A MEDICO-BOTANICAL GLOSSARV 



37 



Cerusa\ i. album plumbum uel flos 



plumbi siue gerse" appellatur. 



[Respice in prosmeticum^.] 

 [Cauda pulli crescit in aquis. angl. 

 5 padpipe*. 



Cauda equina, cauda caballina idem 



est. angl. schauegres^ Respice 



in hircina.] 

 Celia, i. ceruisia calefacta. 

 ^oCenapium", gall. ceneue^, angl. war- 



ich^, uel mostard. 

 Celsus"^, morus maior idem. 

 Celsa" quam multi sicaminum dicunt 



uel mora, arbor est cuius fructus 



cache stomachus est et uentrisis 

 fluu, i. solulorium. 



Centaurea minor^", quam multi hmp- 

 nesiam" dicunt, fel terre^* idem, 

 unum habet stipitem erectum, in 

 campis crescit, florem'^ habet in- 20 

 dum ad rubedinem declinantem, 

 coniungit foHa iuxta stipitem^^ et 

 sunt minuta et oblonga sicut ruta. 

 [Respice in ysion'^] 



Centaurea maior'^, quam multi mar- 25 

 tam uel gencianam dicunt idem, 

 fiorem habet croceum. 



Centum", hermodactilis, affodillus 



10. walrich. 

 21. deklinantem. 



15. cachostomacus. uentrifluxum. 

 25. nartan. 28. centum capita. 



17. This and the next are reversed. 



^ Bart. p. i^, ' Cerusa, plumbum album.' Platearius, cire. inst. 'Cerusa, flos plumbi, siue 

 gersa alio nomine appellatur.' ^ Bart. p. 22, ' Gersa est quoddam album quod fit de 



radice brioni^, cucumeris agrestis et similium.' ib. p. 24, ' lersa, autem proprie fit de iaro et 

 serpentaria, cerusa vero de plumbo.' Cath. Anglicum (E. E. Text Soc. 1881) ' Blek, attramen, 

 attramentum, gersa, blacta:' with a note just before it ' Gerso = fucare faciem' from the 

 Medulla Grammatica. See post, Gersa. ^ \pifxii6i,ov, Diosc. v. 103. * Paddock- 



pipe or Toad-pipe, a name for Horsetail, Equisetum : cf. Wright, Prov. Dict. Toad-pipes ; and 

 see ante, Boletus. ' Gerarde, p. 1116, 'in English Horse-taile, Shave-grasse.' Orosius, 



V. 7, ' Succo tritici per artem confecto, quem succum a calefaciendo celiam vocant.' Plin. Hist. 

 Nat. xxii. 25, ad fin. Florus, ii. 18. See Du Cange, in voc. "^ aivqin, Diosc. ii. 1S3. 



** Fr. seneve. ^ E. P. N. p. 51, ' Hoc sinapium, warkecok.' '" App. ' Celsus, i. morus.' 



E. P. N. p. 45, ' Celsi, murer, mur-berien,' whence our word mulberry. Gerarde, p. 1508, ' in 

 shops morus celsi.' " Matth. Silv. c. cxlvii, 'Celsa, i. jnora celsi.' App. ' Celsa, i. mora 



domestica.' Diosc. i. 180, fxopia i) avKafuvia SevSpov karl yvwpifiov, ^s 6 Kapirds XvrtKos Koi\ias, 

 tv<p6apTos, KaKoaTofiaxos. ^"^ Diosc. iii. 7, Kevravpiov to puKpov Kal XiiTTuv rivts KLfxv-qaiov 



KdKovaiv, hiTtiS^ fviKfiovs (pi\(T tSttovs. ^^ Which seems to be truncated into ' Nesia, i. 



centaurea.' App. " Bart. p. 15, ' Centaurea viajor, fel teme idem.' E. P. N. p. 37, 



'Fel terre, uel cen/auria eoT^-geaWe.'' App. ' Fel terrcE,fehrifuga, i. cenlcLUTea. minoT.' '' Diosc. 

 iii. 7) a.v9T] ev toi (poiviKw vrroTTuptpvpa, . . . <pvWa pnKpa vnofiTjKr] wanep Trrfydvov. '^ -^PP- 



'Centaurea major contingit folia juxta stipilem.' " See post, Ision. '* Diosc. i. 



6, KfVTavpiov fxeya, ol 5 vdpKifv KaXovai. Matth. Silv. c. cxlix, Diosc. ca. centaurea secundum 

 translationem nostram, ' Centaurea major quam multi narcam alias narcen aut gentianam 

 dicunt, &c.' ^^ Centum capila, Plin. Hist. Nat. xxii. 8. Bart. p. 15, ' Centum capita, 



affodillus idem, an. clansing gresse.' Cf. Brit. Mus. Add. MSS. 15^36, where clansing gras is 

 given as a name for spurge. 



