VINEYARD. | NATURAL HISTORY. 329 
And strong Vinegar done upon iron or upon the cold 
ground boileth and seetheth anon. Also Vinegar stauncheth 
parbreaking [vomiting] and wambling, if the mouth and 
the other part of the throat be washed therewith, and 
thrown out again; and helpeth deaf ears, and openeth the 
hearing and the ways; and sharpeth the sight of eyes. 
And drasts [dregs] of Vinegar helpeth against the biting 
of a wode hound, and of. the crocodile. 
Bartholomew (Berthelet), bk. x ii, 9788, 
“How to make white of red Vinegar:—Fetch your Vinegar 
at St. Katherine, a yroat a gallon”—[add a pottle of elder 
flowers to six gallons of Vinegar. Renew every year with 
fresh flowers and Vinegar (“Good Huswife’s Treasury,’ bk. vi.)]. 
Even now I strike his body to wound: 
Behold, now his blood springs out on the ground. 
(Stage-direction: A “ttle bladder of Vinegar pricked.) 
“Lamentable Tragedy of Cambyses”; 
so “Return from Parnassus,” i, 2. ° 
t 
I wit sell her 
For twopence a quart, Vinegar! Vinegar in a wheelbarrow! 
Randolph, ‘Hey for Honesty,” etc., iv. 3. 
Is your patent for making Vinegar confirm’d?. 
Chapman, ‘‘ The Ball,” ii. 2. 
Vineyard. 
Measure For Measurg, iv. 1, 29, etc. 
Vv. Vine. 
A VaneyarD is busily tilled and kept, and oft visited 
and overseen of the earth-tillers, and keepers of vines, that 
they be not appaired [damaged] neither destroyed with 
beasts, and a wait is there set in an high place to keep 
the Vineyard, that the fruit be not destroyed, and is left 
in winter, without keeper or. waiter. The smell of the 
Vineyard that bloometh is contrary to all venomous things, 
and therefore adders and serpents flee, and toads also, and 
may not sustain and suffer the noble savour thereof. 
Foxes lurk and hide themself under vine-leaves, and gnaw 
