AND ENGLISH PHYSICIAN ENLARGED. 275 



i broken, and they boiled in spring water, 



Then the College tells you there are things \ btt \ not / CUI T ed f f> for the scum will 

 bred of PLANTS \ s . itself, an " t " L& water drank for 



ordinary drink is a most admirable remedy 



College.] Agarick, Jews-ears, the berries 

 of Chermes, the Spungy substance of' the 

 Briar, Moss, Viscus Quercinus, Oak, Apples. 



for consumption; being bruised and ap- 

 plied to the place they help the gout, draw 

 thorns out of the flesh, and held to the nose 



cures the itch. 



CulpeperJ] As the College would have 'help the bleeding thereof, 

 you know this, so would I know what the 

 chief of them are good for. 



Ms-ears boiled in milk and drank, j Therefore considef that h c 



helps sore throats. h Apothecaries a catalogue of what 



Moss is cod, dry, and binding, therefore! . /- *\ X, 



good for fluxes of all sorts. f^EftS tf T E * crements 



' Misleto of the Oak, it helps the falling \ ^ mUSt ke ^ ln thcir sh P s ' 

 sickness and the convulsions, being dis- ] College.] The fat, grease, or suet, of a 

 erectly gathered and used. $ Duck, Goose, Eel, Soar, Herron, Thymol- 



Oak Apples are dry and binding ; being j lows (if you know where to get it) Dog, 

 boiled in milk and drank, they stop fluxes t Capon, Beaver, wild Cat, Stork, Coney, Horse 

 and the menses, and being boiled in vinegar, j Hedge-hog, Hen, Man, Lion, Hare, Pikf, or 

 and the body anointed with the vinegar, I Jack, (if they have any fat, I am persuaded 



'tis worth twelve-pence a grain) Wolf, 

 Mouse of the mountains, (if you can catch 

 them) Pardal, Hog, Serpent, Badger, Grey 



Then the College acquaints you, That thereof brock Fox, Vulture, (if you can catch 

 are certain living Creatures called J") A ^\" n Gr^nn, Anghce, Dog's dung, 



I the hucklebone of a Hare and a. Hog, East 



College.] Bees, Woodlice, Silkworms, \ and West Bezoar, Butter not salted and salted, 

 Toads, Crabs of the Rivet , little Puppy Dogs, j stone taken out of a man's bladder, Vipers 

 Grass-hoppers, Cantharides, Cothanel, Hedge- \flesh, fresh Cheese, Castorium, white, yellow, 

 hogs, Emmets or Ants, Larks, Swallows, and ; and Virgin's Wax, the brain of Hares and 

 their young ones, Horse-leeches, Snails, Earth- \ Sparrows, Crabs' Claws, the Rennet of a 

 worms, Dishwashers or Wagtails, House i Lamb, a Kid, a Hare, a Calf, and a Horse, 

 Sparrows and Hedge Sparrows, Frogs, Scineus, j the heart of a Bullock, a Stag, Hog, and 

 Land Scorpions, Moles, or Monts, Tortoise of j a Wether, the horn of an Elk, a Hart, 

 the Woods, Tenches, Vipers and Foxes. \ a Rhinoceros, an Unicorn, the skidl of a man 



Culpeper.~\ That part of this crew of I killed by a violent death, a Cockscomb, the 

 Cattle and some others which they have not | tooth of a Bore, an Elephant, and a Sea-horse, 

 been pleased to learn, may be made bene- i Ivory, or Elephant's Tooth, the skin a Snake 

 ficial to your sick bodies, be pleased to I hath cast off, the gall of a Hawk, Bullock, a 

 understand, that 1 she Goat, a Hare, a Kite, a Hog, a Bull, 



Bees being burnt to ashes, and a lye made 

 with the ashes, trimly decks a bald head 



a Bear, the cases of Silk-worms, the liver of a 

 Wolf, an Otter, a Frog, Isinglass, the guts 



being washed with it. ; of a Wolf and a Fox, the milk of a she Ass, 



Snails with shells on their backs, being \ a she Goat, a Woman, an Ewe, a Heifer, 

 first washed from the dirt, then the shells \ East and West Bezoar, the stone in the head of 



4 B 



