MPT wean raw, 
15:, CULPEPER’s ENGLISH! PHYSICIAN, 
tion thereof:drank at-the dame time, doth cure them, and eafeth violent pains :in the 
bowels. The roots are likewife effectual to help ruptures or burftings, being ufed 
with other things available to that purpofe, taken cither inwardly or outwardly, or 
both: asalfo for bruifes, or hurts by blows, falls, or the like, and to ftay the bleed- 
ing of wounds in any part, either award or outward. 4 
Some hold that one Jeaf cures a quotidian, three atertian, and four a quartan- 
ague ; but with refpeét to the number of leaves, it is a matter of no confequence, or 
whether it is given in powder or decoétion: if Jupiter were ftrong and the Moon 
applying to him, or. his good afpect at the gathering of it, I never knew it mifs the 
gelired ects, arte 
y aa ee vy. be 
- THEY are alfo called ruth leeks, chives, civet, atid {weth. 
Temperature and Virtus; Iconfefs | had not added thefe had it not been for 
a letter I received of a country gentleman, who certified me that amongit other 
herbs I had left thefe out ; they are indeed a kind of leeks, hot and dry in the fourth 
degree as they are, and alfo under the dominion of Mars ; if they are eat raw, (I do 
oppofite to roafted or boiled, but raw oppofite to a chymical prepara- 
tion) they fend up very hurtful vapors to the. brain, cauling troublefome fleep, and 
ipoiling the eyefight, yet of them prepared ‘by the art of the alchymift may be 
made an excellent remedy for ftoppage of urine, od 3 7 
* 
~ 
. Coe Levees Terry. 
; OR, more properly, clear-eye, . z ) 
lary hath fourfquare ftalks, with broad, 
eaves, fomewhat evenly cut on the edges, 
near the Bround, and fome by couples upon 
frances with two {mall leaves at the joints under 
iii 
CSOVERN- 
