Botanologia. The Brittish physician, or, The nature and vertues of English plants. Exactly describing such plants as grow naturally in our land, with their ... applications and vertues, physical and astrological uses, treated of, each plant appropriated to the several diseases they cure ... / [Robert Turner].
- Robert Turner
- Date:
- 1664
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Botanologia. The Brittish physician, or, The nature and vertues of English plants. Exactly describing such plants as grow naturally in our land, with their ... applications and vertues, physical and astrological uses, treated of, each plant appropriated to the several diseases they cure ... / [Robert Turner]. Source: Wellcome Collection.
168/336 page 144
![ee antes eres > a Yo pas ee SERS Ss te 174. The Brittifb Phyfician: or, b The! | bot or cold, but I judge it to be moderately hot, of the nature Nill of Jupicer , it hath a binding drying faculty , i i an excel- Jin fe cellent herb for all difeafes of the Adit, by reducing it to its Wyeith; | li right temper , whether it be too much opened, or {wollen hardy Wiyqu slit! | or flopped. The decoction thereof taken in Wine, and the Drath herb boiled and laid to the grieved place; it likewt{e mal- lifies, opens, and firengthens the Liver and Stomach , and | Stops the Terms, [pitting of blood, and other Fluxes. A decom ion made of Harts Tongue, Kyot-grafs, and Comfrey roots, Hii a draught thereof being drunk, every morning, and the boiled Dr herbs applyed to the grieved place,t 4 good remedy againfe | Dade, Byrfine{s: it is alfo profitable inthe Faundies, Kings Evil, \{tik, wt and bitings of venomous Beafts. The herb, or juyce applyedy | the middle cleanfeth Wounds and Ulcers » and the diftiled water t com- t dented ash mended againfi the pafion of the Heart, Hiccop, and bleed~ | eons | Pere ee ert et eee 5 ioe ee 5 a Gk SPENT AES SAA BEETS PULSES ing of the Gums. | leaves, bro | sc See more of this in the Art of Simpling = written ptetov,0 by W. Céleés. | fall brow : ) . | ro0tis | Hazel Nut Tree. Nux tenuis. sak : TT is fo well known it needs no Defcription.. Bs Neer Names, | Nux tenuis, or Parva, fome call it, to di- | a fore ftinguith it from Walnuts, others Corylus , and Nux Avel= } 4. in fro lana. Thofein Gardens are called in Englith Filberdsy } ply, artd the wilde kinde, Hazel and Small Nuts. A hotles of Place and Time. | They are commoners in moft Woods J and Voi, and Hedges, the truit of fome of them is ripe in Angas Ire. and of others not till the beginning of Ofober. 1 Nae; Nature and Vertues..] Hazel Nuts frelh gathered, are hot fli and moift, but afterwards they grow dry ; they are ander the i Planet Mercury > the skin that covers the kernells is very a- §. a es Ree PRE RSS tet rate TO | ‘At . : eh mw toch firingent, fo ave thé Katkins, a dram thereof in wine flayes Be Womens Courfes: The parched kernels made into’ an Elettaa~ Qy,,_,_ ry helps anold Cough: Oi ojl may be preffed from the ker- ESR He Rg se ide EE BS | Wa | i : 2) i ied mf) ! im Hite a) nels | 2g ite er](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b30325730_0168.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


