasting to help the King's evil, and pain in the throat. 8 The leaves laid to with Rose oil & fresh swine's grease, taketh away the pain of the mother. 9 Appetite to cause, eat it or apply it to the stomach, it also healeth gatherings and apostumes. 10 Belly gripings, drink Veruine with sugar. 11 Deliverance to cause, drink it with wine, or the juice thereof with water. 12 Flux, seethe it in white wine, and drink it. 13 Kernels, seeth it with honey in water and drink it, and apply the rest. 14 Lust to void, bear it about thee, or use it in thy drink, and it is best that thou carry Veruine about thee next thy body, and so thou shalt be effeminate, and whosoever thou touthest often therewith, shallbe unapt to the act of venery. 15 Head megrem, seeth Betony, Veruine, Horehound, and Hyssop in white wine, and wash therewith, and apply the rest as hot as may be suffered. 16 Milk to cause, drink the juice of Veruine. 17 Seconds to cause, drink the juice warm & provoke sneezing. 18 Stinging, drink the juice. Warts, drink Veruine. 19 Mischief in child bearing, stamp good store of Nep with a little Veruine, an strain it with stolen Ale or white wine, and drink it hote first & last till you be whole. 20 squinsy, stamp Veruine and apply it hot. 21 Headache, wear a garland of Veruine about thy head night and day, or seeth two handful chopped small in a quart of Wine with a little Sack, and apply it warm. 22 Mad, seeth Camomile flowers and Veruine of each one handful in a quart of water or lee, and wash thy head therewith. 23 Eyes spots, tie the whole herb, and root about thy neck. 24 Fever cold, seeth three roots and three leaves of Veruine, and drink it before the cold fit. 25 Stamp it with wine and drink it, and also apply it against all stinging venom and poison. 26 Stamp three roots and drink it for the fever tertian, and four for the fever quarten. 27 Stone, drink it with Saxifrage and Betony, of each like much with wine. 28 Bear it about thee to have love of great men, and to have thy request if it be good and right. 29 Gather it in the first day of the new moon before sun rising, and bear it about thee, and thou shalt have no lust to women, or drink the juice to avoid lust for seven. years. 30 Belly ache, drink powder of Veruine gathered about Midsummer. 31 Vein broken, drink the juice of Veruine, Betony, and Fiveleafe, boiled with as much goats milk warm seven. days in the increase, and seven days in the wane of the moon. 32 Falling evil, gather it while ☉ is in ♈, & drink it with white wine and powder of Peony seeds. 33 Mouth stink, hold the juice long in thy mouth. 34 Piles, (See Burr.) Bitings venomous, bear it about thee, and no serpent will hurt thee. Or seeth two. or three handful and wash therewith, and apply the herb with honey to heal it. 35 Bile to remove, (See Oculus Christi.) 36 Cramp, stamp it with Brimstone and apply it. 37 Hoarseness, seeth it with Liquorice in water and strain it, and use no other drink till you be well. 38 Eyes watering, stamp it with the white of an Eglantine, and apply it at night on the eyes. 39 Eyes bleared, stamp it with wine and salt, and apply it night and day. 40 Nose bleeding, be not strait girded, and hold thy hands full of Veruine, and look up to the Sun. 41 squinsy, stamp it and apply it hot. 42 Appetite to cause, eat Veruine. 43 Flux, seeth the root, and drink the broth. 44 Deliverance to cause, stamp it and drink it with water. 45 Fever tertian, stamp three leaves and three roots, and dissolve them in water, and drink it before the fit. 46 Fever quarten, stamp iiii. leaves & iiii. roots, and seethe them in wine, and drink it before the fit. 47 Kings evil, hung the root about thy neck. 48 Deliverance to cause, stamp it and strain it with wine, water or vinegar, and drink it. 49 seeth it with Draconitum in water, and let it stand till it be clear, and anoint any edge tool therewith to make it hard and sharp. 50 (See Hyssop, Dittany.) 51 Chilblains, stamp it with Swine's grease and apply it. 52 Ptisike and difficulty of breathing, drink Veruine water. 53 Fundament falling, seeth it in wine, and mix it with a little lee and wash it therewith warm. 54 Eyes blooddyshot, stamp the leaves with a little salt, & apply it in the nights, and be whole. 55 Matrix sores, wash with the water distilled in the end of june. It helpeth also the griefs and dullness of the eyes being often dropped in. 56 Deliverance to cause with speed, drink it with cold water. 57 Eyes swollen, dim, and bloody, stamp it with the white of an egg and apply it, or the juice of it. 58 Hold it privily in thy right hand, and ask the sick how he doth, but let him not see it, take him by the right hand, and as his answer is, so shall he do, whether it be to live or die. 59 Dead child, drink it with wine or water. 60 Milk to cause, drink it with water, or rather with wine. 61 Mouth stink, hold the juice close long in thy mouth. 62 It is good for the stone, liver, and lungs. 63 Stone, stamp Veruine, Betony, and Saxifrage, of each like much, and drink it with wine. 64 Blood to stop, put in powder of Veruine. 65 Biting of a mad dog, stamp it with as much Planten, and strain it with read wine or stolen ale, and drink it with Treacle, and apply one of the same herbs, stamped with salt to draw out the venom. Appetite 9 Apostume 9 42 Belly-ache 3. 10. 30 Biting venom. 1. 34. 65 Bile 35 Bleeding 64 Breath stink 33. 61 Chaste to be 14 Consumption 52 Chilblain 51 Cramp 36 Dead child 59 Deliverance 11. 44. 48. 56 Eyes bloodshot 54 bleared 39 griefs 55 spots 23. swollen 57 watering 38 Emerods' 34 Falling evil 32 Fever tertian 6. 26. 45 quarten 6. 26. 46. cold 24 Flux 12. 43 Fundament fallen 53 Gums lose 1 Headache 3. 15. 21 megreme 15 Hoarseness 37 Kernels 13 Kings evil 7. 47 Liver griefs 62 Lungs griefs 62 Lust to void 14. 28 Mad 22 Matrix pain 4. 8. 19 sores 55 Milk to 'cause 16. 60 Mouth sores 1. 33 stink 33. 61 Nose bleeding 40. 64 Piles 3. 4 Pissing blood 31 Poison 25 (see venom.) Ptisike 52 S. Ant. fire 5 Seconds 17 Sores 5 squinsy 20. 41 Stinging 18. 25 Stone 27. 62. 63 Teethache 2 Tool to cut 49 Vein broken 31 Veruine 14. 28. 58 Venom 18. 25. 65 Wounds griefs 19 Wounds 5 ¶ Violets. VIolets: gather them in March, and dry them in a shadowy place in the air. 2 Stomach windy, drink the flowers. 3 squinsy, gargoyle with the decoction of the flowers. 4 Swell hot, apply the juice of the herb. 5 Flowers stopped, drink two drams of the seeds with wine. 6 Milt swollen and the hot gout, seeth the root in wine and apply it. 7 Dead child to expel, and to cleanse the matrix, and void the swelling of it, boil white Violets and apply them. 8 Matrix to cleanse and to provoke the terms, foment with the decoction of it. 9 Headache hot and to cause sleep, apply Violets to the forehead. 10 Syrup of Violets helpeth the headache, causeth sleep, softeneth the breast and throat, and helpeth the falling of the palate and the squinsy. Headache, smell to Violets. 11 Milt swollen and for the gout, seeth the root in Vinegar, and drink it and apply the root. 12 Cough in children, boil the herb and root and apply it. 13 Ears pain, drop in oil of Violets. 14 Headache, anoint with the oil. 15 Belly worms, mix the oil with wormseed, and anoint. 16 The Syrup helpeth the burning Fever, looseth the belly, and qualifieth the hot liver. 17 The purple Violet drunk in water looseth the belly, quencheth choler and thirst, helpeth inflammations, and putteth away the jaundice, and so doth the Conserve of Violets. 18 Cut off the green part of the flowers, and pun them small, and put thereto twice so much Sugar, but to all other flowers thrice so much Sugar, and keep it in a galley pot, it will last one year, and is very good for a hot stomach and liver, it cooleth the head, procureth sleep, and tempereth the heart, and all other parts of the body: the leaves in broths are good for the same purposes. 19 The decoction of Violets is good against all hot Fevers, and all inward inflammations, and driveth out by siege hot choleric humours, and so doth the syrup, and conserve, and juice. 20 The syrup is good against the inflammation of the lungs and breast, the pleurisy and cough, and also against Fevers, especially in children: it cureth all inflammations and roughness of the throat being holden in the mouth, and so doth the sugar of Violets, or the conserve, or juice. Ears running, drop in the juice. 21 Head ulcers and sores, stamp the leaves with honey and anoint therewith. 22 Frenzy and watching, make a suppository of oil of Violets and Opium, and use it. 23 Stamp Violets alone or with oil, and apply it to the extreme ache of the head and to abate the heat, to provoke sleep: for melancholy, to moisten the brain. 24 Stame Violets with Barley meal, and apply it to hot apostumes and carbuncles, inflammations of the eyes, hot ulcers and inflammations that come with the falling down of the fundament. Drink the seeds with wine or water against the stingings of Serpents or Scorpions. 25 The yellow which is in the midst of the flowers boiled in water and gargled, is good for the squinsy and swelling in the throat, and is good to be drunk of children for the falling sickness. 26 The herb or plant is very good against all hot Fevers, the inflammation of the liver, and to loosen the belly. 27 Take two or three spoonful of the Syrup to take away sharp Fevers, to soften impostumes, and to strengthen the heart for the pleurisy & all hot griefs. 28 The syrup taken with spring water, is good to quench thirst. 29 The oil, water, and vinegar of Violets applied, is good for the head ache and inflammation of the liver. 30 Violet water and Salad oil of each one ounce drunk, cleanseth rotten matter in the lungs and stomach, and helpeth cough and pain of the lungs. 31 The broth of Violets is given from iiii. ounces to viii. ounces. 32 The syrup from two. ounces to iiii. ounces, the conserve from one ounce and a half to three ounces to purge the body. 33 Drink one dram of the powder of Violets with the broth of a Capon, or of peason before meat to purge the belly. 34 seeth Garden Violets, and stamp them and apply them to the bottom of the belly, against the stopping of the urine in a fever. 35 For hot aches of the head or else where, apply Violets. Tongue weals, (See Roses.) 36 Eyes blasted, stamp the roots with Myrrh and Saffron, and apply it at night. 37 Head wounded, stamp the leaves with vinegar and honey, and apply it. 38 Sleep to cause in sickness, seeth it well in water, and soak well thy feet therein to the ankles when thou goest to bed, and bind the herb to thy temples. 39 Eyes sore, ache, and swelling, stamp Violets with Myrrh and Saffron, and apply it. 40 The water is good for the apoplexia. 41 Sleep to 'cause when choler is the cause, seeth the leaves in water, and wash thy head therewith. 42 Breast suppuration or mattering, use the syrup. 43 Cough of hot cause and for thirst, and roughness of the throat, drink the syrup with a little water blood warm. 44 Head bushes, stamp the leaves with honey and apply them. 45 Ears running, put in the juice with clarified honey. 46 Teethache, seeth Violets in wine, and hold them in thy mouth. 47 Nose bleeding, gargarise with the juice of the roots. Aches hot 3. 5. 6. 11 Apoplexia 40 Apostume 24. 27 Belly bound 33 Breast griefs 10 inflamed 20. 42 Carbuncle 24 Conserve 18 Cough 20. 30. 43. 12 Dead child 7 Ears pain 13 run. 20. 45 Eyes blasted 36 inflamed 24 sore 39 ulcers 24 Falling evil 25 Fevers hot 16. 19 20. 26 27. 34 Flowers stopped 5 Fundament griefs 24 Frenzy 22 Gout 6. 11 Heart griefs 18. 27 Headache 9 10. 14. 18. 23. 29. 35 sores 21. 44 wounds 37 Heat inward 29 jaundice 17 Inflammation 17 Liver hot 16. 17. 18. 26. 29 Lungs griefs 20. 30 Mad 22 Matrixe griefs 7. 8 swollen 7 Melancholy 23 Milt swollen 6. 11 Nose bleeding 47 Pleurisy 2. 7. 20 Purgation 19 31. 32. 33 Sickness general 18 Sleep to 'cause 9 10. 18. 23. 38. 41 Squincy 3. 10. 25 Stinging 24 Stomach hot 18 windy 2 Swell hot 4 Teeth ache 46 Thirst 17. 28. 43 Throat griefs 10 rough 43 swollen 25 Tongue blisters 35 Venom 24 Urine stopped 34 Vuula fallen 10 Windiness 2 Wounds 15 ¶ Virga aurea. VIrga aurea: It healeth wounds, and hath the virtues of Saracens confound: boil it in wine, and drink it against the stone in the reins, and to provoke urine, and so doth the water of it: drink one spoonful of the powder with a rear egg four hours before meat, to provoke urine within half an hour, and so taken, it expelleth the stone in ten or twelve days without pain, (See Solidago.) Stone Urine stopped ¶ wall barley. Wall barley, Waybent, or read Darnell, drink it with read wine, to stop the flowers and fluxes. Bind the herb to the body in Crimson leather, to stop bleeding. Bleeding Flowers Fluxes ¶ brickwall nuts. WAlnuts new & green, are better to be eaten then dry nuts, yet they be hard of digestion, & nourish very little. 2 The dry nuts nourish less, and yet are of harder digestion, they 'cause headache, & hurt the stomach, & cause cough & shortness of breath. 3 A dried nut or two taken fasting with a fig & a little Rue, withstandeth poison. 4 And mixed with figs & Rue, they cure old ulcers of the Paps & other cold apostumes. 5 Apply dry nuts with salt, honey & onions, to the biting of a mad dog. 6 Stamp old oily nuts, or the oil of them, and apply it to blue marks & bruises, and skurfs & scales. 7 The decoction of the green husks with honey, is good to gargoyle against all tumours & ulcers of the mouth & throat. 8 The leaves be almost of the same virtue, (Poison, See Figs.) 9 Mad dogs biting, chew a kernel fasting, & apply it. 10 Some gather the green husks about midsummer, & dry them into powder, & use them in their meats in stead of Pepper: it is much better to put dried sage thereto. 11 The tender leaves that are reddish, dried, are good for the same purpose. 12 The young nuts are gathered about midsummer, & condyted with sugar or honey into a sucket, for many purposes. 13 Walnuts mixed with a little honey & Rue, are good for the inflammation of the Paps, 14 Apostumes and lose joints: and with honey, an onion & salt, it is good for the biting of a dog, of a man, or of an ox, and for blackness coming of a bruise. 15 The water distilled out of Walnuts about midsummer, is good for the inflammation of the Paps & lose joints. 16 Walnuts burned with their shells, and mixed with oil or wine, and applied to the navel, is good for the torments of the belly. 17 The shells burnt & mixed with oil & wine, nourisheth & restoreth hair that is fallen. 18 The kernels burnt & mixed with wine, healeth carbuncles, and so doth the oil pressed out of the nuts. 19 The oil with honey, or the green nut rinds, will kill the canker, the place being anointed, & also bring hair, & withstand baldness. 20 They are fit to be taken fasting, of them that would vomit. 21 If they be eaten in great plenty, they kill broad worms. 22 Walnuts mixed with Garlic, taketh away the sharpness. 23 With Rue and oil, they are good to be said to the squinsy. 24 And mixed with sugar, they nourish temperately. 25 The pills taken off, they are good for the stomach, & do somewhat loosen the belly. 26 The water of green nuts distilled about midsummer two or three ounces drunk, cooleth & resisteth poison & the plague. 27 And the water of the utter husks, distilled in September & drunk, is a sure experiment against the plague. 28 Lay Walnuts with Chestnuts, to preserve them from moulding. 29 A Walnut put into a Chicken, maketh it to roast the sooner. 30 Walnut leaves with bores suet, restoreth hair, and so do the ashes thereof. 31 Steep the leaves in cold water, & at night spring off the water and apply them one after another as they dry, to running eyes. 32 Make powder of they flowers when they bloom, & take two drams of it with an egg roasted till it be hard, with oil three mornings fasting, (See Filbeard, Hasell.) 33 The leaves with Boar's grease, cause hair to grow. 34 Plague, (See Rue.) 35 Stamp green husks, and anoint dogs therewith, no fleaes shall annoy them, his ears especially being anointed. 36 Hair falling, chew the meat of them well in your mouth, and apply it presently to the place. 37 Poisoned, pair away the uttermost of the bark, and steep powder of the rest all night in water, & strain it and drink it fasting, to cast up the venom. 37 Hairs to be yellow and shining, seethe well the husks of the nuts, and the bark of the tree in water, and make Lee therewith, or stamp them with ashes, and make Lee therewith, and wash the hairs. 38 Stamp as much bark of a Wall nut tree as thy finger, with woman's milk, and anoint the headache therewith, and put thereof into thy ear. 39 Fever cold and shaking, take the rind of the root, scrape off the upper part, and make powder of the middle part, and grind it with vinegar, and strain it two or three times, till it be somewhat thin and clear, and drink thereof a good quantity, to avoid the sickness, and to purge thee clean. Apostume cold 4. 13 Belly ache 16 bond 25 Bitings venomous 5. 9 14 Breasts sore 4. 13. 15 Bruises 6 Carbuncle 18 Eyes running 31 Fever cold 39 Fleaes 35 Headache 38 Hair falling 17. 19 30. 33. 36 to be yellow 37 joints lose 13. 15 canker 19 Mad dog 5. 9 14 Mouth sores 7 Plague 26. 27 Poison 3. 8. 26 Poisoned 3. 7 scales 6 scurf 6 Spots 6 Squincy 23 Sucket 12 Throat sores 7 Vomit to 'cause 20. 37 Worms 21 ¶ Water cresses. WAter cresses are good in salads, either by themselves or with other herbs, it provoketh urine, and expelleth gravel and stone, and is good for the strangury, and all stops of the kidneys and bladder. 2 The lesser Water cress taketh away the spots and freckles of the face, and all such blemishes, being applied morn & even. 3 The wild Passerage or Cuckoo flower boiled in Lee, driveth away Lice of the head, being washed with it. 4 Kine that feed where plenty of Cuckoo flowers are, give very good milk. 5 Cough, seethe the juice of Water cress, with as much water, and good store of Honey and sugar candy, and use it: proved. 6 The juice is very good for the dropsy, and so is the water distilled with Sage and Centorie, of each like much, and drunk first and last. 7 Eat every day three crops of Water cress, to take away all the swelling of the dropsy, but drink not after it. 8 Impostumes, stamp Water cresses, and apply them hot. 9 Strangury, drink the juice with wine, or seethe the roots of Parsley, Fenell, and Smallach, with Water cresses in white wine, and drink the broth, and apply the rest. 10 Urine stopped, drink wine of the decoction of Water cress. 11 Headache of a murr or rheum, draw in the powder of Water cresses dried in an oven into the Nose. 12 Seethe a quart or a pottle of Water cresses chopped small, with as much bran in a bag, in a kettle of water, and anoint the Navel and loins with butter, and apply the bag round about thee hot as may be suffered, at morn, noon and even, and lie on thy back for the most part, to mollify the body, to avoid pain, and to cause urine. 13 Urine to cause, seeth Water cresses in a new pot with wine, and sit over it. 14 Strangury, seeth read Water cress in water, and apply them to thy womb: but let a woman use the suffumigation thereof. 15 Worms of all sorts, boil the juice with swine's grease, or May butter, and anoint, or fry them, and apply them, (See Oats.) 16 Pleurisy, spread honey on a cloth, and cast thereon powder of the seeds of Water cress, and so apply it. 17 Legs and feet swollen, chop Well-cresses small, and seeth them in an earthen pot with dregs of white wine, wheat bran, and weather's tallow, of each like much, and apply it hot four and twenty hours, and then renew it. 18 Back ache, (See Nettles, Polypody.) 19 Swell, seeth Water cresses in white wine, and bathe well the place therewith, and keep it to four and twenty hours, and hot, and do so two or three days, then cut large Figs the broadest way, and steep them in woman's milk one day, and bind them to with a cloth three or four days without removing. 20 Dropsy, make pottage with Water cress, Borage and read Mints, with a read Cock or Capon, or with Pork & use them, (See Nettles, Polypody.) 21 Senowes drawn, (See Camomile.) 22 hoarsness, (See Fenygreke, Horehound.) 23 Boil Water cress in water, till they be tender, make them in balls, and dry them, & apply one of them to the Emerods', as hot as may be suffered nine days, if need be. 24 Urine stopped, seethe it and apply it, and sit in the decoction of it. 25 Emerods', strain the juice into hot water, and of the herb and juice, make a plaster, and apply it. 26 Skall to heal, seeth the juice with Boar's grease and brimstone, and anoint therewith. 27 Seethe Water cresses with water, or with flesh, and sup the broth, to cleanse the inward members, and for the flux, and the strangury. 28 Dropsy, eat Water cresses, Mints and Parsley daily, 29 Bruise, (See Dockes.) Aches 12 Apostume 8 Back ache 12. 18 Bladder stopped 1 Bruise 29 Cough 5 Dropsy 6. 7. 17. 20. 28 Emerods' 23. 25 Face deformed 2 Feet swollen 17 Flux 27 Gravel 1 Head ache 11 skall 26 Hoarseness 22 Impostume 8 Kidneys stopped 1 Legs swollen 17 Lice 3 Milk to 'cause 4 Pleurisy 16 Rheum 11 sinews drawn 21 Skall 26 Skin to cleanse 2 Strangury 1. 9 14. 27 Swell 17. 19 Urine stopped 1. 10. 12. 13. 24 Worms general 15 ¶ Water Betony. WAter Betony, or Brown wort: The leaves, stalk, seed, root or juice, doth waste and dissolve all swellings and hardness, being stamped with vinegar, and applied at morn, noon and even. 2 Stamp the leaves and apply them to old rotten corrupt spreading and fretting sores and pocks, to heal them: and with salt to kankers. 3 Face read, wash with the juice. 4 Emerods', eat the root to dry them up, or stamp it and apply it outwardly. 5 Worms to kill, drink the seed. 6 Stamp the whole herb, and drink the juice of it against spitting of blood, the flux and excess of flowers and bleeding at the nose. 7 Bruise the leaves or seed cases, and apply them on fresh wounds to heal and skin them, and to rotten sores, figs of the fundament, swellings and lepry: the juice doth the like. 8 Drink the seeds with wine, against all venomous bitings. 9 Drink one dram of it, to expel great worms. Drink the seeds with myrrh and Pepper with wine, to help the sciatica excellently well. 10 Take the juice of the whole herb and root in May: keep it in a close glass: when need is, take thereof with wax and oil, of each like much, boil it till it be an ointment, and use it for all skabs and lepry. 11 The distilled water, taketh away all pimples and redness of the face. 12 The water or juice with brimstone and saltpeter, taketh away the ache of the eyes. 13 The seed mixed with honey and applied to the forehead, stoppeth the running of the eyes. 14 The powder of it helpeth the piles and Emerods. 15 The herb alone sodden in well water, quencheth all unkind heats without danger, and exceedeth all others for the marmall, lepry, scab, itch, etc. weals, bushes, etc. 16 Eyes dull, put in the juice of it and of Comfery. 17 Botch in the throat or else where, drink the juice, to drive it out. Apostume 17 Bitings venomous 8 Bleeding 6 Botch 17 Eyes ache 12 dull 16 running 13 Emerods' 4. 14 Face deformed 3. 11 Fig in ano 7 Flowers to stop 6 Flux 6 Fundament fig 7 Hardness 1 Itch 15 canker 2 lepry 7. 10. 15 Marmall 15 Nose bleeding 6 piles 14 Pock 2 Pushes 15 Sciatica 9 Skabs 10. 15 Sores 2. 7 Spitting blood 6 Swell 1. 7 Weals 15 Worms 5. 9 Wounds 7 ¶ Water Pepper. WAter Pepper or Culerage: The leaves and seed do waste swellings and hardness, and dissolveth congealed blood of bruises. 2 The powder of the dried leaves may be used for Pepper in meats, like as our Dittany and Passerage. 3 Mixed with salt, it will season flesh. Bruise 1 Flesh to season 2. 3 Hardness 1 Swell 1 ¶ Water Planten. WAter Planten: Dropsy, apply good store of the leaves to the shanks, to draw out the water from the belly: it hath the nature of Planten. ¶ Wheat. Wheat raw chewed, is good to be laid to the biting of a mad dog: whole Wheat is good for the pain of the gout, if a man sit therein up to the knees. 2 The meal with the juice of Henbane, applied to the sinews, is good against the falling of rheums and subtle humours into them. 3 The same with oxymel cleanseth away all lentils & spots from the face. 4 The meal of March or summer Wheat applied with vinegar, helpeth venomous bitings. 5 The same boiled like to paste or pap & licked, is good against spitting of blood. 6 And boiled with Hony, butter and Mints, it is good against the cough & roughness of the throat. 7 And boiled with Hony & water, or with oil & water, it dissolveth all tumours & swellings. 8 The bran boiled in vinegar, is good against the skuruy, itch, and spreading scab, & dissolveth the beginnings of all hot swellings. 9 The bran boiled in the decoction of Rue, doth slake & suage the hard swellings of women's breasts. 10 The leaven of Wheat meal, draweth out shivers, splents & thorns, especially in the soles of the feet, and doth ripen, open & break all swellings & impostumes, being applied with salt. 11 Wheat bread boiled in Honeyed water, doth suage & appease all hot swellings, especially if good juices of herbs be put thereto fit for the same purpose. 12 Wheat bread new baked, soaked in brine or pickle, doth cure all old & white scurf, and the foul creeping & spreading scab. 13 The amyll & starch of Wheat, is good against the falling of rheums & humours into the eyes being applied: and it cureth & filleth with flesh, wounds & hollow ulcers. 14 The same amile drunk, stoppeth the spitting of blood. 15 And mixed with milk, it suageth the roughness or soreness of the throat and breast, and causeth easy spitting. 16 Mix Wheat meal, incense and doves dung, with the white of an egg, and apply it to the forehead, to avoid all headache. 17 Take as much Wheat flower as will lie on three french crowns, mix it with as much well or spring water, as will make it of the thickness of milk, and give it to a child to kill worms. 18 Mix Wheat bran with Pigeons dung, and the white of an egg, and apply it to the contrary side of the grief to take away all giddiness and dassing of the head. 19 Wheat meal with the juice of Henbane taketh away the inflammation of the guts. 20 Wheat bread that is leavened, is better than the meal in Plasters for the stomach. 21 The juices of Rue, Mints, Sage and wormwood mixed with Wheat meal or Wheat bread-crums and vinegar, is good in plasters for the pain in the stomach. 22 A plaster of the bran with vinegar, and the juice of sour Pomegranates applied warm to the belly, doth stop the flux & swelling of the guts. 23 Bread that hath much Wheat bran in it, maketh the eater thereof lean. 24 And the pure meal nourisheth and maketh fat. 25 The oil pressed out of Wheat betwixt hot irons, healeth ulcers & wounds, and all chaps of the hands, lips and feet. 26 Plasters of Wheat meal leaven, and salt, vinegar, butter and oil of Roses, are good against all bruises, to heal them, if they be curable, the same being applied & the patiented drinking unguentum Potabile, and rolled in a long towel. 27 Wheat, or meal thereof used in broths, is both comfortable and restorative. 28 Wheat flower well sodden in water or milk with butter, is good against the cough, hoarseness, and spitting of blood, and all griefs of the breast. 29 The same sodden with Honeyed water, driveth away all inflammations. 30 The bran sodden in water or Honey, healeth the exulcerations of the throat, and being gargarised, it helpeth the swelling and inflammation of the jaws. 31 Seethe the bran in vinegar, and foment the members and sinews that are lose. 32 The same sodden in vinegar with Rue, is good for creeping sores, pocks, weals, inflammations & swellings, especially of the Paps and privities: it helpeth also the stingings of vipers. 33 The leaven of Wheat meal, is good to draw, to ripen & heat the knobs and Agnailes of the feet: and with salt, it helpeth felons, uncomes and such like. 34 Apostumes, fry Wheat bran with dregss of wine and sheeps suet, and apply it. 35 Bloody flux, kneade a cake of Wheat meal with the juice of Motherwurt, and bake it in the fire, and eat it hot. 36 Botches, seethe Wheat meal, with oil in water, and apply it. 37 Cod swollen, seethe the bran with parietary in sweet wine, and apply it. 38 canker, mix Honey with Wheat meal and Ribwurt, and apply it. 39 Wounds to heal, apply white bread crumbs stamped with water and the white of an egg, and apply it. 40 Swelling of wounds, apply the pith of bread of Wheat with the juice of Smallach. 41 Bruises, gouts, wounds and such like, apply a plaster of Wheat bran, sheeps tallow and white wine. 42 Pushes to avoid, stamp Wheat with wine, and apply it. 43 Tenasmus, seethe a bag of Wheat bran in water, if the disease be hot, or else in wine, if the disease be cold, and sit upon it. 44 Swelling of blood letting, stamp white bread crumbs with wine, and apply it. 45 Stones apostumed of cold cause, seethe the bran, and apply it. 46 Squincy, apply a plaster of white bread, wine and Honey, to ripen and break it, and use butter. 47 For the ache and Apoplexia of the liver and milt, boil Wheat meal, and the bran thereof, with the juice of wormwood, till it be thick, and apply it. 48 For inflation of the stomach and belly, stamp Planten with Wheat bread, and apply it. 49 Botch, apply a read Onion roasted with Wheat meal. 50 Head skalfering, cast seething hot water into Wheat bran, and let it stand four and twenty hours, than strain it, and put a little vinegar to it, and strake the head therewith, as often as need is. 51 Spitting blood, seethe Wheat in butter and water, and eat it three days as pottage, it helpeth also the cough of the lungs. 52 Nails to grow soon, apply Wheat flower with Hony. 53 Breasts hard, (See Rue.) 54 Pricks to draw out, seeth Wheat flower and apply it, it helpeth the ache, voideth the venom, and healeth it again, and is good to heal a bile, uncome or felon, or whiteflaw. 55 Freckles, wash with the decoction of Wheat bran, or crumbs of bread and water. Ears apostumed, (See Cummin.) 56 Teeth to draw, (See Tythimall.) Hicket, (See Mastic, Mints.) 57 Reins ache, (See Calamint, Cummin.) 58 Flux, bake cakes of Wheat flower and the juice of Yarow, and eat them hot. 59 Bloody flux, seethe Wheat till it be broken, than strain out the juice, and seethe it in a posnet and eat it, or knead cakes of Wheat flower and the juice of white tansy and yolks of eggs, and bake them and eat them, and drink a little after it. 60 Belly grinding, bake Wheat cakes soured, and use them as Ote cakes, (See Oats.) Or boil Wheat in wine, and apply it plasterwise. 61 Isiake, (See Smallach.) 62 Gouts general, make powder of dried salt, put thereto as much Honey, and as much Wheat meal, as it cometh from the mill, boil it till it be thick, and apply it. 63 Felon, boil good ale dregss with Wheat meal, and apply it. 64 Apostume, (See Barley.) 65 Apostume phlegmatic, boil oil Olive, Honey, Butter and Wheat meal, and anoint therewith, (See Figs, Cummin.) 66 Apostume to draw, apply Wheat flower with common oil. 67 Ranker, (See Radish, Elecampana.) Fester, (See Garlic.) Wounds ache, (See Smallach.) Vomiting, (See Mints.) 68 Flowers to stop, (See Planten, Roses.) Soreness in the flesh, (See Saffron.) 69 Skabs, boil Wheat leaven in good ale dregss, and apply it. 70 Swell, (See Watercresse.) Ache by breaking of any thing, apply Wheat meal with wine. 71 Flux, boil clarified Honey and white bread crumbs with read wine, and drink thereof two or three times. Flowers to stop, seethe Wheat flower in milk and Honey, and apply it to the navel hot. 72 sinews drawn, (See Camomile.) 73 Sores, boil Wheat flower with Honey, and use Plasters thereof. 74 Stomach heat, stamp smallach with the finest Wheat bread, and apply it to the chest & stomach three days together, fresh every day. 75 To make fine Wheat cakes, Take fair Wheat flower a pottle, Rose water half a pint, cinnamon half a stick, powder of Aniseeds two spoons full, sugar i. pound, whites of eggs iiii. salt a quantity, butter two. or three pennyworth, but no barm: make cakes thereof, etc. 76 Eyes humours and tears, strain Wheat flower with water, and put it into the eyes, (See Rue.) 77 Gout, seethe salt & sifted Wheat bran, Honey and read wine, till it be thick, and apply it. Fever tertian, (See Radish.) 78 Apostume, masels pocks, etc. apply leaven of Wheat. 79 Ache or bruise, seethe Wheat bread crumbs in water till it be thick, and stir it well and apply it, to restore the colour again, (See Fenigreke, Lilly, Planten, Chickeweede, Leeks.) 80 Falling evil, kneade cakes of Wheat meal, with the dew on midsummer morning, and bake it and eat it. 81 For women's breasts that be hard, and for all venomous bitings, seethe the bran with the juice of Rue, and apply it. 82 Sciatica, apply the juice of savoury with Wheat flower. 83 For itch and worms in any place, steep Wheat in wine, with powder of Olibanum, and apply it. 84 Arm swollen by blood letting, apply the meal with honey and milk. 85 Headache continual, make a cake of the flower and vinegar, and apply it, (See Spurge, Tythimall.) 86 Skabs, anoint with the oil of Wheat. 87 Prick in the sinews with needle or such like, seethe the flower in white wine, till it be thick, and apply it hot, (See Bran, See Houseleek.) 88 Yard griefs, (See Olive.) Wounds, (See Planten.) 89 piles, seethe Wheat bran in Leeses of white or claret wine, and apply it as often as need is, hot. 90 Sores, (See Dasie.) 91 Blood to stop, apply Wheat flower with Raddle and whites of eggs. 92 Breasts curdled milk, make pellets with Wheat flower, water and swine's blood, and apply it to bring out all filth. 93 lask to stop, bake cakes of Wheat flower and yolks of eggs on a tylestone, and eat them morn and even. 94 bile to break, apply wheat flower with Honey, the yolk of an egg, and a little salt. 95 Amyl, amidum, or starch: Tongue blisters or bladders, mix starch with Rose water, and apply it. 96 It is good in eye medicines, for wounds, roughness, and rheums of the eyes, and is an excellent help for spitting of blood being drunk: and with milk it stoppeth fluxes, it is good for apostumes of the spiritual members and the cough, sodden in Barley water, and Almond milk, with some Penides. Taken with milk, it helpeth the roughness of the throat. 97 It helpeth all fluxes, bushes and ulcers of the ears, (See Leaven, Bran, etc.) Aches 41 Agneiles 33 Apostume. 10. 11. 33. 36. 64. 65. 66. 78 Back ache 57 Belly ache 19 22. 60 swollen 22. 48 bile or botch 36. 49. 54. 94 Bitings venomous 1. 4. 32. 81 Bleeding 91 Bloody flux 35. 59 Breast griefs 15. 28. 51 Breasts sore 9 32. 53. 81. 92 Bruises 26 Cakes 75 Chaps 25 Cod swollen 37. 45 Cough 28. 51. 69 Ears apostumed 55 Eyes griefs 97 humours 13. 76. 96 Emerods' 89 Face deformed 3. 55 Falling evil 80 Fat to be 23 Felons 33. 54. 63 Festers 67 Flowers to stop 68 71 Fluxes 22. 58. 71. 93. 96 Freckles 55 Gout 1. 41. 62. 77 Head ache 16. 85 giddy 18 skall 50 Hycket 56 Hoarseness 28 jaws griefs 30 Iliake 61 Impostume 96 Itch 8. 83 joints lose 31 Inflammation 29 canker 38. 67 Kernels 33 Lean to be 23 Liver ache 47 stopped 47 Lungs 51 (See breast.) Mad dog 1 Masels 78 Milt ache 47 stopped 47 Nails to grow 52 Piles 89 Pocks 32. 78 Pricks 10. 33. 54. 87 Pushes 42 Restorative 27 Sciatica 82 Sinews griefs 2. 31. 72. 87 Scab 8. 12. 69. 78. 86 scurf 12 Skin deformed 3 Sores 8. 33. 73. 78. 90 Soreness 68 Spitting blood 5. 14. 28. 51. 96 squinsy 46 Stinging 32 Stomach pain 21. 48 heat 74 Swell 8. 10. 11. 32. 40. 41. 44. 70. 84 Stones apostume 45 Teeth to draw 46 Tenasmus 43 Throat griefs 30 rough 6. 15. 96 Tongue blisters 95 Venom 54 Vncom 33. 54 Vomiting 67 Ulcers 13. 25 Weals 32. 42 Whiteflawe 54 Worms 17. 83 Wounds 13. 28. 39 40. 41. 67. 96 Yard griefs 88 ¶ White Saxifrage. WHite Saxifrage, with the grains and berries of the same boiled in Wine, and drunk, provoketh urine, cleanseth the kidneys and bladder, breaketh and expelleth the stone, and is excellent against the Strangury, and all the griefs of the reins. 2 The powder of the roots in an Electuary with honey, hath the same virtues, and so hath the water distilled in May. Stone 1 Strangury 1 Urine stopped 1 ¶ Wintercresse. WIntercresse or Herba S. Barbarae, is good in salads, and is used in Winter for salads, and doth aswell as Cresses or Rocket. 2 It cleanseth corrupt wounds or ulcers, and consumeth dead flesh that groweth too fast, being applied, and the juice dropped in. 3 The seed provoketh urine, and driveth forth gravel, & cureth the Strangury. It is green most commoly all Winter. Dead flesh 2 Gravel 3 Strangury 3 Ulcers 2 urine stopped 3 Wounds 2 ¶ Withwinde. WIthwinde black, the juice looseth the belly. 2 The herb stamped, dissolveth swellings. 3 Pluck up hairs, and anoint with the juice, and it will grow no more. Belly bound 1 Hairs to voided 3 Swell 1 ¶ Woad. WOad: the garden or sown woad, is good to be laid upon the wounds of mighty strong people that use daily labour, and to staunch bleeding, and to fretting sores and rotten ulcers, and to all cold apostumes, to dissolve them. 2 The Wild woad may supply the want of it. 3 The leaves applied as a plaster, stoppeth all swellings, join green wounds, stop blood, healeth S. Anthony's fire and all hot apostumes, consuming, rotten, and spreading sores. 4 The Wild woad both drunk and applied, helpeth the milt. Apost. 1. 3 Bleeding 1 Milt griefs 4 S. Ant. fire 3 Sores rotten 1. 3 Swell 3 Ulcers 1. 3 Wounds 3 ¶ Woodlillie. WOodlillie, or Lily convaile, the flowers drunk in new wine, do strengthen the heart, brain, liver, and all the spiritual parts, panting of the heart, giddiness of the head, the falling sickness, the Apoplexia, and frenzy, pain and trembling of the heart, and stoppeth the passages of the lepry, that it spread no further. 2 And being anointed, it avoideth the scab and ringworm, and that the sooner, if they be washed first, sundry times with the water. 3 The water also assuageth the swellings of the stingings of Bees and wasps. 4 And being distilled in wine, the water helpeth the inflammation, and missed of the eyes, and it is thus made: take the flowers and steep them in new wine thirty days, then take them quite out of the Wine, and distil the wine five times over in a Limbeck, or body of glass. This wine is more precious than gold, for if any drink thereof with six grains of Pepper, and a little Lavender water, they shall not need to fear the Apoplexia that month. 5 The Wine may also be made thus: Fill a gallon glass with good old Wine, and one pound of the flowers, and set it to sun forty days, then distil it in a Limbeck of glass twice over, and put thereto a little Lavender water and Pepper, or else the flowers of Lavender and of Rosemary, and other good spices, and distil it over again, and keep it close stopped in a narrow mouthed glass, a spoonful of it taken at the point of death, doth revive and prolong life: it comforteth the brain, ceaseth the Colic, and helpeth the Impostume in the hinder pat of the brain, and helpeth the Apoplexia, it giveth good memory and ready wit, by anointing the head before and behind with it. 6 The water of the flowers six ounces drunk, helpeth them that are poisoned, and helpeth the biting of a mad dog, the birth of children, it comforteth the brain, heart, and senses. And being drunk forty days, it putteth away the falling sickness. 7 The same water drunk, helpeth the Strangury, the pricking about the heart, and inflammation of the liver, and stayeth the excessive menstrues. Drink one spoonful of the water of the flowers distilled in good strong Wine, to restore speech in the Apoplexia, and for the Palsy, and the gout, and to comfort the heart, to strengthen the memory and restore it. 8 Drop it into the eyes against their inflammation and watering. (See Monophyllon.) Apoplexia 4. 5. 7 Bitings venomous 6 Brain weak 1. 5. 6 Colic 5 Deliverance 6 Eyes dull 4 inflamed 4. 8 watering 8 Falling evil 1. 6 Flowers to stop 7 Heart griefs 1. 7 weak 1. 6. 7 Head giddy 1 impost. 5 Leapry 1 Liver hot 7 weak 1 Mad dog 6 Memory 5 Palsy 7 Poison 6 Restorative 4. 5 ringworm 2 Scab 2 Speech lost 7 Stinging 3 Swell 3 ¶ Woodbine. WOodbine, the fruit drunk i wine forty days together, doth heal the stopping and hardness of the milt, and maketh it less, and purgeth by urine the corrupt humours so strongly, that after the daily use thereof eight or ten days together, it will 'cause the urine to be read and bloody, and is good for shortness of breath, or any dangerous cough, it helpeth women in travel, and drieth up the natural seed of man. 2 The leaves have like virtue as the fruit. 3 And being sodden in oil, and stamped, and the ridge bone anointed therewith before the fit, preventeth the shaking of Agues. 4 The same healeth wounds and corrupt ulcers, and taketh away hurts and spots of the body and face. 5 The juice of the leaves and fruit are evil for women with child. 6 For the breaking out of the head, with ringwormes, etc. wash it with strong vinegar, and cast thereon ashes of the rind of Woodbine. 7 For Impostumes, and webs of the eyes, mix the juice of Honeysuckle, with pure honey, and put it into the eye. 8 Take Woodbine leaves one handful, white Wine a pint, powder of Ginger four ounces, seeth them till it be somewhat thick, and anoint thy face therewith five or six times to avoid the pimples, and to make it fair. 9 Stamp the leaves, and apply them to warts six times, to destroy them. 10 Gather the seed when it is ripe, and dry it in the shadow, and drink one dram in wine forty days to melt away the milt, to void weariness, for shortness of wind, for the hickit, and to expel urine: the leaves have the same virtues. 11 leaves drunk seven and thirty days together, so drieth up the natural seed of man, that he shall get no more children. 12 The oil thereof is very good for all cold griefs and numbednesse. 13 The water is good against pissing of blood. 14 The syrup is good for the lungs and the sores of the mouth and throat. 15 If women drink it much, they become barren. 16 The berries are good against pissing of blood, and to hasten deliverance, but the water is better and more pleasant, which also helpeth the hot griefs of the eyes, and of the liver. 17 Apply a Woodbine leaf to chaps, till they be whole. 18 Eyes web, seeth ribwoort, Woodbine, and Planten, with may butter, and strain it and use it. 19 Stomach sore, stamp fifteen leaves, and strain them with stolen ale, and drink it nine days first and last. 20 Tongue palsy, stamp the leaves and hold them under thy tongue. 21 Woodbine healeth cankered sores, wounds, bladders, and toothache, sores in the toes, and is good against swelling in the body, coming of venom or poison. 22 Skin to grow where it is raw, stamp the leaves, and seeth them in a quart of good ale, and strain it, and put thereto honey and allome, and seeth it to one half, then dip grey paper therein, and apply it. 23 Eyes to clear, (See Planten.) 24 Mouth canker, (See Cheruil.) 25 Skall, (See Planten, Rue.) canker, (See Fiveleafe.) 26 Ears worms, put in the juice hot. Eyes pin and web, (See Rue, Smallach.) 27 Mouth canker, mix the juice of Woodbine and Fiveleafe with honey and allome, and apply it. 28 Sores, (See Sage. 29 ringworm, wash it with strong vinegar, and cast on ashes of the rind, it healeth all skabs of the head, or else where. 30 Eyes blemishes, put in the juice with woman's milk. 31 Nose bleeding, (See Radish.) Face red, take white Wine one pint, Woodbine water, two or three ounces, a handful of the leaves, & four ounces of ginger in powder, seethe them till it be somewhat thick, and anoint the redness & pimples five or six times. 32 Face spots, read pimples and weals, distil the flowers and wash often with the water, and also drink four ounces morning and evening. 33 Wounded, drink Woodbine with wine and honey three days. 34 Flux to stop, seethe it in water till it be soft, and wash thy body and feet therewith. 35 canker, mix burnt alom with the juice of Woodbine, vinegar & honey, and anoint. 36 A salve for a green wound, wash one ounce of turpentine in Woodbine water, and mix it with the yolk of two new laid eggs, and put thereto two blades of saffron, and mix them well and keep it in a box, it will last good one year. Barren to be. 15 Benumbed. 12 Blisters. 21 Breath short. 12. 10 Bruises. 4 Chafing. 22 Chaps. 17 chaste to be. 11 Conceived. 5. 11 Cough. 1. 2. 10 Deliverance. 1. 2. 16 Ears worms. 26 Eyes grief. 7. 16. 18. 23. 26. 30 Face deformed. 4. 8. 31. 32 Fevers. 3 Fluxes. 34 Head skall. 23 Sores. 6 Hicket. 10 Kankers. 21. 25. 35 Liver griefs. 16 Lungs griefs. 14 Lust to void 1. 2. 11 Milt griefs. 1. 2. 10 Mouth canker. 24. 27 Sores. 14 Nosebleeding. 31 Palsy. 20 Pissing blood. 13. 16 Poison. 21 Ringwormes. 6. 29 Seed to dry up 1. 2. 11 Scab. 6. 8. 29. 31 Skall. 25 Skin to grow. 22 Sores. 4. 21. 28 Speech lost. 20 Stomach sore. 19 Swollen. 21 Throat sores. 14 Toes sores. 21 Tongue palsy. 20 Venom. 21 Ulcers. 4 Urine stopped 1. 2. 10 Warts. 9 Weariness. 10 Wounded. 33 Wounds. 33. 36 ¶ Woodrowell. WOodrowell, It is a good healer up of wounds. 2 Being put into wine, it rejoiceth the heart, and comforteth the diseased liver, and so it doth being sodden in wine. 3 Seethe it in old ale and drink it against pissing of blood. 4 Stamp it and drink it with wine to heal sores of the mouth. 5 Stamp the seed and drink it with strong vinegar to help the bloody flux. Bloody flux 5 Heart grief 2 Liver grief 2 Mirth 2 Mouth sores 4 Pissing blood 3 Wounds 1 ¶ Wolfthistle. WOlfthistle, the juice drunk with wine is good for the liver. ¶ Wardens. WArdens: to enlarge breath and open the pipes, shred iiii. pound of wardens, the roots of Elecampane and radish of each two. pound, put them into a pot with as much honey as will cover them, cover it with paste and bake it with a batch of bread, and take thereof one spoonful morn and even. ¶ Wormwood. Wormwood, drink the juice ten days, drink half an ounce at once with sugar to help the jaundice, the water between the skin and the flesh, to drive out many noisome humours of the liver and milt. 2 It comforteth the stomach and liver, and moveth appetite to meat, helpeth the diseases coming of obstructions, as the dropsy and such like diseases. 3 And it killeth worms in the belly, and expelleth them mightily, in this sort: take Wormwood four ounces, Euphorbium half an ounce, heart's horn burned one ounce, a hare's gall one ounce, and some honey, work them together and apply it to the belly. 4 Drink the juice with Sugar against old agues. 5 Bruise it and boil it in water, and dip a linen cloth therein, and wash the head therewith gently for the headache, and to procure sweet sleep. 6 Boil it in wine & drink four ounces at once, to preserve the blood from putrefying in the body. 7 Drop the oil into the ear to restore hearing. 8 Boil Wormwood in vinegar, and wash the mouth therewith to amend the evil savour thereof. 9 Drink the decoction of it to put away the swelling of the milt. 10 Boil it in oil olive, and anoint therewith about the breast, to help the weakness of the stomach, and malice of the liver. 11 Seethe it in lee with sothernwood, to help the shedding of the hair. 12 Stamp it with as much rue, and a little pepper, and boil them in wine, and drink it to comfort and purge the stomach. 13 Lay it among clotheses to defend them from moths. 14 Say it under the bolster to procure sleep. 15 seeth the leaves or flowers in meat or drink: they are good for the stomach, help digestion, and cease ache, expel poison, choler, and the terms, being sodden in wine & drunk. 16 Seethe it in wine, and drink it with Cummin, to warm the stomach, and to help the torment and ache thereof, to expel worms, to help the jaundice, to expel the terms, and all manner of poison or venom. 17 And sodden with vinegar, it helpeth the strangling of muhrooms. 18 The flowers dried and stamped with salt and given to cattle to eat, helpeth their inward griefs, and driveth away all noisome things within them. 19 The juice or water applied to the temples, taketh away the headache that cometh of cold cause, and dropped into the ears or eyes, it taketh away their pain, and cleanseth them. 20 The herb stamped with saltpeter, and honey, is good for the squinsy. 21 The vapour thereof is good for the ache of the ears, being received through a tunnill. 22 seeth it in wine, and apply it to the stomach to take away the loathing belch and ache thereof. 23 Steep a branch or two in half a pint of good white wine in a close vessel all night, and drink it in the morning warm with sugar to have a good colour, and to be free from worms. Make Wormwood wine thus: take aqua vitae and malmsey, of each like much, put it in a glass or bottle with a few leaves of dried Wormwood, and let it stand certain days, and strain out a little spoonful, and drink it with a draft of ale or wine: it may be long preserved. Wormwood used of them that be lean and evil coloured, restoreth their liking and colour. 24 Wormwood taken, and also applied with honey, provoketh urine and the terms. 25 The water thereof healeth watering sores in the corners of the eyes. 26 With honey it is good for the bruisings and darkness of the eyes, and for the mattering of the ears. 27 The broth with Malmsey is good to anoint the aching eyes withal. 28 The smoke of it driveth away gnats. 29 The juice killeth itch, and put to ink, mice will not eat the paper that is written with it. 30 Take the broth or infusion of it from v. ounces to viii. ounces. The juice from three drams to iiii. drams, the powder from two. drams to three drams with wheye or with reasons the stones taken out, or with Roses, or with Fumiterie to purge the body. 31 In stead of Wormwood wine, mix one good spoonful of it made with Malmsey and aqua vitae, as afore is said, with a good draft of wine and drink it. 32 Headache, wash it thrice a week with lee of Wormwood. 33 Ears deaf, put the juice into the ears. 34 Headache, stamp it and apply it to the temples. 35 Eyes read and bloodshot, stamp it with the white of an Egg and apply it. 36 Lay it in chests to withstand breeding of moths. 37 Steep it in the wine vinegar or water that ink is made withal against eating with mice. 38 Ears worms, put in the juice with the juice of Rue, and of Southistle, and be whole. 39 Clarify one pound of May butter in the sun, and stamp two pound of green Wormwood, and set them in the sun ix. days, then seethe it one hour and a half, and strain it and keep it in a Galley pot, and therewith anoint the navel at the full of the moon to kill worms. 40 Wormwood purgeth by siege and urine choleric humours from the veins of the liver, wherefore the decoction or infusion thereof taken daily, cureth the jaundice. 41 If it be taken fasting, it preserveth from drunkenness that day. 42 With Anniseedes it is good against windiness and pain of the belly and stomach, wambling and desire to vomit. 43 Drunk with vinegar, it is good against the sickness that comes by eating of Todestooles. 44 With wine it resisteth all venom and poison, chiefly of humblocke, and all venomous bitings and stingings of spiders, and other venomous beasts. 45 Apply it with honey to the dimness of the eyes that are bloodshotten, or have black spots in them. 46 Boil it in Bastard or other sweet wine, and strake therewith painful bleared eyes. 47 Stamp it with figs, salt, pepper, and Darnell meal, and apply it to the belly, sides and flanks to help the dropsy, and griefs of the milt. 48 The oil thereof rubbed upon any place, keepeth away fleas, flies and gnats. 49 Wormwood wine serveth for all the diseases aforesaid. 50 seeth it in vinegar and apply it to sores that breed in the ears. 51 The syrup thereof eaten before wine, withstandeth drunkenness. 52 Bound to the belly, it healeth the bloody flux. 53 It helpeth a cold stomach drunk two spoonful ten mornings, and is good for the dropsy. 54 The wine thereof is good against dropsies, coldness of the stomach, wind, and swelling. 55 seeth a handful in a gallon of clean water, or wine, in a vessel of silver, glass, or stone, with some calamus Aramaticus, squinant, cinnamon, and the flowers of Cassia, and some spikenard, and dates of each four ounces, beaten all together, or else put them into a vessel of new wine, with a linen bag, and keep it close two months, and then drink thereof for the yellow jaundice, pain in the reins, loathsomeness of the stomach, stopping of the terms, swelling after meat, continuance of vomiting, cold passions of the heart, etc. 56 Stamp one pound of the leaves finely, and put thereto four pound of the best white sugar, till it be well incorporated, and keep it in a close glass, or galley pot, and use it to help the dropsy, by taking every day one ounce three hours before meat. 57 The oil thereof is good against ache, noise, and deafness of the ears. 58 Wormwood Roman is singular against all inflammations, and heat of the stomach, and liver, and for that purpose is better than all other kinds of Wormwood. 59 While it is young, it is eaten with other salad herbs to strengthen the stomach, to open the liver and milt, and so to preserve health. 60 The Wormwood wine at the Stillyard is good for the same purposes. 61 Wits lost, (see Marigolds.) 62 Headache, (See Betony.) 63 Ears pain, and worms, put in the juice of Wormwood. 64 Eyes bloodshot, (See Celondine, Cummin.) 65 Stomach griefs, (See Betony.) 66 Vomiting, (see Mints. 67 Hands wounded, & swollen, boil the juice with vinegar and wheat bran, & apply it. 68 Breasts swollen, (see Calament. 69 Liver griefs, (see sorrel.) 70 Worms, (see Aloes.) 71 Mother griefs, or suffocat. drink a dram of mithridate with an ounce and a half of Wormwood water 4. hours before meat. 72 Piles, (see Dasie.) 73 Impost. (see Mallows.) 74 Apost. inward or outward, drink the juice of Wormwood. 75 Backach, stamp rue, Wormwood, & sage, of each a handful, with barrows grease, and fry it, and strain it, and keep it in boxes, and use it. 78 Bones ache, stamp it with sage and sothernwood, of each a handful, of rue 3. handful, mix them with oil olive and malmsey, of each a pint, and let them stand five days in an earthen pot close stopped, then seeth it till the wine be consumed, then strain it, and keep it in boxes, and use it. For all sudden swellings, boil Wormwood in wine, or in vinegar, and apply it. 79 Ears ache and dull, boil the seeds of stavesacre, radish, and Wormwood, and strain it, and dip tents therein, and put them into the ear. 80 Eyes griefs, seeth olibanum & Wormwood in wine, and drink it with sugar, and a little ale first and last. 81 Eyes spot or web, bruise Wormwood with woman's milk, and strain it, and put in one drop of the juice. 82 For redness and blood in the eyes, bruise new gathered Wormwood with the white of an egg, & apply it. 83 Gout, boil Wormwood in a little oil, and apply it. 84 Headache, seeth it with veruive & betony in water, and wash therewith, & also grinned the herbs with wheat bran, & apply it with a cloth to the mould of the head thrice, as hot as may be suffered: proved. 85 Mix Wormwood with ground ivy, whites of eggs, & honey, & apply it to the head for the ache thereof. 86 Eyes ache, & swelling by a bruise, heat dried wormwood on a tile, & apply it. 87 Headache, seethe Wormwood in vinegar & apply it to the forehead. 88 jaundice, drink the juice of planten & Wormwood, of each like much with sugar. 89 Impost. seeth it with cummin in wine, and apply it. 90 Itch, wash with the decoction of Wormwood. 91 Liver ache, boil the meal & bran of wheat with the juice of wormwood till it be thick, & apply it to the liver or spleen. 92 Matrix suffoc. apply the juice of Wormwood, smallach and hyssop, hot to the navel with a cloth and be whole. 93 Mouth ulcers, stamp Wormwood with honey, & hold it in thy mouth, it is a singular remedy. 94 Speech lost, stamp it with water, and put in a spoonful into his mouth. 95 Milt griefs, seethe the roots of young ash plants, with as much wormwood in a gallon of wine, to the one half, and drink thereof at even hot, and at morn cold. 96 Milt hard, apply Wormwood. 97 Stitch, stamp mallows and Wormwood with new butter, & apply it. 98 Stomach swollen, use Wormwood. 99 Warts, anoint with the juice of Eldrens flowers & Wormwood. 100 Worms in children, stamp Wormwood, and apply it to the navel. 101 Vomiting, stamp Wormwood and Rose cake of each one handful, and seeth them in read wine, and apply it to the stomach, or quilt Wormwood, Mugwort, and Hyrsse, or Millit, of each iiii. drams in a bag, and seeth them in wine and water, and press it a little, and apply it warm to the breast to comfort the cold stomach, and to stay vomiting. It helpeth also women with child, and them that have the stone engendered of cold cause, and for gripings. 102 Stomach evil after meat, seeth vinegar with Wormwood, and rub thy feet therewith when thou goest to bed, and so thou mayest perhaps sweat to do thee good. 103 Liver cold, use Wormwood in thy meat to comfort and warm the stomach and liver, to unstop the liver, the yellow jaundice and the dropsy, or take as much as a Chestnut daily at morn, noon, and even. 104 Belly griefs, if the body be mistempered and hard, and the urine stopped, chop two handful of Wormwood small, and put it in a bag, and seethe it in wine with as much water, and apply it to the body as hot as may be suffered half an hour, and heat it again as often as need is in the same liquor. 105 Belly worms, mix two ounces of the juice of Wormwood, with one ounce of an Ox gall, and strake it upon the belly. If you put thereto half an ounce of Aloes Epatica, and Euphorbium, it will be much the better, the gall of a Hare is better than the gall of an ox. 106 Fever quarten, seethe a handful of Fenell, with three or iiii. leaves of Wormwood in half a pint of wine, till the third part be wasted, and drink it warm before the fit with half an ounce of honey of Roses, half a glassful at once, and when the cold fit is past, lie down to sweat, and sleep if you can, if you be thirsty, drink more of it and use it in the morning's fasting v. days, or seethe one handful of Fennel with half as much Wormwood in strong ale or wine to the one half, than strain it and put to it some honey of Roses, and drink thereof a glassful before the fit, and walk after it as long as you can, and then lie down and cover you well to sweat, and eat nothing of iiii. or v. hours before the fit. 107 Corns in the feet, anoint them with the juice of Houseleek, and then apply Wormwood warmed on a tile, and sprinkled with vinegar, and do so three or four times. 108 Ears dull, (See Aloes, Onions, Leeks.) 109 Ears cleansing, seeth Wormwood in vinegar, & the urine of a boy under 7. years old, and put it in with tents of linen, and lie up therewith. 110 Teethach, apply the juice with honey. 111 Stomach windy, apply the juice or herb. Breasts canker, (See Flax.) 112 Stomach cold, and want of digestion, mix the juice with as much honey, and twice so much good wine, and boil them together, and take every day a good spoonful morn & even. 113 Stomach swollen, seeth three handful of Wormwood, and a handful of rue in good wine, & drink it. 114 Illiack passion, boil powder of hot seeds with Wormwood in wine, & apply it. 115 canker, (see Flax, Holy-oke. 116 Fundament falling, of terms in man or woman, take up the fume of Wormwood sodden in white wine, and anoint it with black ink. 117 Ache and swelling in the feet, legs or thighs, take the roots of Wormwood, do off the uppermost, & boil it in water well, and stamp it with horse grease, & apply it in a clout. 118 Leapry, boil the juice with swine's grease, till the juice be consumed, than strain it, and put thereto quicksilver mortified, and use it also for all salseflegme. 119 Scab, (see Celondine.) 120 Worms, (see Arsmart, Centory.) 121 Apost. (see Barley, Mallows, Holioke. 122 Head broken, (see Mallows. 123 Bruises, (see Cummin. 124 Scab, (see Celondine, Dock. 125 Worms in the hands, (see Docks. 126 Worms, (see Mints. 127 Belly swollen, seeth a handful of Wormwood in a pint of malmsey to the one half, than strain it, and drink it, and boil fine powder of coliander, with butter, till it be an ointment, and use it. 128 Agewe cake, (see Mints, Nettles.) 129 Heart burning, seeth it in fair water, and strain it, and drink it daily: proved. 130 Head scurf, seeth it, and wash therewith, and apply the herb to help it by & by, and to make the hair fair, clean and even. 131 Hair falling, make lee with the ashes of Wormwood, and powder of doves dung, and wash the head therewith. 132 milt griefs, (see ash.) Take the roots of young Ash plants, and a good quantity of Wormwood, seeth them in a pottle of Wine to the one half, and drink thereof at even hot, and at morn cold, and use the ointment of Ashen ashes, and do these things nine days and be whole. 133 Stitch, (See Rue, Sage.) 134 Stomach griefs, (See Cummin, Mints, Rosemary.) 135 Whites to stop, seethe wormwood and mallows in sack, and apply it plasterwise to the belly, as hot as may be suffered. 136 women's griefs, use Wormwood with ale. 137 squinsy, (See Flax.) 138 Colic, (See Barley, Sothernwood.) 139 Eyes bloodshot, running and rhewmatike, stamp it with the white of an egg, & rose-water, and apply it when you go to bed, & be whole. 140 Headache, stamp it and apply it to the temples, or the juice thereof, (See Cucumber.) 141 Eyes read and bloody, stamp it with the white of an egg, and apply it. 142 Morphue, (See Barley, Mallows.) Vomit to cause, (See Fennel.) 143 Mother, (see Fearn, Ysope.) 144 To defend from the stinking vermin called pulices, anoint with the juice and oil olive. 145 To void fleas, sprinkle the juice or decoction. 146 Vomiting on the sea, to prevent it, drink the juice of Wormwood. 147 For old pain of the liver, and sides, seethe it in wine, and put thereto oil of nuts, or of spikenard, and apply it or anoint. 148 To void headache, and cause sleep, stamp it and boil it in water, and apply it. 149 Steep the leaves in water ten hours, then take them out, and seeth the water to the one half, and take four ounces of it, and cover thee well to sweat, to avoid old fevers that come by fits. (See Camomile.) 150 Eye spots, put in the juice well strained. 151 To heal the disposition that cometh before the dropsy, and the obstruction of the meseraicall veins, take the juice of Wormwood & sugar ana half a pound, spikenard a dram, cinnamon 2. drams in powder, mix them well, and take two ounces with wine or broth morn & even. 152 Breasts sore, seeth sage, margerom and Wormwood, of each a handful in white wine, and wash therewith, or apply powder of black beans with honey. 153 Eye bruised, apply it with honey. 154 Head giddy, and swimming, seeth it in vinegar, and stamp it and apply it. 155 Wounds to heal, stamp it with groundswell and old Swine's grease, and apply it to wounds and rotten sores. 156 Eyes dull, put in the juice of Rue and Wormwood, (See Mallows.) 157 Stomach cold, and not digesting, take the juice of Wormwood and honey, of each one cuppefull, wine as much as them both, boil them, and take one spoonful morn and even, (See Horehound, Elm.) 158 Nostrils stink, drink Wormwood with honey and wine. 159 Ache in the hands, wrists, feet or sinews, seeth it in oil olive, or in oil of linseed, and strain it, and anoint therewith. 160 Heartburning, seeth it in water, and drink it, (See Barley.) 161 jaundice, seeth it in water, and wash therewith thrice, and drink ivory with wine, (See Auens. 162 Breasts sore, (See Mallows.) Sweated stinking, (See Camomile.) 163 Belly ache, Wormwood anoint with the oil, (See Peach,) or seeth it in water with galls, and bathe therein. 164 Head megrem, (See Betonie.) 165 Stomach weak, (See bread.) 166 Black jaundice, (see Celondine.) 167 Besch, (see meadows.) 168 Wormwood comforteth the heart, cleanseth the stomach. 169 Drink it with spikenard against the windiness of the stomach and belly, 170 With honey it helpeth the swelling in the mouth. With the gall of a bull it cleareth the sight, and helpeth all the impediments of the eyes. 171 Clarify a pound of May butter in the sun, and mix it with two pound of green Wormwood well stamped, sun it nine days in May, then boil it an hour and a half, and strain it, and keep it in a galley pot, and anoint the belly therewith to kill worms. 172 Cough, seeth Rue, Wormwood, and century with good ale and honey to the one half, and strain it, and drink it: some use Gentian therewith. 173 Hickit, stamp Wormwood, sage and rue, and seeth them with vinegar and May butter, and apply a plaster thereof to the breast four and twenty hours thrice, for want of May butter, take fresh butter without salt. 174 Water of Wormwood is good for the stomach, liver, & milt, to kill worms, itch, and emeralds, & to withstand drunkenness. 175 Wormwood fried with butter, & applied to the navel killeth worms. 176 Piles, drink the juice of Wormwood fasting, with powder of garlic, and apply the drests. 177 Belly-wormes, drink the juice with sweet milk, or seeth it in wine and apply it to the belly, or make powder of Wormwood, century, and betony, of each like much, and use it in pottage and broths. 178 Milt cold & swollen, seeth it in wine, & drink it, and apply the herb warm. 179 Vomiting, stamp it with vinegar, sour toasted bread, & the juice of mints and planten, and apply it to the mouth of the stomach. 180 Worms, serpents, or earwigs in the ears, put in the juice. 181 Dropsy, seeth it with wine, and drink it morn and even. 182 Take as much of the juice as a bean to stay the breeding of choler and melancholy. 183 The decoction of it drieth the stomach, and helpeth the inflammation of the lungs, liver, and milt, purgeth the bowels and stomach, and the salt thereof likewise. 184 The strength thereof increaseth, by being sodden in whey, with fumiterre and reasons. 185 Breasts sore, (See Mallows.) Ache 15. 78. 117. 159 Agewe cake 128 Agneiles 107 Appetite 2 Apostume 74. 89. 121 Backach 55. 75 Belching 22. 42 Belliach 16. 42. 101. 104. 163 wind 169 worms (See worms.) swollen 127 Bitings 44 Black jaundice 166 Blood to preserve 6 Bloody flux 52 Bone-ache 76 Botch 167 Breast sores 152. 162. 68 Breath stink 8 Bruises 123 cattle sick 18 Choler 15. 182 Colic 114. 138 Conserve 56 Consumption 23 Corns 107 Cough 172 Colour ill 23 Digestion 15. 157 Drunkenness 51. 41. 174 Dropsy 47. 53. 54. 56. 103. 151. 181 Ears ache, and dull, or griefs 7. 57 79. 109 ache 19 21. 63 dull 32. 57 matter 26 sores 50 worms 38. 63. 180 Eyes griefs 19 27. 25. 26. 35. 45. 46. 54. 80. 81. 82. 86. 108. 139. 141. 150. 153. 156. 170 dull 19 45 Emeralds 174. 176 Feet corns 107 Fevers 4. 149 quarten 106 Fleas 48. 145 Flies 48 Flowers stopped 15. 24. 55 Fundament fallen 116 Giddiness 154 Gnats 28. 48. 144 Gout 83 Hands ache 159 worms 125 Heart burning 160. 129 griefs 55. 168 Headache 5. 19 32. 34. 62. 84. 85. 87. 140. 148 broken 122 giddy 154 scurf 130 megrem 164 Hair falling 11. 131 Hickit 3. 17. 173 jaundice 1. 16. 40. 55. 88 103. 161 iliac pass. 114 Impost. 73. 74 Ink 29. 37 Itch 29. 90 canker 115 Leanness 23 Leaprie 118 Leg swollen 117 Liver griefs 1. 2. 10. 69. 91. 147. 174. cold 103 inflamed 183 stopped. 59 103 Loathing 22 Mad 61 Matrix suffocat. 71. 92. 143 Melancholy 182 Milt griefs 19 47. 95. 132. 174. 178. 183 hard 59 96 Morphue 2. 14 Moths 13. 36 Mouth stink 8 swollen 170 ulcers 93 Nostrils stink 8. 158 Piles 72. 176 Poison 15. 16. 17. 43. 44 Purgation 12. 30. 40. 183 Sickness general 2. 19 23 after meat 102 Side griefs 147 scabs 118. 119. 124 Sleep to 'cause 5. 14. 148 Speech lost 94 squinsy 20. 137 Stinging 44 Stitch 133. 97 Stomach griefs 2. 10. 12. 14. 22. 134. 183 ache 15. 22. 55. 59 60 cold 16. 53. 54. 55. 101. 103. 112. 157 swollen 98. 115 Windy 42. 111. 169 sick 42 weak. 165 Stone 101 Swelling 55. 67. 68 78. 117 Sweat to 'cause 102 Teethach 110 Tongue palsy 94 Venom 43. 44 Vomiting 42. 55. 66. 101. 146. 179 to cause 142 urine stopped 24. 40. 104 Warts 99 Whites' to stop 135 Windiness 169 Wind 23. 55 women's griefs 136 Worms 3. 16. 23. 39 70. 100 105. 120. 125. 126. 163. 171. 175. 177 Wounds 67. 155 Ysope. YSope leaves stripped from the stalks, may be kept a year. seeth Ysope in Spring water with figs, honey, and rue, and drink it for the griefs of the lungs, shortness of breath, the old cough coming of Rheum, wheasing, and to kill all manner of worms in the belly. 2 Drink the juice with oxymel to loosen the belly. 3 Drink the juice with chess seeds to loosen the belly gently, and to 'cause a good colour. 4 Boil Ysope with pure duck's grease, and figs, and apply it to the milt for the swelling thereof. 5 Boil Ysope with figs and salt niter, and apply it to the swollen and hard milt, and to the belly that hath the dropsy, and water between the skin and the flesh. 6 seeth Ysope in water, and wash the mouth therewith to suage the swollen gums. 7 seeth Ysope in wine, & drink it to cleanse the breast. 8 Seethe Ysope in wine with fennel seeds, and drink it for the pains of the stomach, or foment the stomach with the decoction thereof, and apply the herb, the same foment beneath doth cleanse the matrix. 9 Seethe it with figs, & gargoyle therewith, to help the squinsy. 10 Seethe it in vinegar, & wash the gums and teeth therewith for the toothache. 11 Drink Ysope wine for the griefs of the breast, sides, lungs, shortness of breath, old cough, to provoke urine, to help the gripings of the body, to cease the cold shake of the ague, and to draw down the terms. 12 seeth Ysope with Iris and Cardamome to purge Choler mightily. 13 seeth Ysope with rue, honey & figs in water, and drink it for any obstruction of the breast, shortness of breath, or old cough, or lick in the powder with honey. 14 Take Ysope with syrup of vinegar to purge tough and clammy humours, and to kill worms, and drive them forth. 15 Apply the decoction of Ysope to congealed blood & blue bruises, and to all itch, skurf, and mange. 16 Roast Ysope in the embers, and apply it to the head to stop rheum. 17 The vapour of Ysope driveth away the wind in the ears, being holden over it. 18 The powder of Ysope is good against the dropsy, and causeth a good colour, abateth toothache, and killeth worms. 19 seeth Ysope in Wine, and drink it against any poison. 20 seeth it with Sugar and honey in wine, and drink it against ruptures, burstings, or bruisings, and to expel Melancholy, and for all things that Organie is good for. 21 Use Ysope in epithimes, foments, baths, and glisters, for the Colic. 22 seeth it in water, and wash all scurf, scabs, and pocks. 23 Steep two handful of Ysope with one ounce of sliced liquorice in a gallon of ale when it is cleansed, and use it after it is three or four days old, for the griefs of the lungs and chest. 24 Cough, seeth a handful of Ysope well in water, then put in powder of Liquorice, dry figs, and raisins, and boil them again in red wine, and drink it for all kinds of coughs. For all kinds of coughs, take running water a gallon, lycoras scraped, one handful, great raisins, Ysope, barley, and violet leaves ana one handful, seeth them all to a quart, then strain it, and drink thereof five or seven spoonful first and last, at even hot, and at morn cold, nine, eleven, or thirteen days for the purpose aforesaid. 26 To cause deliverance of a dead child, Drink Betonie, Rue, and Ysope in hot water, or drink the juice of Ysope in ale. 27 Drink the decoction of Ysope for the Dropsy. 28 For the falling sickness, seeth Ysope and Piretrum in wine, and use it. 29 For the suffocating of the mother, Apply the juice of Smallach, Ysope, and Wormwood hot to her navel, with a cloth dipped therein, and she shall be whole: Proved. 30 Pleurisy, drink treacle with the decoction of Ysope. 31 jaundice, drink Ysope water. 32 Lungs cough, and consumption, with pain in the left side, and about the breast, take four ounces of Liquorice, Anniseedes, and Ysope ana one handful, seeth them in a quart of water, and strain it, and put thereto five or six ounces of Sugar, and drink thereof, but if thou hast any great heat, drink milk. 33 Hair not to fall, seeth the ashes of Ysope in strong lee, and wash therewith. 34 Breast, (See Figs. 35 Cough, and stops, make powder of Ysope, Ginger, Annniseeds, and Liquorice, with honey, and use it. 36 Breast pains, stamp Ysope, Parsley and Sage, and apply them. 37 Breast and lungs griefs, seeth Ysope and sothernwood in wine and sugar it, and drink it, (See Barley.) 38 Belly great, See Arsmart. 39 For the griefs of the stomach, Liver, and Lungs, to kill worms, to comfort the sight, and to 'cause a good colour, Drink the juice of Ysope fasting. Receive Ysope, Sage-royall, and water Cress, of each two handful, bake their juice in Wheat paste, and then break it into two gallons of Ale, and drink it daily, but keep it close. 40 For the host and stopping of the breast-seethe the juice of parietary, Ysope, and Planten with swine's grease, and strain it, and anoint the chest. 41 Breast phlegm, seeth Ysope, fat figs, and liquorice, with barley in water, and drink thereof. 42 Reins imposthume, seeth the roots of lilies and leeks, with Ysope in milk, and drink it. 43 Breast pains, and short wound, anoint with the juice of Ysope and honey, or drink the juice of Ysope, horehound, and bull-foote, with some sugar, or seeth a handful of Ysope in a pottle of good white wine to the one half, then strain it, and put sugar candy to it, and drink thereof at even hot, and at morn cold daily. 44 Cough, drink the juice of Ysope with syrup of liquorice, and fine sugar, or boil half a pint of liquorice water, with three sticks of lycoras and sugar candy, and drink thereof morn and even daily. 45 Mouth stinking, make a syrup with the juice of Ysope and mints, and take thereof morn and even. 46 Stomach cold griefs, seeth Ysope in white wine, and strain it, and put sugar candy to it, and drink thereof at even hot, and at morn cold. 47 Belly worms, incorporate Ysope with honey and niter, and use it. 48 Ears ache, put in the juice withoile blood warm. 49 squinsy, seeth it in vinegar, and gargarise therewith: if the palate be fallen, apply the powder of the flowers with thy finger, or dip wool in the decoction of Ysope with oil and apply it. 50 Dropsy, seeth it in wine and drink it. 51 The juice of Ysope holden in the mouth, healeth all the evils thereof, it slayeth worms, and looseth the belly. 52 Breast phthisic, fry the juice of Ysope, planten, and parietary with swine's grease, and strain it, & anoint therewith the chest. 53 Ysope, (See Bursa pastoris, Figs.) 54 Dropsy, seeth it with staveseacre in wine and drink it. 55 Swelling of toothache, seeth a good handful in a pint of vinegar to the one half, than strain it, and seeth it a little more, and hold thereof often in thy mouth. 56 Stamp Ysope with honey and niter to kill worms in the body. 57 Cough in children, seeth Ysope in wine with Serpillium, or savoury, and drink it with sugar candy, 58 Ysope, (see Figs.) 59 Gums putrefied, seeth Ysope in water, and wash therewith, and be whole. 60 Ysope, (see Fenegreke, Horehound.) Agewe cold 11 Belly bound 2. 3. 51 Belly great 38 Blood congealed. 15 Breath short 1. 11. 13. 43 Breast griefs 7. 11. 13. 23. 36. 37. 40. 43 Bruises 15. 20 Choler 12 Chollike 20 Cough 1. 11. 13. 24. 25. 35. 44. 57 Colour 3. 18. 39 Deliverance to 'cause 26 Dropsy 5. 18. 27. 50. 54 Ears ache 48 windy 17 Falling sickness 28 Phlegm 41 Gums swollen 6. 59 Hair not to fall 33 Humours evil 14 jaundice 31 Itch 15 Liver griefs 39 Lungs griefs 1. 11. 23. 32. 37. 39 Melancholy 20 Milt swollen 4. 5 Mother 29 Mouth stinking 4. 5. 51 Pocks 22 Poison 19 Pleurisy 30 Phthisic 52 Reins impostumed 42 Rheum 16 Ruptures 20 Sight to comfort 39 Skabs 22 scurf 22 Stomach pains 8. 39 46 Stops 35 squinsy 49 Terms to come down 11 Tooth ache 10. 18. 55 Worms in the belly 1. 14. 18. 39 47. 51 Worms in the body 56 ¶ Oak. Oak: The leaves and bark, with the cups of the Acorns, do stop and cure the spitting of blood, pissing of blood, and all other flux of the blood, the bloody flux and lask, being boiled in read wine and drunk. 2 Powder of the leaves doth heal and close up wounds, and stoppeth their bleeding. 3 Powder of the bark given to young children, helpeth their lask, the flux of blood, or other humours. 4 The Acorns do provoke urine, and are good against all poison and venom. 5 And boiled in milk, they be excellent to be eaten, against the bitings and stingings of venomous beasts. 6 The powder of them is very good to be laid to the beginnings of hot apostumes and inflammations. 7 And stamped with salt and swine's grease, they cure hard ulcers and consuming sores. 8 The Gaul is also very binding and stiptike, they be good against all fluxes of blood and laskes, howsoever they be taken inwardly: or mixed with oils, ointments or implasters, and laid too outwardly. 9 They are good in the excessive moisture of the gums, and all swellings and blistering sores within the throat or mouth. 10 They stop the terms, and 'cause the matrixe that is fallen down, to return to the natural place, if women sit in the decoction thereof. 11 The same steeped in vinegar or water, maketh the hair black. 12 It doth eat and consume superfluous flesh being laid on. 13 The same burned upon the coals and quenched in wine or vinegar, or with brine ma●e of salt and vinegar, stoppeth all issues of blood or flux. 14 The powder of Gauls, cleanseth the mouth from filth. 15 Gaul applied, taketh away the ache of the teeth quickly. 16 The decoction of the inner bark and the cups of Acorns put in, is good against all the fluxes of the belly and matrixe, the Gomor passion, spitting of blood. 17 The water of the young shoots and young acorns, is good for the same purposes, but especially in children. 18 The leaves do heal wounds being applied. 19 The tender and reddest leaves or buds sodden in wine and gargarised, helpeth the tooth ach. 20 Gauls sodden in water, and meats made therewith, helpeth the bloody flux and all other fluxes, and helpeth all things that the inner bark is good for. 21 Powder of Gauls is good for the fluxes of the jaws and Vuula. 22 Acorns eaten, breed wind and headache. 23 Raw Acorns are good for hot burnings, being stamped and applied. 24 They are good with salt and swine's grease, for very sore hard lumps, and sores hard to be healed. 25 The Gaul sodden by itself, and then stamped and applied, is a good remedy against the inflammation or burning heat of the fundament, and for the falling down thereof. If the matter require great adstriction or binding, seethe it in wine, if less, in water: if more, in vinegar. 26 Seethe Oak leaves and the middle rind in water, and wash the sores and fistulas of the head therewith, to have present redress. 27 Seethe the middle rind in water, and bathe any sore therewith, old or new: and then anoint it with butter and brimstone, and do so ten days together if need be, and be whole. 28 Mix the ashes of burned Acorns with bores suet, to make hair to grow. The bark is constrictive. 29 For a fistula, make powder of blood suckers, Oak coals and salt, and put it into the bottom of it nine days, yea, though there be a bone in it: or take out the bone with an instrument, and mix flower of Acorns with honey and wheat flower and apply it, it healeth marvelously: or mix powder of Oak bark with vinegar, and the juice of Planten, and apply it. 30 Pissing bed, drink powder of the bladder of a goat, or ox, or hog, with the decoction of Acorns, to have speedy help. Stomach wambling, chew a green leaf, or a dry leaf soaked in water. 32 Liver inflamed, apply bags of Oak leaves, and when they wax hot, apply other. 33 Belly lose, apply a bag of meal of Acorns one quart, with whites of eggs and vinegar round about thee from the navel downwards, and renew it with whites of Eggs and vinegar, as often as need is, thrice or more. 34 children's urine stopped with gravel or stone, stamp a handful of Acorns and seethe them in a quart of water, till the third part be wasted, than strain it, and let him drink thereof as much as he william. 35 Strangury, drink powder of Acorns and Peach kernels ana with wine: if that help not, than thou hast the stone. 36 Woman's breasts swollen, apply powder of the apples with oil of Roses. 37 Morphew, (See Eldrens.) Wounds general, apply the juice of green Oak leaves, with the gleere of an Egg. 38 The kernels of the Acorns in powder, do help the power retentive, weakness of the brain, the pissing evil, called diabetica passio, the bloody flux, the stone and strangury, and is good for them that cannot hold their urine. 39 The cups are good against vomiting of choler and sneezing, and it drieth and consumeth phlegm in the mouth of the stomach. To make fruit black, put powder of the Gauls into a hole bored in a tree, and the fruit will be black. 40 Powder of the leaves put into the nose, stoppeth the bleeding thereof and spitting of blood. 41 The leaf is good against ache of the heart, the oppilation of the liver and milt, head ache, ach of the stomach and belly, the colic, ache of the flanks, it breaketh the stone of the reins and bladder, it helpeth sneezing, it is good for women that be cold, and disposeth them to be able to conception: it is wholesome for all creatures of all ages for all diseases, to be taken at all times of the year. 42 The leaves laid on, heal all wounds, the canker, fistula, Saint Anthony's fire: a bane made of the water of the Oak, healeth the dropsy, and all Leaprousnesse. 43 He that eateth one of the leaves once a week, shall never have stinking breath, nor tooth ache, nor putrefaction of his gums, nor ears. 44 Emeralds to stop, use powder of Acorns, Ash keys, and a little Bol Armoniak in warm broth or drink, or a rear Egg. Bloody flux, make powder of Acornes-cups, and drink it with read wine, yolks of hard Eggs and Cinamome. 46 Hair falling, make Lee with the ashes of the middle bark and leaves, and wash therewith, or seethe them in water, and wash therewith. 47 Apostumes and swellings at the roots of the nails, stamp an acorn with black soap, and apply it. 48 Eyes running, hold them over the fume of the decoction of the leaves. 49 Cough and hoarseness, and stopping of the liver, use to drink Lee of the ashes of a great Oak. 50 Flux, drink the water distilled of the leaves. 51 Flowers to stop, drink water that standeth in an hollow Oak with rain water: or use the decoction of acorn shales. 52 Bloody flux, and all other fluxes, distil the read leaves of the young springs of Okes that have been lopped, and take three or four spoons full of the water for a child, but more for an old body with an Alebrew, or such likewise, twice or thrice a day. 53 Flux read or yellow, seeth powder of a Gaul, seeth it in water, and temper the water with Barley meal, and apply it to the belly. 54 Tongue bladders, or weals, anoint it with the juice of petty morel, Purssen and Letuce, with read wine, and cast on powder of Gauls. 55 Teethach, mix powder of Gauls Mastic and Coral ana like much with Honey, and rub therewith, to kill the ache and worms. 56 Squincy, apply Gauls, with Sal Armoniak. 57 Fundament fallen, cast on powder of Gauls, Frankincense and Myrrh, and Aloes, of each like much. 58 Gomer passion, to heal the vessel wherein nature lieth, drink a spoonful of the powder of the cups, with warm ale one hour or two before thou risest. 59 Rheum, and to cleanse the head and brain, tie many leaves to a little stick, and hold it between thy teeth deep in thy mouth, and hold down thy head, then wash them in fair water, and hold them in again as often as need is, it is the best help for Rheum. 60 Urine running, seeth the small ends of the leaves in claret wine, and stamp them, and apply them hot on the yard. 61 Hair to grow, burn Acorns, and mix them with Boar's grease, and anoint. 62 To stop the flux of blood of the matrixe, and of urine, and of wounds, and to heal black pimples or weals in the legs, distil the leaves in a L●mbecke in the midst of May, and drink thereof six ounces at once, and bathe also therewith: it helpeth all inflammations of the legs. 63 Whiteflawe and apostumes of the nails, stamp the leaves with Soap, and apply it. 64 Wounds to heal, apply powder of the leaves. Flowers to stop, drink the feces which come out of an Oak with rain water. 65 Flux to stop, distil the leaves, and drink the water cold. Apostume hot 6 Belly ache 4 Belly lose 33 Bitings venomous 55 Bloody flux 1. 3. 8. 13. 20. 28. 45 Blood issue 13 Blood spitting 1. 40 Brain weak 38 Breath stinking 43 Breasts swollen 36 Burn hot 23 colic 41 Conception to 'cause 41 Cough 49 Dropsy 42 Ears dull 43 Emerods' to stop 44 Eyes running 48 Fistula 29 Phlegm to dry up 39 Flesh superfluous 12 Flowers to stop 10. 51 Flux 16. 17. 20. 50 Fundament fallen 25 Fundament hot 25 Heart ache 41 Head sores 24 Hair to be black 11 Hair falling 46 Hair to grow 28 Hoarseness 49 Inflammations 6 canker 42 lask 1. 3. 8 leprousness 42 Liver inflamed 32 Liver stopped 41. 49 Matrixe fallen 10 Morphew 37 Mouth to cleanse 14 Mouth sores 9 Nails swelling 47 Nose bleeding 40 Pissing bed 30 Pissing blood 1 Pissing evil 38 S. Anthony's fire 42 sneezing 39 Sores 7. 24. 27 Stinging venomous 55 Stomach griefs 31. 41 Stone 38. 41 Strangury 35. 38 Terms to stop 10 Tooth ache 15. 19 43 Venom 4 Ulcers hard 7 Vomiting 39 Urine to provoke 4. 34 Vuula 21 Wounds to heal 2. 18. 37. 42 FINIS. ¶ A Table containing the effects of all the simples, set down in this book, by the order of the Alphabet. ¶ Abhorring meat. HOllioke. Housteeke. Saunders. savoury. ¶ Abortion. COleworts. Cresses. Flowerdeluce. Tar. ¶ Ache. ACatia. Alehoofe. Almonds. Amoniacum. Angelica. anise. Arsmart. Auens. Bay. beans. betony. Blessed thistle. Bread. Briony. Broome. bugloss. Bulfoot Burr Camomile Capars Cicory Ciperus Coleworts Coliander Cockle Cowslips Cresses Cumminseeds Daffodil Danewort Dasie Dill Dodder Eiebright Elaterium Eldern Elecamp. Elm Euphorbium Fenell Fiveleafe Flax Flowerdeluce Frankincense Garlic Ginger Gourds Guiacum Hartshorne planten Heath Hemlock Henbane Holltocke Hypocistis jasmin jute Langdebeefe Lavender Leeks lentils Lentisk Lily Mader Margerom Meltlote Meon Mirth Mirhis Millet Morrell Moss Mugwort Mullin Mustard Nettle Nux Indica Ollive Onion Opium Oats Pariet. Parsnips Parsley Pease Pelitory Peneroyall Pepper Poppy Purslane Planten Reed Reasins Rye Rocket Rose Rosemary Rhubarb Rue Safferne Sage Smalach Sothernwood Spearewoort Sperage tansy Tar Thapsia Thime Vinegar Violets Watercresses Wheat Wormwood Ysope ¶ Adder. betony Dragons Fenell Fiveleafe Garlic Rosemary ¶ Ague cake. CEntorie Mints Nettle Onion Wormwood Ysope ¶ Agneiles. ALoes Bengewin Briony Fiveleafe Horehound Lily Marigolde Misleto Myrtle Mustard Nigella Sallow Turpentine Vinegar Wheat Wormwood ¶ Air evil. FIueleafe Garlic juniper Mastic Marigolde Orange Pelitory Sage. ¶ Ale. CItron Gall ¶ Appetite. ALleluya Artichoke ash Barbary Beets Blessed thistie Calamint Capars Centory Cherry chervil Coleworts Cumminseeds Gallingale Ginger Gooseberry Hemp lettuce Lentisk Lupins Maces Marigold Mints Mustered Ollive Onion Parsley Peach Pellitory Peneroyall Pepper Polipodie Rape Raisins Rosemary Rue Sage savoury Skirwits' Sorrel Thime Turpentine Vinegar Vervin Wormwood ¶ Apoplexia. BOrage bryony Coloquint. Cowslips Euphorbium Lavender Margerom Misleto Peach Ros solis Sagapenum Saxifrage Sothernwood Squilla Violets Woodlilly ¶ Apostume. ADderstong Alleluya Apples Archangel Aron Arsmart ash Barbary Barley beans Beets Blessed thistle Bramble Bread Brionie Broome Bulfoot Cassia fistula Cicory Claver Coleworts Coliander Cockle Cress' Cumminseeds Daffodil Darnell Dasie Docks Ducks meat Egrimony Elaterium Eldern Endive Fenegreeke Five leaf Flax Fleawort Flouredeluce Fumiterre Galbanum Garlic Gelovers Gowrds Guiacum Hartstong Hasell Henbane Holliocke Houndstong Houseleek Knotgrass Lady's mant. Leeks lettuce Lentisk Lily Lovage Lupins Marsh mallows Mints Misleto Morrell Morsus diab. Mulberry Mullin Mustered Nenuphar Nettle Oak Olive Onion Orange Oats Pears Pariet. Pelitory Peneroyoll Pimpernell Pitch Planten Poppy Purslane Quince Radish Reed Reasins Rye Rose Rue Saffron Sagapenum Sage Savin Setwall Smalach Sowthistle Sothernewood Sparewort Strawberry Tamariske Tar Thistle Thime Tormentil Vervin Violets walnuts Watercresses Waterbetony Wheat Woad Wormwood ¶ Arm ache. BRoome Flowerdeluce Morrell Spearewoort ¶ Armpits stinking. Flowerdeluce ¶ Astonished. Sage ¶ Back ache. ALkakengi Almonds Angelica anise Archangel Artichokes Bay Barley Betony Blessed thistle Briony Broome Burr Calament Calamus aromaticus Cammamile Carrots Carway Cassia Fistila Centory Chickweed Cicory Clary Coleworts Coliander Coloquintida Cumminseeds Danewort Dodder tragacanth Egremonie Elecampane Endive Eringium Fenigreeke Fennell Figs Filipendula Five leaf Flax Flowerdeluce Fluellin Galingale Garlic Gelovers Gromell Hasell Holliocke Horehound Houseleek juiubes' Knotgrass Lavender Lavender cotton Leeks Liquorice Lovage Melilot Meon Mints Milfoile Mouseare Mugwort Mullin Neniver Nettle Pariet. Parsnips Pelitory Peneroyall Peony Pimpernell Planten Poppy Purslane Radish Reed Rose Rhubarb Rue Saunders Setwall Smalach Sothernewood Sperage Spinach Squinant. tansy Thime Vinegar Watercresses Wheat Wormwood Back apostume. Fennigreeke Cricke. Thistle Gout. Endive Griefs. Artichokes Broome Cicory Coloquintida Eringium Fluellin Gallingale Gromell Hasell juiubes' Lavender Lavender cotton Leeks Liquorice Lovage Stitchwort Hot. Houseleek Sanicle canker. Bistort Pain. Horehound Sore. Holliocke Weak. Flowerdeluce ¶ Baldness. Celondine ¶ Barrenness. BEtony Clary Fearne Pelitory Sallow Woodbine ¶ Bathing. Poplar ¶ Belching. anise Betony Cherry Curranes' Daffodil Mints Pomegranate Raisins Rue ¶ Belly ache. ALecoste Almonds Angelica anise ash Bay Balm Barley Blessed thistle Bramble Briony Broome Bumbace Burr Burnet Calamint Calamus aromaticus Cammamile Cardamom Carrots Cassia Fistula Centory cinnamon Claver Cloves Coleworts Coliander Coral Cresses Cucumber Cumminseeds Danewort Dates Dill Egremony Elecampana Ellebor Endive Eringium Erysimon Fenigreeke Feuerfew Fennell Figs Filipend Fiveleafe Flax Flowerdeluce Floweramor Frankincense Galingale Garlic Guiacum Hearts-ease Hyrundina. Holliocke juniper Knotgrass Lady thistle Lavender Leeks Linden Lovage Marshmallowes Madder Melilote Meon Mints Milfoile Millet Myrrh Morrell Mouseare Mugwort Mullin Mustard Neniver Nutmegs Oak Opopanax Orpin Oats Palma Christi Parietary Parsley Peach Pelitory Peneroyall Peony Pepper Pine tree Planten Pomegranate Poppy Quince Radish Rye Rosemary Rhubarb Rue Saffron Sage savoury Saxifrage Setwall Skirwits' Sloes Smalach Sothernewood Squilla tansy Thime Tormentill Turpentine Vervin Walnuts Wheat Wormwood Bound. Acorus Algood Aloes Amoniacum anise Apples Arach Basill beans Beets Betony Borage Briony bugloss Capars Centory Cherry Coloquintida Coleworts Cockle Cornrose Cresses Cucumber Cumminseeds Docks Eldern Elm Fearne Fenigreeke Feuerfew Fiveleafe Flax Flowerdeluce Fumiterre Gourds Hemp Holliocke Holly Leeks lentils Medowort Mints Mirhis Nettle Olive Onion Oats Palma Christi Peach Poppy Purslane Quince Radish Rose Rosemary Rhubarb Saffron Samper Savin Seine Sperage Spinach Squilla Tar Turpentine Vinegar Violets walnuts withwind Ysope Gnawing. Balm Griefs. cinnamon Coral Rose Great. Arsmart Rue savoury Ysopt. Griping. aniseeds Beets Hard. Alecoste Almonds Cumminseeds Eldern Fiveleafe Holliocke Houndstong ivy Parsley Peach Rosemary Inflamed. Purslane Violets Lose. Apples Barley Bramble Burnet Cherry Cloves Coleworts Cumminseeds Dates Dill Endive Lady thistle Leeks lentils Mullin Oak Oats Pears Peach Quince Reasins Rice Rose Rhubarb Spikenard Vinegar Sore. Holliocke Swollen. Alecoste Aloes Anise Barley Coliander Cumminseed Fiveleafe Guiacum Holliocke Hops Leeks Nettle Parsnips Parsley Rue Saffron tansy Throughwaxe Wheat Wormwood Windy. anise Fennell Lavender Parsnips Pelitory Smalach Throughwaxe Wormwood Worms. Almonds Garlic Wormwood ¶ Benumbed. COwslips Dill Euphorbium Lavender Onion Oats Pelitory Rue Sage Sothernwood Woodbine ¶ Beer. CItron Gall ¶ Beasts venomous. Agnus castus. ¶ Bewitched. MVgwort Sothernwood See Witchcraft. ¶ Birds to take. Garlic Hemlock Nux meth.. ¶ Biting of a man. Garlic ¶ Biting venomous. AGnus castus Alleluya Allgood Angelica anise Archang. Asarabac. ash Bay Balm Basill Bengewin betony Bistort Blessed thistle Bread Brionie bugloss Burr Bursa pastoris Butterb. Calamint. Camomile Camepitis Carrots Carway Celondine chervil Chestnuts Ciperus Claver Coleworts Corneflowre Cowslips Cresses Cumminseed Dandelion Dasie Docks Dragon's Egremonie Eldern Elecamp. Eringium Ertsimon Feuerfew Fennell Fitches Fiveleafe Flax Flowerdeluce Flower amor. Furs Garlic Gentian Germander Gooshetrife Hartstong Hather Houndstong Houseleek juniper Knotgrass Larkspur●e Leeks lettuce Licium Lily Lovage Margerome Maidenhair Mandrach Marshmallowes Mints Mirhis Milfoile Myrtle Morrell Mugwort Mulberry Mullin Mustard Nettle Nigella Oak Olive Onion Opopanaz Parsnip Parsley Pears Penerdial Peony Pepper Perwincle Pimpernell Planten Plaintree Radish Reasins Rocket Roscampian Rosemary Rhubarb Rue Sagapenum S. john's wort Sanicle Saxifrage Setwall Smirnium Sorrell Sow bread Sow thistle Sothernwood Sperage Spinach Spurge spikenard Tamariske Tar Thistle Thime Vervin Walnuts Waterbetonie Wheat Woodlilly Wormwood ¶ Black to colour. Allder ¶ Black jaundice. Ash Celondine Maces Saffron Smalach Wormwood ¶ Black spots. AAnnise beans Celondine Garlic Margerom Rue. ¶ Blains. LIuerwort Planten. ¶ Blasting. ACatia anise Chestnuts Lunaria. ¶ Bleeding. COliander Colophony Cowslips Cresses Daisy Elecampaine Five leaf Goosheirife Houndestongue Leeks Lentisk Lungwort Nettle Orpin Pease Pease earth Smalach Tormentil Turpentine Tutsan Vinegar Vervin Walbarly Wheat Woade Bleeding inward. Calamint. ¶ Bladder ache. tragacanth Melilote. Griefs. Angelica anise Arach Artichoke Bay Betony Broome Calamus are. Cammamile Cicory Cipers Cucumber Cumminseede Endive Fennel Figs Filipend. Flowerdel. Garlic Gelovers Gourds Grommel hazel Holliocke Leeks Liquorice Liver wort Lupins Mugwort Nenuphar Nettle Nutmegs Opopanax Organie parietary Parsley Peneroyal Planten Peony Pimpernel Purslane Radish Reasins Rose Rhubarb Saffron Sarasines confound. savoury Sebestens. Shep. Needle Smalach Smirnium Spikenard Strawberry Tamariske Thime Heat. Myrtle Morrel hurts. Horstaile Paine. Burr tansy Skabbed. Brookelime Stone. ivy Stopped. Alecost Alkakengi Asarabac. Camepitis Dodder Horehound Hops Linaria Mints Sothernwood Stitchwort Stecados Turpentine Watercresses ¶ Blister to cause. Ash Garlic ivy Ros solis Stoncrop To heal. Acatia Apples ash Beech Coliander Flowerdeleuse Fumiterre Holliocke Liverwort Onion Rue Woodbine ¶ Blood bruised. chervil Casting. Centory Comfrey Vinegar To cause. Parsnips Parsley Pinetree Sperage To cleanse. Blessed thistle Borage Cassia fistula Centory Currant Figs Fumiterre Gentian Hops juiubes lettuce Nettle Parsley Peneroyall Rose Rhubarb Saffron Sage Strawberry To comfort. Rosemary Congealed. Ysope Corrupt. Gentian ¶ Bloody flux. ACorus Aloes Almonds Anise Apples Balm Barbary Barley beans Bistort Bramble Broome bugloss Burr Burnet Bursa pastoris Chestnuts Ciperus Coltander Comfery Cress' Cumminseed Dasie Dates Docks Egremonie Eldern Fenigreeke Feuerfew Fiveleafe Fleawort Floweramor Frankincense Gallingale Gooseberies' Goosetansie Gourds Hartsfoot Hartstong Hasell Hemp Hypocistis Holltocke Holly Houndstong Horstaile Houseleek ivy Knotgrass Lunaria lentils Lentisk Lic●um Linden Lungwort Maces Marshmallowes Medowort Milfoile Myrtle Mugwort Mulberry Mullin Neniver Nettle Nutmegs Oak Olive Onion Organy Orpin Pears Peasearth Pepper Perwincle Pinetree Planten Pomegranates Poplar Purslane Quince Reasins Rose Rhubarb Rue Saffron Sage S. john's wort Sallow Sanicle Sorrell Sperage Tormentill Vinegar Wheat Wormwood Wood rowel ¶ Blood issue. Oak Spitting. Almonds Bulfoot Burr Centory Comfery Dates Egrimony Lady thistle Oak To stop. Allisander Aloes Ash beans Betony Bistort Broome Burnet Bursa pastoris Calamint Cipers Coleworts Coliander Cowslips Cress' Daisy Fiveleafe Frankincense Gallion Garlic Goosheirife Hasell Henbane Herb Robert Houndstong Knotgrass Lunaria Leeks Lentiske Liverwort Lungwort Mints Milfoile Mullin Olive Peach Planten Pomegranates Rose Rue Sage Voiding. Squinant. ¶ Bones ache. BRead Broome Burr Capars Eringium Morrell Rye Sothernwood Wormwood Bore. Eringium Broken. Acorus Apples Auens Betony Bread Briony Broome Bugle Comfery Dasie Dogfenell Egremony Elm Feuerfew Figs Flax Flowerdeluc Hearts-ease Hasell Holliocke Myrtle Peneroyall Poppy Rocket S. john's wort Strawberry To conler. Apples To draw out. Acorus To knit. Hasell ¶ Boneshaw. BAitree Balm ¶ Bones in sores Olive ¶ Botch to break. ARchangel Cipers' Cockle Dasie Fenigreeke Feuerfew Figs Galbanum Holliocke ivy Lupins Mints Misieto Morsus diab. Mullin Nettle Pelitory Radish Sagapenum Sorrell Thistle Wormwood ¶ Bots in horses. Egremony ¶ Bowels burning. Alleluya ¶ Brain. MUstard Rue Cleansing. Cresses Dittany Rosemary Saxifrage Cold. Cloves Rosemary To comfort. Asarabac. Basill Blessed thistle Frankincense Lavender Millet Griefs. Alecoste Amoniacum Cubebs Seine JU. Cammamile Mints Moist. bugloss jasinin Nigella Setwall To purge. Coleworts To restore. Betony Cumminseed Sick. Cardamom Stopped. Basill Weak. Borage bugloss Centory Fennell Galingale Lentisk Maces Margerom Mirre Myrtle Nigella Nutmegs Oak Peach Peonie Rose Saffron Sage Stecados Wood lily. ¶ Breaking out. Hound's tongue Rue Breast ache. Doder. Cleansing. Almonds anise Auens Centory Comfrey Cress' Dwarf gentian Flower deluce Foxglove Garlic Ginger Groundswel Hearts-ease Horehound Leeks Mirhis Onion Pennyroyal Planten Rosemary Tar Time. Griefs. Acorus Alecost Alexander Amoniacum Angelica anise Apples Arach Aron Asarabac. Auens Bay Balm Barley beans Betonie Bengewin Blessed thistle Bombace Borage bryony Bulfoote Burnet Calamint Camepitis Celondine Centory Cherry Chestnut cinnamon Cicorie Coleworts Comfrey Cress' Cubebs Cumminseede Daffadil Danewort Daisy Docks Doder tragacanth Dwar. Gent. Elecampane Endive Eristmon Fenigreek Fennel Figs Fitches Flax Flower deluce Fluellin Foxeglone Galingale Galbanum Garlic Gelovers Ginger Goosherrife Gourds Grains Groundsword Heartsease Hemlock Hemp Henbane Herb Robert Hyrundina. Holyocke Horehound Houndestongue juniper jutubes' Knotgrass Ladies mantil Leeks Lettuce Liquorice Lilly Longrape Lovage marygold Marsh mallows Mints Mirhis Milfoile Mirre Morrell Mugwort Mullin Oak Onion Organie Parsnips Peach Pepper Planten Quince Radish Rosemary Rhubarb Rue Saffron Sagapenum savoury Scabious Smalach Sothernwood Sperage Stecados Thime Violets Wheat Ysope. ¶ Breast hot. Liquorice Inflamed. Violet's Breast Impostume. Barley Grains Holliocke Paine. Knotgrass Olive Parsley Rue Sloes Spinach To purge. Balm betony Rough. Longrape Rape straight. Brionie Stopped. Amoniacum Coleworts Horehound Liquorice Oak of jerusalem Opopanax Parietari Reasins Squilla Strauberie Thapsia Thime Turpentine Vinegar Breasts curdled. lentils Sagging. Lady's mantle Griefs. Cumminseede Henbane Hirundinar. marygold Quince Hard. Camepitis Mints Nettle Rue canker. Blessed thistle Celondine Rankled. Smalach Running. Sorrell Small to be. Hemlock Houndestongue Breasts sore. Arach Asarabac. Barley Bengewin Brionie Fenel Flax Gelovers Groundswell Herb Robert Holliocke Lettise Lily Marshmallowes Mirre Morrell Parsley Pimpernell Rose Sorrell Walnuts Wheat Wormwood Breasts stitch. Burnet Swollen. beans Calament Chestnuts Daffodil Dasie Figs Fitches Galbanum Goosheirife Henbane Knotgrass Lily Nettle Palma Christi Parsley Reasins Rose Smalach Vinegar ¶ Breath ill. cinnamon Daucus Havergrasse Lentisk Nutmegs Short. Alexander Almonds Amoniacum Angelica anise Apples Arach Asarabacca Artichoke Assa fetida Bay Barley Basill beans Beets Betony Blessed thistle Borage Bread Brionie bugloss Bulfoote Bursa past. Butter burr Calamint Calamus Ar. Cammamile Carway Centory cinnamon Coloquintida Coleworts Coltander Columbine Cress' Cumminseede Daucus Dockes Dragons Elecampana Erisimon Feuerfew Fenell Figs Filipen. Flax Flowerdeleuse Gallingale Galbanum Gentian. Ginger Havergra. Herb● Robert Holliocke Horehound Horstaile Lentisk Maidenhair Melons Mints Mirabolan. myrrh Mustered Nettle Nigella Oak Olive Onion Opopanax Organie Oats Parietarie Peletorie Purslane Planten Quince Radish Rosemary Saffron Sagapenum Smirnium Sothernwood Squilla Strawberry Tar Thapsia Turpentine Ysope Stinking. Angelica anise Apples Artichoke Beans Beets Betony Blessed thistle Bread Calamus a●. Centory Coliander Columbine Cumminseeds Fennel Galingale Hermodact. Herb Robert Melons Mints Mirabola. Oak Orange parietary Parsley peach Pellitory Purslane Rosemary Sage Squilla Vinegar Vervin Wormwood Stopped. Coloquint. Docks Spinach straight. Aron Borage bugloss Bursa pastoris Cammamile Holliocke Horstaile Peneroiall Ros solis Rue Setwall Thime ¶ Bruises. ACorus All good Aloes Amaradulcis Angelica anise Archangel Auens Bay beans Betony Bistort. Blessed thistle Borage Bread bryony Brooklime calamint Cammamile Capars Camepitis Centory Chickweede Coleworts Comfrey Cranesbill Cress' Cumminseede Danewort Eldern Elecampana Eline Fenigreeke Fennell Figs Fitches Fiveleafe Flax Flowerdelense Flower amor Frankincense Galbanum Garlic Gentian. Germander Goose tansy Hemlock Holliocke Horsetaile juniper Leeks Mader Margerom Milfoile Myrtle Morsus Diaboli Mullin Mustered Nettle Onion Opopanax Orpin Oats parietary Parsnips Pellitory Pitch Poppy Radish Rye Rocket Rose Rosin Rhubarb Rue savoury Skabious Smalach Sothernwood tansy Thime Turpentine Walnuts Water Cress' Water pepper Wheat woodbind Wormwood. Ysope. ¶ Bull wild. Figs. ¶ Burn. ALder Apples Archangel ash Barley Beets Blessed thistle Bulfoote Burr Catstaile Coleworts Coliander Cucumber Daffodil Danewort Dockes Eldern Elm Endine Fearne Fennell Figs Flax Gallion Gourds Hasell Holliocke Houndestongue Horehound Houseleek ivy Leeks Lettuce Lilly Liverwort Lindentree Marsh mallows Mulberry Mullin Oak Olive Onion Pears Pine tree Plainetree Planten Poplar Privet Quince Rape Ribwort Sage S. john's wort Smalach Tamariske Tutsan Verinice Vinegar. ¶ Bursten. ACorus Adders tongue Amara dulcis Angelica Basil Betony Brionie Bursa pastoris Calamint Calamus Aromaticus Capers Cardamom Cipers Comfrey Dandelion Elecampana Fitches Five leaf Fleawort Flower amor Galbanum Gentian Germander Harts ease Hemlock Herb Robert Holliocke Horstaile juniper Lady's mantle Leeks Liverwort Marsh mallows Myrtle Mouse ear Mullin Nenuphar Orpin pelitory Polipodie Ribwort Rhubarb Rue Sanicle Setwall Sothernwood tansy Thapsie Through wax. ¶ Carbuncles. ARon Basill Bengewin Bless. thist. Bulfoote chervil Coleworts Coliander Cress' Egremonie Houndestongue Lily Morsus diaboli Ollive Opopanax Pellitory Planten Privit Quince Reasins S. john's wort Tar Tithimal Violets Walnuts ¶ Cakes. Wheat. ¶ Cardiacke. Cloves Cumminseeds Rosemary ¶ cattle death. Elm To feeds. Fitches Galled. Fearne Hid bound. Flowerdeleuse Hurt. Sanicle Rotten. Peach Sick. Ellebor Feuerfew Garlic Gentian Mullin Penerosal Vergice Wormwood. ¶ Catharre. ARon Burr Dragon's Hazel Houndestongue Meon Planten ¶ Cat's hair. Cresses ¶ Chafing. BArley Bugle Bursa pastoris Columbine Dragagant Horstaile Houseleek Knotgrass Myrtle Olive Onion Pinetree Privit Eurpentine Woodbine ¶ Chaps. ALmonds Bengewin Celondine cinnamon tragacanth Gallingale Gelovers Hemlock juniper Leeks Lentiske Licium Liverwort Marsh mallows Polopodie Rose Squilla Tar Tassel Turpentine Wheat Woodbine. ¶ Chastity. AGnus castus Dockes Hemlock Vervin Woodbine ¶ Cheeks swollen. Cumminseede ¶ Cheese. COrnerose Gallion Cheese ren●its. Aron ¶ Chest griefs. Balm. ¶ Chilblain. Showbread ¶ Child dead. ivy Fevers. Morsus diaboli Griefs. Chickweede To grow. Coleworts Skabbed. Cicorie. ¶ Chincough. APples Comfrey Elecampana Ginger Holliocke juniper Olive Thime ¶ Choler. Beets Buckhorne bugloss Camamil Centory Cicory Doder Eldern Euphorbium Hops Mints Mirabol. Morrell Pellitary Peneroyal Purslane Rhubarb Seine Spurge Thime Tormentill Turpentine Tutsan Wormwood Ysope. ¶ Colic. ALlisander Almonds Aloes Angelica anise Auens Bay Balm Basill beans Blessed thistle Bread Broome Calamus ar. Cammamil Cardamom Carrots Celondine Centory Chickweede cinnamon Claver Coloquintida Coleworts Cresses Cummin Dockes tragacanth Dragons Egremonie Eldern Elecampana Ellebor Eringium Fennell Figs Filipendula Five leaf Flax Flowerdelense Frankincense Gallingale Garlic Ginger Haver. Holliocke Holly Horehound Knotgrass Lavender Leeks Lovage Maces Mints Mouse ear Mugwort Mustered seed Nettle Nigilla Oak Olive Onion Organte Oats Parietary Parsley Peach Pellitory Pepper Polipodie Radish Raisins Rose Rosemary Rhubarb Rue Saffron Sage Sallow Saxifrage Seine Setwall Smalach Sothernwood Sperage Squinant. Thime Tormentil Vinegar Wormwood. ¶ Clotheses stained. Pease ¶ Cock to fight. Garlic ¶ cods apostume. CIcers Hemp Griefs. parietary Inflamed. Lilly Swollen. Agnus castus Aron Barley beans Calamint Cipers Cummin seed. Danewort Docks Ducks meat Egremonie Elecampane Erisimon Fennel Figs Five leaf Hemp Holyoke Horstaile Lily Olive Oats Pomegranate Rye Rue Throughwaxe Vinegar. Wheat ¶ Cold. CVmmin seed Rosemary Sagapen. Cold griefs. Amoniacum Angelica Bombace Butterburre Calamint Cloves Coloquint. Cresses Dill Ellebor Filipendula Gentian Ginger Guiacum ivy Lavender Mirre Mustard Rosemary Rue savoury Sothernwood Pellitory Humours. Dogfennel ¶ Conceived. Garlic Pomegranate Woodbine Wormwood ¶ See woman conceived. ¶ Conception. ALoes Artichokes betony Calament Carrots Cassia fistula Clary Cockle Colophony Cumminseed Darnel Dockes Galbanum Lavender Leeks Misseto Mugwort Nettle Nigella Oak Orchis Parsnips Parsley Rue Saffron Sage S. john's wort Sothernwood Sperage Stitchwort Tar Tormentill. ¶ Conserve. QVince Rose Strawberries Violets. ¶ Consumption. ALmonds Barley Betony Blessed thistle Borage bugloss Centory Chickweede Clary Coriander Dates Dittany Elecampane Eringium Fennell Figs Fitches Flax Gentian Horehound Leeks Lupins Maces Mints Mirhis Milfoile Neniver Nettle Nigella Nutmegs Parsley Pimpernel Parsnips Pinetree Planten Pomegranate Popie Radish Rice Ros solis Rose Saffron Sage Satirion Tormentill Turpentine Vinegar Wormwood Consumption of nature. Clary ¶ Correction. BRiony Broome Cassia fistula Ellebor Laureal. ¶ Costivenes. Danewort ¶ Cough. ALmonds Apples Aron beans Bengewin betony Bombace Bulfoote Burr Calamints Cardamom Carway Chestnuts Coleworts Cresses Cucumber Cumminseed tragacanth Dragon's Egremonie Ellecampane Ellebor Endive Fennel Figs Filipendula Flax Flowerdeluce Fluellin Galbanum Germander Ginger Goosheir. Hartstongue Hemp Hypocistis Holyoke Houndstongue Horsetaile juniper Leeks Liquorice Maidenhair March mallows Mirre Mulberry Mustard Nettle Oak Onion Opopanax Organie Oats Pears Parsley Pellitory. Peniroyal Pepper Pinetree Planten Polipodie Pomegranate Poppy Purslane Radish Rape Raisins Rocket Rosemary Saffron Sagapenum Sage Sanorie Setwal Scabious Smalach Smyrnium Sothernwood Squilla tansy Turpentine Violets Watercresses Wheat Woodbine Wormwood. Cough cold. Angelica Oak of jerusalem Rue Sebestens. Dry. bugloss century Danewort Daucus Elecamp. Nenuphar Time. Cough hot. Barley Lettuce. Cough old. Aniseed Basill Brionie Cherry Erisimon Femgreeke Frankincense Garlic Hasell Horehound Mirre Parietary. ¶ Crablice. Aloes. ¶ Cramp. ACorus Almonds Aron Asarabac. Bengewin betony Bread Brionie Burr Calamus aromat. Capers century Chickweed Coral Cowslip tragacanth Dragons Ellebor Eringium Feuerfew Fennel Flax Flower deluce Galbanum Gelovers Germander Holyoke. Lavender Marygold Marsh mallows Motherwort Orpin Pellitory or Magistran. Pennyroyal Rose Sagapenum Saxifrage Squinant Thistle Time. ¶ Crows to kill. Nux vomica. ¶ Crudity. Auens. ¶ Colour bad. Balm Betonie Brionie bugloss Calamus aromat. Camomile century Cherry Elecamp. Figs Flower deluce Fumitory. Gentian Golds Mints Mirre Mugwort Onion Polipodie Rice Saffron Seine Squilla Wormwood Ysope. ¶ Colouring black. Alder. Greene. Buckthorne Capers. Colouring read. Brasill Madder. Yellow. Buckthorne. ¶ Cuts. Adder's tongue Alecost Blessed thistle Daffodil Egremonie ivy Leeks Lily Orpin Setwall Smallach Torment. ¶ Danger. Nigella. ¶ Dead birth. ASarabac. Bengewin Brionie. Dead child. Amoniacum Betonie Borage Calamint Camomile Camepitis Carrots century Cress' Cumminseed Dates Elaterium Ellecamp. Ellebor Figs Flower deluce Galbanum Gelovers Gentian Holyoke Horehound juniper Laureal Lovage Lupins Mandrach Marygold Mirre Mugwort Olive Opopanax parsnip Parsley Pellitory or Magistran. Penyroial Peonie Pepper Polipodie Ros solis Rue Sagapenum Sage Sallow Savoury Savin Saxifrage Showbread Vervin. ¶ Dead flesh. NEttle Olive Pepper Sloes Sorrel Sparewort Wintercresses. ¶ Deafness. Ivy Eldern Balm. ¶ Death or life. Rue. ¶ Death to prevent. Marygold. ¶ Defensive. Myrtle. Pears. ¶ Deliverance. ANgelica Bay Basill Betonie Brionie Bulfoote Carrots century Coriander Columbine Dates Dittanie Dragon's Egremonie Figs Flower deluce Frankincense Galbanum Gelovers Gourds Horehound juniper Laureal Leeks Lily Lovage Lupins Madder Mandrach Mints Milfoile Mirre Motherwort Mugwort Nettle Nigella Olive Opopanax Parsnips Parsley Peonie Pepper Pinetree Polipodie Raisins Ros solis Rue Saffron Sage Sallow Savoury Savine Saxifrage Turpentine Veruine Woodlilly Woodbine Ysope. ¶ Demoniake. betony Fiveleafe Ros solis S. john's wort. ¶ Dew. Rose. ¶ Diet. Guiacum. ¶ Digestion. anise Auens Basill betony Calamint century Cherry Cicorie Cloves Coleworts Coriander Coral Elecamp. Fennel Galingale Ginger Horehound Lavender Laureal Lentiske Lovage Lupins Maces Marierom Mints Milfoile Mustard Nutmegs parsnip Persley Pellitory Pepper Quince Radish Raisins Rice Rocket Rose Rosemary Saffron Sage Savoury Wormwood. ¶ Distilling. ROs solis. Rose. ¶ Dissurie. DIll tragacanth Nigella parietary. ¶ Dog biting. CVcumber Danewort Dragons Hounds tongue. ¶ Dog mangy. Broome. Wounded. Coleworts. ¶ Dreaming. Coleworts. ¶ Dreams evil. anise Lettuce Nenuphar Peonie Polipodie Purslane Rosemary. ¶ Dried roses. Rose. ¶ Drink. Cowparsnip Flower deluce Mugwort. ¶ Drunkenness. ALmonds betony Coleworts Leeks Lettuce Lovage Milfoile Myrtle parsley Peach Quince Saffron Vinegar Wormwood. ¶ Dropsy. acorn Agnus castus Alleluia Alkakengt Angelica anise Asarab. ash Bay Barley Basill Bengewin Betonie Blessed thistle Borage Brionie Broome Calamus aromat. Carrots Celondine century Chickweed cinnamon Cicorie Claver Coleworts Coloquintida Cress' cucumber Danewort Doder Egremonie Eldern Elecamp. Ellebore Fennel Figs Filipend. Five leaf Flower deluce Fumiterre Garlic Gentian Germander Goosherrif Hops juniper Lavender Laureal Leeks Lettuce Lilly Marierom Mints Mustard Nutmegs Oak Onion Opopanax Organie Palma Christi parsnip Parsley Pease Pellitory Penywort Peonie Pepper Pimpernel Planten Radish Rye Ribwort Rhubarb Rue Saffron Sage Saracens cons. Savoury Seine Smalach Smirnium Soldanel Squilla Stitchwort Tamariske tassel Thapsia Thistle tithymal Vinegar Watercresses Wormwood Ysope. ¶ Drowsiness. MArierom Rue Saffron Savoury Vinegar. ¶ Dullness. Cheruil. ¶ Ears ache. ALmonds Angelica Bay Beets betony Bursa pastoris Chickweed Elaterium Ellebor Feuerfew Goosheirife Mints Opium Perwincle Pomegranate Rue Vinegar Wormwood Apostume. Cummin seed Organie Wheat. Cleansing. Hops. Deaf. Alchoofe Arsmart Bay betony Bread Cornerose Cummin seed Ellebor Hypocistis Holly juniper Knotgrass Leeks Marierom Mirre Mustard Olive Sage Savin Time. Dull. Almonds Aloes Ash Balm Blessed thistle Camomile Cedria Centorfe Coleworts Elm Euphorbium Frankincense Hasell Hounds tongue Horehound Houseleek Lavender Laureal Lily Oak Onion Peach Planten Radish Rosemary Rue Seine Stanesacre Wormwood. Fistula. Stavesacre. Griefs. Aron cinnamon Cucumber Henbane leek Lettuce Misleto Mirre Morrel Mouseare Olive Onion parietary Poplar Purslane Radish Rose Saffron Sallow Wormwood. Heat. Sowthistle. Hu●. anise. Impostume. Acorus Eldern Lily Mints. Mattering. Tar Turpentine Wormwood. Noise. Aloes Asht Bay Beets betony bugloss Cedria Centorie Coleworts Coloquintida Garlic Mustard Onion Organie Peach Rue Verivice Vinegar. Running. Bursa pastoris Eldern Fleawort Houseleek Lavender Mirre Scabious Violets. Sores. Wormwood. Vermina. Hemp. Ulcers. Bursa pastoris. Watering. Onion. windy. Ysope. Worms. Algood Aloes Apples Bread Calamint Capers Cedria Coloquintida Danewort Eldern Elecamp. Fennel Hasell Horehound Horsemint Marygold Mints Milfoile Olive Onion Rue Sothernwood tassel Woodbine Wormwood. ¶ Eyes ache. ALoes Basill Beets betony bugloss Cummin seed Dragons Fennel Nenuphar Rue Vinegar Water betony. Apostumes. Holyoke Planten. Black to be. Hasell. Bleared. betony Cowslip Rose Tansie Veruine. Blasted. Egremonie Violets. Blemish. Fennel Thistle. Blind. Tormentil. Bloody. Aloes Cummin seed Fennel Frankincense Lentiske parietary Rose. Smallach Bloodsh●●. Telondine Nigella Onion Vervin. Bruised. Algood beans betony Fennel Parsley Rose. Clear to be. Balm. Celondine. Dark. Acorus. Dasting. Fennel Dropping. Milfoile Nigella. Dull. Aloes Amoniacum Angelica anise Aron Asarab. betony Blessed thistle Carway Cedria century Cloves Coleworts Dandelion Dragons Eiebright Eldern Ellebor Flax Fumitory. Frankincense Galingale Gelovers Ginger Horehound Houseleek Lavender Lettise Licium Longrape Mirre Mulberry Mustard Nutmegs Olive Opopanax Penyrorall Radish Rape Rose Rue Savoury Sarifrage Seen Sowthistle Sperage Squilla Time Water betony Wood lily Wormwood. Falling outward. beans Bramble. Fistula. Egremonie Germander. Griefs. Apples Basill Bengewin Borage Bramble Bread Cherry Chickweed Cicorie Clary Claver Coleworts Coral Corn flower tragacanth. Fennel Gentian Germander Groundswell Henbane Marierom Mandrach Marygold Melilot Melons Myrtle Morrel Mouseare Olive Onion Pepper Pimpernel Pomegranate Poplar Purslane Raisins Rose Rue Saffron Sagapenum Sallow Scalacoeli Setwall Smalach Showbread Strawberry Tamariske Veruine Wheat Woodbine Wormwood Hawe. Lillie. Heat. Apples bugloss Cornerose Fleawort Holyoke Houseleek Mitabol. Opium Rose Southernwood. Humours. Sanders Wheat. hurts. Barley Fitches Scabious. Inflamed. Asarabac. Gourds Mullin Persley Planten Violets. Itch. Aloes Blessed thistle Fennel Fleawort Smallach. Moist. Cress' Pearl. Aloes beans Cockle Eiebright Ginger Knotgrass Onion. Pain. Organie. Red. Apples beans century Fennell Ginger Houndstong Mints tassel Thime Tormentil Running Aloes Apples Beans betony Columbine Mirabol. Mullin Oak Plaintree Scabious Smalach Tormentil Walnuts Water betony. Rough. Mustard. Rheum. Time. Rupture. Holyoke. Smarting. Betonie. sore. Cow parsnip Eiebright Fennel Liquorice Mullin Nigella Palma Christi Stitchwort Vinegar Violets. Spots. Algood Alchoofe Cedria Gelovers Holyoke Knotgrass Mirre Vervin. Swollen. beans Rose Sothernwood Vervin. Tears. Fleawort Flower deluce Sloes. Ulcers. Holyoke Mirre Violets. Watering. Barley century Fennel Frankincense Vervin. Web. Althoofe Aloes betony Celondine century Eiebright Fennel Five leaf Ginger Hasell ivy Nigella Olive parietary Rose Vinegar. worms. Fennel Germander. yellow. Sorrel. ¶ Electuary. Radish. ¶ Elfecake. Acorus. ¶ Emeralds to flow. Cummin seed To stop. Aloes anise Archangel Aron ash Barley beans Betonie Bramble Broome Bulfoote Burr Calamint Colewort Columbine Daisy Dill Docks Dogfennel Eldern Ellebor Filipendula Five leaf Figs Flax Flower amor Frankincense Garlic Ginger Grains Henbane Hounds tongue Horehound ivy Leeks Lungwort Marygold Mints Milfoile Myrtle Morrel Mouseare Mugwort Nenuphar Nettle Nux indica Oak Olive Onion Pellitory or Magistr. Pepper Pimpernel Planten Purslane Raisins Restharrow Rose Rosemary Rue Seine Setwall Scabious Showbread Squilla Tar Vervin Watercresses Water betony Wheat Wormwood. ¶ Evils general. Rosemary. ¶ Experiment. Cicorie. ¶ Face blains. PLanten Breaking out. Rosin Bruised. Cummin seed. Cleansing. Lemons. Deformed. Algood Almonds Amoniacum ash Beets bryony Broome Burr century Cowslip Cucumber Daffadil tragacanth Ellebor Fenigreeke Fennel Figs Flax Flower deluce Fumiterre Galbanum Garlic Gelovers Goostansie Hearts-ease Holyoke Lentiske Lily Lovage Lupins Marshmallowes Melons Mullin Mustard Nenuphar Nigella Nutmegs Olive Oats Palma Christi Pease Peonie Pepper Pomegranate Radish Rape Rocket Rose Rue Savine Saxifrage Scala coeli Sperage Strawberry tansy Tar Tassel Thapsia Verivice Vinegar Watercresses Water betony Wheat Woodbine. Evil coloured. Acorus. Face foul. ARon Bay beans Cumminseed Rosemary Face freckled. BEets Burr Celondine Cockle Lemons See Freckles. Heat. Almonds Risen Knots. Hermodact. Leprous. Hasell. Measles. Nettle See Measles. Noli me tangere. Mirre See Noli me tangere. Painted. Cummin seed Garlic. Pimples. Planten See Pimples. Red. Apples Gourds Langdebeefe Lillie Nettle Sauce phlegm. Aloes Burr Coriander Docks Elecamp. Ellebor Ginger Lily Nettle Pimpernel Sothernwood Thistle. Sun burnt. Beans See Sun burning. Spots. Auens Dragons Ellebor ivy Onion See Spots. Swollen. Barley Crabs Frankincense Houseleek Strawberry. ¶ Fairies. Bay three. ¶ Faintness. Peneroyall Rose See Heart faint. ¶ Falling evil. Alleluia Amoniacum anise Balm Bengewin Betonie Blessed thistle Brionie Camomile Cardamom Cherry Claver Coloquintida Coriander Coral Cowslip Cowparsnip Crowfoote Cubebs' Dogfennel Dwarf gentian Ellebor Eringium Figs Filipendula Fiveleafe Galbanum Germander Hypocistis Holyoke Horehound Lavender Lindentree Lunaria Margerom Misleto Motherwort Mustard Nettle Pentroyal Peonie Pellitory Planten Poplar Radish Restharow Rosemary Ros solis Rue Sagapenum Sage S. john's wort Seen Smalach Squilla Vervin Violets Wheat Wood Lily Ysope. ¶ Fancy. Five leaf ¶ Fatness. ash Fat to be. Almonds Bulfoote Chestnuts Wheat ¶ Fear. FIueleafe Nettle ¶ Feebleness. Rosemary. ¶ Felon. Barley beans Bread bugloss Celondine Coliander Columbine Cress' Flax Galbanum Houseleek Misleto Morrel Nenuphar Oats Planten Raisins Sage S. james wort Turpentine Wheat. ¶ Festers. ash Blessed thistle Clary Fearne Garlic Hemp Lettise Pepper Planten Privet Rye Smalach Wheat. Foster's cold. Ribwort ¶ Feet ache. Mugwort Oats. Corns. Wormwood See Agneils, Feat galled. Onion Privet. Feet gout. Aron Figs Lovage Meon parietary Poplar Poppy Showbread tansy Feet griefs. Clary Tormentil. Feet hard. Houseleek Sallow Feet pain. Alehoofe Ruptures. Squilla Sore. Alder. Stinking. Bengewin. Surbated. Planten. See Surbated. Swollen. bugloss Cummin seed Danewort Eldern Linden Watercresses. Washing. Fennel Feet worms. Henbane ¶ Fevers. APples Arach Bay Barley Butterburre Camomile Cassia fistula Clary Collander Coral Daffodil Dandelion Dill Dodder Dogfennel Eldern Eringium Fennel Five leaf Flower delute Groundswell Guiacum Hearts-ease Holyoke Lettuce Liquorice Marsh mallows Mints Morrel Mustard Orange parsley Pease Penyroial Pimpernel Planten Rosemary Rhubarb Rue Saffron Sage S. john's wort Sanders Saracens cons. Smalach Smirnium Spearewort Stonecrop tansy Tormentill Vinegar Woodbine Wormwood Fevers in children. See children's fevers. Fever cold. Bengewin Camomile Centory Opopanax Pellitory Planten Saxifrage Smallach Sothernwood Vervin Walnuts. Continual. betony Coleworts Fleawort Pimpernel Ephemera. Rose. Phlegmatic. Rice. Of the gall. century Hectike. Flax Orchis Poppy. Fever hot. Adderstongue Auens Barbary Barley Basill Blessed thissle Borage bugloss Bulfoote Bursa pastoris Camomile Cherry Cicorie Cloves Diagredium Gelovers Gooseberie Gourds Houseleek Nenuphar Nettle Peach Pomegranate Poppy Purslane Rose Sebestens Sorrell Strawberry Violets. Fever old. Amara dulcis Bugle Pellitory Pestilent. Poplar. Quarten. Aloes Arach Asarabac. ash Assafet. Barley Bengewin Betonie Borage bryony Bulfoote Burr Calamint century Cetrach Claver Cucumber Danewort Dandelion Ellebor Gelovers Gentian Hasell Hemp Houndestongue ivy Knotgrass Lavender Liverwort Marygold Medowort Milfoile Mugwort Mullin Nettle Pellitory Pepper Planten Polipodie Radish Raisins Ribwort Rosemary Satyrion Seine Sperage Tamariske tansy Tasell Tormentill Vinegar Verum Wormwood Quotidian. anise Asarabac. Bay betony century Danewort Dandelion Eldern Feuerfew Garlic Gentian hazel Parsley Polipodie Radish Seine Setwal Time Shaking. Pepper: Sharpe. Damsons. Fever tertian. Asarabac. Borage Bulfoote Calamint Cicorie Claver Damsons Dandelion Dodder Endive Garlic Gelovers Germander Houndestongue ivy Knotgrass Liverwort Mullin Nettle Parsley Peach Pimpernell Radish Raisins Ribwort Vervin ¶ Figs to keep. Mullin ¶ Finger bruised Orpin ¶ Fire of hell. Lettise ¶ Fish to kill. Nettle Nux meth.. Palma Christi Tithimal ¶ Fish sick. Parsley ¶ Fistula. ALleluia Alehoofe Archangel Auens Barley Bursa pastoris Celondine Centory Coleworts Columbine Cowparsnips Danewort Dragon's Eldern Elecampane Elm Euphorbium Figs Filipendula Five leaf Flowerdeleuse Garlic Germander Houndestongue Leeks Mirre Mouse ear Mullin Orpin Pimpernel Planten Poplar Rosemary S. james wort Set wall Spurge Stavesacre Tar Tassel Tithimal Tormentill Vinegar ¶ Flank griefs. Thime flank sick. Bay three Cumminseede ¶ Fleas to kill. ALder Coloquintida Danewort Eldern Fleawort Penyroial Rue Sloes Walnuts ¶ Phlegm. ACotus anise Barley Basill Blessed thistle Buckthorne Centory Cherry Cowparsnip Currant Daffadil Eldern Elecampana Euphorbium Feuerfew Figs Hops Mithis' Oak Peneroyal Pepper Rosen Rhubarb savoury Seen Sorrel Spurge tansy Thime Ysope ¶ Flesh dead. ALleluia Crowfoote ¶ See dead flesh. Elesh to grow. Daffodil Eringium Myrrh. Nettle Pitch Flesh to keep. Onion Flesh moles. Bentbrow marygold ¶ See Moles. Flesh to season. Water pepper Superfluous. Bengewin Coral Oak ¶ Flies to avoid. Eldern Gourds Nigilla Onion Peneroial Rue Wormwood. ¶ Flowers to cause. ACorus Alecost Alexander Almonds Auemom Angelica anise Aron Arsmart Asarabac Assafet. Baytree Basill Betony Blessed thistle Briony Butcher's broom Butterburre Calamint Calamus ar. Cammamil Capars Camepitis Centory Chickweede cinnamon Ciperus Clary Claver Coloquint. Coleworts Coliander Cockle Cress' Diagredium Dill Dittany Docks Elaterium Elecampane Ellebor Eringium Fennell Figs Filipend. Flower deluce Foxeglove Galbanum Garlic Gelovers Gentian Germander Ginger Grains Holliocke Horehound juniper Knotgrass Lavender Laureal Leeks Lily Lovage Lupins Madder Marierom Maidenhair Marsh malowes Meon Mints Milfoile Mirhis Myrrh. Motherwort Mugwort Mullin Mustered Nettle Nigella Oak of jerusalem Onion Opopanax Organie parietary Parsnips Parsley Peneroiall Peony Radish Rue Saffron Sagapen. Sage S. john's wort Samper savoury Savin Saxifrage Setwall Smirnium Sorrel Showbread Sothernwood Strawberry Thlaspi Thime Turpentine Violets Wormwood. To stop. Acatia Bay Beech Betony Bistort Bramble Broome Burr Burnet Bursa past. Capars Coliander Comfrey Coral Cottonweed Cumminseeds Dockes Fiveleafe Flags Flax Flower amor Ginger Goostansie hassel Henbane Heps Hypocistis Horstaile Houseleek juniper Lunaria Lavender Leeks lentils Lentiske Licium Lungwort Maces Margerom Myrtle Millet morel Mouseare Moss Neniver Nettle Oak Olive Peasearthn. Peneroial Peony Perwinckle Planten pomegranate Popy Purslane Reasins Rose Rhubarb Rush Saffron Sage Sallow Saunders Savin Setwall Smalach Sothernwood Strawberry Tamariske tansy tassel Tormentill Vinegar Walbarly Waterbetony Wheat Woodlilly. ¶ Fluxes. ACatia Acorus Alecoste Alehoofe Almonds anise Apples Barbery Barley beans Bengewin Bramble Burnet Bursa pastoris Calamint Cammamile Cherry Chestnuts cinnamon Cipers Cipes Cloves Coleworts Coliander Colophony Comfrey Cottonweed Cresses Crabs Cumminseed Currant Dogfennel Elecampane Feuerfew Figs Fiveleafe Flags Fleawort Flower amor Frankincense Gallingale Garlic Germander Goosebery Goosebery read Goosetansie Haresfoote Harteshorn pl. Hartstongue Hasell Henbane Heps Hypocistis Houndstongue Horehound Horstaile Houseleek Knotgrass Leeks lentils Lettuce Lentiske Licium Lungwort Maces Maiden hair Marsh malowes Medowort Milfoile Myrtle Millet Mulberry Mullin Neniver Nettle Nutmeg Oak Olive Onion Orchis Opium Orange Orpin Oats Pears Peach Peasearthnut Pepper Perwinckle Pinetree Planten pomegranate Poplar Popy Purslane Quince Raspes Reasins Restharow Rice Ribwort Rose Rosemary Rhubarb Rue Rush Sage S. john's wort Sallow Saunders Skirwits' Smirnium Sorrell Strawberry Tamariske tansy tassel Thime Tormentill Turpentine Verivice Vinegar Vervin Wall barley Water cresses Waterbetony Wheat Woodbine Flux of cold. Basill ¶ Foolishness. Rosemary. ¶ Forgetfulness. MInts Mustard Rue Savoury ¶ Forespoken. S. john's wort. ¶ Fowl evil. Planten ¶ Freckles. ARach Barley Beets Bombace Broome Ellebor Elm Figs Flags Flax Goostansie Lemons Lupins March mallows Nutmegs Pellitory or Magistran. Rocket Scala coeli Wheat See Face freckles. ¶ French pocks. Blessed thistle Dodder Euphorbium Fumitory. Guiacum Houndstongue Nettle Savin Tamariske. ¶ Frenzy. AGnus castus Alehoofe Betony Borage Brionie bugloss Carway Columbine Cornerose's Cowparsnip Cucumber Diagredium Ellebore Henbane Houseleek ivy Marygold Mints Morrel Olive Opium Pennyroyal Poplar Poppy Purslane Rape Raisins Rose Saffron Sage Sanders Smalach Sothernwood Tassel Thime Vinegar Violets. ¶ Frog biting. Eringium ¶ Fruit. Rose. ¶ Fullness. Mustered ¶ Fundament bleeding. Nettle. Chapt. Agnus castus Gelovers Nettle. Fallen. Aloes Aron Beech Cress' Dogfennel Ducks meat Frankincense Garlic Gelovers Holliocke Houndestongue Horsetaile Mirre Myrtle Morrell Mullin Oak Organie Pears Pitch Quince Sage Showbread Tar Through wax Turpentine Vinegar Veruine Wormwood. Fig. Aron beans Dogfennel Milfoile Mouseare Mullin Polipodie Restharrow Water betovie. Fistula. Dates Leeks Griefs. Bengewin Comfrey Dill Fiveleafe Flower deluce Flower amor Holliocke Marsh mallows Melilote Nettle parietary Pomegranate Raisins Restharow Rose Stinking Horehound tassel Violets. Hard. Fenigreeke Tar. Hot. Oak Sowthistle. Inflamed. Groundsw. lentils Mullin. Itch. Sage Lump. Bramble. Pain. Rue Turpentine. Fundament rift. Rue. Sores. Aloes Dates Lovage Onion Swollen. Chickweed Morrel parietary Quince Rosemary Rue. Ulcers. Frankincense ¶ Gallings. COlumbine tragacanth. Olive Onions. ¶ Gall cleansing. Peonie Griefs. Saracens cons. Shedding. Sperage. Stopped. Bugle Radish ¶ Gangrene. COleworts Ellebore Knotgrass Lupins Nettle Pellitory Radish Raisins ¶ Generating. Orchis. ¶ Giddiness. AMoniacum Basill Claver Coloquintida Gelovers Horehound Lavender Sage Time Vinegar Wormwood. ¶ Glanders. Beans Betony Coleworts Cucumber Euphorbium Leeks lentils Peach. ¶ Glasses. parietary. ¶ Gnats. CUmminseed Danewort Ellebor Fearne Hemp Lupins Rue Wormwood. ¶ Gnawing. Rosemary. ¶ Goblins. Peonie. ¶ Gomor passion. ARtichokes Cresses Fenigreeke Flowerdeluce Lettuce Lentisk Mints Morrel Sorrell. ¶ Gums grief. BEech Blessed thistle Borage Bramble Cloves Coral Egremonie Lentiske Olive Pennyroyal Planten Rose Saracens confounded Strawberries Impostume. Sage. Lose. Squilla Vervin. Rotten. Five leaf Flower deluce Lavender Mirre Stavesacre Tassel Swollen. Purslane Ysope. ¶ Gout. ALoes Amoniacum Angelica anise Arach Aron Arsmart Bay Barley beans Betony Bramble Bread Brionie Broome Burr Capers Camepitis Cassia fistula Cicorie Coleworts Cockle Cress' Cumminseed Danewort Darnell Dasie Docks Ducks meat Elaterium Eldern Ellebor Euphorbium Feuerfew Figs Flax Fleawort Garlic Gelovers Guiacum Hartsh. pla. Hather Hemp Henbane Hermodact. Holyocke Houseleek ivy Lavender Leeks lentils Lovage Meon Mirre Misleto Morrel Moss Mugwort Muslin Mustard Nettle Olive Onion Opopanax Opium Oats Palma Christi parietary parsley Pellitory Peneroyall Pepper Planten Poplar Poppy Quince Radish Rape Raisins Rosin Rose Rosemary Rue Saffron Sage Sallow Sanders Smalach Showbread Sothernwood tansy tassel Time Turpentine Vinegar Wheat Wormwood. Hot. Celondine Gourds Seamosse. ¶ Gravel. ALkakengi Almonds Bay Burr Camomile Carots' Cherry Cyperus Docks Eringium Gooseberrie Hartshorne pl. Hauthorne Holliocke Leeks Lemons Marsh mallows Medlar Mints Mugwort Nettle Nutmegs parietary Peonie Rose Restharow Saffron Sperage Time Turpentine Watercresses Wintercresses. ¶ Grief general. CEloudine Rosemary. ¶ Green colour BUckthorne Capers. ¶ Green sickness. ASarabat. ash Blessed thistle Onion Rue Saffron Sage. ¶ Grossness. ash ¶ Gunpowder. Linden. ¶ Guts bursten. Alleluia, Cleansing. Fenigreeke Gnawing. Acorus Paine. Celondine ¶ Hands ache. WOrmwood Gout. Poplar Hands itch. Chickweede Mints morel Rue Rupture. Squilla Shaking. Fiveleafe Mugwort Skabde. Daisy Dockes Flax Fumitory Holliocke Lupins Nettle Withered. Alehoofe Worms. Dockes Henbane Morrell Rue Wormwood ¶ Hardness. ALecoste Amoniacum Barley Camomile Capars Centory Coliander Cowparsnips Cucumber Darnell Ellebor Flax Flower deluce Galbanum Hypocistis Holliocke jasmin Leeks lentils Lentisk Lily Lovage Marierom Marsh malowes Misleto Mustered Nettle Olive Onion Opopanax Pellitory Planten Rose Saffron Sagapenum Smirnium Sothernwood Strawberry Tar Tithimal Tormentill Waterbetony Waterpepper ¶ Hard lumps. Fineleafe Parietarie Swell. Erisimon ¶ See swellings heard. ¶ Heart ache. MAces Oak Sage Heartburns. Almonds Coral Fennel Liquorice Milfoile Pease pomegranate Wormwood Cardiake. anise Betony Cloves Coral Cumminseed Pimpernel Rose ¶ See Cardiacke Heart to comfort. Alleluia Balm Cloves Gelovers Oranges Parsley Rose Rosemary Heart faint. Barbary Lily Myrtle pomegranate ¶ See Faintness. Griefs. Apples Auens Bay Basil Blessed thistle Borage bugloss Burnet Calamint Cicory Coral Cowslips Daffadil Daisy Elecampane Endive Feuerfew Fennel Gallingale Hartstongue juniper juiubes' Langdebeefe Lavender Lentisk Mints Motherwort Nutmegs Peneroiall Peony Planten Rosen Rue Saffron Sage Seine Scabious Sothernwood Spikenard Verivice Vinegar Violets Woodlilly. Wormwood Woodrowel Heart hot. Hartstongue Lettise Nettle Pain Leeks Stich. Borage Pimpernell Stopped. Holliocke Swollen. Rosemary Trembling. Bramble Maces Mandrach Mirabolans Myrtle Nutmegs Orange Saunders Heart weak. Angelica Setwall Woodlilly Wring. Balm ¶ Head ache. AGnus castus Alleluya Alehoofe Almonds Aloes Amoniacum Anemom anise Asarabacca Balm Barley beans Beets Betony Blessed thistle Borage Bread Briony Bugle Camomile Celondine Cherry chervil Chickweed Cicory Claver Coleworts Cockle Columbine Cowslip Cowparsnip Cresses Cucumber Cumminseed Darnell Diagredium Dockes Dogfennel Earthbinde Elaterium Egremonie Ellderne Ellebor Endive Euphorbium Fleawort Flowerdeluce Frankincense Garlic Gelovers Gourds Hather Hemlock Henbane Hypocistis Hops Houseleek Lavender Laureall Leeks Marierom Maidenhair Melilot Mints Milfoile Misleto Morrel Mustered Neniver Nettle Nigella Nutmegs Onion Opium Oats Peach Peletory Peneroyal Pepper Poplar Poppy Privet Quince Rape Raisins Rye Rose Rosemary Rue Saffron Sage Saunders Seine Setwal Smalach Sorrel Sothernwood Stecados Strawberry Thime Vermices Vinegar Violets Walnuts Watercresses Wheat Wormwood Headache hot. Bulfoote Lettise Purslane Headache old. ivy Thapsia Head apostume. Dockes Head bad. Centory Bowing. Bengewin Broken. beans Betony Bugle Dasie Egremony Holliocke Mirre Pimpernel Worm wood Cleansing. Beech Beets Centory Dasie Ellebor Flowerdeluce Marierom Mandrach Mustered Peletory Pimpernel Rue Cold. Nutmegs Rosemary Sothernwood Cold grief. Lavender Comforting. Rose Dasling. ivy Dizzy. Onion Fistula. Egremony Lupins Giddy. Allel●ia Alehoofe Balm beans Blessed thistle Borage Briony Coriander Cumminseed Ellebor Feuerfew Gelovers Horehound Lavender Misleto Opium Peneroial Rose Rue Saffron Sage Sothernwood Squilla Thime Vinegar Wheat Woodlilly Wormwood Griefs. Alecost Bay Celondine Claver Cowslip Cubebs Danewort Fenigreeke jasmin juniper Lentiske Misleto Opopanax Organy Peony Showbread Tamarinds Griefs hot. Dandelion Strawberry Headhurts. Olive Impostume. Mints Megrim. ash Beets Betony Blessed thistle Bread Cammamile Cumminseede Dasie Fennell Madder Mandrach Milfoile Mustered Vinegar Wormwood Noise. Aloes Betony ¶ See ears noise. Pose. hassel Mustered Purging. Alehoofe Celondive Capars Chickweed Clary Coleworts Cresses Dragons Laureal Myrrh. Onion Pepper Stavesacre. Head bushes. Celondine Fennell Vinegar Rheum. anise Cumminseed Darnel Earthbinde Mustered Penerotal Shaking. Houndestongue Sage Skabbed. Alecoste Cicers Cucumber Mints Stavesacre Turpentine scales. Beech Beets Hasell Maidenhair Mustard Onion Radish Skalle. Algood Cicers Ellebor Fennell Frankincense Garlic Groundswort Holliocke myrrh Mustered Olive Pitch Rose Tar Vinegar Watercresses Wheat Woodbine scurf. Alecoste Beech Beets Bengewin Ellebor Elm Figs Hasell Hypocistis Holliocke Maidenhair Mustered Nenuphar Rue Sage Scabious Squilla Thapsia Wormwood Sores. Bramble Bugle Bursa pa. Cress' Fennel Gelovers Horehound Myrtle Nettle Pease Radish Rue Savin Saxifrage Squilla Violets Wood been Stopped. Rosemary Smalach Swimming. Basill Beets Bread Swollen. Docks Galls Turning. betony Opium Ulcers. Cammamile Purslane Sage Whirling. Peneroyall Worms. Cresses Ellebor Wounds. Mints Turpentine Violets. ¶ Hair to avoid. beans Henbane Nettle Pitch Reasins withwind Black to be. Acatia Cipers Danewort Eldern Hasell ivy Myrtle Oak Sage Colouring. Licium Curling. Milfoile Falling. Aloes Bay Beets Beech Claver Coleworts Cresses Ellebor Euphorbium Garlic Hasell Hypocistis Houndstong Leeks Mirre Myrtle Morrell Mullin Mustard Nettle Oak Reed Rose Sage Sallow Skabious walnuts Wormwood Ysope To fall. Coleworts Hypocistis Lupins Tithimal Vinegar. To grow. Barley Dandelion Dew Dogfennell Egremony Flax Flowerdeluce Hasell Holliocke Houndstong Lily Maidenhair Milfoile Olive Oak Onion Peach Rosemary Sothernwood spikenard Thapsia Not to grow Beans Fleawort Fumiterre Gourds ivy To restore. Carway Centory Crowfoot Radish Standing up. Dandelion Yellow to be. Box Epithime ivy Marigolde Mullin Walnuts ¶ Heat inward. GOsebery Knotgrass Melons Rye Violets Outward. Vinegar ¶ Hectike. DIagridium See Fever hectic ¶ Hen's to lay. BArley Hemp Nettle ¶ Hicket. ALoes anise Aron Balm Bay Callamint Carrots Cumminseed Daucus Filipendula Gallingale Ginger Hartstong Lavender Mints Nutmegs Parsley Peneroyall Pomegranate Radish Rose Rhubarb Rue Sage Skirwits' Squilla Vinegar Wheat Woodbine Wormwood ¶ Hog's murrain. polypody Sick. Ellebor squinsy. Hearts-ease ¶ Holy fire. ADderstong. Arach Beets Bulfoot Bursa pastoris Cicory Coleworts Coriander Cornerose's Endive Gallion Gourds Hemlock Holliocke Knotgrass Lily Mints Opium Pariet. Parsley Planten Poppy Purslane Rose Rue Savin Through wax ¶ Horse. ADderstong ALoes Back sore. Barley Bora. Garlic See in ●. Cough. Mullin Fartion. Butterbur Foxglove Fight. Garlic Foundered. Onion Griefs. Dates Mouseare Hurts. Marshmallowes Keeping. Fennell Sick. Ellebor Fearne Gentian Hemp Mullin ¶ Hoarseness. APples Bay Barley Centory Coleworts Comfrey tragacanth Ellecampane Fennel Figs Fiveleafe Garlic Hasell Holliocke Horehound Leeks Liquorice Lovage Lungwort Mints Nettle Oak Olive Peach Peneroyall Pepper Poppy Rape Rosemary Sage Spinach Vinegar Vervin Watercresses Wheat ¶ Host. COleworts Cummin seed Fennell ¶ Hot evil. HEnbane Rue ¶ Hot griefs. ADderstong Alehoofe Apples Bay bugloss Chery Chickweed Cicory Cucumber Damson Dasie D●agridium Ducks meat Fennell Fleawort Goosebery Guiacum Hemlock Holliocke Houseleek Morrell Planten Rose Strawberry Tamarinds ¶ Humours evil. BLessed thistle Ysope Falling. Myrtle gross. Guiacum Waterish. Acorus. ¶ jaundice. ACorus Alehoofe. Aloes Amara dull. Arach Asarabac. ash Barbary Barley Bengewin Beets Bistort Borage Bugle bugloss Burr Burnet Butchers broom Calament Cammamile Cammepitis Carrots Cassia fistula Celondine Centory Cetrach Cherry Chickweed Cicory Coleworts Coliander Columbine Cowparsnips Cumminseed Damsons Diagridium Docks Dodder Egremony Elaterium Ellebor Endine Euphorbium Erisimon Filipendula Fiveleafe Fleawort Flowerdeluce Goosheirife Goulds Hartstong Hemp Horehound ivy Lavender Lavender cotton Leeks Lilly Lovage Linaria Madder Maidenhair Mints Morrell Mouseare Mugwort Nettle Onion Palma Christi parsley Peach Pease Peonie Planten Radish Rose Rosemary Rhubarb Saffron Sage Saracens cons. Seen Setwal Sorrel Showbread Sowthistle Sperage Squilla Spikenard Strawberry Tamarinds Tamariske tansy Thistle Tormentif Violet's Wormwood Ysope Old. Bay tree ¶ jaw fallen. Chickweede Jnflamed. Columbine Griefs. Wheat. ¶ iliac. ALmonds Bay Barley Coloquintida Eldern Five leaf Garlic Gentian Madder Nigella Olive parietary Polipodie Radish Raisins Rosemary Rue Sallow Smalach Wheat Wormwood. ¶ Impetigo. Celondine ¶ Impostume. ALecost Alder anise Apples Barley Blessed thistle bugloss Bulfoote Burr Calaminte Camomile Centory Cicorie Claver Coral Cowslip Docks Dogfennell Elecampane Fenegreeke Fennell Feuerfew Figs Flouredeluce Gentian Gourds Grains Holliocke Houndstong Horehound Hops Laurel Lentiske Liquorice melilot Mirre Morrell Mullin Nutmegs Poppy Purslane Rosin Rue Sage S. james wort Skabious Smalach Stoncrop Thlaspi Tormentill Watercresses Wheat Woodlilly Wormwood ¶ Enchanted. S. john's wort ¶ Inflammation. ACatia Adderstong Alder Alleluya Aloes Angelica Arach Arsmart Bay Barley beans Beets Bistort Bulfoot Burnet Bursa pastoris Chery Chickweed Cicory Coleworts Coliander Comfery Corneflower Daffodil Danewort Dasie Dates Ducksmeat Eldern Eringium Feuerfew Flax Flower amor Goosebery Groundswell Haresfoote Hearts-ease Hemlock Henbane Holliocke Houndstongue Houseleek. juniper Lady's mantle Lily Liverwott Morrell Mullin Oak Olive Orchis Opium Palma Christi Pariet. Peniwort Peneroial Pinetree Plaintree Planten Pomegranate Poplar Poppy Privet Quince Reed Rose Rue Saffron S. james wort Savin Soldanella Throughwax Violet's Wheat ¶ Infusion. Rose ¶ Ink. Wormwood ¶ joints ache. Burre Chickweed Coleworts Cresses Euphorbium Guiacum Langdebeefe Lavender Meon Moss Mugwort Onion Oats Poppy Reed Thapsia joints broken. Columbine Cleansing. Broome Cold. Butterburre Griefs. Auens Barley Flax Flower deluce Gelovers Lentisk Marierom Nettle Nutmegs Opopanax Polipodie Rue Sagapenum Heat. Houseleek Lose. Burr Madder Walnuts Wheat. joints out. Acatia Amara dulcis Coloquintida Daffodil Danewort Holly Lily Marierom Myrtle Mullin Polipodie Reed Raisins Rocket Showbread Sperage Thime Vinegar. joints pain. Balm Rape Stopped. Germander. Strengthening. Egremonie. Swollen. Chickweed Nettle. ¶ Iron to be soft. Hemlock. ¶ Itch. ALoes Bay Birch Brionie Bugle Camomile Celoudine Chickweed Dockes Egremonie Eldern Elecamp. Fenigreeke Figs Frankincense Fumiterre Harts ease Mullin Nigella Olive Onion Organie Palma Christi Penyroial Poplar Rosemary Saffron Sage Sanders Seen Skabious Sorrell Stavesacre Tar Tormentill Vinegar Waterbetony Wheat. Wormwood Ysope. ¶ juice. HEnbane Rose ¶ juleppe. Rose ¶ Kankers. ALleluya Algood Aloes Angelica Auens beans Bistort Blessed thistle Butcher's broom Carrots Celondine chervil Clary Claver Coleworts Columbine Cowslips Dogfennell Dragon's Egremony Elecampane Elm Erysimon Fearne Five leaf Flax Flowerdeluce Garlic Guiacum Hemp Herb Robert Houseleek ivy Lunaria Leeks lentils lettuce Lupins marygold Mirhts Mirre Mullin Nettle Oak Olive Pelitory Pepper Planten Privet Radish Rye Ribwort Rosemary Rue Sage S. james wort Savin Sloes Tar tassel Thapsia Tithimal Vinegar Walnuts Waterbetony Woodbine Wormwood Wheat ¶ Keeping roses. ¶ See in Rose. ¶ Kernels. ALder Aloes Amoniacum Arach Aron Balm Barley beans Betony Briony Broome Burr Cammamile Capars Collander Columbine Cress' Cucumber Danewort Dill Dockes Egremony Euphorbium Eringium Figs Five leaf Flax Fleawort Flower deluce Goosheirife Groundeswell Leeks lentils Liquorice Maidenhair Marsh malowes Misleto Mustered parietary Peach Pepper Pitch Planten Polipodie Poppy Squilla Tar Thime Tormentill Vervin Wheat. ¶ Kibes. BEngewin Beets Catstaile Dragon's Figs Galbanum Onion Peniwort Rape Showbread Squilla ¶ Kidneys ache. ALmonds tragacanth. Apostume. Leeks. Cleansing. Melons Parsley Peonie. Cold. Calaminte Calamus Aromaticus. Exulceration. Planten Griefs. Almonds Bay Betony Broome Calamus aromat. Eringium Figs Gourds Holliocke juiubes' Liquorice Mader Nutmegs Parsnips Parsley Radish Raisins Rue Sanicle Sebestens Smyrnium Spikenard Strawberries Tamariske Heat. Myrtle Purslane Impostume. Figs. Moist. Sampere. Stopped. Alecost Asarabac. Camepitis Carots' Horehound Hops Lavender cotton Lunaria Meon Mints parietary Peonie shepherds needle Sothernwood Sperach Turpentine Water Cresses ¶ Kings evil. Arach Aron Borage Broome Bulfoote Burr Calamint Capers Coliander Columbine Darnell Docks Endive Fennell Figs Fiveleafe Germander Goosheirife Groundswell Hartstong Horehound Lavender lentils Liquorice Lupins Mullin Nettle Peony Pepper Pitch Radish Rose Rosemary Rue Savin Sperage Squilla Stoncrop Strawberry Vervin ¶ Knees ache BArley Broome Egremony Eldern Moss Nux indica Onion Parietary Pitch Rue Sorrell Griefs. Lovage Lame. Oats Swollen. Briony Eldern Onion Parietary Planten Rue Sorrell Thime Knobs. Dill Ellebor Reasins Tithimal Knots. Amoniacum Galbanum Guiacum Misleto Mustard Polipodie Tormentill ¶ Lameness. EVphorbium Onion Rape Rosemary Rue Saffron Sage ¶ lask. CHestnuts Dockes Figs ivy Maces Oak ¶ Leanness. ALmonds Bullfoote Gourds Lupins Mirhts Turpentine Wormwood. ¶ Lean to be. Ash Betony chervil Ellderne Fennel Hassel Squilla Vinegar Wheat. ¶ Legs ache. BRoome Fiveleafe Holliocke Houseleek Oats Peneroial Sparewort Black. Celondine Cold. Oats Hard. Frankincense Lame. Oats Marmalle. Coleworts Painful. Horehound ivy Pustulet. Bread Red. Lovage Scabbed. Strawberry Sores. Briony Bullfoote Egremony Figs Rue Sallow Vinegar Swollen. Danewort Ellderne Frankincense Hemlock Holliocke Houseleek Oats Vinegar Watercresses Wormwood ¶ Leaprie. ACatia Anemom ash Barley Bramble Briony bugloss Calamint Celondine Coleworts Cresses Darnell Docks tragacanth Eldern Ellebor Elm Figs Fluellin Fumiterre Garlic Hasell Henbane Holliocke juniper Mints Mugwort Mullin Oak Organy Orpin Pepper Planten Plumtree Reasins Sperage Stavesacre Strawberry Tamariske Tar Tithimal Turpentine Vinegar Waterbettony Woodlilly Wormwood ¶ Lys to kill. ALecoste Aloes Beets Broome Cedria Ellebor Garlic ivy Lavender Radish Rue Scala celi Stavesacre Tamariske Vinegar Watercresses ¶ Life or death. NEttle Rue ¶ Life to preserve. Eldern ¶ Lightning. Coral ¶ Lips chapped. tragacanth Leeks Lentiske Licium Griefs. Beech canker. Vinegar ¶ Lethargy. AGnus castus. Amoniacum Assafoetida Calamint Cowparsnip Cresses Euphorbium Galbanum Margerom Mints Mustard Onion Opopanax Peneroyall Pitch Radish Rue Saffron Sage savoury Vinegar ¶ Liver ache. ORpin Wheat Bad. Dates Chafed. Gourds Poplar Rose Saffron Sallow Sorrell Cold. Anise Calamus aromaticus Cammamile Reasins Rice Sage Thime Wormwood Griefs. Acorus Almonds Aloes ash Auens Bay Barley Basill Betony Broome bugloss Calamus aromaticus Cammamile Centory Chickweed cinnamon Cicory Coleworts Columbine Cowparsnip Cumminseed Daffodil Endive Eringium Fenigreeke Fennell Fiveleafe Flowerdeluce Fluellin Gelovers Gentian Gourds Guiacum Hartstong Holliocke Horehound Houseleek juniper ivy Lavender Lentiske Liquorice Liverwort Lovage Madder Maidenhair Maple Mirabol. Nigella Olive Organy Pears Parsley Peneroyall Peoney Planten Reasins Rhubarb Rue Saffron Sage Sanders savoury Seen Setwall Skabious Smalach Soldavel Sorrell Spinach Spikenard Strawberry Tormentill Vinegar Vervin Woodbine Wormwood Wood rowel Ysope Hard. Melilot Reasins Hot. Adderstong Apples Arach Barbary Borage Bulfoot Cherry Cornerose's Ducks meat Endive Gooseberies' Gooseberie read Goosetansie Hartstong Hops lettuce Liquorice Morrell Nenuphar Pomegranates Poppy Purslane Quince Rose Sage Sorrell Tamarinds Violets Woodlilly Liver imposthume. Fennell Inflamed. Lily Oak Wormwood. Sick. Marygold. Stopped. Agnus castus Alecost Alehoofe Alkakengi Amara dulcis anise Arach Arsmart Asarabac. Assafet. Beets Bugle Burnet Calamint Capers Camepitis Carrots Cassia fistula Celondine Cetrach Cheruil Damsons Dodder Dogfennel Egremonie Eldern Elecampane Figs Foxglove Fumiterre Germander Hemp Hops Lavender Lettise Lupins Linaria Mints Morrell Mulberry Mustard Nenuphar Nettle Nutmegs Oak parietary Peach Pimpernel Pinetree Radish Raisins Rose Rosemary Sage Saracens cons. shepherds needle Smalach Sorrell Showbread Sperage Stitchwort Stecados Thime Turpentine Wheat Wormwood Liver to strengthen. Cloves Egremonie Lentiske Swollan. Germander Wasting. Goostansie Sage Sarasons confound Sorrell Weak. Maces Rose Woodlilly ¶ Loins ache. BArley Cammamile Coliander Fennell Garlic Holliocke Mints Parsnips Read Spinach Apostume. Barley Coleworts Fenigreeke Griefs. Coloquint. Figs Flowerdeluce Rue Paine. Parsley Purging. Nettle ¶ Loathing. ALoes Apples Bay Cherry Dill Germander Holliocke Mints Peneroyall Quince Sanders savoury Wormwood ¶ lousiness. Figs ¶ Lunacy. CRowfoot Pelitory Peneroyall ¶ Lungs blister. CHerry Garlic Holliocke Cleansing. Hearts-ease Melons Organy Griefs. Alecoste Almonds Angelica anise Aron Asarabac. Bay Barley Betony Blessed thistle bugloss Bulfoot Burr Camamil cinnamon Coleworts Comfrey Cress' Cucumber Cumminseed Dill tragacanth Elecampane Eringium Erysimon Fenigreek Fennel Figs Five leaf Flower deluce Fluellin Gallingale Gentian Ginger Holliocke Horehound juniper juinbes Langdebeefe Leeks Lentiske Liquorice Lovage Lungwort Maidenhair Marsh malowes Mints Mirre Myrtle Mullin Mustered Nettle Oak of jerusalem Parsnips Peach Peneroyal Pepper Pellitory Pinpernel Pinetree Radish Raisins Ros solis Rue Saffron Sage savoury Seen Skabions Smalach Squilla Squinant Stecados Strawberry Tamariske Tormentil Vervin Violets Ysope Inflamed. Basill Pa●ne. Spinach Stopped. Horehound Mustered Parietary Peach Turpentine Wasting. Sanicle ¶ Lust to abate. AGnus castus Angelica beans Dill Dragons Gourds Hemlock Henbane lettuce Morrell Nenuphar Nettle Orchis Poplar Purslane Rue Sallow Vervin Woodbine To cause. anise Artichoke ash Bay Bombace Calamus aromaticus Carrots Chestnuts Clary Clones Coliander Cresses Dill Euphorbium Fennell Flax Gallingale Garlic Ginger Leeks Mints Mustard Nettle Nutmegs Nux indica Onion Orchis Parsnips Radish Rape Rocket Rosemary Rue Saffron savoury ¶ Madness. ASarabac. Betony Briony bugloss Cammamile chervil Cucumber Elebor Fiveleafe Fumiterre Gentian Germander Henbane Houseleek lettuce marygold Mints Morrell Pelitory Ros solis Rose Rosemary Rue Sage S. john's wort Sothernwood Thistle Thime Vinegar Vervin Violets Wormwood ¶ Mad dog. Archangel Bengewin Betony Box Bread Burr Celondine Chestnuts Cowslip Cress' Egremony Fennell Figs Garlic Gelovers Houndstong Lovage Maidenhair Mints Milfoile Morrell Nettle Olive Onion Pelitory Planten Radish Rue Sage savoury Thistle walnuts Wheat Woodlilly ¶ Maidenhood. Nettle ¶ Maiden's milk. Vinegar ¶ Maleflanke. Cresses ¶ Manus Christi Rose ¶ Marmalade. Quince ¶ Marmalle. ash Coleworts Fennel hay Madder Olive Waterbetonie ¶ Masels. BAsill Figs Fluellin Finniterre Rue Saffron Skabious Showbread Wheat ¶ Matrix ache. Orpin Apostume. juniper Cleansing. Eringium Horehound Margerom Mirre Nettle Nigella Pariet. Parsley Sage Squilla Stavesacre tansy Thime Cold. Calament Hypocistis Nutmegs Sage Comforting. Sage Fallen. Assa fet. Beech Colophony Dogfennell Hemlock Lavender cotton Lentiske Madder myrrh Nettle Pears Quince Savin Tamarisk. Tar Flux. Barbary Coral Dead nettle Margerom Moss Pomegranate Ribwort Spikenard Tamariske Turpentine Griefs. Arach Artichokes Blessed thistle Burr Burnet Calamint Calamus aromaticus Cammamile Cipers Coleworts Comfery Cubebs Cummin seed Danewort Eldern Fenegreeke Flouredeluce Galingale Germander Henbane Hyrundina. Holyoke Lavender Leeks Lentisk Lily Lovage Mader Melilot Mirre Nutmeg Opopanax Parletarie Peniroyal Peonie Purslane Rose Rue savoury Squinant. Stecados Violets. Grinding. Ash Hard. Hypocistis Lilly Margerom Organie Tar Hear. Sowthistle Inflamed. Marsh mallows Spikenard. Lose. Acatia Turpentine Moist. Calamint To open. Nettle Paine. Balm Nettle Periwinkle Sperage Vervin Rent. Comfrey Tar. Sores. Agnus castus Polipodie Vervin. Stopped. Asarabac. Cockle Garlic Horehound parietary Saffron Sothernwood Suffocat. Assafet. Dogfennel Garlic juniper Motherwort Mustard Nettle Parsenip Pellitory Peonse Pepper Rue Savine Saxifrage Smalach Turpentine Wormwood. Swollen. Hops Lavender cotton Mustard Rape Violets Windy. Mullin Mustard Nettle Pellitory Rape ¶ Mange. Bengewin Broome Docks Elaterium Fenigreeke Garlic Penyroial Sage Scabious Stavesacre tithymal Turpentine. ¶ Meat abhor. ivy See abhorring. Keeping. Coriander Seething. Figs Meigrim. Alehoofe Bay Egremonie ivy Maces S Mustard Rosemary See Head Meigrim. ¶ Mel rosarum. Rose. ¶ Melancholy. Balm Basill Borage bugloss Cubebs Doder Ellebor Feuerfew Figs Fumiterre Germander Hops ivy Lemons Maidenhair Mirabol. Nettle Parsnips Penyroial Peonie Rose Rosemary Saffron S. john's wort. Seen Squilla Tamariske Thime Tormentil Violets Wormwood Ysope. ¶ Members benumbed. AGnus castus See benumbed. ¶ Memory. ASarabac. Borage bugloss century Cresses Eiebright Frankincense Galingale Langdebeefe Lemons Marierom Mints Mugwort Mustard Nutmegs Parsley Radish Rue Vinegar Woodlillie. Bad. Blessed thistle, To comfort. Rosemary ¶ Menstruous. Rosemary. ¶ Miso. Ellebor ¶ Milk to abate. Colewort Hemp Mints Nigella Rue. To cause, Agnus castus Basill Brionie bugloss Dill Dittany Fennel Holliocke lettuce Nigella Parsnips Radish Rosemary Savoury Sowthistle Time Veruine Watercresses. To cured. Figs ¶ Milt ache. Wheat Apostume. Broome Pepper Bad. Dates Cold. Calamus aro. Thime Acorus ash Bay betony bryony Broome Calamus aromat. Camomile Capars century cinnamon Cicorie Colewort Colophony Coral Cress' Cubebs Cucumber Cumminseed Egremonie Eringium Fenigreeke Fennel Flower deluce Fluellin Gentian Guiacum Grass Hartstongue Holyoke Lignum al. Lovage Madder Marierom Maidenhair Mints Mustard Nenuphar Opopanax Penyroial Peonie Pellicorie Polipodie Radish Raisins Rose Rue Saffron Sagapen. Sallow savoury Seine Setwal Smirnium Spleenwort Squilla Squinant. Spikenard Stecados Strawberry Tamariske Woodbine Wormwood. Milt hard. Acorus Cetrach Docks Dogfenell Gelovers Germander Lillie Misleto Mustard Nettle Quince Showbread Sperage Wormwood. Hot. Morrel Nenuphar Paine. Fearne ivy Lily Sick. Marygold Stopped. Agnus castus Alehoofe Asarabac. Beets Calamint Capars Carots' chervil Dittany Dogfennel tragacanth. Eldern Elecamp. Endive Figs Foxglove Fumiterre Galbanum Germander Horehound Hops Lavender Lettuce Lupins Linaria Mints Morrel Mulberry Mustard Nenuphar Nutmegs parietary parsley Rosemary shepherds needle Sorrell Sothernwood Thime Turpentine Wheat. Swollen. Burr Cumminseed Docks Hemlock Mustard Vinegar Violets Ysope. ¶ Mirth to cause. AVens Basill Borage bugloss Hemp Mirabol. Mugwort Rosemary Saffron Seine Smalach Woodrowel. ¶ Moles. Avens' Oats See Fleshmoles. ¶ Morphew. BArley Borage Calamus aro. Capars Celondine Daffodil Dockes Eldern Ellebor Feuerfew Fumiterre Garlic Holliocke Lupins Mader Mints Nenuphar Oak Orpin Oats Parsley Pepper Rue Savine Scabious Stavesacre Wormwood. Morphew white. Myrtle Planten ¶ Mothe. ACorus Bay Cedria Flower amor. Oak of jerusalem Rosemary Wormwood ¶ Mother. Balm Morsus diabol. Ysope. Apostume. Gelovers. Cleansing. Almonds Basill Ellebor Mugwort Cold. Alecost Displaced. Galbanum Falling. Bay Griefs. Bay betony Broome Claver Dill Ellecampane Feuerfew Five leaf Rhubarb Inflamed. Almonds Gelovers Mugwort Mother moist. Planten Prefocat. Gourds. Rising. Brionie. Stopped. Figs Suffocat. Briony Butterburre Carrots Claver Clones' Cowparsnip Elecampane Euphorbium Fearne Galbanum Grains Mugwort Sagapenum windy. Cranesbill ¶ Moules to take. Garlic Leeks Onion ¶ Mouth bleeding. Betony Blisters. Acatia Coleworts Germander Verivice Glanders. Coleworts Mouth grief. Alecoste Alehoofe Bramble Cheruil Cumminseed Damsons Dragons Figs Hartstongue Liquorice Mints Mulberry Mullin Nettle Organy Pepper Planten Purslane Radish S. james wort Sanicle Sarasons Setwall Sperage Strawberry Tamariske Tasil Heat. Cornerose Redgoosbery Impostume. Skabious Inflamed. Pariet. canker. Cammamile Celondine Cheruil Columbine Five leaf Mirhis Mullin Rye Rose Sage Woodbine Mouth scalded. Five leaf. Sores. Agnus castus Alder Alleluia Aloes Birch Bistort bugloss Coleworts tragacanth Fiveleafe Gelovers Goostansie Herb Robert Houndstongue Knotgrass Lavender Licium Lovage Mustered Nigella Oak Olive Orchis Peneroial Pomegranate Privet Smalach Stavesacre Tormentil Vervin Walnuts Woodbine Woodrowel. Stinking. Cloves Five leaf Haver Lentiske Daces melon Mints morel Rye Squilla Vervin Wormwood Ysope Mouth swollen. Wormwood Ulcers. Balm Camomile Sothernwood Wormwood Writhen. Broome Ros solis ¶ nails ache. EGremony Apostume. Flowerdeluce Marsh malowes Corrupt. Crowfoote To fall off. Flax Vinegar Fowl. Flax Griefs. Pomegranate Rape Stavesacre To grow. Five leaf Wheat Lose. Raisins Rent. Turpentine Rough. Arach Five leaf Milleto Olive Tar Swelling. Oak Ulcers. Horehound Myrtle ¶ Nature to comfort. Rosemary Nature lost. anise ¶ Navel out. BLessed thistle Flax Fleawort Purslane S. john's wort Throughwaxe Sore. Throughwaxe Swollen. Almonds ¶ Neck ache. Purslane Apostume. Figs Fleawort Flowerdeluce Holliocke Bowing back. Satyrion Griefs. Almond Daisy Kernels. Flax Horehound Skrophules. Pitch Neck swollen. Barley Burr Cammamile Flax Fluellin Nettle ¶ Nettled. Nettle ¶ Nitts. BEets Ellebor Garlic Munkshood Stavesacre Tamariske ¶ Noli me tang, Flax Mirre Planten Rue ¶ Nose bleeding Barley beans Betony Blessed thistle Bursa pastoris Coliander Coral Cornerose's Cumminseed Egremony Eldern Fearne Fiveleafe Frankincense hazel Horstaile Houseleek Knotgrass Leeks Milfoile Moss Nettle Oak Onion Pease Perwincle Pimpernel Radish Ros solis Rose Rue Smalach Vinegar Vervin Violets Waterbetony Woodbine Nose to bleed. jasmin Griefs. Pomegranate Nose noli metangere. Dragon's Polip. Aron Bengewin Bistort Ciperus Dragons ivy Leeks Polipodie Rose Nose read. Apples Stinking. Alehoofe Dragon's Haver Mints Nettle Rose Rosemary Rue Showbread Wormwood Nose stopped. Basil Thime ¶ Obstruction. ALecoste Almonds anise Asarabac. Bay Barley Beets Betony Blessed thistle Cicory Cubebs Doder Figs Flax Foxglove Fumitory Garlic Germander Ginger Holliocke Marterom Maidenhair Parsley Pellitory Peach Radish Rhubarb Sagapenum Seine Stecados Tamariske ¶ Oil to make. BAy Camomile Hemp Henbane Lavender Lentiske Mustered Quince ¶ Ointment. Houseleek ¶ Oxen sick. GEntian Rush ¶ oxymel. Radish ¶ Palsy. ALisander Aloes Auens Bay Betony Blessed thistle Briony Capars Centory Coleworts Coloquint. Columbine Cowllip Cress' Daisy Ellebor Euphorbium Figs Gelovers Germander Hather Lavender Madder Maple Marigold Motherwort Mustered Nettle Parsnips Pellitary Parsley Peneroyall Peonie Pepper Pinetree Ribwort Rosemary Saffron Sage savoury Savin Saxifrage Setwall Sothernwood Sperage tansy Woodlilly Woodbine ¶ palate swollen Organie ¶ Paps hanging down. ivy ¶ Painting. Flax ¶ pensiveness. Orange ¶ Pepper. Nettle ¶ Pestilence. Rosemary ¶ Piles. BVlfoote Burr Calamint Daisy Dill Dogfennel Flower amor Frankincense Myrtle Onion Pariet. Pellitory Pimpernel Rose Tar Tormentil Vervin Waterbetony Wheat Wormwood ¶ Pimples. Elm Mullin Planten ¶ Pipes stopped. anise ¶ Pissing. Lily Pissing bed. Calamint Dill Egremony Frankincense Garlic Lettise Mints Mirre Oak Poplar Rue Sage Sloes Tormentil Blood. bugloss Burnet Bursa past. tragacanth Egremonie Five leaf Garlic Gourds Guiacum Hartsh. plan. Henbane Houndestongue Knotgrass Laureal Leeks Lentisk Lemons Lungwort Milfoile Myrtle Oak parsley Pellicorie Perwinckle Planten Rue Savine tansy Vervin Woodbine Woodrowel. Pissing evil. Oak Much. Houseleek ivy Lettise ¶ Plague. Almonds Aloes Angelica Aron ash Bay Betonie Bistort Blessed thistle Bread Burnet Butterburre Celondine century Claver Coral Cress' Crowfoote Dittanie Dogfennel Dragon's Ducks meat Ellebor Endive Euphorbium Figs Flax Fluellin Garlic Gelovers Gentian Germander Houseleek juniper ivy Lentiske Lillie Lemons Madder Mirhis Morsus diabol. Mustard Nenuphar Onion Orange Pellitory Pennyroyal Pimpernel Planten Poplar Rue Saffron Sage Saxifrage Setwal Scabious Sorrel Tormentill Vinegar Walnuts. Plague bushes. Cicorie Plague sore. Aron Bengewin Blessed thistle Coleworts Coriander Figs Galbanum Lily Lupins Morsus diabol. Onion Opopanax Pellitory Savine Scabious Tithymal. ¶ Ploukes. COriander Nettle Raisins ¶ Pleurisy. ACorus Angelica Apples Bengewin Branke Bread Broome Burnet Cassia fistula Cheruil Claver Cornerose Diagredium Fenigreeke Fennell Figs Flax Holyoke Horehound Liquorice Lovage Marsh mallows Nenuphar Nettle Parsnip parsley Rue Saffron Sage S. john's wort Setwal Scabious Violets Watercresses Ysope. ¶ Pocks. BVtterburre Carrots Cresses Dragons Figs Fluellin Fumiterre Henbane Houndestongue Liverwort Lupins Olive parietary Peach Penyroial Planten Rue Saffron Savin Scabious Showbread tansy Waterbetonie Wheat Ysope. ¶ Poison. ACorus Alecost Alehoofe Angelica anise Aron ash Bay Bengewin betony Blessed thistle Broome bugloss Butterburre Calamint Celondine century Ciperus Claver Cresses Dittanie Dragon's Dwarf gentian Egremonie Elecampane Ellebor Fennel Figs Filipendula Fiveleafe Flax Galbanum Garlic Gelovers Gentian Germander Holliocke Hops juniper Knotgrass Lavender cotton Laureal Lemons Longrape Lovage Maidenhair Mints Milfoile Morsus diabol. Mulberry Mustered Nanew Nigella Orange Parsenip parsley Penyroial Peome Pepper Pimpernel Purslane Radish Rape Ros solis Rosemary Rue Saffron Sage S. john's wort Saxifrage Setwal Scabious Showbread Sothernwood Stonecrop Stecados Tar Thapsia Thime Tormentil Turpentine Vervin. Walnuts Woodlillie Woodbine Wormwood Poison drunk. Eringium Henbane Walnuts. ¶ Polipe. ARon Bengewin Leeks ¶ Pose. BAy Burr Hypocistis Nigella Pepper Pose old. Mustard ¶ Powder. Risen Sage. ¶ Preseruat. ALoes Angelica Centory Gentian Pears Pellitory or Magistran. Rhubarb See the next that followeth. Preserving health. Blessed thistle Elecampane Hypocistis Polipodie Rosin Rhubarb Sage Savoury. ¶ Pricks. ACorus Angelica Arach Archangel Barbary Betonie Bulfoote Chickweed Clary Cockle Daffadil Dittanie Egremonie Elecampane Eringium Flower deluce Galbanum hazel Hawthorne Hermodact. Holyoke Holly Houndstongue Lilly Madder Mullin Nettle Onion Palma Christi Pepper Pimpernel Polipodie Reed Rye Rocket Rose Setwal Sloes Sothernwood Thistle Vinegar Wheat ¶ Privities chaste. Turpentine. Griefs. Bulfoote Chickweed Cicorie Cipers Cornerose Dill Ellecamp. Fenigreeke Flower deluce Knotgrass Misleto Planten Rose. Itch. Sage Turpentine. Sore. Aloes Bugle Ciperus Goostansie Gourds Groundswell Herb Robert Houndestongue Lovage Myrtle Privet Stopped. Penywort. Swollen. Danewort Rue ¶ Ptissands. Barley ¶ Ptisike. betony Blessed thistle century Dittanie Egremonie Fennel Figs Filipendula Flax Gentian Holliocke Horehound Leeks Marsh mallows Mirhis Nigella parsley Pimpernel Pinetree Planten Polipodie Radish Rosemary Saffron Sage Strawberry Turpentine Vinegar Vervin Ysope. ¶ Purgation. ALoes anise Arach Aron Asarabac. Auens Bay Beets betony Brionie Broome Cassia fistula century Cherry Cicorie Coloquintida Coleworts Corneflower Cornerose's Cowparsnip Cresses Daffadil Danewort Diagredium Docks tragacanth Dragons Earthnut Elaterium Elecampane Ellebor Elm Euphorbium Esula Fearne Fenigreeke Feuerfew Fennell Flax Fleawort Flower deluce Fumiterre Gentian Ginger Gourds Gromel Gratiola Groundswell Hermodates Holliocke Horehound Hops Laureal Lily Lovage Lupins Maidenhair Mandrach Mirabol. Mulberry Mustered Nettle Onion Opopanax Palma Christi Pease earthnut Pelitory Peneroial Peony Planten polypody Radish Rose Rosecampion Rosemary Rhubarb Sagapenum Sage Satyrion savoury Seine Soldanella Sperage Spurge Squilla Stavesacre Thapsia Thistle Thlaspi Thime Turpentine Tutsan Violets Wormwood Purging. Pease ¶ Pursinesse. Burr ¶ Pushes. ACatia Bay beans Beets Birch Bread Broome Bulfoote Cicory Coleworts Cucumber Elaterium Figs Groundswell Houndstongue Horehound Horstaile Leeks Lily Lupins Myrtle Morsus diabolus Mustered Parsley Planten Rue Savin Waterbetony Wheat Pushes hot. Neniver Rose ¶ Putrefaction. Mirre ¶ quails. Maidenhair ¶ Quarten Alleluia ¶ Quats. COleworts Horstaile ¶ Ranklings. Barley beans Chickweed Flax Holliocke Houseleek morel Planten Sorrell. ¶ Rats to kill. Ellebor ¶ Ravens. Nux vomica ¶ Read gum. Columbine ¶ Reins ache. BEtony Cheruil Rue Smalach Cleansing. Lovage Griefs. Angelica Betony Milfoile Mullin Mustered savoury Impostume. Eldern Ysope Running. Acatia aniseeds Artichokes Clary Cress' Dockes Fenigreeke Flags Flax Flowerdeluce Leeks Lettuce Mints morel Oats Pariet. Pimpernel Planten Pomegranate Poplar Purslane Rose Sanicle Sorrell Thime Reins stopped. Alkakengi Aniseed ¶ Replection. Mints ¶ Restorative. CLary Eringium Maces Milfoile Wheat Woodlilly ¶ Ribs broken. Daisy Ribs griefs. Mirre Mugwort ¶ Ringworme. ADderstongue Alehoofe Burr Celondine Cherry Coleworts Cucumber Darnell Ellebor Garlic Ginger Hearts-ease Horstaile Knotgrass Nutmegs Peach Pepper Planten Plomtree Purslane Raisins Sage S. james wort Sorrel Tar Turpentine Vinegar Woodlilly Woodbine. ¶ Rising in sleep● Lovage ¶ Rose oil. Olive ¶ Rose vinegar. Vinegar ¶ roots. Rose ¶ Rheum. ALehoofe anise Aron Bay Barley Basill Beets Blessed thistle Borage Bugle bugloss Burr Burnet Bursa pastoris Cardamom Cloves Coleworts Cresses Cumminseed Darnel Dragons Earthbinde Ellebor Fennel Figs Frankincense Garlic Germander Guiacum hazel Hemlock Henbane Hypocistis Houndstongue Horehound jasmin juniper Lavender Lentiske Liquorice Liverwort Maces Marierom Meon Mustered Nigella Peneroyal Pepper Planten Pomegranate Poppy Radish Rape Rye Rosemary Sage Setwall Thime Watercresses Ysope ¶ Rupture. Ysope ¶ Sage ale. SAge Sage wine. Sage ¶ S. Ant. fire. Burre Cicory Fleawort Hemlock Holliocke Houndstongue Houseleek Knotgrass lentils Morrell Mullin Oak Palma Christi Peniwort Planten Role Sage Sorrel Vervin Woad ¶ Salads. GRoundswell Hartshorne pla. ¶ Salt humour. juiubes ¶ sauce. FLax Ginger Sage Samper ¶ Sciatica. ALmonds Amoniacum Angelica Asaravacca Bay Betony Broome bugloss Burr Calamint Capars Camepitis Cardamom Centory Coloquintida Crests Darnel Daisy Dittany Elecampane Ellebor Erisimon Five leaf Flower deluce Flower amor Garlic Guiacum Henbane Hermodact. Holliocke juniper I'm Lavender cotton Leeks Lupins Mader Marsh mallows Mints Mugwort Mustered Nettle Nux judica Onion Opopanax Palma Christi Penerosal Pellitory Pepper Pitch Poplar Rye Rhubarb Rue S. john's wort savoury Smirnium Sothernwood Sperage Squilla Strawberry Thlaspi Thime Tormentill Tutsan Vinegar Waterbetony Wheat ¶ Scrophuls. AMoniacum Aron Briony Broome Burr Coliander Cress' Cucumber Danewort Darnell Leeks Liquorice Maidenhair Mustered Peach Pitch Poppy ¶ Seconds. ASarabacca Basil Bengewin Borage Briony Carrots Clary Cresses Dill Dittany Flower deluce Garlic Gelovers Hypocistis Horehound juniper Laureal Lavender Leeks Lovage Lupins Madder Maidenhair Mandrach Marygold Marsh mallows Mirhis Mugwort Nigella Opopanax Parsley Peneroial Peony Pinetree Rue Sage Savin Saxifrage Smirnium Thime Turpentine Vervin ¶ Seeds. Rose ¶ Seed to abate. DIll Hemp Neniver Rue Woodbine Seed distilling. Acatia Flowerdeluce Houndstong Leeks Lentisk Seed to increase. ash Bombace Calamus aromaticus Coliander Fennell Leeks Mints Mustered Nettle Onion Parsnip Pelitory Poppy Rape Rice Sperage See Lust to cause ¶ sinews. ASarabacca Rosemary Ache. Bread Guiacum Mugwort Parsley Broken. Broome Coleworts Bruised. Pariet. Cold. Butterbur Cloves juniper Savin Cut: Briony Daffodil Groundswell Milfoile S. john's wort Drawn. Watercresses Griefs. Amoniacum Bay beans Blessed thistle Calomus aromaticus Cammamile Cardamom Centory cinnamon Cowslip Dill Ellecampane Euphorbium Fearne Flax Flowerdeluce Gelovers Lavender Lentiske Lilly Margerom Mugwort Nutmegs Opopanax Peneroyall Pitch Planten Privet Rue Saffron Sagapenum Sallow Seine Sothernwood Squilla Thapsia Thistle Thime Turpentine Wheat Hard. Purslane Lose. Coloquintida Pricked. Pears Shrunk. Bengewin bugloss Burr Cammamile Coleworts Galbanum Hemp Holliocke Reed Rhubarb Rue Stiff. Marshmallowes Swollen. tansy Weak. Capars ¶ Serpents. ALecoste Angelica Galbanum Garlic Rosemary Biting. Acorus ¶ Serpigo. Celondine ¶ Shaking. ALisander Butterbur Coleworts Cress' Fennel Fineleafe Flowerdeluce Lavender Marshmallowes Mugwort Mustered Parsnips ¶ Sheep. Asarabacca ¶ Shingles. ADderstong Archangel Barley Bursa pastoris Coleworts Coliander Cornerose Goosebery Guiacum Hearts-ease Holliocke Knotgrass lentils lettuce Lily Mints Mullin Opium Parietary Purslane Rapes Rose Rue Saffron S. john's wort Through wax ¶ Short wound. ALmonds Flax Planten ¶ Shoulder ache FIgs ivy Smalach Sparewort ¶ Shrink. CAmmamile Dill ¶ Sicknesses. COlumbine Sickness after mea●. Wormwood Sickness general. Adderstong Angelica Aron Auens Betony Blessed thistle Cammamile cinnamon Cloves Cowslips Cresses Cumminseeds Ellebor Fennel Figs Flowerdeluce Frankincense Gallingale Gelovers Gentian Guiacum Holliocke Hops juniper Lentiske Liquorice Lily Lovage Maces Margerom Madder Marshmallowes Milfoile Mirre Mugwort Mustard Olive Organy Pelitory Planten Poplar Quince Radish Reasins Rose Rhubarb Rue Saffron Sage Sanicle savoury Seen Shepherds needle Sothernwood Squilla Stecados Thime Tormentill Turpentine Vinegar Violets Wormwood Sickness hot. bugloss Damsons Sudden. Liquorice ¶ Side. MVstard Sides ache. Barley chervil Mints Planten Thapsia Colic. Garlic Griefs. Alleluya ash Auens Bread Burnet Carrots Claver Cress' Cumminseed Fennell Gentian Holliocke Horstaile Mirre Mullin Nettle Onion Rhubarb Rue Sagape. Sage Smalach Sothernwood Thime Wormwood Hard. Acorus Impostume. Figs Pain. Betony Coleworts Flax Galbanum Horehound Knotgrass Lovage Maple Milfoile Opopanax Parsnip Peach Pelitory Pricking. chervil Stitch. Blessed thistle Saffron See Stitch. Swollen. Barley ¶ Sighing. CAmmamile Ellecampane ¶ Sight comforting. Ysope ¶ Silkelike. Flax ¶ Syrup. Risen Vinegar ¶ Skabs'. ACorus Algood Almonds Aloes Bay Balm Br●ony Bugle bugloss Calamint Carway Celondine Cicory Coleworts Coliander Cockle Columbine Corn●rose Cresses Crowfoot Cucumber Danewort Darnell Dasie Diagridium Docks Elecampane Ellebor Elm Figs Fiveleafe Flowerdeluce Fluellin Fumiterre Germander Goosheirife Hearts-ease hay Henbane Holliocke Houndstong Horehound Horstaile jasmin juniper Knotgrass Lentiske Licium Lily Liverwort Linden Lovage Lupins Mints Myrtle Morrell Morsus diab. Mouseare Mullin Mustered Nettle Olive Onion Orpin Parietary Parsley Pelitory Peneroyall Poplar Reasins Rye Rue Sage S. james wort Savin Skabious Stavesacre Strawberry T●rre Thistle Tithimal Tormentill Turpentine Waterbetony Wheat Woodlilly Woodbine Wormwood Ysope Scab dri●. Auens Fennell ¶ Skall. BAy Cress' Lupins Olive Watercresses Woodbine ¶ Skaldings. BArley Eldern Elm Fennell. Flax Gourds Holliocke Houseleek lettuce Lily Marshmallowes Medowort Mulberry Mullin Olive Onion Poplar Privet Verivice ¶ scales. Lily Onion Walnuts ¶ Scars. Hypocistis ¶ Skin cleansing. ALgood Bay beans Butterburre Cicorie Coliander Cumminseed tragacanth. Euphorbium Fenigreeke Fumiterre Goostansie Melons Pompons Rosemary Rue Sa●ine Spurge Vinegar Wintercresses Skin deformed. ash Broome Coleworts Columbine Diagredium Dragons Elaterium Ellebor Elm Fennel Figs Flax Flower deluce Fluellin Galbanum Garlic Hearts-ease Lentiske Lily Lemons Lovage Lupins Mustard Nenuphar Nigella Pepper Rape Rocket Rose Sallow Saxifrage Sperage Thapsia Verivice Wheat. Skin fo●le. Almonds Aron Brionie Capars Daffodil Docks tithymal Skin griefs. Bengewin Birth Pellitory Pease Raisins Showbread Skin to grow. Woodbine. Skin of. Dragagant. Fearne Fenigreeke Horsetaile Houseleek Knotgrass Pinetree Privet Pilling. Ellecampane Rough. Almonds Palma Christi Spots. Radish White to be. Lily Organi● ¶ scurf. ALder Almonds Bay Barley Beech Bengewin Briony Capars Coleworts Cresses Daruel Docks Dragons Ellebor Elm Five leaf Fumitory juniper Lilly Linden Melilot Monks hood Morrel Mustered Nigella Olive Onion Planten Raisins Skabious Stavesacre Tar Thistle Tithimal Turpentine Vinegar Walnuts Wheat Ysope ¶ Scurvy evil. Rue ¶ Sleep to cause. ALmonds Aloes anise Archangel Bay Barley Betony Blessed thistle Briony Camomile Coleworts Cornerose's Cowslip Danewort Dill Dittany Eldern Flowerdeluce Garlic Gourds Hemlock Henbane Holliocke Houseleek Lettuse Mandrach Marshmallowes Mints Morrell Nenuphar Nettle Nigella Nutmeg Onion Opium Poppy Purslane Rape Rose Rush Saffron Sallow Scala celi Smalach Violets Wormwood Sleepiness. Dogfennell Margerom Peneroyall Pitch Sleepy members. Euphorbium Sleep unquiet. Lovage Wanting. Alehoofe ¶ Slender to be. Fennell ¶ Small pox. Olive ¶ Smelling lost. MArgerom Nigella ¶ Snake. Angelica ¶ sneezing to cause. BAfill Beets Clary Crowfoot Ellebor Flowerdeluce Mustered Nigella Pelitory Pepper To stop. Mustered Sorrell ¶ Sun burning. Beans Lemons ¶ Sorcery. SQuilla Wheat ¶ Sores. ADderstong Alder Alexander Algood Almonds Aloes Anemom Arsmart ash Balm Barley Birch Bistort Blessed thistle Bramble Brionie Bugle Bulfoote Burnet Butterburre Calamint Camomile Capars Carots' Celondine century Chickweed Cipers Clary Coleworts Coliander Cockle Columbine Cornerose Cotton weed Cowslip Cowparsnip Cresses Darnell Daiste Dates Dogfennel tragacanth. Dragons Ellebore Eringium Fenigreeke Figs Filipendula Fitches Fiveleafe Flax Flower deluce Fluellin Fumiterre Frankincense Gelovers Gentian Germander Goosheirif. Groundsw. Hearts-ease Hemlock Hypocistis Houndstongue Horehound Knotgrass Ladies mantle Leeks Lentisk Licium Liquorice Lily Lupins Madder Marierom Melilote Mints Milfoile Mirabol. Milleto Mirre Myrtle Morrel Mullin Mustered Neniver Nettle Nigella Oak Olive Orchis Orpin Oats Pariet. Pease Pimpernel Pinetree Privet Purslane Radish Raisins Rosemary Rue Sage S. james wort S. john's wort Sallow Savin Saxifrage Setwall Smalach Smirnium Sparewort Squilla Ta●ariske Tar Tasill Throughwax Thime Vinegar Vervin Waterbetony Wheat Woodbine Sores cold. Garlic Rosemary Sores creeping. Bursa pastoris General. Broome Houseleek Planten Greene. Celondine Hollow. Eldern Sores hot. Houseleek Sorrell Inward. Horstaile Sores moist. Ciperus Dill Gourds Myrtle Sores old. Aloes Angelica Aron Burr Egremony To opn. Egremony Sores rotten. Danewort Henbane Pelletary Rosemary Woade Spreading. Beets Stinking. Alleluya. Sore swollen. Blessed thistle Soreness. Saffron ¶ Speech lost. ALoes Betony Burr Chery Cress' Cowslip Euphorbium Fenigreeke Figs Lavender Margerom Maple Onion Peach Pelitory Peneroyall Pimpernell Planten Ribwort Rosemary Rue Sage Saxifrage Sothernwood Vinegar Woodlilly Woodbine Wormwood Speaking in sleep. Betony Rue Sothernwood ¶ Spider. Garlic Gentian Rue ¶ Spirits evil. S. john's wort ¶ Spitting blood ALmonds Aloes Betony Burnet Bursa pastoris Centory Chesmits' Comfery Coral Cucumber tragacanth Elecampane Endive Figs Flower amor Garlic Henbane Holliocke Horehound Knotgrass Lady thistle Leeks Lentiske Licium Lungwort Maces Maidenhair Mints Mirre Myrtle Mulberry Mustard Peach Perwincle Planten Pomegranates Purslane Quince Reasins Rye Rose Rhubarb Sage S. john's wort Sallow Sanicle Smalach Tamariske Tasell Thistle Thime Turpentine Vinegar Waterbetony Wheat Hard. Rosemary Matter. Burr Centory Cucumber Holliocke Mints Mirre Mullin Nettle Organy Tar Thime ¶ Spongy ball. Rose ¶ Spots. IAsmin Dates Scala celi Walnuts ¶ squinsy. anise Balm Bengewin Bread Burr Cassia Pistula Celondine Coleworts Columbine Danewort Dogfennell Egremony Elaterium Figs Fiveleafe Flax Garlic Hasell Holliocke Lily Lovage Morsus diab. Mouseare Mulberry Mustered Onion Organy Orpin Oats Peneroyall Pepper Planten Radish Rue Skabious Strawberry Tar Thime Vervin Violets Walnuts Wheat Wormwood Ysope ¶ Starting. anise ¶ Steel to cut. Radish ¶ Steines. Lemons ¶ Sterility. ivy ¶ Stinging. ANgelica anise Bay Blessed thistle Borage Celondine Centory Cipers Coleworts Cowslip Cummin Dragons Eringium Fiveleafe Flax Flowerdeluce Holliocke Houndstong Houseleek lettuce Lily Marshmallowes Mints Mullin Mustered Oak Parsnips Pimpernel Planten Radish Rosecamp. Rosemary Rhubarb Rue Sanicle savoury Spinach Tar Thime Vervin Violets Wheat Woodlilly Wormwood ¶ Stitch. ACorus anise Bay Basill Blessed thistle Borage Bread Burnet Cammamile Colophony Cummin Dock Endive Fennell Ginger Holliocke Horehound Melilote Mints Morsus diab. Mustered Pariet. Peach Rosemary Rue Sage Stitchwort Thime Wormwood ¶ Stomach. ASarabac. Filipen●. Ache. Bay Calamint Cumminseed Dill Fiveleafe Groundswell Horehound Lavender Margero●● Mints Onion Orpin Pariet. Pinetree Rue savoury Setwall Squilla Spikenard Thime Wormwood Apostume. Sowthistle Bad. Artichoke Borage Briony Dates Elecampane Madder Mints Mugwort To cleanse. Alder Centory Flax Horehound marygold Nettle Olive Onion Planten Rosemary savoury Cold. Basill Cammamile Cardamom Clary Cloves Dill Fennell Fiveleafe Gallingale Garlic Germander Ginger juniper Lavender Leeks Lentiske Lovage Maces Margerom marygold Mustered Nutmegs Parietary Pelitory Pepper Reasins Rue savoury Saxifrage Sothernwood Thime Wormwood Stomach to comfort. Acorus Rose Rosemary Griefs. Alecoste Aloes anise Ash Auens Beets Blessed thistle Bramble bugloss Bulfoot Calamint Calamus aromaticus Cammamile cinnamon Coral Cummin Egremony Feuerfew Fennell Flowerdeluce Frankincense Gallingale Gentian Holliocke Knotgrass Lovage Maces Margerom Melilot Mirre Mouseare Oak Onion Organy Pelitory Peony Pepper Radish Reasins Rose Rosemary Rhubarb Saffron Sage Seen Shepherds needle Smalach Spinach Stecados Tormentill Vinegar Wormwood Stomach griefs general. Centory Cloves Flax Lentiske Smalach Gnawing. Betony Hot. Apples Barbary beans Bread Bursa pastoris Chery Cicory Coleworts Crowfoot Damsons Endive Fennell Gallingale Goosebery Goosebery read Hops Knotgrass lettuce Liquorice Melons Morrell Nenuphar Parsley Penywort Pomgran. Purslane Quince Rose Rue Smalach Sorrell Strawberry Tamarinds Through wax Vinegar Violets Wheat Stomach ill. Leeks Mustered Orange Oats Pears Penereyall Pomgran. Impostume. anise Cammamile Lentisk Rosin Loathing. Lupins Pains. Docks Endive Lentiske Lovage Mugwort Peach Squinant. Wheat Ysope Purging. anise Raw. Almonds Garlic Ginger Lentiske Maidenhair Myrtle Sanders Skabious Squinant Rising. anise Saffron Rheum. Figs Sick. Wormwood Sore. Woodbine Stopped. Figs Fumiterre Horstaile Stuffed. Gentian Swollen. ash Barley Cummin Danewort Fennell Lavender Leeks Lovage Mints Parlsley Pelitory Purslane Smalach Sperage Woodbine Wormwood Turning. lentils Ulcers. Reasins Weak. Acatia Almonds Angelica anise Apples Bay Basill Bengewin Betony Bread Burnet Calamint Capars Cherry Cipers Cloves Coleworts Coliander Cubebs Cummin Fennell Fumiterre Holliocke Lady thistle Lentisk Lemons Lovage Margerom Milfoile Mirabol. Mustered Nettle Nigella Nutmegs Olive Parsley Peach Pelitory Planten Quince Raspe Sanders Sothernwood Spinach Thistle Wormwood Stomach windy. Agnus castus anise Coliander Cubebs Gallingale Ginger Lavender Lentiske Margerom Nettle Pariet. Pelitory Rue Seine Smirnium Violets Wormwood ¶ Stone. ALkakengi Almonds anise Ash Bay beans Beech Betony Blessed thistle Bramble Bread Briony Burr Butcher's broom Calamint Cammamile Cardamom Cassia fistula Cetrach Chery chervil Chickweed Claver Cloves Coleworts Cresses Cubebs Damsons Danewort Docks Eldern Elecampane Eringium Feuerfew Fennell Filipend. Fiveleafe Flowerdeluce Frankincense Garlic Gentian Germander Goosbery Goostansie Gourds Guiacum Gromel Hartstongue Hather Hawthorne Holliocke Hops Knotgrass Leeks Lemons Lovage Mader Maidenhair Meddlers Melilot Melons Mints Milfoile Moss Mugwort Mustered Nettle Oak Olive Onion Pariet. Parsley Peach Pelitory Peniwort Peneroial Peony Pinetree Radish Rape Raisins Restharrow Rye Rose Saffron Sage S. john's wort Saxifrage Seine Setwall Sorrel Showbread Sothernwood Sperage Squilla Stitchwort Strawberry tansy Thistle Thime Turpentine Vervin Virga aurea White saxifrage Wormwood Stone to expel. ivy ¶ Stones apost. HOlliocke Wheat Stones griefs. Melilote Planten Stones heat. Groundswell Stones inflamed. Coliander Lily Stones to be soft. Vinegar Stones swelling. Acorus Calamint ¶ Stops. Ysope. ¶ Strangury. ACorus Alleluia Almonds Angelica Asarabac. bryony Bursa pastoris Butchers broom. Calamint Calamus aro. Camomile Carots' Cedria Cetrach Cherry chervil Chickweed Cipers Claver Cress' Cucumber Cummin Dill Dittanie Dogfenel tragacanth Fennel Filipendula Fiveleafe Galbanum Garlic Germander Guiacum Hartstongue Hasell Holyoke ivy Knotgrass Laureal Lily Melons Mints Mugwort Mustard Nigella Oak Opopanax parietary parsley Peach Pease Peonie Poplar Purslane Radish Rye Rose Rue Sage Saxifrage Sebestens Seen Setwal Smalach Sowthistle Sperage Time Turpentine Watercresses White saxif. ¶ Strength to increase. BOmbase Hemp. ¶ Streinings. BAsill Burr. ¶ Sucket. Walnuts ¶ Sugar roset. Rose ¶ Surbated. Alder. ¶ Surfeit. betony Coleworts Mustard. ¶ Swell. ACatia Adderstongue Alecost Alder Aloes Amoniacum Angelica Archangel Aron Bay Barley Blessed thistle Bread Broome Burr Burnet Bursa pastoris Camomile Capars Carway Chestnut Chickweed Cicorie Claver Coleworts Coliander Columbine Comfrey Cornerose's Cowparsnip Cresses Cucumber Cumminseed Daffodil Danewort Darnell Dasie Diagredium Dill Dockes Ducks meat Elaterium Eldern Ellecampane Eringium Erysimon Fenigreeke Fennel Figs Fiveleafe Flax Fleawort Flower deluce Fluellin Frankincense Galbanum Garlic Goulds Gourds Guiacum Hather Hemlock Holliocke Holly Houndstongue Horehound Hops Houseleek jasmin Knotgrass Langdebeefe lentils Lily Liverwort Lovage Lupins Marierom Mandrach Marsh mallows Melilote Melons Mints Misleto Morrel Mulberry Mullin Mustered Nettle Nigilla Nutmegs Olive Onion Orchis Opopanax Oats Pears Pariet. Pellitory Pease Peniwort Pepper Pitch Planten Plaintree Pomegranate Poplar Privet Raisins Rye Ribwort Rose Rue Saffron Sagapen. Sage S. james wort savoury Smalach Smirnium Soldanel. Sow thistle Sothernwood Sperage Stavesacre Stinking horehound Tamariske tansy Tar Thapsia Thistle Thime Tormentil Vinegar Waterbetony Watercresses Waterpepper Wheat withwind Woad Woodlilly Wormwood Swelling by blood letting. Leeks Plumtree Swelling cold. Lady thistle General. Sanicle Hard. Stoncrop Hot. Apples Arach Beech Henbane lettuce Olive Poppy Quince Sea moss Spinach Violets Inward. Leeks Sudden. chervil ¶ Sweat to cause. ADderstong Alecoste anise Barley Blessed thistle Branke Broom Butterb. Calamint Cammamile Camepitis Dodder Eldern Figs Flax Hirundinaria Holliocke Houndstong Hops Knotgrass Lily marygold Mints Mirre Nettle Pelitory Peneroyall Pepper Pimpernell Rosemary Saffron Sage Setwall Smalach tansy Tormentill Wormwood Sweeting much. Flax Lavender lettuce Spikenard Strawberry Sweeting sickness. Sage Sorrel Sweat stinking. Artichoke Camomile Rosemary Thistle Myrtle. Sweated to withstand. Balm Myrtle Rosemary ¶ Swine's evil. FIgs Poppy Swine's griefs. Madder Swine pocks. Dockes Planten Swine sick. Corneflower Dwarf gentian. ¶ Swooning. ANgelica Apples Basill betony bugloss Cloves Columbine Cowslip Cucumber Ginger Lavender Mints Pennyroyal Pomegranate Roses Savoury Spikenard Verivice Vinegar. ¶ Taken. BAy Euphorbium Lavender. ¶ Tart. Apples. ¶ Taste lost. Barley ¶ Teat swollen. Knotgrass. ¶ Teeth ache. ACorus Alder Alehoofe Angelica Apples Ash Bay Balm Bengewin Beets betony Bistort bryony Bursa pastoris Calaminte Capers Cedria Celondine Chickweed Cicorie Cockle Coloquintida Comfrey Coral Cowslip Cresses Crowfoote Cucumber Damsons Danewort Dittanie Docks Eldern Ellebor Euphorbium Figs Five leaf Flags Flower deluce Flower amor Frankincense Galbanum Garlic Ginger Goostansie Henbane Holyocke Horehound ivy Knotgrass Lady thistle Lavender Leeks Lentiskel Marygold Marsh mallows Mints Milfoile Mirre Momeare Mullin Mustard Nettle Nigella Oak Onion Opopanax Organie Parsnips Pellitory Peneroyall Pepper Perwincle Pimpernel Pinetree Planten Plaintree Pomegranate Purslane Radish Raisins Restharow Ros solis Rose Rosemary Rue Saffron Sage Saxifrage Smallach Sothernwood Sperage Spurge Stavesacre Strawberry Tamariske Tar Thistle tithymal Tormentil Vervin Violets Wormwood Ysope. Teeth an edge. Purslane Cleansing. cinnamon To draw out. Flower deluce ivy Tormentill Wheat. To fall out. Amoniacum Celondine Coral Galbanum Henbane Tithymall. Fowl, Barley Broome Coral Cumminseed Holyoke Lady thistle Lentiske Lemons Mints Rye Strawberry Hollow. ash Rue Lose. Bistort Blessed thistle Bramble Burr Damsons Elecamp. Goosetansie Hypocistis Lady thistle Lentiske Mirre Olive Pellitory Pomegranate Rose Rosemary Squilla Stavesacre. Rotten. Flower deluce Stinking, Broome Mints Sage To be wh●●e, Vinegar Worms. Betony Centory Coloquintida Dogfennel Frankincense Henbane Pepper Rosemary tansy Yellow, Sage. ¶ Tenasmus. BAsill Coleworts Daisy Dill Fenigreeke Fitches Flower amor Mullin Nenuphar Organie Pomegranate Rue tansy Turpentine Wheat ¶ Term's to come down. ALehoofe ivy Ysope. Terms to open. Acorus Terms to provoke. Agnus castus. Balm Terms to stop. Oak ¶ Tertian. Alleluia ¶ Tetters. ACatia Alehoofe Broome Carway Celondine Cherry Coleworts Cockle Cowparsnip Crowfoote Cucumber Danewort Elaterium Ellebore Elm Figs Flower deluce Ginger Hemlock Horsetaile jasmin Knotgrass Mints Myrtle Morrel Mustered Nettle Peach Plomtree Raisins Rose Rue Sage S. james wort Sorrell tansy Turpentine Vinegar. ¶ Thighs ache. Vinegar. Thighs swollen. Danewort. ¶ Thirst. anise Apples Barbery Barley Beets Borage bugloss Camomile Cherry Comfrey Cucumber Endive Figs Fleawort Gooseberrie read. Leeks Liquorice Lovage Marsh mallows Melons Nenuphar Olive Orange Planten Poppy Rose Rosemary Smalach Sorrel Squilla Strawberry Tamarind Vinegar Violets. Thirst continual. century. ¶ Throat apostumes. COleworts Smallach. Throat griefs. Bengewin Blessed thistle Borage Bramble Brionie Burr Cherry Columbine Figs Mulberry Planten Radish Raisins S. james wort. Sanicle Saracens cons. Setwall Spinach Strawberry Violets Wheat. Throat heat. Cornerose. Throat imposthume. Scabious. Throat canker. Mirhis Throat kernel. Barley Camomile Partetarie Peach Poppy Squilla. Throat rough. Dates bugloss juiubes Liquorice Longrape Mints Peach Rape Raisins Violets Wheat. Throat skrophul. Pitch Throat sore. Dragagant. Five leaf Holyocke Mustard Throat sores. Aloes Bistort Lovage Mader March mallows Privet Smallach Walnuts Throat squinsy. Columbine Throat swollen. Alder anise Cassia fist. Columbine Crowfoote Danewort Daisy Docks Dogfennel Elaterium Eldern Flax Garlic Lovage Lupins Maidenhair Morsus diabol. Oats Parsnips Rue Stonecrop tansy Violets. Throat wen. Planten ¶ Tympany. ANgelica anise Asarabac. Cresses Ellebor Guiacum Rhubarb ¶ Toes sore. Woodbine. ¶ Tongue bitter. Sage Tongue blisters. Violet's Wheat. Tongue griefs. Borage Quince Tongue heat. Fleawort Tongue heavy. Mustard Tongue hurt. Reed Tongue palsy. Coleworts Cresses Figs Mustered Onion Pelitory Rue Woodbine Wormwood Tongue rough. bugloss Mints Tongue sore. Five leaf Tongue swollen. Five leaf Tongue weals. Rose ¶ Tool to cut. Vervin Toole to set. bugloss ¶ treacle to make. BEtony Rue ¶ Trembling. BLessed thistle Coleworts Cresses Fenuel Five leaf Lavender Marsh mallows Parsley ¶ tumors. Acorus ¶ Vein broken. COmfrey Cresses Dragag. Planten Vervin Vein cut. Alecoste Melilote Milfoile Vein comforting. Rosemary Veins griefs. Rue ¶ Venom. ALecost Allgood Angelica Archangel Asarabac ash Bay Basil Bengewin Betony Burr Butterburre Calamint Carrots Ciperus Claver Cresses Dittany Dragon's Dwarf gent. Fennel Figs Five leaf Flower deluce Galbanum Garlic Gelovers Gentian Hasil Houndstongue Horehound juniper Lavender Laureal Lily Mints Mustered Navew Nigella Oak Orange Parsnips Parsley Pellisory Pimpernel Planten Purslain Radish Rape Rosemary Rue Sage S. james wort Smirnium Sorrel Sperage Squilla Tar Torinentil Verum Violets Wheat Woodbine Wormwood Venomous beast. Danewort Venomous bitings. Pellitory ¶ Vermin. Rue ¶ Vernishing. Flax ¶ Vinegar. BRamble Raisins Rose Vinegar ¶ Ulcers. BEech Blessed thistle Briony Broome Cammamile Camepitis Chickweed Cipers Colewort Coral Cornerose's tragacanth Dragon's Dwarf gent. Egremony Ellebor Figs Frankincense Germander Goostansie Horehound Houndstongue ivy lentils Licium Liquorice Lilly Marierom Mandrach Marsh mallows Melons Misleto Mirre Myrtle Neniver Nettle Olive Onion Orpin Pariet. Parsnips Pimpernel Planten Poppy Privet Radish Raisins S. james wort S. john's wort Sar. cons. S●u●n Setwall Sothernwood Stink. ●orh. Tar ●thimall Woad Woodbine Ulcers hard. Crowfoote Oak Rosemary Ulcers hollow. Spurge Ulcers hot. Morrell Purslane Ulcers old. Angelica Capars Garlic ¶ Vncomes. BVglosse Cress' Lily Liver wort Marsh mallows Neniver Oats Peneroial Sage Smalach Tar ¶ Unguent. BAy Broome Rose ¶ Voice bad. tragacanth Figs Garlic Ginger Peach Voice to clear. Centory Eldern Vinegar Voice ill. Holliocke Horehound Leeks Mints Mouseare Mursterd Nettle Radish Sage Squilla Strawberry Voice lost. Apples Coleworts Cowslip Fennigreeke Lilly Olive ¶ Vomiting. ACatia Alecost Aloes Angelica anise ash Bay Balm Basil beans Betony Bistort bugloss Burnet Calamint Cipers C●eruil Clones Cummin Dates Dill Feuerfew Fennel Five leaf Frankincense Goosebery Heppes Horehound Knotgrass Lentisk Mints Milfoile Mulberry Neniver Nettle Nutmegs Oak Orange Pears Pease Peneroial Planten Poplar Quince Raisins Rue Saffron savoury Setwall Sorrell Squilla Stitchwort Tormentil Vinegar Wormwood Vomiting blood. Almonds Leeks Marsh mallows Mints Myrtle Sage S. john's wort Sallow Vomiting matter. Mints Vomit to cause. Alder Asarabac. Bay Betony Broome Cresses Daffadil Earthnut Elaterium Ellebor Eldern Fennel Flax Holliocke Laureal Lovage Mandrach Melons Nettle Nux methil. Olive Palma Christi Peaseearthnut Radish Satyrion Spurge Stavesacre Stonecrop Thlaspi Walnuts Wormwood ¶ Urine. Garlic Urine burning. Lettise Urine to cause. ACorus Alehoofe Arach Caltrap Cheruil ivy Oak Planten Rosemary Rush Urine flux. Bursa pastoris Epithime Fennell Flower Amor Galingale Hasill Linaria Peneroial Sage Setwall Urine hot. Alkakengi Barley Cetrach Liquorice Sebest. Tormentil Urine read. Pomegranate Urine stinking. Artichoke Calamus ar. Urine to stop. Balm Egremony Urine stopped. Alecost Alkakengi Alexander Almonds Amoniacum Angelica anise Apples Asarabac Artichoke ash Bay Barley Basil Betony Blessed thistle Bramble Broome Briony bugloss Burnet Bursa pastoris Butchers broom Butterburre Calamint Cammamile Capars Cardamom Carrots Carway Cassia fist. Cedria Cherry cinnamon Ciperus Claver Coleworts Cockle Cress' Cubebs Cucumber Cummin Daisy Dill Dock tragacanth Elecampane Eringium Fennel Filipendula Flax Flower deluce Fumitery Galingale Galbanum Gelovers Germander Goosebery Gourds Gromel ●uiacum Hemp Hypocisti● Holliocke Holly Hops Horehound Horstaile juniper Knotgrass Ladythistle Lavender Laureall Leeks Lily Lovage Lupins Lynaria Madder Maidenhair Marshmallowes Melilote Melons Meon Mints Mirhis Milfoile Millet Mirab. Motherwort Mouseare Mugwort Mustered Nettle Nigella Nutmegs Oak of jerusalem Onion Opopanax Organy Parietary Parsley Parsnips Peach Pelitory Peniwort Peneroyall Peony Pepper Pimpernell Pinetree Poplar Quince Radish Rape Resthar. Rocket Rose Rue Saffron Sage S. john's wort Sampere savoury Savin Saxifrage Setwall Shepheard needle Skirwits' Smalach Smirnium Sorrell Sowthistle Sothernwood Sperage Squilla Spikenard Stitchwort Strawberry tansy Thistle Tormentill Turpentine Violets Virga aurea Watercresses White sax. Wintercresses Woodbine Wormwood ¶ Vuula. BRamble Oak Vuula fallen. Bengewin Chickweed Coleworts Coliander Dill Mustered Nettle Organy Pepper Purslane Raspe Rue Violets Vuula great. Peneroyall Rosemary Vuula inflamed. Nettle ¶ Warts. ALL good Basill Briony Crowfoot Egremony Eldern Eringium Figs Fineleafe Houseleek ivy marygold Mullin Onion Palma Christi. Pease Purslane Reasins Sallow Savin Squilla Tasell Thune Tithimal Vinegar Woodbine Wormwood ¶ Wasps. Nigella ¶ Water. Rose Water ill. Purslane ¶ Wax to increase. Olive Wax to renew. Vinegar ¶ Weakness. ROsemary Vinegar ¶ Wens. AMoniacum Archangel Balm Burr Capars Coliander Crowfoot Darnel Dasie Fineleafe Flax Flowerdeluce Goosheirife Groundswell Houndstong jasmin lentils Lupins Maidenhair Marshmallowes Onion Peniwort Pepper Planten Rose Smirnium Stoncrop Tar Throughwaxe Tormentill ¶ Weariness. AGnus castus Alder Amoniacum Bay Cammamile Dill Euphorbium Flax Gallion Horehound Mugwort Rossolis Woodbine ¶ Weals. ACatia Almond ash Bay Beets Birch Broome Colewort Darnell Fenigreeke Figs Fumiterre Houndstong Olive Parietary Waterbetony ¶ Whealks. BVlfoot Groundswell Horehound Myrtle Nettle Peach Planten Rose ¶ Wheasing. CAlamint Cammamile ¶ Whites. ALleluya anise Archangel Barbary beans Bursa pastoris Clary Claver Coral Cress' Dates Fenigreeke Flags Feowerdeluce Flower amor Germander Goostansie Hasell Holliocke Horehound Horstaile Knotgrass lettuce Licium Lunaria Margerom Milfoile Moss Mouseare Nenuphar Peneroyall Pomgran. Rose Rosemary Tamariske Tormentill Turpentine Wormwood ¶ Whiteflaw. bugloss Flowerdeluce Frankincense Horehound Marshmallowes Misleto Myrtle Rape Reasins Wheat ¶ White rose. Rose ¶ Wicked spirits. Peony ¶ Wild fire. ACatia Arach Asarabac. Barley chervil Cipers Corrander Cornerose's Duck's meat Feuerfew Fennell Garlic Goosebery Holliocke Houndstong Leeks lettuce Lily Liverwort Myrtle Olive Pomgra. Reed Ribwort Rose Saffron Sorrell Vinegar ¶ Windiness. ALisander Almonds Angelica anise ash Bay Basill Betony Calamus are. Cammamile Carrots Carway Coliander Colophony Cummin Dill Elecampane Etingium Fennel Filipend. Gallingale Garlic Ginger Hemp juniper Lovage Margerom Meon Monseare Nettle Nigella Nutmegs Pariet. Parsley Peach Pelitory Peneroyall Pepper Rose Rue Saffron Sagapenum Sage savoury Saxifrage Seine Setwall Skirwits' Smalach Spikenard Squinant Thime Violets Wormwood Wind to expel. Celondine chervil Wind short. Balm ¶ Wine. CItron Quince Wormwood Wine to colour. Docks Wine dead. Moss Perwincle Wine to keep. Orange Wine to try. Mulberry ¶ Witchcraft. BRiony Ros solis Squilla ¶ Wit lost. Archangel Cresses Cucumb. marygold Sothernwood Wit to sharpen. Balm Langdebeefe ¶ Wood to colour. Apples ¶ Women. ARsmart Bay Women barren. Sage women's belly ache. Radish With child. Sage In childbed. Peony Rue Conceived. Endine Pomgran. Quince Delivered. Parsley women's griefs. Aron Balm bugloss Cardamom Cummin Horehound Leeks Lovage Maidenhair Mints Mugwort Nettle Oak Onion Pelitory Peony Sothernwood Strawberry Tamariske Vervin Wormwood Women hurt. Calamint women's issues. Poppy Women longing. Reasins Women purging. Holliocke Women swollen. Fineleafe Women in travel. Dates ¶ Worms. ACatia Alecoste Algood Almond Aloes Amoniacum Apples Arach Aron Arsmart Asarabac. ash Bay Basill Betonie Blessed thistle Butterburre Calamint Camomile Cardamon Cedria century Chickweed Coleworts Coloquintida Coriander Cresses Cummin Darnell Docks Dwarf gentian Egremonie Ellebor Esula Fearne Feuerfew Flower deluce Fumiterre Galbanum Gall Garlic Gelovers Germander Goosheirif. Horehound Houlleeke juniper Knotgrass Lavender cotton Laureal Leeks Lupins Madder Mints Milfoile Mirre Morsus diabol. Motherwort Mulberry Nettle Nigella Nux indica Oiive Onion Organie Orange Peach Penyroial Planten Pomegranate Purslane Radish Raisins Rose Rosemary Rue Sea moss Sebestens Scabious Smallach Sothernwood Squilla Stonecrop tansy Tar Time Turpentine Violets Walnuts Watercresses Waterbetonie Wheat Wormwood Ysope Worms in the flesh. Milfoile Parietary Worms in sores. S. john's wort ¶ Wounds ACorus Adderstong Alecoste Alleluya. Algood Algood Aloes Amara dull. Angelica Apples Arach Archangel Arsmart Auens Barley beans Bengewin Birch Bistort Bread Briony Broome Bugle Bulfoot Burr Burnet Bursa pastoris Butchers broom Butterbur Calamint Camepitis Celondine Chickweed Cipers Claver Coleworts Coral Cowparsnip Cress' Daffodil Danewort Dandelion Dasie Dates Dogfennell Dragon's Dwarfgentian Ellebor Elm Fearne Fenigreeke Feuerfew Fineleafe Flax Flowerdeluce Flueslin Frankincense Galbanum Gentian Germander Gooshetrife Goostansie Gratiola Groundswell Hearts-ease Herb Robert Hypocistis Holliocke Houndstong Horstaile ivy Knotgrass Ladies mantle Leeks Lentisk Liquorice Lily Liverwort Lovage Marsh malowes Milfoile Morrell Motherwort Mullin Nigella Nutmeg Oak Olive Orpin Oats Palma Christi Pears Parsley Peach Pimpernel Pinetree Pitch Rye Ros solis Rose Rue Sage S. james wort S. john's wort Sallow Saunders Sar. cons. Scala coel. Setwall Skabious Smalach Smirnium Soldanel Sowbread Splenewort Stink. horehound Stitchwort Strawberry Thapsia Throughwax Tormentil, Turpentine Vervin Waterbetony Wheat Wintercesses Woade Woodbine Wormwood Woodrowel Wound ache. bryony Purilam Bleeding chervil Pomegranate Cleansing Egremonie Wounds general. betony chervil Henbane Lunaria Myrrh Monseare Onion Planten Ribwort Sanicle Wounds green. Balm Wounds great. Garlic Inward. Angelica Blessed thistle Centory Comfrey Horstaile Nettle Wound canker. marygold Wound moist. Tasell Wound mortal. Blessed thistle Wound old. Egremony Outward. Centory Comfrey Nettle Wound rotten. Purslane Swelling. Centory Vinegar ¶ Wrench. Burr ¶ Wrinkles. Briony Cowslip Cucumber Lilly Maidenhair ¶ Yard ache. FEnnell Piuslaine Apostume. cinnamon Flax Henbane Leeks Apegald. Flax Blistered. Fumiterre . Flax Chafed. Morrel Sage Galled. Turpentine Griefs. Aloes Dill Horsetaile Olive Poplar Turpentine Wheat Inflamed. Butcher's broom. canker. Auens Egremonie Flax Holliocke Olive tassel Paine. Betony Pushes. Mirre Sage. Rankling. Cummin seed Skin of. Fumiterre. Sores. ash Dasie Gourds Morrell Pomegranate Sage Standing. Agnus castus Bay Cummin Neniver Swollen. Barley Betony Ducks meat Fennel Figs Flax Holliocke Leeks Purslane Rue ¶ Yellow colour. Buckthorne Yellow part. Rose Yellow water. Laureal myrrh ¶ Yexing. Bay Rosemary ¶ Youth preserving. MIrre Mirabolans Rosemary Samper Squilla. FINIS.