AND ENGLISH PHYSICIAN ENLARGED. 
265 
FLOWERS. 
College.] Wormwood, Agnus Castus, 
Amaranthus, Dill, Rosemary, Columbines, 
Orrenges, Balaustins, or Pomegranate 
Flowers, Bettony, Borrage, Bugloss, Mari- 
golds, Woodbine or Honey-suckles, Clove 
Gilliflowers, Centaury the less, Chamomel, 
Winter Gilliflowers, Succory, Comfry the 
greater, Saffron, Blue-bottle great and 
small, (Synosbatus, Tragus, and Dedoneus 
hold our white thorn to be it, Cordus and 
Marcelus think it to be Bryars, Lugdu- 
nensis takes it for the sweet Bryar, but what 
our College takes it for, I know not) Cyti- 
nus, (Dioscorides calls the flowers of the 
Manured Pomegranates, Cytinus, but Pliny 
calls the flowers of the wild kind by that 
name, ) Fox-glove, Viper’s Bugloss, Rocket, 
Eye-bright, Beans, Fumitory, Broom, Cow- 
slips, St. John’s Wort, Hysop, Jessamine or 
Shrub, Trefoil, Archangel, or Dead Nettles 
white and red, Lavender, Wall-flowers, or 
W. inter-Gillifowers, Privet, Lilies white, 
and of the valley, Hops, Common and tree 
Mallows, Feather-few, W oodbine,or Honey- 
suckles, Melilot, Bawm, Walnuts, Water- 
Lilies,white and yellow, Origanum, Poppies 
white and red, or Erraticks, Poppies, or 
corn Roses, so called because they grow 
amongst Corn, Peony, Honey-suckles, or 
Woodbine, Peach-flowers, Primroses, Self- 
heal, Sloebush, Rosemary flowers, Roses, 
white, damask and red, Sage, Elder, white 
Sazifrage, Scabious, Siligo, (I think they 
mean wheat by it, Authors are not agreed 
about it ) Steches, Tamarisk, Tansy, Mullen 
or Higtaper, Limetree, Clover Gilliflowers, 
Colt’s-foot, Violets, Agnus Castus, Dead 
Nettles white and red. 
Culpeper.| That these may be a little 
explained for the public good: be pleased 
to take notice. 
Some are hot in the first degree, as Bor- 
tage, Bugloss, Bettony, Ox-eye, Melilot, 
|, Steechas. 
Hot in the second degree. Amomus, Saf- 
fron, Clove-gilliflowers, Rocket, Bawm, 
Spikenard, Hope, Schenanth, Lavender, 
Jasmine, Rosemary. 
In the third degree. Agnus Castus, 
Epithimum, Winter-gilliflowers, or Wall- 
flowers, Woodbine, or Honey-suckles. 
Cold in the first degree. Mallows, Roses, 
red, white, and damask Violets. 
In the second. Anemom, or Wind-flower, 
Endive, Succory, Water-lilies, both white 
and yellow. f 
In the third. Balaustins, or Pomegranate 
flowers. 
In the fourth. Henbane, and all the sorts 
of Poppies, only whereas authors say, field 
Poppies, which some call red, others erra- 
‘tick and corn Roses, are the coldest of all 
the others; yet my opinion is, that they are 
not cold in the fourth degree. 
Moist in the first degree. Borrage, Bug- 
loss, Mallows, Succory, Endive. 
In the second. Water-lilies, Violets. 
Dry in the first degree. Ox-eye, Saffron, 
Chamomel, Melilot, Roses. 
In the second. Wind-flower, Amomus, 
Clove-gilliflowers, Rocket, Lavender, Hops, 
Peony, Rosemary, Spikenard. 
In the third. Woodbine, or Honey- 
suckles, Balaustines, Epithimum, German- 
der, Chamepitis. 
The temperature of any other flowers not 
here mentioned are of the same temperature 
with the herbs, you may gain skill by 
searching there for them, you can loose 
on 
none. 
For the parts of the body, they are 
appropriated to, some heat 
The head; as, Rosemary flowers, Self- 
heal, Chamomel, Bettony, Cowslips, Laven- 
der, Melilot, Peony, Sage, Steechas. ae 
The breast. Bettony, Bawm, Scabious, pe 
Scheenanth. Ree 
The heart. Bawm, Rosemary flowers, 
rae — ug ig » ee a 
