( * 3 ° ) 
Wound Herb, taking the Seed or Root in Wine * 
or the Decodlion in Wine drank. The Leaves 
were ufed for the Biting of venomous Beads, 
bathing the Part wounded with them. It provokes 
Urine and brings down the Menfes. They, with 
other Wound Herbs, heal inward or outward 
Wounds •, whether frefh Wounds, or old Cancerous 
Sores and Ulcers. Their Seed, drank, is good a- 
gainft the Biting of Serpents. A Hare’s-Ear with a 
very narrow Leaf, Leaves and Seed, are 'bitter, 
warm, dry, and vulnerary, good in green Wounds, 
and for the Falling-down and Swelling of the Guts, 
efpecially of the Navel ; for fwell’d Joints and 
Scrophulous Tumours, whether ufed inwardly, or 
applied outwardly. Its Virtue confifls in healing 
up, and flrengthening the Parts. ADecodlion of the 
Herb in Wine, or its Powder, is given in Ruptures, 
or inward Bruifes from Falls; but it is chiefly com- 
mended for Children’s Ruptures, ufed inwardly 
and outwardly. Ufed the fame Way it diflolves 
Kings-evil Swellings. Schwenckfeldt extols it in 
Fradtures, Ruptures, and Eryfipelas’s. Sim. Pauli 
cured a Navel Rupture, with Through- wax, a 
Handful; Moufe-ear, Rupture-wort, Plantain, 
Mofs, and our Acacia, of each half a Handful ; all 
boil’d in Wine, and applied to the Part aflfedted. 
136. 
Hare’s-foot. ( Lagopus ) All its Parts, but ef- 
pecially the fpiked Heads, are drying and binding; 
drank in Wine or Water they flay Fluxes of the 
Belly; or bound on the Sharebone in aPoultife it 
takes away the Inflammation of the Belly, and its 
Pains. The powdered Head and Seed, taken in 
red Wine, flop choleric Belchings of the Stomach, 
or Pains. A Decodlion of the Herb with Mallows, 
in Wine, is good for Pains of the Bladder, Heat of 
Urine, and its Scalding. The Seed taken helps 
Spitting 
