Oiap. ^77. ■Engltjb Herbs. 





J7i 



i;""'"' „>*f»"fc « 8a«* «nii^ Coro, aud« fi^*^* 



h'i"A: 



IX. The Speaficauon. They are peculiar for 



Xr. The Juice or Effence. Taken to three ( 

 it is good aguinft the Bitings o'r Stinging of Serpenl 

 wardly bathed with the fame j it alfo provokes Urin 

 ' and prevails againft the Strangury, and is of goo 



ing taken Mor°nTng and'Night in Whke Port°l^inc 

 -taken alfo inwardly Dietetically it fingularly coi 

 tributes to the Cuiing of Wounds, old running Sore 



Wounds at once or twice dreffing , and is good 

 gainft all forts of Sores, whether they be freOi a 

 green, or old and malign, when rebellious and di: 

 y^V-The Cataplqfm. Applied to the Biting 

 Serpents, Mad Dogs, and other Poyfonous Anima 



CHAP. CCCXXXVII. 

 Of HARES-FOOT, 



TREFOIL Spiked. 



X in Latine Lagopus, Lagopodium , Trifolium 

 Humile, UporitCumtnum, Of Pet Leporis, a Lepo- 



III. TheDefcnptions. Tfe///?, i./- Our Common 

 Hares-Foot. It hat a /wall, long, Ihwgy Root, which 

 fends forth Stalks, imth/mall, whitijh, woolly, Tretoil 







riant, but it grows greater and higher in fome pla- 

 ■ :'goo<lnefs of the Soil or Ground it is found"w. ° 

 [V. The/econd, or Greateft Hares-Foot, ha, an 

 mual,fmall, long, thready Root alfo, which fendf 

 thfeveral TteEoil Leaves, eachjiandingon a long 

 <tftalk, being almojl round, and dented about the 



from among thefe rife up weak bending Solks, a 



like, but fomewhat longer Leaves on them, and at 

 their tops clofe Spiked Heads, with many fmall 



in which Hudcs, 



