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IleP whatever lome may boaftof, it is not rcalonaWe f6 
Exppfl that aftera Medicine is mixed with any of the 
Fluids of the Body and has pafi: one Secretion, it fhoiild 
jHii retain its virtue lo entire as to be capable of diflbl- 
ving lb hard a Subftance as a Aone in the Bladder, fuch 
a remedy muft not be looked for in the Vegetable 
Kingdom, and tho’ the mineral World could fitrnilla us 
with more powerful Medicines of this Kind, yet are we 
riot lure that inwardly taken they will not prove injuri- 
ous to the Parts through which they muft pals before 
they can reach the Stoee. 
Antirrhinum anguliifolium Sylveftre. /. B. 
Syn. 283, Sylveftre medium. Yark. minus. Qer. 
The lejfer wild Calf^'s Snout^ or Snapdragon. Cl, G. 
XVIII. 2 Flowers in J^me and ^J^uly. I obferv’d 
this QxxWoollaton Wall in Company with Mr. 2»- 
tin. 
At the lame Place grew allbone with a Milk white 
Flower, which I alterwards met with plentifully grow- 
ing upon Sir Francis Molyneux's Wall at^everjal Four- 
teen Miles from Nottingham» 
AnthylUs leguminofa: vid Vulneraria Ruftica. 
Aparine. Ger. /. B. Syn: 225, vulgaris. Park 
Cleavers or GoofeGrafs^ hy the Common People calU 
ed ‘tongue bleed. Cl; I; Gen. XII. Flowers in 
May and holds all Summer.^ in moft Hedges. 
A ftrong Decoflion of this Herb is not ordy com- 
mended in the Jaundice., but is allb efteemed an excel- 
lent Remedy for the Gravel and Stone., in the Kidneys. 
The good Women in the Country rub their Oaken 
Tables with it which makes them lo6k brown and 
glolfy. 
Aparine femine laeviore. Syn. ibid. Aparine 
laevis. Park. Goofe~grafs with fmooth Seeds, belongs, 
to the fame Gen. with the preceeding, 
F flowers 
