VINE. | NATURAL HISTORY. 32 
WHosokveER is stricken or hurt of any venomous worr 
‘or other thing, or else bitten with a mad dog, let ther. 
take heed diligently that the same thing that did hurt ther. 
see them not until they ‘be perfectly whole. For th 
Hebrew Physicians say that the party hurt shall then dic 
or else be in peril afresh; yea, though they begin to wa 
whole when they see them. 
Lupton, “ Notable Things,” bk. v. § 72. 
Vine. 
Comepy or Errors, ii. 2, 176. 
Vines be perched and railed and bound to trees that b 
nigh to them. The crooks of the’Vines holdeth things tha 
be nigh thereto, for [so that] boughs and branches of th 
Vine should not be slacked far for the succour, and shaken 
and disparpled [or “disparkled,” 7.e., “scattered ””], and hurlec 
with blasts of wind, but they should so come to bear anc 
save the fruit without peril. Rain gendereth and breedetl 
certain worms and malshrags [caterpillars] and snails, tha 
grow and fret burgeoning and leaves of the Vine, anc 
leaveth lightly the Vine so spoiled, gnawn and eaten; anc 
this evil breedeth in moist time, easy and soft. And o 
evil blasts of winds cometh and breedeth as it were cob 
webs, and beclippeth [surrounds] and wasteth the fruit, anc 
burneth and grieveth it. Also the Vine hateth the radish 
and all manner cole, and hateth also hazels, for when suc 
be nigh to the Vines, then the Vines be ailing and sick 
and nitre—much like to salt—alum and sea-water, and beans 
and vetches, and namely [especially] in the last, cutting br 
venom to Vines, and destroy them. [artholomew—faba 
ac vicie putamina ultima et maxime interimentia vitium sun 
venena.| And in some parts and countries be so grea 
Vines, that they make images, posts and stocks of Vines 
as it fareth in the image and mammet [idol—from Mahomet 
Jupiter in the city of Populonia. And men stied [climbec 
—Bartholomew| upon a Vine to the top of the temple o 
Diana of Ephesus. Also posts and pillars made of suct 
Vines dure and last without corruption long time. The 
juice [of the Vine] with oil laid to an hairy place in « 
plaster-wise doth away the hair. The rind of the Vine 
doth away warts. Moreover the ashes of the Vine healett 
