The seconde booke. fo.19 | ||||
Liber 2 | ||||
Heere beginneth a true copye of such medecines wherewth | ||||
Mris Johan Ownsteade daughter unto ye worshipfull | ||||
Mr John Olliffe alderman of London hath cured and | ||||
healed many forlorne & deadlye diseases:——- | ||||
1. For a sore breaste to rotte* it | ||||
Take groundes of the strongest ale you can get, & crummes of leavened | ||||
breade & and red rose leaves dryed & boyle it till it be thicke, then take it of | ||||
the fire, & worke it with 8 spoonefulls of sallet oyle* & chaunge it 3 times | ||||
a daye, & it will rot it, breake it, drawe it & heale it. | ||||
2. To heale the same | ||||
Take the iuice* of smallage*, & wheate flower*, the yelke* of an egge, & a | ||||
little honye, boyle all these together upon a chafeing dish & coales till it | ||||
be thicke & so implaster*[*] it, & this shall both drawe & heale it fayre, | ||||
but you must tente* it with the salve to keepe it open so long as you can. | ||||
3. A present remedye agaynste the dropsie & all swellings | ||||
whatsoever they bee, it doth asswage the payne in the | ||||
synnewes*, it provoketh urine, & causeth a man to be | ||||
laxative, & cureth the payne in the raynes* that | ||||
cometh by colde.—————————— | ||||
waxe | ||||
Take of the oyle of roses 20 ?, of white |
||||
Dwall* 8 ?, of white breade 4 ?, of common leade made into powder | ||||
2 ?, of trouches* a kinde of leade 2 ?, of frankencense 2 ?, make | ||||
those simples into powder, then seeth the juice of dwall with the oyle of | ||||
roses untill the juice be consumed, then mingle the waxe with ye pouders | ||||
& beate them in a mortar, & make your oyntemente. | ||||
4. An oyntemente for scalles*. | ||||
Take swines greace* 5 ?, of the oyle of bayes or of the bay tree j ?, | ||||
of quickesilver sleked* j ?, of waxe washed j ?, of frankencense made | ||||
into powder j ?, of masticke* j ?, of salte 8 ?, of the juice of planten* as | ||||
much as you will judge may suffice: make it after this fashion, set ye | ||||
juice on the fire with the waxe, the oyle of the bay tree & swines greace, & | ||||
let them all boyle till they bee melted then put thereunto youre salte, | ||||
frankencense & your masticke, & boyle them all till yor juice be consu- | ||||
med, then take it from ye fire: & put thereunto your quickesilver | ||||
sleeked, & so use it. | ||||
5. An oyntement for children | ||||
Take of washed turpentine 4 ?, of washed butter 2 ? of salte j ? of | ||||
the oyle of roses j ?, of ye juice of pomecitrone* & ye yelkes of 3 eggs, | ||||
mingle all these together & use it. | ||||
6. A composition which ye king Mithradates* did use. | ||||
Take the bloode | ||||
Abbreviations are underlined like this Wm. and the expansion may be seen by moving the cursor over it.
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Transcribed by SCS