-

OverviewTranscribeVersionsHelp

Facsimile

Transcription

Status: Needs Review

Garden lupyne boiled & after
steeped in [fair?] water till suche tyme
as it doth altogether loose his naturall
bitternes & lastly being sesoned with a
resonable resonable quantity of salt
it is eaten with pickle, the lupyne is of
an hard & earthic substance wherof
it is of a hard digestion with being
not pfected concocted in the veines
[Fugendreth?] a blood wyce called
Crude, or [Pawe?], but when it hath
lost all the bitternes by sparing or
dressing of it as aforesaid it is lyke to
suche thinge as are without rekorse
which is pceyved by the tast

The decoction therof inwardlie taken
voideth wormes & lykewise if it be
sundrie tymes used as a bath it is a
remedie against the morphewe
fore heade the small pockes wyld scabb
gangreene & venemous ulcers.
the roote boiled in water & dronke
pvoketh urin

Notes and Questions

Nobody has written a note for this page yet

Please sign in to write a note for this page