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.
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![ee SS SAG Re irae Ie te Ke cB oe RES BEY Ee eee ty SSC RRS 5 Sh Se ES nia coins Col le ARTE a Sl Ma WS nN nrg ree ME So de ER at SERIES Boar pe SPR oD RSS Be eS eae a See EY Ri a EE Ra Spe. EST. BES net Sees aa wicias CREE EEE sabes SIERO ARs De REM RIERA NRT tte e ceamediitniincsiansaaeasss |My — 66 ibe Brittifo-Phyfician: or, . tiation we ————= Lee LEY RC SAN Ears | — whitifh green colour, theftalk rifeth half a yard high, and Jy; beareth white flowers’; the feeds are ‘harp pointed and wy blackifh, the root is fmallandlong , and. peritheth every | iin year after it hath born'feed. : 3 Names.-| Its common name in Latine is Cerefoliumis or |y ity Cherifoliam, in Englifh Chervil. wilt Place'and Time. | tis planted in Gardens, andis a good |; y; fallet herb at firft while it is young and tender, and grows | pj eth alfo wilde in many places , the feed will be ripe about |, June ; and being fown again prefently , will {pring again | ji and be a.good fallet in Autumne. | | Naturé and Vertues.] Chervil is “moderately hot and |. dry, tt provokes Urine, and eafeth the'pricking pains of the |. yi Stones and openeth inward obftruttions , it warms. the Sto= | 2) mach and the decoction thereof provokes fleep, it provokes | and at the Terms, ts effectnal-ezainft the Plurifie, and pricking pains leaves, inthe fides ;’ and according to Pliny, the root beaten with Mal- | i: R lows drameth forth fplinters out of theflefh: it is an herb of | thee Ma aais Ry hen ete | ant “The Chefunt. Tree. .Caftanca. > | ta peftription, ere to be-actall Tree, bearing | - great rough dented leaves, and bloometh forth long Catkins in the Spring, of a greenith. yellow colour, the fruit is inclofed in a prickly husk, which Open= |) eth when they grow ripe, and.the Nuc appeareth covered |, with a brown husk. . Names, | Caftanea, and Caftaneum, are the ufual Latine |, names thereof, in Englith Chef{nuts: ee Fai Place and Time,| 'They grow wilde inthe Woodsin |,” Kent, andinthe hedgesin the Road to Canterbury , yet in| other Counties of this Land are planted in Orchards and | Gardens’ the fruit isripe about Adichzelmas time. i. Natureand Vertues, |, Che/nuts. are dry and aftringents |, Tie](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b30325730_0094.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


