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Show A B brooke, where moft of thé hedges are nothing elfe bur Barberie buthes They are planted in'gardens in moftplaces of England, rf % The time, The leaues {pring foorth in April: the flowers andfiuit in September. : ee ts » The names, Per fete % The vertucs. The fiuit is vfed in divers fawces for meate, as thofe that are skilfullin Cookerie cai bettertell then myfelfe. Theyare vied in brothes in fteede of Veriuice which maketh the broth not onely pleafantto the tafte,but is greatly profitable to fuch as are troubledwith a hot burning ague, C_ Theyarediuerfly eaten,but howfoeuertheybe eatentheyalwaies ingender rawand cold bloud: they nourifh nothing or verylittle : they alfo ftaic the belly andftenclibleedings, D Theyftop the menfes,or monethlyficknes,except they happen to be taken intoacold ftomack, then do they not helpe,but rather clogge or trouble the fame by fome manerofflixe. E The ripe berries as theyare {weeter fodo they alfolittle or nothing binde,and are fomthing hor, F and yeeld a little more nourifhment then thofe that be not ripe,and the fame not crude or rawe,bur thefe are feldome eaten or vied as fauce. The iuice of the greene Goofeberties, coolethall inflammations , Ery/pe/as, andSaint Antho- aka callerh.this Thorne an Greeke sfud$2, who maketh i iffer from s2ivvevlec. in hi ofthe Faculties of fimple medicines: but more plainly aie ee i aR f 2 nae mentsywhere he reckoneth vp the tender{prings gionsg thetender pring of Barbaties i Sra ; a eee fhootes that’are tobeeatén,fuch as Oxyacanthus or the Hawthorne bringeth not foorth, wherein he planly mad diference betweene Oxyacantha the Barberie buth sand Oxyacanthus rhe FiveihiGenes Poe Diofeorides hath made mention of this Thorne, for that which he calleth Ox acatithai : he. minine gender,is Galems Oxyacanthusinthe Mafculine gender, Seen, Coe nicen Seeeth to conteine boththefe thrubs ynder the name of Amyrberis but we k they areneitherofaffinitie or neighbourhood, althoughthey be both prickly =: i Thefhtubit felfe is called in fhops Barberies of tlie corrupted name Amyrbetis: ofthe later mien Cre(ptr rin Italian Cre/pimo:in Spanith E/pino demaiuelas: in high Dutch PO aiffelbeers in lowe Dutch Saufeboat¢ in French Efpine vinette:and thereupon by aLatinename Spin ‘apse Sjina mids, and Oxyacantha Galeni. ee % The temperature. nies fire. G H Theyprouoke appetite, andcoole the vehement heatof the ftomacke andliver. The yoong and tender Jeaues eaten raweina fallade , prouoketh vrine, and driueth foorth the ftone and grauell, Of Barberies. Theleaues and berries of this thorne are cold anddriein the fecond deoree sand as Garr alfo alnimeththey are ofthinne parts,and haue a certaine cutting qualitie, 2 Chap.21. % The vertues, Theleaues are vied of diuers to feafon meatewith,andin {teed of a {allade, as be thofe of Sorell. A : The decoction thereofis goodagainft hot burning and cholericke agues:it alaieth the heate of B the bloud,and tempereth the ouermuch heateof the liver. % Thekindes, The ftnite of berries are good for the fame things,and bealfo profitable for hot laskes ‘andfor C thebloudy flixe,and they ftaie all manier offuperfluous bleedings, ; There be divers forts ofBarbeties;fome gréater, otherslefler,and fome withourftones, Spina acida fue Oxyacantha. ‘The Barberie buth. o greene leaues of the Barberie buh {tamped, andmiade into fauce, as that made of Sorrell, D tagreenefauce doth coole hot ftomackes, andthofe thatare vexed with hot burning agues, aad procureth appetite, cs. % The defeription. He Barberie. plant is an high fhrub ot bufh having many yoong ftraight{heores andbranches,very full of white and pric ly:thomes ; the rinde whercot 1s {mooth thinne,the woodeitfelfe yellow: theleat esa me long, very greene, flightly nicked ab se ye flow the afte: fowerr ofa edges, and BY: lowe, ftanding in clufters vpon gf sted their places come vp long berriessfl I! of acdek fittleh witha ripe, be when they fharpetalte : the {tone within; of'a fower and! Jfe far abroas,4 roote is yellowe; difperferh it tc i and is ofa woodie fubftance. gardens 7 uct n Londo our in haue We fub sn fort, whofe fiuiteislikein formeofand as three the comme but onebertieisas big S kinde,wherein confiftech the t : ah withoutany We hauedikewife another Barberies, of the the frisite is like the reft in fubftance and tafte. rheplace cAfein j The Baiberiebuth growethof it 6 toiled places and defart groundNys,inabout a GE Ly: aoe "4 ie> the bordersoffieldes,efpecy " Pa tlemans houfe called Matter two mules° Iuer, in'a village called aoe madeofthe fruite and fugar, performeth all thofe things before remembred, but E orce and fuccefle. pets of the tree fteeped for certaine daies togither in {trong lie,made with afhes of the ath F sand the haire often moiftnedtherewithsiakethit yellow. Ofthe white Thorne,or Hawthorne Tree... (hap.r%. Hetebe ty z _ % The kindes. : 0 forts of the whire Thorne Trees defcribed ofthe later writers one vefy commonin oa of England : thereis another-very rare, and not founde in Burope), except in fome tifuith cnsof Germanic; which differeth not from Our COMES Hawthorne; fauing that Lich eae as yellow as Saffron: we hauein the welt of England one growing at a place calby thereport of diners of Bod cred Unte , whichbringethfoorthhis flowets about Chriftmas, ue the fames but my felfe haue notfeenc it;andtherefore leaue it to be vine, Mete tewho hauefee xamined, te The defeription. Peare tree: the Hewhite Thorne is a great fhrub growing oftentimes tot he height of the woodidie fer full of long th or bodie is great : the boughes andbranches Hard and ttunke {in t Otnes : the leaues be broade,cut with deepe gaflies into : diters 5 fect ions; a 8 pe agliter; or, Sting ‘ rundles, ofapleafan {weete‘ fin flowers grow vpon{pokie the : tm 3 5 8teene colour whit “Mes wath of pury ple; which hath mooued fome to 2 ‘omedigt Sand often dafht ouer with alight 2 a it 8round berries, greene the fruite, being come which after plants: the “a zr 4 re did iC whitifh f ¢ * n is founde a foft fweete pulpe, and cercaine I ‘ Mote otower} cy beripe ;wherei . Sthdeepe in the gtound,ofa hard woodie fubftance Ecce 3 bes 2 Th ftShe sk The temperature. The berries of this buth before they betipe, are colde and drie, andthatin the latetend of the fecond degree,andalfo binding. ra pokedTottyPeete | HISTORIE OF PLANTS, THE THIRD BOOKE OF THE aeli Dalle et Pee 1144 |