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Show 1508 Cuar.77, Theatrum Botanicum, T rise 16 Slggassem being fharper,cooleth more, but doth not equally refit putride humours like it: an ounce arid ahalfe of the juyce of unripe Lemmons drunke witha little Malmef y helpeth to clenfe and expell tk ac {tone ont of the kidneyes and likewife killethand driveth forth the wormes in the bodyof menorchildren: if an angell of gold, machweight of pure leafe gold be fet to fteepe in three orfo or foure ounces of pure juyce of Lemmonsfor foure and twenty houres, and then taken out,ort he jayce drained cleane from it, and {ome of it given ina cup of Wine, with lictle pouther of Angelica roote unto any infected with the Plague, and dangeroutly ficke, hope orlikelihood of recovery) it willhelpe Cif there be any them, the fcedes ofthefe are likewile almoft as eflectuall as of the Citrons, the juyce of the {weete Lemmons is neither fo cooling norto operative for any of the purpofes afore mentioned, The deftilled water in glaffe from the inner pulpeor fubftance of Lemmonscleareth all freckles, {pots or other markes in the tace,or the skin from in any other part of the body, provokerh urine, expelleththeftonebeing drunke, and helpeth and breaketh and alfo the :unning fcab, and killeth lice inthe head, the the hands or nofe.and pufhes and wheales in the skinne. The juyce of Lemmons is fingular good wormes in in long voyages,toput into their Beverage to keepe to ufe at Sea them from the Scurvy; whereto long Sea jotrhie fubject ; as alfo the more abundantly to quench s are much their thirf in thofe hor climate s : it is no lefle ufefull at home for Dyers, who {pend much of it in ftrikin g fandry dainty colours whichwill never be well done withoutit, The Orenge tree, unto Wine, Malus Arantia vulgaris, The ordinary Orrenge trees 2. Malus Arantiafylueftris. The wilde or Crabbe Orrenge tree, The Crabbe Orrenge tree (as ottr Crabbe Apple tree) Stoweth wild, and is fuller ofbranch s, with thornes,the flowers and leaves are and thicker fet alike, bur lefer, and thefruite is very {mall, and of 3 pale yellow colour, with a thicke rindeand little jayce or fharpe within ir, bur — tafting as. a Crabbe with us, differeth from a good 3. Malus Arantiacortice dalei eduli, The Apple Orrenge. This Orrenge differeth from others not fo colour ofthe onter barke which is of a deepe much in the gold yellow- ipi dry } Hy theywere, and brought them away with him: Somecall them Asrantia a corticy coloreanreo, Cee icnmacees Aveetie oppido dicta, {ome Pomum Naraminum, ‘Dodonews Anarantinm, and Lobel Maluns fear hich name doth beft {uite with them for Golden Apples they are indeed : All nations call them ac- conde he Latine,and Clufius faith the Spaniards call them Naranjas, andthe third fort here fet downe Na- aca the Germanes call the Orrenge Pomerants, andthe French sift! ee The flowers of the : are called Nepha,and the oyntment~_— Unguenthm # 3 =&; '° Orenge: tree ex ae , i bitteret and horter then thofe ef Lemmons,or Citronsjand t ercfore doe warme wn et assotala o breake the winde therein,and the flegme, and after the -bitterneffeis taken fron aca fteepin; them in water for fundry dayes, and then preferved either wet ordry, befides their ufe ace ce OM raiite leffe cffe@uall for the ftrengthening of the heart and fpirits, and the other qualities th ou “ one the juyce is farre inferiour to cither of them, and are fitter for meatethen medicine, yet and comfortthe otherplaces of the bodyes. Craps LXXVIIL Malim Affyria vel Poma Adami, 4 yettwoor three times bigger, pale eee Hedek, tes tugged or uneven, and with fomerifts or chaps thereon, as if it had beenebitten; (from whence was obtruded that fond opinion unto the vulgar, for wife men would be afhamed of nee diculousan opinion, that it wasthe frnice that 4: taftedin Paradice,and that therfore the markes fee d remaine upon the whole kinde ever after but thus have yon three or foure trees foilted into mens ~~ by irreligions cozeners , for Adana: Apple, like to the are curious of rare fruices, and is in nature like the reft, The Names. ; This is called by fome Porm, and Malum ee um, as denoting forth the place of his ey the more generall part Poma Adami, yet Cordus in ites calleth it Citrins altera,the Spaniards as Clufeus fait ; call i¢ Toronjas, and fome Zamboas, as the ee doe,the Zeaéians Lomic,and Pomi di Adamo, the Frenc Poncires ingenerall, ies hereof ate referred tothe Lemmons yorBleed ester juyce, and therefore not fomuch regarded as the others: itis by fome ufed to mee irchand takeaway che fcabs, to cut one of thefe through the middle, and thereon to calt fomefine = ther of Brimftone,being heated underthe cinders, an tubbed onthe parts affected afterwards. Spaine, and Portingall, the hedge or wilde Crabbe frnite ; oranty y faire and large,almoft as greatstho ¢ of the Citron or »poun t : eeeireaiidtaryaleepreaeasboleeaseierorLexyaes pomsted walt evergreen, and bearing fowersandfruite all the yeare long. The Place and Time, Sals a inthelike ase the Rlowets _ are —much unlike,bit the fruite that followethis morelike uné rrenge, The Place and Time. : i This groweth with the other forts in fundry pc of Spaine, among the Monafteries, or with others t ~ All thefe forts likewife we have feene being brought ns ftom Adams Apple. @Histree forthe molt part groweth as great as the Orrengetree, yet fometimes it isdes 35 therlike the Apple Orrenge as Clw(ias faith, TDpgs AO, S SSVssSSS §. Malus Arantia pumilio, The Dwarfe Orrenge tree. The ftocke of this dwarfe tree according to his name is low, and the branches Brow thicke, well flored with leaves, bur they are leffer and narrower then theother,the flowers alfo' are many, and thicke which beare fruite more plentifully fer on the branches, then the former, but is leffe then the greater forts, yet as well coloured. ere knowne to the auncients whocalled them 44/4 anrea He(peridum, being ode: wh next roit, and withan acide {weete juyce, yet not fo pleafantas others, lying in parts and round seine ae mongft it like the Citron, which maybe eaten altoge- DD, S Pu r eee iy ifhred, but inthe whole fruite, which is through cut as firme almoftas an Apricocke, and yet diftinguithed into parts on theinfide, like others, which together withthe barke orrindeis tobee eaten like an Apple, the bar ke or rinde notbeing bitter or tough like the reft : the Spaniards call this Maranja caxel. 4. Malu: Arantia unicograno, The Orrenge without feedes, This onely differeth from that Orrenge with thebeft fower juyce in having batone graine or{eed in the whole joyce lying within ir. A oe Puaidcins Tewe made it one ofhis taskes or labours to flay the Dragon that kept the reft ofthe Rellickes in the World) a Spongyfubftance iy Vn PrasGa) S = CHa P.78, from the hither parts of Spaine,and keepe cay:ee hath yi ae erfume,it is good againit contagious difeafes,and peftilentiall feavers, to drinke thereof atfunpee sithel th alfothe cold and moift infirmities of the mother: the oyntmentthat is made of the flowers pecmaai to dinoint the ftomacke to helpe the cough, and to expeétorate the cold raw flegme, and to warme Have likewife five forts or rather kindes of Orrenge s to fhew yon, which are thefe, 1, Malus Arantia vulgaris, The ordinar y Orrenge tree, The grafred or ordinary manured ©; Tenge tree a) nc fle, {preading large armes and branches witha growcth oftento a very great heighth and bigroughe r barke below, and finooth greenc onthe A branches, yer itis alfo oftenfound lefle in leffe fruitefull foiles, {paringly armed with fharpe bur fhort thornes, the leaves are fomewhat like unto thofe of the Lemmon, but that each leafe hath a peece of a leafe fecunderit,and are not denteda t all about the edges,and are asfull offmall holes of the former, the flowers are whitith,bur of in them, as any a ftronger eft, and ufedto manyother purpofes then either of the other: the fruite hereofi f colour, which from it taketh the name of an Orrenge s ro c, ofadeepe yellowifhred colour, havi t whi outer coloured rinde,and a fower juycelying fubltance, next untothe mixed withfuch like feed alfo : the joyce of fome isleffe among (mal! ckinnes in feverall parts, as in the other forts, fower ; ; then others;and ofa tafte betweene fower and{weernecre The Theater ofPlanis, on ss fe tinces of the Juyce taken at atime, will drive forth putrid humoursfrom the inner parts by fweat, ake fe ‘ then and comfort the heart, The deftilled water ofthe lowers, befides the odoriferousfentir Cuar. LXXVII. Malwa Arantia, Trepe 16, Nannan Malum Affyria vel Poma Adami. Adams Apple. |