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Show rong Cx Tripe 9. Botanicum. er Theatrum AP.27> TE eae ee lik ate round and Nand two at j greater and more upright without any thornes on them, the leaves , and the fruit efeute ro es former, the buds are greater and foarethe white flowers in like manner T aise 9. 4. Capparis Arabica non Spinofa, Great h upright ftemmes without thorn The Arabian Caperis a {mall fhrubbe growing up with many flow sand ae greater and larger then the laft Egyptian kinde, the frnit being of the bienefie Tee i ies id j iting ides hath noted, and others fince Bee g tafte as Dio/cor i , ofa fharpe and bitin a therein wich divers fe: Wallnut or at aa cS 5. Capparisfabago five leguminofa, Beane Capers alkes like thé other, branchi The Beane Caperrifeth up with diversgreene herby and not twooddyft leaves oppofite ane unto ii a ‘he uh two fromthe very botcome, at the feverall joynts whereof grow re unto Purflane ei in he n: being fomewhatlike alwayes two together at the end of the footefta:lke,the forth fingly one at a mati come flowers of Beanes S: ete oes — leaves : : ; f li unto Caper bloffomes, being white ftanding ina greene very like they areare blowne opent are very ore they which before round thefruit followeth fomwhar long and after which huske and with many yellow threads in the middle, and We dd seis {mall brownith feede :the roote islong opening into feverall parts, wherein is contained ees cote cs wayes. many ground forth long {trings and branches under The lace, : i /taly, Spaine and fomeparts of France,as alfoaga of The two firft forts grow naturally inthe ftony places ofnot fo frequent as the other Theophraftus t ted leaves + sf = the hotcountries Ealtward, yet that withpoin ee ets vant line s ait ee oltore bide no cur yet Pliny fheweth that in his time they ufed to plant it in Iraly uponridge bap the deepe trenches filled up with ftones to keep¢ in the roots from overfpreading thefield or ground wh “ ize faith Laue = ke them frnétifierhe better, the third Bellonius set pated or ys that rhe ones would°ma 1.8 . at f mile fromos Alexandriastk ae is Type i aloofe {angy, field not far fromthe Lake Aareotis which is about halfea poe eahere re alfo found ashe (aith in the clefts of the rockes on mount Tazrms in Arabia The Place, a rai Th i i esi he two firft forts as I {aid before foot forth thei Saiy sot Goyenflowring tis = ee -fametime after, whenastheir fruit is not ripe untill cadespnneatkeo wo : keepethe = ; sof fe aetes \ the leav on and {hooting frethev leaves keeping theirtheir oldold , butbur keeping ictifying, and frnétifying : the end ofSommer. wine tae a ers and Capparn eS SRin « Eamelh owned sa ieee The Names, z Lati alfo in is 7 i tis called in Grécke x27 i fan colette Ioter@, Pliny femethto thinkeic was the Sie. seb oe d in Diooe Greeke Raes hier ee nae h ste camongt sy i a 1 1 hee f1ai {corids Sy Cynosbatos at is one which e e hi n i e oe ey ellonius an ae ee booke plants, et pane tian fecond Fetion his in Napa ius f bie the fecond but by afewND) plants, ochicte Sy ptian : ay ees cone, ons and-Cha of Oblersati i and arborefcens = pparis non [pinefa the third by the name ofCapparé mentionof the! 1ap.2.1, ervations Sp BS Aras maketh : cag a 1isalfo remembred by Bellonius in the faid fecond booke and 66. Chapter, fi o ne his : erne writers Capparis Leguminofa, or Cappart } tis e Fp hedeor a EsofRy Aland the Rbafis : tori Andirian be theURab taketh it a? andaca as Rauwolfius faith AZo rgfani, Syriansa. Pc o Belgarum,bythe es Bauhinus calleth ee sa cet rit moft propesly to agree unto the Telephinm of Diofcorid ae Pariat Paris,and theretore Lugdunenfis callethit Pepls 4 sina P08 a faithit oo ee : af the accent according yarvi i to their; Greeke and Latine, but ne Greeke varying ing to the Capers according i apers ation Sails a The Vertues, i ri nothing,yet (2 doe nourith ickled up in or doe a little move the belly, but 1¢ Capers, fuchas cor apa and ‘ jec i dejected ‘ed GEER tee or de y d and the appetite fo eaten n dofti keine do flirre upp the dfteeped in1 Vinegar he Saeetee Vineg feavom ii cbftructio ER theCRE tr to open he doe helpe i asasalfo alfo f doe oydit, the and1 avoydit, ng tothem to flegme icking flegar flicki bowells lls of REOCE t te clenfe the Liver of the Splecncahd eiiiesh w f that the Ani Liver: 1 eptimofimpl, fimpl, wed, the roote ro of Capers : Oeconfilteth ifietk of the Barkeof 1¢ Barke in1 [cptimo fheweth Galen and Spl Rives cahey of vatitautet I D purgeth cle leit i clenfeth, the b bitrernefleit $s | qua rv $ el nelyJ firftbextren extreme bitter, th fower, , by by the i e, then arpe, ne fharpe, er, r next r ore eats peltfa itheateth, catteth, and digefteth, and bythe fowernefle it contracteth, on oth ao paler By aptheres ayaileable for the hardnefle of the Splecne, whehee : cenaopen Isa medicine above all otherthings to annoint the place, or the r tts Dove re iene aes Ny e itfelfe, or mixed withother and taken, OI abah ah unw ardly, or the powderof the roote mixed with the faid decoétion and Sh Ebert oe that it ayy deth grofie andvifcous humors,not onlybythe urine but bythe betlyalfo = pothole tha | TE ! geth away withitc ngealed and corrupted blood, and thereby givetk ER SOUR 5H ee in the is geean isin the Hippes i or Sciatica, weakenefle Spl with orpaines or Palfies, 1¢ Spleene with Gouts tsthe troubled ees utter SaaS from the head draweth it them: procure to {topped it ater ag ev are po oe nat have their courfes : Convulfions and Cram acs wt ey ee that are the originall caufe of Rupreres, faaure e i; > 3 > {pe nuc rie cs 1 ne a e si 3 ke of the es of Capers is an efpeciall remedy to helpe fowle ¥ cee taut eid Lereslitantc oe ie 5 ee clenfeth and mightily dryeththem, and is alfo good for hard {welra di aeh Se che t fae alfo effe@tuall for the {aid purpofes, and foare litt] Vine Vinegar heatedinin a little and heated ifed and fi brnifed 1 roots ; the(feede ; ; then the DEESOT : Weld betw and held Weaker fthem and ealcth thefines oe seventh the fame rootes alfo bovled in oyle and dropped intothceares oopeileened or bones + ery a : ing in them : the leaves and flowers, but efpecially the barke ofthe 1g AP ithe citing Whattoeve: ap va et eens on ofall morphew, freckles, fpots or any orher difcoulo i nei of abe the fides an ver good nfefe agai againft the paines made of aac is of very that 1sthe oyle tae : . The.Wrabiaetatlscsaek 2 Spleens. well faith,iris not Sirius Gaviolos eftietane ee er and almoft exulcerating,and therefore as P/iny Syr#Europian kindes, The Beane Caper is ufed bythe <ourowne Ee : the kill to faith ans as Rauwelfins wormes in children and to drive them forth — Cuap,28. 1025 Cuap. XXVIII. others doe,and herein confit the chiefe diffe pase at the former : this loofeth not rhe leaves in Winteras the zee Capers of Arabia, : The Theater of Plants. : Cuar. dix Pliny; ideft, Sping acuta feu poriua Spina appen Oyacantha Diojcoridis quibufdam,Thor ne or Hawthorne. The white orts then oné, but wee have in our knowne formerly to be of any moref cavity He Hawthorne hath not beene other which fhall be prefently fhewed you, two time had the knowledge of horne. : 1. Spina appendix vulgaris. The ordinary Hawt reafonable height ifconvenient d tobea tree ofa place fome in thup growe e horn Hawt The common bebuta fhrubbe or hedge buth, ,with it forward, otherwife irgroweth to e= dreffing, pruning and keeping helpe thornes andfaire fhining leaves,fom e fharp s place whereonare fet in divers givers fhoots armes and branches, the ts+ spar diver edges into x. Spinaappendix valgai. what broad, and cutin on the ther,comming forth both at The ordinary Hawthornecree. flowers are many{tanding coge r joynts with the leaves, uppe the tops of the branches and e s a peece, with divers whit confitting offive white leave red, and of avery pleawith tipt rhreadsin the middle, what fome h come berries fant fweere fent, after whic lively red colour when, ofa long, with the roundneffe {weete intafte, conteitheyare fully ripe and fomewhat e feedes lying in a flocky or ning within them divers whit it harfh in rafting, and if downie fabfance which make e to the throate and hart ftick it fhould bee eaten it would ethfarte and deepe. grow the winde pipe : the roote low Hawthorne. 2. Spina entabumilior. The ethfo high or great as grow r neve e horn Hawt low The but longer divided on the former, the leaves are fmaller + the flowersalfo are white the edges in the fame manner clufters, but the fruit that or and fwveete and grow in tufts Saffron colour, in other followethis yellow tending toa er. oth the from not reth diffe things it nica. 3. Spina acuta biflora Brita Englands Hawthorne. e growing indivers We have another fort of Hawthorn e that dwell about thof places of our Land well knowneto greatly regarded or not the places where they grow, yet of thofe that have wondered at by them noryet by many efic chat it fhould not think feene them growing :but I doe fmal ly refpected,for I fupe be foflightly paffed over ot fo , or of the God of nature pofe ita ftrange worke ofnature g in all parts thereof like rather,to caufe fiuch a tree bein bloffome twice every unto the common Hawthorne, to in AZay as all others of the yeare, the one time ufuallyChri ftmas, cyther fomewhat kind doe, the other about g to the temperature before or fomewhatafter, accordin Winter before bee of the Winter at thattime, forif the hard weather, it or other v milde without either great frofts as in A4ay, fometimes over willbe in blofflome white all oweE : mber, but ifit bee hard and Dece n elfei or , her be over sit beareth alfo after thefe , fo mber weat Nove in s in (May ome untill Zaneary that the hard fharpe weather it will not blof in the Winter before any greene leaves doe appeare or bloffome nor beene obferved ers are pa(t greene berries.even time uponthe tree: there hath tt hath beene diand greene at one and the fame might thinke as Some e. thar it will have bothripe fruit horn Hawt ary ordin Kind and the e by the rootes of any other difference becweenethis eneth,by reafon of fomehot fpringes that take their courf dered, Is too ed among divers that this happ {ome appearance of likelihood, but wifely {canned and confi all the other trees in of none and , which reafonI grant hath place ina thist fome blof n divers places for howfhould one tree onlyand befides this there are of thefe treesi light I chinke to hold weight, running ; t, where tract or compaffe of the fame {pringes fhould bee rather Highftree the fame t,asit is valgarly called, but tts, and expofed to the beaten with cold and Northerlybla upon open foyle, whereI thinkeno it @andethin a moorifh ground thounoghfhelt er ot defence, but {tanding in a flac and ughly, h in Whey feree ofthe Land, asin Rumney Mart a banke it thro furious winds on allfides, having : let the wife and judicious fcan y to breake forth or runne neareit hot {pring eyther dothor is likel e of the foyle and {prings,or the naturall kinde of the trees if this come to paffe by the natur The Place, any : the and woods: the fecond in Germ the hedges and borders of fields in e wher and neare unto every eth grow firlt The ot Whey fireet in Rumney Marfh,thou ireet Highf in e faid befor sis from che ght anda y, name as it was lat at Glaffenbury Abbe called white greene, which tooke the Nantwiche alfo in (he[bire dy a place greencs= white bufhes ofthornes which therethey call The Time. s arily about Chriftmas, fometimeon ordin extra and A4ay in arily ordin doc hang rr he time of thefe to flower is {pecified to be y trees in September, and dinar or the on ripe is fruit the : alittle before and {ometimesa little after the frofts doe make them fall. them all the Winter as meate for birds,oruntill |