( ro9 ) 
Fluxesj the fame mixt with Tarmerkk, cures Sore^. 
S.B, 
Thefc Leaver are like the vajlard Se/^a, but ftnalier 
and hoary 3 they are winged, and commoniy grow 5 
together, and rarely 3 5 at fetcing on they are guard- 
ed with 2 narrow Leaves or Auricles, the like alio at 
each Branch 5 its pods are very flender^ bein^ not 
thicker than a large pin, are ftrait, and when aF fuU 
bignefs near an inch long, ending in a fpinnia 5 thefe 
grow in naked (i.e. leaflefs ) Spikes, being feldom more 
than 4 or 5, and they about a quarter of ai?. inch di- 
ftant from one another 5 each fpike about one inch 
and a half long. 
7 1 . D,ivadarree Mdab. ^ ^ ^ 
Berberidis facie, arbor Madrafpat. foliis non ferratis. ^^^^- ^^f^v. 
MuJ. Petiver 625. (W.^ Ts)erou-Canelli Hort. Mdab.^^^'j^^i y ^ 
Vol. 5. Tab. 50. p. 99. Ray H. Plant. 1499, p- 99- 
This is ^ Tree about 30 or 55 foot high, thick asones^''^^*^^'^'^^^^ 
Leg. The Decoftion of the Leaves drank kills Wor/^s^ 
the like of the Bark cures Fevers^ Cholick^ &c, and 
pains occafioned by wind. B. 
A Decoftion of the Wood purifies the blood, correds 
Choler, and expels wind. S. B. 
The Natives call this wood Black Sandd 5 they alfo 
Sometimes call it Wild Aggaly Agallochum) as my 
very ingenious Friend Mt Edward Buckley Surgeon at 
Fort St George^ informs me 3 and moreover, that they 
have in their Bazars^ (or Markets) a more fragrant 
fort, which comes from Cape Comerin, 
72. Cheendee Malak 
Coccifer Peermeadoorica Convoivulaeeus, foL corda* 
to, tuberofa radice. 
The Natives make an exrraft of the Leaves and 
Stalks^ which cures fliarpnei's oi lJrine^ and running erf 
the Reim^ it does not purge. B, 
Sfff f 2 ' This 
