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An other medicine for the stone
Take a handfull of parsley stampe it & streyne it with white wine or Ale & every morninge drinke therof fastinge:

An other for the same:
Take Saxifrage & distill it to water & make Surrope therof as if it were of Roses & put therto a quantitye of Shuger & so eate it & it will breake the stone:

An other for the same:
Take a quarte off malmsey, of Time, of parsley, of each one handfull boyle them together untill it be healfe wasted, then streyne it & drinke therof lukearme eveninge & morninge:

An other for the same
Take the leaves of Raddishe distilled & drinke the water therof morninge & eveninge: Take oslo the powder of Elder flowers a sponefull at a time with wine or beare:

An other for the same:
Take of the Rootes of parsley, pelitory & reed nettles, of each a like quantitye, washe them cleane & mince them smale & lay them in good white wine fowr & twentye howers, then distill all together & drinke it To tooe pownd of Rootes put a quarte of white wine:

An other good medicine for the stone
Take a quarte of Malmsey & as much cleane well water, & a sponefull or tooe of honney & one handfull or tooe of ripe hippes well brayed in a morter boyle all together then strayne them & lay the hippes to the navell bound fast with a towell when goe yee to bedd & drinke a hartye drawfte of the Juce that is strayned, as whott as yee cane.

An other for the same:
Take the inner rinde of the [foole] of rough [fooled] done, dry it betwen tooe tile stones & beate it to fine powder. Take a quantitye of fine Amber as much Jett beaten into powder each by it sealfe: And when you have neade take of each powder a like quantitye & drinke it lukewarme with white wine or ale: This is olso good for the strangnillion:

Others for the same:
Take Roch Samphire distill the same & drinke of the water: Take the stone that is in the oxe galle beate it into powder & drinke it in water malmsey & water of wilde time:

An other for the same
Take Bay berries one peniworth, Sinamond tooe peniworth, Eliceris one peniworth, thre Acornes made into powder, thre Cloves of a lillye roote dried uppon a tile before the fier, of Reed Sage, of Reed fenell, of each one hanffull made into powder, for a woman take one handfull of parsley shredd & sodd with one peniworth of prunes in a quarte of Ale untill halfe be consumed, then streyne it & put into it one sponfull of the powder & so lukewarme let the patiente drinke of it eveninge & morninge: olso yo must in VIII peniworth of parmasihe, one oyster shell burned to powder, II peniworth of Cloves & mace, III dates stones beaten, Aniseedes II peniworth smale [pepped] I peniworth

An other esspetial water for the stone:
Take strawberies & distill them & drinke the water therof & it is very good for the stone. It hath bine often proved:

A good medicine for Collike & the stone
Take a pinte of Sallet oyle, halfe a handfull of white salte, seeth it & dippe in the same tooe or thre handfulls of Blacke wolle as the [shipp] have it carded & binde the same from the navell to the botome of the bellye as warme as you can suffer it:

A very Soveraigne Oyntmente for the Collicke & the Stone
Take of wormewoode, of Rew, of each one handfull, of Bayes, of holihocke leaves, of each tooe handfull, of lillye slowers, of lavender, of spike, of each thre handfulls, of Camomill flowers, of Melilott flowers, of each fowr handfulls, of brome flowers picked from the greane as much as of all the rest, then stampe them all & put into of hogges greace purely tried the weyght of all the styffe afforesayde, then stampe all together in a greate morter & put them into a panne close stopped for the space of seven dayes, then boyle them on a softe fier ever stirringe it for the space of one hower & a halfe, then streyne it throughe a [corousle] clothe & keape it in smale pottes & annoynte the soore place therwith:

A good medicine for the Collicke
Take mustard seeds & grinde them smale the quantitye of halfe a pinte, with the strongest vineger you may gett, then take halfe a pownde of the best figges & pare off the skinne & stampe them in a morter a good while & then put the mustard seede & vineger together & make therof a playster & lay it to the place greved, so that you lay a clothe betwene it & the playster not warmed, & you shall (god willinge) finde therby greate easse: Probatum:

A good medicine for the Wormes, Ague, Newsicknes, or to drive any thinge from the harte:
After you have made Common possett ale, take away the Curde & seethe in the drinke a quantitye of holye Thistell as much as will make it bitter & drinke therof: Mrs Reade:

A good medicine for the stinginge of an Adder or any other venemous beaste:
Take the shell snayles which in sommer keape in gardens & in winter in Corners, breake the shells & lay the snayles in a fayer dishe & pricke them with a pinne so that the oyle may come from them: Annoynte the patiente with the same oyle with a feather & so usse it alwayes, as the oyle drinketh in & when you may perceave the place wher the stinge wente in take one of the snayles not pricked & lay it to the sayd place olso beware the swellinge risse not the harte, therfore let the place stonge lye hier then the harte, & take aquavitye & treacle & strike it on a linnen clothe of the breadth of an [guch] & girde it above the place wher the stinginge is, towards the harte that it may preserve the swellinge from thence:

A good medicine for winde in the stomacke:
Take a good handfull of Mother [time] seethe it in thre pintes of white wine at the leaste, untill it be halfe consumed, then take some of the time & stripe off the leaves, whiche cleanes with a little treakell drinke together with the wine it was sodden in, It is a perfect good medicine for dissease above sayde:

A Soveraigne medicine for a Bruse in the Eye
Take yearbe Cristopher & beate it well then putt to it may buter & sett it in the sonne for a good space & when you thinke it well sonned take it in & put it in a covered cupp, then putt it in a panne of seethinge water & so let it boyle [leyswelye] a whole day, then take it ouot & streyne it, when it is to to be ussed, it must be molten & dropped into the eye with a feather, as whott as the patient can suffer it, let it be ussed at morninge & eveninge, but he must lye uppon the bedd for the space of tooe howers at least after dressinge:

A medicine for the wateringe eyes:
Take the leaves of reed worte & annoynte it with the whitte of an egge & lay it to the wateringe eye when the patiente goeth to bedd:
Probatum:

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