1 1 68 Salmon's Iderhal. 



Lib.'!. 



OiL by dihnii to it a fropjrtioral quantity of U to 

 TJrpemtnc ,mJ Bees IV^y. It has all the Virtues 

 of thi. Oil aforefaid to advantage, and is a more 

 ''xiX The DiftiUedWater It is good to dear 

 the Skn, and dry up Scabs and running Sores in 



th.q'-ai fty of tho Juice or tffence, and uken to 

 4 Ounces at a time or more, it is good againftthe 



It ' n.'-s, and at length cures the tits of Tertian and 

 Qo rtjn Ag ics It alfo ftops all fortb of Fluxes 

 of BIooJ a. Vomiting, Spitting and Piffing of 

 Blood , and ibgood againft inward Bruifts -'"--' 



' YJ.\oia The firft is moft ofed hecaufe moft 

 common , but the fecond is the moft eifeflual of 

 thtm all It IS tifed alfo to be laid up in Cliefts 



Z'chhghel "til te^ui£,fblaL]'Tany dn. 



Trefoil Purple Meadow, 

 Common. 



CHAP. DCCV. 



Cf T R E F O I L Meadow : 



OR, 

 Field Clavcr : Or, Clover- Grafs. 



THE Nams. It is called in Greek UfvxKc 

 Kiiuim, : in Latine, Trifolium Fratenfe, 

 by all Authors, as being the moft common belong- 

 ing together upon one Footftalk ; and in Englifli, 

 Trefoil, Three-Uav'd Grafs, Meadow-Trefoil, 

 Meadow - Claver, ot Clover • Gr»fs, and honey- 

 Suckles; becaufe Bees gather much Honey from 



II. The Kinds. They are very many, but we 

 (hall here have refpea chiefly to fuch as grow with 

 us in our Meadows, which are, i. Trifolium pra- 

 tenfe vulgare purpureum. Our Common Purple 

 Meadow - Trefoil, or Meadow - Honey Suckles. 

 2. T'lfoliuyn ¥ratenfc vulgare album. Our com- 

 mon white Meadow-Trefoil. 3. Trtfoltum pur- 

 folium album magnum,GxQ3.t white Trefoil. 5. Iri- 



III. The firft, or our Common Purple Meadow 

 Jender and fibrous or flringy Root, which f pre ads 



with half round Spots of white in the Leaves. 



IV. Gm;rJDefcribesitthus. Its Root is long 

 woody, and grows deep. It brings forth Stalks a 

 Cubit long, round, and fomctbing hairy, the great- 

 er part of which creeps upon the Ground; on which 

 ' -aves conjifttng of three jotned together, 

 ■dmg a little from another; of which 

 nch are next the Ground and the Roots, 



^Stallt*hmin Toff °"ot iTinthZ 

 . a "white %"of like ^alialfS^. ' The 

 F/owersgrow at the tops of the Stalks in a Tuft, 

 or in a fmall Fox-Tail Ear, of a purple Color, 

 and Jweet Tajfe ; after which cones the Grain 



Trefoil. Thk differs little 



