^^ i- DUKE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY Treasure %oom Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2011 with funding from Duke University Libraries http://www.archive.org/details/hortusamericanusOObarh HORTUS AMERICA. CONTAININC AN ACCOUNT OF THE Trggs, Shrubs, and other Vegetable Produ^iloh O F §»ont5»am?nca ant) x.\\t 22?fa 7.itiui jnanDjJ, AND PARTICULARLY OF THE Island of Jamaica; Liter ff erf (d ivith many curious ord I'feful ObsirvatioNS, rtf^e8':n^ ti^cir^ U b Ji S in MEDICINE, DIET, and M £ C ii A N I C S. BY THE LATE Br. HENRY BAR HA M, TO WHICH ARE ADDED, A LinnjEan Inde^, ^c. ^a, <^c. ' KINGSTON, J^M^IC.1: PMNTBD AND PUBLISHED BY ALEXANDER A IK M AN, PRINTli TO THE king's most RXCELLENT MAJESTY, AND J TO THE HONOUR A BJ.j; HOUSE OF ASSEMBLY. M 0 C C X C I V. T O tHE HONOURABLE WILLIAM BLAKE, ESQiJIRE, iPEAivER, AND THE OTHER lME\rEIl3 OF THE HONOURABLE HOUSE O.' ASSE.^IELY, THIS ATTEMPT TO RESCUE FROM OBLIVIOZ^'" THE REMAINS OF AN ANCIENT AND RESPECTABLE WRITER OF THIS COUNTRY, IS MOST RESPECTFULLY INSCRIBED, B Y THEIR VERY OBEDIENT, AND DE^"OTED SERVANT, A. A I KM AN, c PREFACE. IT would be doing injuflice to the memory of the late doctor Barham, to Ihppoie it neceflTary for the editor to make any for- mal apology for publilhing what is univcrlally allowed to be the genuine performance of fo refpe6table a chara6ler, and which, from its own intrinfic merit, cannot fail of recommend- ing itfelf to every reader. Although no doubt can be entertained of the genuinencls of the work, yet it muft be owned that there is much appearance of want of ex- a(5lnefs, and fuch perfection as might be ex- pe6led from his hand : This, however, mud be attributed to the length of time which has elap- fed fince the death of the author, and the nu- merous hands through which the manufcript has paifed. Sir Hans Sloane, in the Appendix to his fe- cond volume of the Natural Hiftory of Jamaica, fpeaks in ftrong terms of do6lor Barham, and has made copious extrafts from the work, which he fays he received in manufcript from the doc- tor, 6 PREFACE, tor, and which he exprefTes a wilTi may foon bd publiihed : 1 he editor, however, is not aware that any other part, excepting the quotations made by Sir Hans Sloane, and fome extra6ls interfperled through Mr. Long's Synopjis^ was ever presented to the pubHc. it The anxiety expreiTed by many to fee the en- tire w^ork of- doctor Barham, has induced the editor to aim at rendering it as complete as poffible, by the addition of a Linnaean index, for vvhich he is indebted to a gentleman emi- nent for his botanical knowieds-e; an index of difeales, remedies, Sfr. has alfo been annexed, from which reference may readily be had to any part of the work, and, it is prefumed, in a manner intelligible to all claifes of readers. It was the w^ifli of the editor to accompany the vv^ork v/ith fome account of its ingenious and philanthropic author ; but his refearches and enquiries have not produced any materials "wherewith to gratify curiofity. All he can learn is, that he came to this country early in the prelent century, and m.arried Elizabeth Poller, the widow of Thom.as Foiter, efquire, of St. Elizabeth's, in whofe right he became polTeiTed of a coniiderable fortune in that pa- rilli ; he afterwards purchafed of the family of the Stevenfons, relations of Mrs. Earham, Me- fopotomia eitate, in Weitmorland. In the jour- nals PREFACE. 7 lials of the affembly, we find him a member of that body in the year 1731; and it appears that he returned to England about the year 1740, and fettled with his family at Staines, nenr Egham, v/herc he died, leaving his pro- perty in this ifland to j^oieph Foiier, the youngcft ion of Mrs. Barham by her former hulband, on toiidition of his alfuming the name and bearing the arms of Itarham, in addition to thoie of Foder. This gentleman was the father of the prexnt Joleph Foifer Barham, elqiiire, a mem- ber of the Eritiih parliament, and hitely mar- ried to lady Caroline Tufton, daughter oi the carl of Thane t. II O R T U 3 HORTUS AMERICAN US. Alder-Tree. THERE is a fort of aider grow.<^ in Jamaica, the virtues whereol" are niuch the I'aine with the Englifii alder, as cooling, dryiing, and binding. Alder-Tree, cr Kuttom-V/ood. We have a fort of alder, which is commonly called in Jamaica button-tree. It hath u laurel leaf, and fmall yellow flowers, with aider-like cones. The fiuit is drying, binding, and healing. Alligator-Wood. See Mufk-Wood. ALstNhs, 0^ Chick-Weed. We have three or four forts of thefe. They are cool-» ing, and of the natuie of puiflanes, &c. Ambergris. Many are the opinions about the origin of am- bergris, but none hath yet concluded with certainty A what fl HORTUS AMERICANUS. what it is, A certain mafter of a veffel affirmed, fejS*- faw a fpermaceti whale opened in North America, ivh the bowels of which was found a great quaniiiy of am- bergris, which made them believe it was the duncr of that fifti ; but I am more inclined to believe the tvhale might fwallow ir, meeting with it floating in the fea ; and indeed volumes liave 1 welled with diverfity of Opmions about this leftorative treafure, yet ail agree in its jurt tranfeendent virtues ; arid, let it proceed from vhat it will, 01 whatever it be, it is certain that it is a Xnofl powerful antido'e agairiU poiicn's ; for the Ber- mudians, thofe ot the Bahama iOands, and the Florida Indians whenever they are poilbned with fifh (which often they arf), they {]v to- am.bergris as a powerful antidote, and are cured therewith, and refcued from the mofl horrid fvmptoms threatening them. People that are acquainted and know the ufe of this fovereiga lernedv, take it in all weakneifes, and in great evacua- tions by vomiting and llools, arvd in. all other too-libe- ral difcharges of nature and (Irength; in dilpiritments, jn fevers, in the hip, or any melancholy or deje^led- nefs, they happily take ambergris, and that not in a very fmall quantity. I have feen. a- man, faith Dr, Trapliam, take two drachms at a time, without anv pre- judice, but made him as merry as if he had dranlc a great quantity of wine, Ambergi is, faith he, by its odoiiferous parts, unites the fpirits to themfelves, and ftrengthens by fuch addition thofe brifk minifler* «f life and fenfe, thereby enabling- them to cafl fortk their enemy. The advantage of fuch auxiliaries far ex- ceeds th.e tranfitnt inflammatoiy fpirit, fuch as rumor brandy, which only hurries the fpirits into a bnfk mo- tion, the fooner to haften an exit; whereas, our benign and powoful ambergris brings no danger of inflam- ing tile v/eak (pints tO' a conlumption, but rather in- creaielh I^ORTUS AMERICANUS. 3 creafeth the ftock; not fpurring nature to an over-ha^ zarding ftrain, but iuccours wirh adventitious and lafl:- ing ftrcngth, conveying apparently by a lafling and lubtle power, it being only difJolvedin wine, broth, or other warm liquids; the which when received rcfrtfhei it, and, by its nervous parts, fendeth impreffions into the whole body, aftd re^refhes the whole ecotioniy of liature, ejefting all morbific taints, not orlly egregious J)oirons, but all other noxious and offending Immours. It is a fignal remedy for the horrid Ipafms, or lofs oi the ufe of the limbs in the dry bclly-ache , itaifo ftops vomiting and loofcrrefTcs, is proper for all i award bruifes, and a moll Univerfal coidi.d ; it refiefhes the memory, and eafes all pains of the head, being diffolved in a v.arni mortar and mixed with ointment of orange- flowers, anointing tiie head,' temples, and forehead, therewith; it alio helpeth barrerinefs proceeding from ai cold caiife, and cures fits of the mother inwardly ta- keu : And Dr. Trapharh concludes with faying, that ue dare aflign ambergris to' be the mod uhiveifal cor» ilial in the world. Amu£r, Liquid. Sfe Liquid Amber, Anchoaca, a yellow Mallow^. See MalloWs, Anciiovy-Pear, This is the fruit of a very large tree, growing very plentifully in the mountains in Jamaica, and othlf parts of America. It hath a leaf above a foot long, and above half a foot broad, very nervous and tougla. Its fruit is about the bignefs of an alligator or crocodile's egg, and much of the Ihape, only a little more acute at one end, of a brown ruUet colour; and, when pickled, exactly- rekmbies the mango, if not the fame thing. A St AngelyN" 4 HORTUS AMERICAXU^. - AnGF, LYN'-T:^EE. Thefe trees grow in moll parts of America. Sir Hans S'o?ne calLs tiitm vtetoiumvia zv.d vilanoxylon arbcr la^rijolia nxtciftia gtnnnis mgi icar.tibus Avieri^ CSiYia. rifo call.s it ayidira and ib:aribai fi\e angelyn, /• '^TS- See his fi^uf e. He makes tv. o forts. Both bark and tiuit aie as bitter ds aloes; a fciuple of the bark given iri a pioper vehicle kills vvoim^y but if you exceed the dole j ou may do harm. An'otto. This plant hath nianv names, as nrvcu, 7-oi(Cou, mcflur, erleana leu ortilara, cw^oi'c^". : rourncfort calls it mz- teiid Amercana viaxtiiia L'vftor.-a, i'v.d fo doth Plu- inier : Hernandez and the Indians c.iil it achictl^ feu m'd cina tingcndo apta. The figure of the plant, with its flower and fruit, is extraordinarily well dehgned in Pifo. The leaves are cordated, or in the figure of an heart, about four inches long and about two broad, coming out alternately from the ftalks and branches, having a fort of foot-flalk, and a= nerve running through the ivhole leaf, with tranfverfe or oblique veins on each iide; at the ends of the branches ccrme oirt/ u'j^on a fhort foot-ftalk, many flowers in clufters, every flower the bijrncfs of a fmall rofe, wiih five leaves of a carna- tion colour, xvith a great many yellow ftamina, or thrums, with purple tips; alter the flower follows the fruit, or cod, which is in the fhape of the leaf, but not fo broad, co^'ered with a verv rough coat, like the chef- nut, which is faft green, and, as it ripens, grows of a' dark brown, and then opet^ of itfelf. Every cod con- tains about thirty or fort\' feeds, about the bignefs and flaape of buck-whcar, having a fplcndid led colour, and a little HORTUS AMERICANUS. ^, a little oilv ; To that it tinges or paints the fingers of a reddifli colour, not ealiiv got out vvirh vvafh-ng; and it is u'hat flicks to the oi'jfide of tiie feed which makes the pafle called anotto ; wu'cli they gt t bv ^v.1fhing it off v/ith water, and after (eparate the wafer and make the pafle up into b ills. This ihe dyers ute to n^ ike a colour th^y call Aurora. I have known it io'd in America for i>i nc fliiihngs ptT pound, b it now of low price, and imtch out of u(e. There is a migiflery prepared xvith the pafle, as followeth : Take Jinr fovr oj cjffad,!, o^ an?;i -jhwtr watrr, zuk-tt' fu/jir^ B^ajii p-pp ', and the jl lo ri of nhambi, ail jvuly mixrd. (S t mtrc of thf p> eparati^Tik in Pifo, p. iiD.) This ind;^i11ery i!< given to per- ions that are poiloned, in waflirjvjs and coniumptions, h::ctic fevers, and immoderate Iwea iii^s; it flops bloody fluxes, flrengdien,'. the ilomach, and p'ovokes urine and tiic gra^•el ; there is alio an exfrarl to h- m ide out of the roots, wiiich is of the lame nirure as the palle. Anqtro is cornm )n!y pur in c^iocol iie; and the Spa- niards mi>; it with th?!r fauces, and broths, or foups, . ivliich gives them a iatnon colour, and a pieafuit tafle. A P P L F. S . There are fcveral forts of wild fruits rcfembling the f!i ip" of apples, but are in no refpecl like tne Englilh apples. I here is a fort growing ainongll the Bahama Tliuds, called feven-years apples, which are indiffe- rcndv plealant and fwect, and v/tien ripe are black and fu I of fe-^ds. Tney will at firll purge them that are not uled to eat of them, and afterwards bind flrongly. See Gaflard- \pple. Apples of love. See Tom ifo-berries or nightfbade. A.P"LES caufinsjr madncls. 5 f So!,mu:ns or nightfhadc. APPLti, uioiny. Sec riiorny apples or niglitihade, A 3 Ar A^J ID N A, a HORTUS AMERICANUS, Araquidna. See "Prndah, Arraganas. See Myrtles, Arrow-Head. This grows in great plenty in Jamaica. Sir Hans Sloane laith, he hath (een the fame plant lent from Vori St. George, in the laft-Indies, by the name of cooletie yrila. It grows much hke our t-uropean arrow-htad, and hath its name fiom its fiiape; viz. fagtta five fa-^ ^ittaria. Toumeiort calls it ranunculus palujlris folio Jagittato maximo. It generally grows in lUndiii}j wa- ters, and IS counted a peculiar wound herb, whether inwardly taken or outwardly applied ; the roof, bruife^ and applied to the feet, helps the crab-yaws ift negroes." Arrow-Root. This root is fo called from its curing and expelling the poifon which Indians put to their airows wheni they fhoot at their enemies, v.hich, if they make but a flight wound, certainly kills the perfon if the poifon be rot expelled ; and that this plant doth, by taking the juice inwardly, and applying thebruifed r<^ot as a poul- tice outwardiv : This was difcovered by an Indian, taken after he had wounded an European with one of ihefe pt ifoned airows, whom they tortured until he promifed to cure him, winch he dif effeclually with the loot of this plant. It hath a flalk and leaf exadly like Indian (1 >ot, onlv that hath a beauM;ui fcarlet fl)i f')r knotty gou^s ; or ti.is: Tak^ the n I nf arfrnart (male by in^ fuficn)y lavage, and j7i''pher(i's p'lrf ^ of pijcIi a hand- fvl ; 'he heads of hve. jhcfp and Jijtren A^f ; -'c^il all to^6tk^r 1)1 two or three quarts of oil, until the jl^fn zs Ci^njumcdy HORTUS AMERICANUS. 9 covfumed^ and then fi^-ain. This is excellent forknottj^ ®r chalky gouts, rubbing it well iiiLo the pai\s. Asparagus. The common gard-.n afparajjus never j;rou's To lar^e in Jamaica as they do in England. We have a fo a fort of wild fea afptragus: It is a more p weiful di- uretic than garden alparagus, bclldes having all its virtues. Attco. I never couM find any other narr.e for this plant, and that I had from a negr>). I take it to be the fame plant that Sir H. Siomc calls, in his caralof^ue of Jamaica plants, rai x fnUicofd ghcirrh'zr. fimilis Cortice fufco, &c. and indeed the root to the fight much refembles Eng!ilh liquorice, but of a bitterifh taite.' It hath leaves like the dog'.vood tree, but is a fm d! fhiub, hard y able to lupport itfelf, and generally joins to another pIo»nt, altnough it doth not climb ab )a': it ; it hath a ihort pod, which when ripe is very black and t'u'.I of fwc-et: pulp, like cajfia Ji/!uta. The negroes cleanfe their teeth wuli this root ; andi thev alfo grind it with water like a pafle, and plaller their bodies all over with it in mod feveiiih heats, head- achs, p.r>dcho!ic«; and have fuch an opinion of it, that if they find not a p efent relief by it, they give them- feivcs over. A certain gcntlsrrtan reco:nmended it to me as an excellent remedy in the dry belly-ache ; and I happening to have a fervant fcized with it, to that de- gree as threw him Iwo convuifion fits, I tnou^-ht fit to make ufe of u, by decocting the root, and giving him about half a pint at a time, warm, turce or four timest a-d«y ; wnich firfl eafed h' n of all his puns, afterwards wiou^in gently downwards, and, m thrsje or iouc d ivs, • 'he |0 HORTUS AMF.RICANUS. lie faid he thought himfelf as well as e\er he was iT\ his lif:;, and lo continued. Ave MS. There are two cr three forts of them growin? irj /Lmerica One forr, Pcre \t F ciwiilc Cdlis caryophylala jfoliis alatis flore amplo coccineo. It is an aperitive herb, which the natives make a tea oC, to keep their bodies in order. It grows about half a yard high, on the fide of the mountains, and hath a fcarlet blolfom. The fame fort 1 found growing in Jamaica : It is hot and dry, attenuates, cleanfcs and opens obDruftions; is good in bruifes and pleunlics, arid heals wounds, Avoc ado-Pear. This tree and. fruit are well knov.'n in America; ii^^ the kingdom of Peru they are called pattas. The fruit is of a pear faflaion, as big as the Englifh tyound pears, and green vvherj ripe; but I have feen a fort very round, with red flreaka like a pear-main. When they have been gathered fome days, they grov/ foft, and are fit to eat with pepper and fait; fome mix them \vith lemon-juice and fugar, others will boil them and eat with fait beef. They are very lioarifhmg, and are thought to. be great provocatives ; tiierefore the Spaniards dq not care their wives fbould eat much of th^m. This fruit is ripe in June, and fp continues till Ovlober. They have a large ftone in the middle, wrap- ped up in a fins thin Ikin, of the Ihape of a heart ; and when that (kin is taken off, it is very rough, and in wrinkled or little hard protuberances, of a reddilh co- lour; when cut through, it is very white; but the air foon turns it reddifn. If you take one of thefe pear- fiones, and write upon a white wall, the letters will turn. as red as, blood, and u^ver go out until the v*:all is white- walhed HORTUS AMERICANUS. i| wafbcd again, and then with difficulty; alfo, if yo4 take a piece of white cloth and put round them, ana(hes. It is certaim this balfam is excellent for wounds of the nerves, and iefolves cold tumors; inwardly takm, it flrengrhens the ftomach, reins, and back, and drives out malig- nant humours by perfpiration. Some get this balfam by boiling its bark, branches, arid leaves in water, Ckirnming off the top; but this is a very black fort : The befi; fort is of a blackifh-red colour, and is always ii-. quid, of a fweet agreeable tafte, fmelling like ftora?^ or citron, or rather vanilloes when well cured. It is tifed as a great peftoral, particularly in afthmas. Balsam ToLtJ. This balfam hath its name from a little village cal* led Tolu, fituated near Golden-Ifland, or the Stocka-* does, in Darien, near Nombre de Dios, near where fihe Scotch took pofTeffion in King William's reign. It is fold in calabaihes, becaufe, as it grows old, it grows refinous and buttle. It is of a grateful fragrant Imell, a great pectoral, particularly in phthificks, ca- larrhs, and defluxions, made into a fyrup, which yoU' may make vcrv plealant and fine, in the following manner: Take four ounces of baUavit putting it into a Jlojky fill n-^ it with water about two-thirds full ; then j^ut it coU in a vefel of water ^ and let it gently boil for twenty four hours ; then pour off the clear, to which add double Its weight of doubk-rcfned fugar, and make & halfamic fyrup. What is not diiloived, may ferve: again to make more fyrup. Balsam-Tree. This tree is fo called becaufe fo much balfam comes from It, even from the bark, leaves, and fruit. Sir H. Sloane HORtUS AMERlCANUl i^ il. Sloane tribes it r.mongfl hi? ierehirtihi, or turperW tine frees; but it is in no rtfptft like any of the iGir liind, it is certain. It hath very thick, round, au^ brittle leaves, and, when broke, comes out a milk^ juice, Tvhich immediately turns yellow, and flicks lOf the fingers like bird-lime ; the fruit is the bignefs of i genetin, or Indian v/ild fig, and full of gum. If yoUc cut the bark of the tree, immcdiatelv comes out a yel* low gum, but without fcent. I q'ueflion not but the gum would be of great ufe, if exptri. need; for w^^e know not as yet the virtues of it, nor ever could -me^St with any that could give me any medicinal ufe of irt; if the Indians know, they kerp the ufe of it to tiicio- felves. They giow in great plenty in Jamaica; aaai are fo plemiful in mofl parts of Ameiica, that i:1 Cora© places they mix this gum juice with tallow, and paio* their canoes and boats with it, to make them gUd< through the water, and prefei vi them from Vorms* Ban AN a-Tree. This is very common, and its fioit fo well knowti that it needs no defciiption. The Spaniards have a. conceit, that if you cut this or the plantam athwart or cioffwavs, there appears a crofs in the middle of the fruit, and therefore they will not cut anv, but break them. The Francifcans dedicate this fruit to the mufei;, and therefore call it mufa. The Port uguefe call them ficui dcrta, others fccus martahana ; in Giiinea, htnana^, Lodovicus Romanus, and Brocard, who wrote a defciiption of the Ho!v Land, call them Adam's apples, fuppofmg it to be the fruit that Eve took and gave to Adam, which is erroneous ; but it is very pro- bable, that tiicir leaves might be the fig kax'es thejr fowed together to hide their nakednefsj nav, one leaf alone was or is fufiicient to do that, beinj very broad and iij HORTUS , AMERICANUS, and lorg ; I know none like if. They are a wholeromC fruit, and make a pleafant drink, exceeding Ejiglifti C) der ; baked, they eat like an apple, and lo they do in a dumplin ; dried in the fun, thty eat like a deli- cate fig. The juice of the leaves is good againfb a bum; the fruit comforts the heart, and cools and re- freflies the fpiiits; made inro a marmalade, or comfit, St is good for coughs and hoarfenefs, lenifies the (harp- refs of humours ct£lu6ting upon the lungf, and allays the heat of urine. See Plantains." Barbadoes Flowfr Fence. r _ ■ _ _ . , . This, I fuppcfe, is fo called from their fencing in their plan:atioi)S with this fhrub, which is full of (hort flrong prick'es; but they aie crmmonly called in JH" xirMC.\ doodkdoe^ ; they grow in all or m oft parts of America. The flowers are elegantly mixed with red- 5^ el low, and therefore called, by fome, Spanifh carna- tion, or wild f( nna. Sir Hans Sloane tribes it amongft the bailard (enna's, for this comes the neareft of any in America, and, when dried and old, it is very difficult to diliingiiifh one from the other; and as for virtues, I have often expenenied ir to have the fame with that of Alexandria ; befides which, a deco6lion of the leaves or fluweis has a wondetful power to move or force: the menjlrva in worsen. Tiie flowers make a deli- cate rtu puiging lyrup, and the root dyes a I'carlet co- lour. The whoh; plant. is full of fhort iharp pri« kles, branching and fpreading very large, with beautiful ilowers, red mixed wi.d faith they are good agamit the iling of Icor- pions and other venomous ferpcnts, and are accounted a very great cordial, and good againfl pains of the head, iic. Bastard C£Dar, As it is here fo called; for what reafon I know not* being in no refpeft like cedar. Its leaves arc in the fliape of Engliih hazel ; its fruit like the mulberry, firft green, and when ripe black and hard, which flieep and cattle delight to cat, and will make them fat. I lake this tree to be of the mulberry kind, more than of the cedar; the flowers are like the line cr lindal free, yellowifii, and very odoriferous, fmelling like our May or iiawthorn flowers. R Bastar*^ 2« KORTUS AMER!CAn01 Bastard Mamee, or Santa Maria. Thefe are very tall trees, an'i very flraight, giowin* to liftv or fixty, fome to eighty feetliigh; they ;i!C \'erv ton^h, and therefore injil, Tvhich thev laid was the fineft balfam in the wo'ld for g'een wounHs, but could not tell me from what tree it came. So:"ne ti ne after, a ne^io brou.Tht me of the fame fort of biifarrt, both in colour and fmell, which he got from one or thefe trees, and I foiuid it to be aa excellent balfam; for, melt it and pour it into a green or frefh incifed 'vound, arid it would heal up in once or twice dreffiaij. T )is ba'fam the Sp miards, while it is new and frefb, pu^ in-: > the hollow joints of tran- pet-wood, calling it the. aJmirable green balfam^ but conceal its name, and the tree it comes from ; yet it is for fome extraordinary ufe that they call this tree Sa;ii it may be given itl elyfteis for the fame intentions. BiGNONlA. There are many forts of thefe plants growing in A*- merica, honing their names from Abbeiiignon. They a:e more for beauty and fine arbours, than of any me-"-, dicmal ufe. B'ind-Weeds. There is in Jamaica a vaft number of bind-wecdsi of the convolvulous kind, with bdl flowers. Thofe that are known to be of phyfical ufe, will be mentioned as they come in courfe. Birch-Tkee. It is very common in Jamaica, although I do not take it to be the Cime with what grows in England;' but it having the very fame fort of bark, makes the Englifh here call them birch-trec5. They are much larger here than any I eVer faw in England; befides^ of thtfe, after the bark is off, the wood is vtry white, light, arid l^iittle; none of the twigs are fo tough aS to make rods or brooms of; and the gum that flows froni the tree is verv odoriferous, white like maftic, and hath an aromatic abforbent tafle. I have often given and adviftd this sfum to be taken in the lues venerea with good fuccefs, after due purging. It is fo well kndwn, that it needs no particular defcription, BiSN .GUS, or V I., NAG A. Thefe are well known in New Spain, where they make HORTUS AMERiCANUS- 2\ fpakc tooth- picks from them. It is a fort of fennel or chervil ; and it is the foot-ftalk of the flov\'er and fee4 they make ufe of afrer dinner to pick their ti^ctii. Bitter-Wood Is fo called from its exceffive bitternefs: I;t!;ir*k if cxm cecds wormwood, gall, and aloes. I have feen.a hand* ful of the (havings but jufl dipped in wafer, as quipk as thought f.,kcaout ag^in, and the water Itft fo biner that nothing could exceed it. A trough \vas made of it to give v/^iter to. hogs, and, to their owner's fuiprife, although the hogs were ever fo drv, they would not touch the water. This property of the tree hath not been known very long in Jamaica; and it was difco/eied by an accident : It being a very free foit of wood to Iplit, light, and white, the coopers had made <;aijcs of it, un« Jcnowing its bitternefs, to put fugar in, v.'hicii w?,s fent to England. Soon after, the owner had advice that his i'ugar was fo bitter it qoixld not be fold : The gendema;?i thought it was a trick, qr a banter ; but, upon a flrid en* quirv> found the occailon of it^ Of late, bqdlieads and p'elfes are made of it, to prevent bugs, cockroaches, or ivorms breeding, as they do in other wood*;, iof none of thefe vermin will come near the wood; neither do the workmen care fqr workmg it, it bittering their mouths and throats. It kills worn;)s in the bodyj helps the cholic or belly-ache, and creates an appetite. The wood of this tree, at the fiift cutting, is verv white, but turn/; yellow afterwards. Its bark is like the lance- v/ood, and. its leaves like the Englifh afh. Black. Mastic;^ Bears a round fruit, as big as a wild fig, an.d black when ripe like a bully ; and therefore is called by feme ballavd bully. B 3 Buoojx «2 HORTUS AMERICANUS. j3lood-Flow!iir, It is fo called from its (lopping bleeding when all other remedies have failed; rTDd^js lo well known in Jamaica that it; needeth no panicular defcription. I jcnew a gentleman that bad fuch a flux of blood, by the piles or hemorrhoids, that there was no flopping it, he himfelf, and all his friends, defpairing of his life. At lafl:, he was advifed to this flower, which was imme- diately got (for they grow almoR every where) and bruifed, and preded out the juice, and v/as given with a fyringe; by which he was perfetlly cured. I had a patient that had a yiruleut gonorrhea, and after I had carried off the virulence^ and began to ufe balfamics and reflringents, I found it would not ftop, and all the medicines I could think of were to no purpofe for above twelve months. At lafl he took a deco6lion of the flowers, leaves, and flalk, of this plant, twice* a-day, for five or l^x davs, and it made him perfefllv firm ; and feme years after he told me, that he never had the Icafl fymptom. of a gleet or any other illnefs attend him in thofe parts. Lately, an ancient gentleman confukcd me, who had a gleet upon him marjy years, which he apprehended was pure weaknefs of th^e veffels, for he was very well in all other refpeds: I advifed him to make a tea of the dried flowers, and drink of it in the room of other tea^ and at the fame hours, for a month; in which time, he told me, it made him perfectly well, and faid it was v/orth its weight in gold, and believed, ii a man could make it known in Europe, he would get an eflate by it. I have known many old gleets cured by it; and I qucflion not but it vmyi be as ufe- ful to v.-ornen, for the fi,uor albus, and other excefhve difcharges. BOXTHORN. HORTUS AM ERIC ANUS. 2.3 BoXTHORN Hath a white u'ood, liaid and folid like box. Th« Itaycs, with tv.'i'Ts, arc fet oppofite to one anotlier, which are almofi round, jiiicy, having two leddilh h)ng fliarp prickles rifinrr bv the foot of the leaf. It bears a large purple flower, and a round green ftui'" of tije bigncfs of agoofebeirv. Ihave (cen fometimes leaves growing out of the fruit. It is o^ a rtftrini;ent quali- ty, and Hops ali.dcfluxions of the cyns or ulcers, and heals them. Bkasilletto. The true Brafil is called Pernambucaj beinfj the place from whence they cnmc in Brahl; the Brahlians ailling it ihirapitanga. It is a thick large tree, with a reddifli and thorny bark ; the leaves ftnall and blunt, of a fine lliining green ; its flowers little, fweet, and cf a beautiful red ; tiie pods flat and piiekiy* in v,ri.a^h are two flat feeds, like the gourd leed. 1 his wood is ufed among the dyers, and tiie itationers make red ink of it; viz. Take rafpingf. of the zuoad, ivfufe them in vinegar or fome Jlrong lixivium^ and, with gum arnbic and allunit put them in a glazed pot, and gtnt'y injufe them, for fome hours. Some dye the roots oi althea with it, to clean the teeth withall. I have met witli two foils glowing in Jamaica; one every way as red as brafil. It hath a red gurp, v.ith a reftringent taflc; its wood is very lough and fl:rong; the wheelwrights in. Jamaica fay, they make the befi Ipokea.for wheels. A dtcoc- tion of the wood flrengthcns the llomach, abates fe- verifli heats, and takes away inflciinmations. a«d de- fluxions in the eyes, Bread-Nut Tree. Why this is fo called I cannot tell, unlefs it be upoa, B 4 tbp. 34 HORTUS AMERICANUS. the account of the wild hogs feeding upon its fruit, ^vhich makes them very fat. The leaves are good fo^ horfes. The medicinal qualities arc not yet known. Brier-Rose of America. It is a drying rcdringcnt plant. Its fruit is goo4, againfl fpitting of blood, B.R I o N Y , There are feveral forts of brionies growing in Ja- maica ; but the fruit of thefe brionies feepis to be the fame with thofe in Englarid ; yetjheir leaves differ very much : And as they have different names here among the common people, they will be mentioned by thofe names, as they come. Brook-Lime Differs but very little from that of England in fiiapq and virtue. See Pimpernell. Br COM- We ED. This plant is fo called by the negroes in Jamaica^ for no other reafon, that I know of, than becaufe they make a broom with it, being very tough and ready at hand, growing almort every where in Jamaica, even in the pooreft red land ; but it hath no refemblance to the Englifh broorri, being of the mallow kind, having the fame feed, but a yellow flower, which opens every day €xa6lly at eleven o'clock in the forenoon ; fo that, in the country, I have afked a planter what it was o'clock, when I thought it was growng near noon, and he would go out and look upon this plant, and tell me. The only medicinal ufe I f^iw of it was, the negro v/omcn, when their children were fcabby or mangy, would HORTUS AMERICANUS. si^ Vonld make a bnth of this herb, which would Cieanfir them, and make tliem thrive. BuCK-Vv'hf, AT. We have a fort of climhin;^ or woodbind buck-wheat. This American buck-v/heat hath round, red, fuccu- lent ftalks, by which it winds and turns itlelf round any tree, rifmg about fevcn or eight feet high ; to-» •wards the top, it puts out leaves alternatively, which are green, thick, juicy, and iinooth, irx the fiiape of an heart, 'about an inch and half long ; and towards the too come out flowers, verv numerous, in oblong (pikes, looking like parfnip feed : In the protuberant part of the flowers lie tJie feeds. 'I he grams of tins plant are hot and dr^-, and of thin and fubtle part*;: They are good againfl hyllerics, zvA are elleemed great provocatives. Bu LLV-T« EE. This is fo called by the Jamaicans, for it5 fruit when ripe is as black as a buJiy or daniibn, but iii fliape of a Lucca olive ; pigeons feed much upon them, and they make them very fat : its timber is very iiroflg and laflmg. Theie is another fort, railed baflard bully. I remember, after the great lire at l^ort-Royal in jan^aica, m 1703, jeluits bark was Ip fcarce that we gave four pounds for a pound of it, and fome prac- titioners could not get any for love or money ; upt)t» which, they made vA'c of the baik of tnis tree, forwi- termittmg fevers, with good fuccefs, but were forced to give twice or thrice the quantity : Since that, -thev have have found out a bark that every way anfvvers the ends of the jefuits bark, wiiich I fhall mention here- after. Cacao. sS HORTUS AMERI-CANUS, Cacao. This beaufiful plant and profitable tree grew once in fuch plenty in Jamaica, that they valued th'rmfelves upon it, and thought they were or fhould be the riclieft- people in the world; but they foon law them (elves de- ceived, for a blaft at once came upon the trees and deftroyed them all, and few or none could ever be got to grow there fmce ; what do grow are generally in plantain-walks, or among fliady trees, and in^ bot- tom's or vallies flieltered from (he north wind>. This tree grows in bignefs and much relcmbling the heart cherry tree, the boughs and branches beauufuUy ex- tending thcmfelves on every fjde, their leaves being nnich cf tlie ra..me fliape ; the flower is very beautilui, ai;d almoll of a fafFron colour; the fruk proceeds from t:-.e body (ar. the caiabafli) and fliall be full aira.ofl all iiie way from the bottorp ud to the branches, which fire alfo full of fruity wliich is firft green, and, as it incrcafeth its bignefs, changes its fbape and colour, lintii ihev are tiJorough1^' ripe. I have ken two iorts; cue very large, as big and aimoft in fhapc of a cucum- ber, but pointtrd at tlie end, and ot a moil delicate ^■e;icw or. lemon colour, wjih a little red blulh of one iide whe:;} ripe ; another foit not lo big, of a fine bluc- ifh red, aimoft purple, wiih reddjQi or pink colour \"fcin?, efp^ecially on that iide next the lun; they have en the ou'.iide ridges and furrows, with fmooth bunches or knobs, as cucumbers have. They are ripe and fit to gather in January and in May, having two crops or "bearings in a year. The external huflc or rind, which js pretty thick, being broke or cut, there appear the lerncls adhering to one another by left filaments, and it:c'ofed in a wjiite pulpv fubflance, foft and lwect-> vvi:ich feme fuck v.-hea ihcy take them out of thci^r fiielis. HORTUS AMERICANUS. 27. ilitlls, which contain ten, twentv, and iomerimes thirty, nuts, altnofl like ahnonds. There is misch dilTerence in rhiir largf^nefs and goodtuls; thofe at Carpen- ter's, river are the iar;creft, thoic bronghr fiom the Coaft of Carjccas next, the Imalleft are fhole of Mariiiiico. They are cured in the fun upon clo-h- or blankets. That which we make our chocolate of is tlic infide of the nut, encoinpalfed with a tliin fiiell or ca(c, which when taken off, the dry and hard iabftance looks of the col(;ur of a kidney-bean, with crannies or creviccS bcttveen thetn. They arc very apt to mould and de- cay, if they are not well cured; and, if right good, thev are plump, fmooth, and oilv, and .of a bitterilli tafte wht n raw. The oil of this nut is the hotrefl of any thini^ known, and is faid to recover cold, weak, and paralviic limbs, and to fmooth the fkin. This nut IS very npuviihing, as is daily experienced in the Well-Indies, where manv Creoles live in a ruanner who Iv upon chocolate. Ttie way of making it is lo web known, that I need not defcribe it. Calabash. I fnppofe the Spaniard;- gave the name to (his tree, its fruit bang as big as a m .n's head (wliicli thev call calah(ijh)y but rounder; r is fo wc 1 known in nioft parts of \incrica, that it nee.is no defcription I have leen fuch difTercnce of the fnat of thele tre-es as to con- tain from an ounce to a gaMoii. V\ hen they are gieen, they'are full ol white jiiiie, pulp, and leeds, which the cattle cat of m very drv times; but which is hud to give their flelb an odd difagreeable tafte, and alto their milk; but I believe that taffe is from a* weed called guinea-hen weed, and not from the caiabalh. It is faid that the pulp, if eaten, will make a cow cad her calfi or a marc her colt, it 1^ cciiaia.y J;nown (if nor i.8 HORTUS AMERICAXUS. not too well known) to be a great forcer of the men^, Jlrua, and of the birth and after-birth; therefore ought to be very ciutioufly given or taken. I once^ made a fpirit from this fruit, which was fo naufeous aj, jjot to be taken alone. This is a ufeful tree for In-p dians and negroes tp make necelfary furniture for their boufes, as diihes, cups, and fpoons, of fcveral fhapes, rignefs, and fafliion; I have fucn them iiiade» and j^ne]y wrought and carved. Calavai;ces Are fmall peafe, tribcd among the phafeoli. Th(; fiower is all white, whereas mofl.of the other forts of. peafe are blue : the pods are live or fix inches long;! rontaining a fmall white pea, refembling the kidney; I hey are pianied any time when rain or icafons come, and in fix \vcek.s time are fit to eat green. They are vcrr good and fweet, careen or dry, and eafy of digeC*^ tionj and thereiore proper for a hot climate. CALTROPPf, There h a pic.:n in Jamaica which Sir H. Slonnp hath crivtn a very exact hguie of, iu his Hi-ftory of' Ja-» inaica Planis, which he calls tribului tcrrefnis maj^^ jlore maximp cdoratQ. Tiie greater land c*iltroppe, wl'h a lai gc fweet fiOwcr, hatha deep root, fiom which ipring a great many long, trai iigg branches, Ipieadmg every way on the groLirid, a ipot a^id. a lalUong;^ aivd are round ajidjui- cv, brittle aqd. thick; it hataleaves in pair?; the flowers are of ^n orange or yeljovvilh, coJo^ur, with five leaves, fmelling fwret; then, follows a fmall .prickly head, with a proct iV like the crane's bill feeds., idc They are coolmif and aflringcnt. Cam Pi ON Si K'ORTUS AMERrCA\'t)s. »^ Campion's. The fpecific quality of this plant Is ajTainH, bloody fluxes, being oi a drying and binding quality. Canes, The chief of vvliich is that they make fugar fiojn^ and therefore called arundo facckarifcra ; it is fo well known to the inhabitants of America, that it nt cd,s no defcription; and as for the way and manner of making fugar and of I'efining it, it would be thought prefuinp- tion in me to direct : I (hail only fav, that they are Iqueezed or prelied in a mill, bctwceh three rollers calcd with irorr;, and tTie juice boiled up to fiigar. I have ob-r fcrved, although tiie juice is Very iWcei, tliat a gallon of it will make but one pound of good lugar^ and as much inolalfes, the red being water, Icum, and dregs; out of which they alto make rum, but molalfes makes tiie bell fpirit: It is alio obleived, that one hundred Weight of fagar make's but about thirry-threc pounds of lingle-refined, and about fourteen pounds of doublc- fef:ned. Sugar is the efTcndil fait of the planf-, which is f;ood ifbr the breall and lungs to fuiooth their rou:;hncrs, therefore good for hoailenels and attenuating phlegm ; fVjr although fugar fcems fweet to the palate, yet tliere is a great acidity in it; lor 1 "can draw from it a fpnit as corroding almofl as aquafortis^ and therefore fugar de- cays the teeth, and makes the gums loft and fcorbutic^ if too much ufcd ; neither is it good for thofe troubled ^►'ith vapours, h\ llerics, or hippo's. There arc two otiier forts of cuncs, that grow xvildj the one hollow and the ottier not, but full of piih like the eider: When they Ipring up out of the ground, they arc boiled^ and make one of the bed of pickles, and ^ ITORTTJ5 AMERTCANUS. an^l wi'l Veep ^\■]'h aood man.i.feTnent two or three years : I think it exceeds the mango. Cap icu'M Peppers. Thefe only differ iiom one another, in their fruit, in (liape and colour; iome being, when ripe, redj white, and yellow, and are as follows; viz, 1. Tile common red long fort. 2. Tile pj-eat upright, 3. Tlie leifer ditto. 4 The fmallefl:, called bird-pepper. 5. 1 he greateft upright fort. 6. The leiler ditto. y. The pendaldus fort, called bell-pepper^ 8. The long oii^'e-fafhion pendulous. 9. The upright ditto. 10. The great long upright, i 1 . The great crooked or horned fort. 12. The lelTer ditto. j 3 The forked or double-pointed. 3 4. The fmall round. 15. The g eater round upright fort. 1 Thefe are 16 The round chcrry-fafhion. I called goat- 17. The broad crumpled cod. • oepperi--, for iB. T.ie ftiot round yellow-coloured, '.liey* fmell 1 9. T!(> lonsJ ditlo. 'ank like a. SIC. The hairv-ftalked fort. j ram-goat. 1 nele arc a<\ much of the fame natuie. The large hrtllowfo't, cailed beil-pepper, pickled while greens- is an excellent reli'^hing pickle or fauce for meat ; th© othLM final' re ■ peppers, when ripe, taken and dried in the ii.rtj an i then ground with fait and pepper, c'ofe ito: ped in \ bott e, are an excellent relilher to iaucefor lih 01 fl ^h, and commonly called kyan butter. All thcfe forts qi pepper arc mucli more of a burning heat HORTUS AMERICANUS. 31 neat than white or black pepper. Some punifli their flaves b>' putting the jaice of thefe peppers into theif eyes, which is an unlpeakablc pain (or a little while ; and yet, it is laid that fome Indians will put it into their eyes before they go to ftrike fiili, to make them fee clearer. Thefe peppers ftop vomiting, create an appetite, and flrcngtlicn the Itomach, if ii;TfrtIy prepared ; fome I have known to fwallow a certain number of them whole, as fo-ne do cudebs, for the pain in the flomacli and choHc ; thev powerfully provoke the terms, facili- tate birth and after-birth, and are good againll graVcl, or tartarous fhmv matter that breeds 'the lldne in the kidnies 6r bladder. But f would not advifc any pcr- fon that laboTirs under venereal fvmptomsj or thofe who are hetlical, to meddle witli them. Vv^hen in- filled or digelled in fpirits of wine, it takes oH much of thsir violent heating and inflaming qualitv, and they are then great provokers of urine, curing diopfies. In- fufed in oil; they take away the numb pair\-, brlofs of tlie ufe of the limbs; and, mixed with goofe greafci refolve impi)fl:iumes that conie from cold, C^c. Near St. Michael de Sapa; in the Vale of Arica> they cultivate the a-ji, that is Guinea pepper; where there are Icveral farms which have no other product but this pepper. Tne Spaniards of Peru are fo gerte- lally addicted to that fort of fpice, that they can drefs no meat without ir, though fo verv hot and biting, that their ii no enduring of it, unlofs well ul'ed to it. Carapjl LO Is an herb which grows like a tnft of grafs, and yields an ear, the deco6lion of which makes fuch as drink of it delirious for fome d.;ys, like the Eafl India b-jngart. The American Indians make ufe of it to' difcover 3^.. HORTUS AMERlCAN'U-f/ difcover the natural dirpofition of their children: At ^ the times when it lias its operation, they place by them the tools of ail fuch trades as they may follow, as by a maiden a fpindlc^ wool, rcilfars, cloth, kitchen fur- feiture, e;V. and by a youth accoutrements for a horfe, awls, hammers, (3c. and that tool they take moll fancy ■, tain their dehrium is a certain indication of the trade they are fittcil for. Cardamom. We have a plant in Jamaica which grows like the wild ginLj;er, bat Sir H. Sioane calls it ccn'damomwiit minus pfeiido-afphoddijoliis ; its leaf is more like orchii ; than afphodel. This herb is perioral, purges phlegm^ liid expels windy humours^ ^c, (JasHeWc This tree an(^ fruit are fo well knov/n in America^ cfpcciailyin Brazil ani in Jamaica, that they need no particuhu" defcription. Tiie illone of this apple ap- pears before the fruit itfelf, growing at the end ia the ifiape of a kidney, as big as a walnut. Some ol the, fruit are ail red, fome all yellow, and fome mixed with both red and yellow, and others all wi.iir.e, of a very , pleafant taile in general ; but there is a great variety, as ibme more fbarp or tart, fome like the tafle of cherries, ^ others very rough like unripe apples, but moft of them fweet and pleafanr, and generally goes off with a re- l?ringcncy or fiipticity upon the tongue, which proceeds from lis tough fibres that run longway through the fiuit; when cut with a knife, it luins it as black as iyk. There. are fome of the fruit bigger than othars, b'at the generaliiy of ihem are as big and much of the. fliape of French pippins, and make an excellent cy^ dcr or wins. I, having a large oithaid of about three hundred HORTUS AMERICANUS. 33 hundred trees, after the market was glutted with them, diftilled a i'pint from them far exceeding arrack, rum, or brandy, of wliich they made an admirable punch, that would provoke urine powerfully. 1 he flowers are very frnall, and grow in tufts, of a carnation colour, and very odoiiferous. Tiie leaves much rclemble the Engiilh walnut-tree leaves m fhape and fmeil, and are as effectual in old ulcers, cleaniing and he.Jing t.icm, being dcco6lcd, and ilie uiccis waQi-d with it. Tne nut hath a very cau'lic oil, lodged in little partitions betwixt the two outward coat*, which will flame violently when put in the fire. This oil cures the herpes, cmcerous and malignant ulceis abounding with rotten IL.lh; it alfo kills worms in ulcers and chi- goes; it takes away freckles and liver fpots, but it draws blillers, therefore mud be cautiouflv made ufe of; and foms make iifucs witli ihtm ; it alfo takes away corns, but you inult have a very good deftnlive round the corn, to prevent inflaming the pa:t. The infide ker- nel is very pleafant to eat, when young and before the fruit is come to its ripencis, exceeding any walnut; and, wiien older and drier, roaded, thev eat very plc.i- fant, exceeding piilachia-nuts or almonds, and, ground up with cacao, make an excellent chocolate. The ' gum of this tree is very white and tranfparent like glafs. It hath been obferved, that poor cjropfical flaves that have had tl:e liberty to go into a calhew- walk, and eat what callicws they pleafe, and of the roafted nuts, have been recovered. Thefe trees are of a quick gjowth: I have planted the nut, and the young trees have produced fruit in two years time, and v.'iil keep bearing once a-year for forty or filty years, nay, a hundred, by what I an utidei- fland, if no accident altends them. Many are now fioiirifhing in Jamaica that were plauLed wiien the Spa- C niai ds 34 HORTUS AMERICAi>JUS. niards had it in ponTefTion ; for the wood is excellent ftrong and lading timber. Cass ADA Ts well known in Jamaica. The root of this plant makes a very good and wholefome bread, notwithlland- ing the juice is a deadly poifon, called maniputra^ wherefore great care is taken to prefs out all its juice ; and then, dried in the fun, beat, and finely fitted, and baked upon a flat broad round iron, commonly called a baking-done, they make the cakes as broad as a hat, which, buttered while hot, eat like an oat- cake. I have feen feverai bad accidents happen to iiegroes newly come to Jamaica, and ftrangers to the root, who have eat of it only roailed with its juice, which hath poifoned them : The fymptoms are, firft, a pain and ficknefs of the ftomach, a fwelling of the Whole abdomen^ then violent vomiting and purging, giddinefs of the head, then a coldnefs and fhakingj dimnefs of fight, fwoonings, and death, and all in a few hours. The exprelfed juice of the root is very Tweet to the palate, but loon putrifies and breeds worms, called topiieat which are a violent poifon, and which Indians too well know the ufe of: They dry thefe worms or maggots, and powder them ; which powder, in a little quantity, they put under their thumb-nail, and, after they drink to thofe they intend to poifon, they put their thumb upon the bow], and fo cunningly convey the poifon; wherefore, when we fee a negro with a long thumb-nail, he is to be mif- trufted. The only and quickefl remedy for caffada- poiion is., firft to give a vomJt of ipecacuana, and then the juice or powd< r of nhambiy which I ftiall mention liereafter. CafTada bread, milk, and fweet oil, make an admirable poultice to'ripen and break any fwelling. There KORTUS AMERICANUS. . 35 There is a fort of cafTada which is called f\vee^, for it may be eaten raw, or roafted like a potatoe, with- out any manner of prejudice or hurt, being verynou- rifhing, and makes a very fine white flour ; this bears a large berry. There i§ another plant, called wild cafTada, and ia known by no other n.une by the people in Jamaica, but for wh.it reafon I cannot tell, it being in no re- fpe£l like the other cafTada ; they grow wild in every favanna. In the months of March and April, there is found, in the infide pith of the foot-flalk, a hard knotty excrefcence, of an oval (hape, hard and yel- lowilh, of divers lizes, as from a hazel-nut to a hen's egg : I never could find what ufe they are of; only I have obferved the boys will powder them and give it for fnufT, which will burn and tickle the nofe, and caufe greater fneezing than white hellebore. 1 ani apt to believe they will purge- violently ; for the young tops of this plant, boiled and buttered, are ofcen givea in the dry belly-ache, as alfo in clyfters, purging vio- lently when nothing elfe would go through the patient. Tne feeds are like a Imall ric ?zw? ; and, if they are not the true granadiUa, yet they purge as ftrongly ; for two or three fe^dsj given by themfelves, or mixed with pills, quicken the purging quality. I knew a pra6li- tioner who always made up pill ex duobics with addi- tion of thefe feeds, which made the pill work flronger and quicker, and kept it always moift. You make the pill thus : Take wild cajfada-fe-ds Imjkd^ three ounces f ccinibdgia, coliquiniida, end fcammony, of each one ounce ; make a pill according to art : the dofe is two or thrte fmall ones. They will purge ver^ biifkly all wa»- tery humours. Q 8 Cassi«& / 3^ HORTUS AMERI-CANUS. Cassia Fistula, There are two forts that I know growing in Ame- rica, whofe trees are very large, with winged leaves,: four or five ftanding on each lide of the (talk, like £ngli(h a(h, long and fharp-pointed ; the flowers are yellow and large, with five leaves with thrums in the* middle, fmelling very fweet ; one thrum, which is the flyle, is longer than the reft and crooked^ and is fixed to the pod as it grows. The pods difFt-r much as to Jheir length ; viz. from twelve inches to eighteen; I have fteii fome above thirty inches long. It gently • purges. The fecond fort is called horfe-cafTia : The leaves " cf this fort differ extrernclv from the other fort, being fmall foft leaves, ftanding on each li-de of the llalk, to the number of fourteen or fixreen of a iide, of a pale, green en the upper fide, and of a yellowilh green un- derneath, and ot ti.e bigneis and fhape of lenna, but ajittle m-oie rounding. The ends of the branches, for two or tliree feet long, are fet full of beautiful flowers, very odoriferous, of the colour of peach-bloljoms, and' very much refemblin^ them. The fruit is much larger than the other fort, and of a very rank ftrong fmell.- Il hath a wonderful power to move the monthly pur- -gations in women. There is alfo a fhrubby caffia : It hath a ftnall long pod, about the Icngtti of calavances, which is full of feeds fticking iil a fweet clammv puip, which the boys- in America' fuck, and which generally purges them. It poweiiully provoke-s the terms in women. Cedar. There are two forts of ccd i^--t'ees gro^v in Jamaica. The one fojt Sir H, Sioane caiis prunojif^te aj/inis ar^ bar HORTUS AMERICANUS. 37 ior maxima maicric riihro laxo odorato : Thefe grow in plf^nfv in the mountains, and, where they grow, they reckon the ground rich ; ihcv are next in bignefs to the cotton-tree that they make canoes or boats- of. I have fecn fome cedat -trees three feet in diameter, with jiine feet in circumference. Thcleavcs are like thofe of the common plumb-tree of America, almofl like the Englifh aili-leaves, and thev have a round berry which the birds eat ; the wood is foft hke deal, but reddilh, having a very plealant fmell ; ics gum is like gum arabic, very tranlparcnt, and eafily diffolves in water, wherefore the Ihoemakers ulc it as ,<;um arabic. Tlie orjier iort is called juniper cedar, and is the fame fort tint grows in Berrrmd.is : This hath leaves liv.e the favine or (ir, or pi:ie trecis ; its wood is whiter tiim the othei-, lmelifn;r inore hke juniper berries; the gum refills j.^uLretatlion, an J kills worms. CeL \N DIN E. I have often met witii this plant, and wondered how thev came to call it celandine, it dilFcrinir fo much from the Englifli loit; for this generally grows fix or ,feven feet high, v/uh a very tliick llalk covered with a iviiite fmuotii bark, branciiing with a great manv large leaves, and deepiv divided at the ends, of a vellowilh- green colour on the upper fide, and whitifh under- neatii ; on the top comes out a branch of a foot long, full of bunches of flowers, each Handing on a fhort foot-ftalk, and hath in ic manv (lamina or threads of a yellow colour, ?.nd fted-veilels of an oval (hape, in the middle of which is a imall brown oblong feed: Ail parts of this yield, in breakin.^, a yellow juice, like common celandine, from which it hath its name, as I luppofe. Hernandez calls it qitauhchilli, five Chilli Ipccics, fioai i:i fharpncfs like Indian pepper, and; C "> faith 3® HOUTUS. AMERICAMUS. faith it wv planted by the Indian kings in their gar-" dens. It is much ftronger, than Enghfn celandine, be, ing very hot and drying. The juice cures tetters and ring- worms, and takes ofr warts and films of the eyes; but I fliould not care for uung it to the eye, being fo, ■very (harp. Centaury. There are two. or three forts of centaury grow in America. One is called cachin lagua ; a fmali fort ©f centaury, more bitter than the European, and con- lequently more full cf fait; it is reckoned an excellent •febrifuge. -Another fort, that grows about Panama, they make a tea of, vyhich is aperitive and fudorific ; it fortifies the ftornach and kills worms, cures inteimitting fevers and the jaundice; it is alfo given with very goodJuc- cefs in rheumatifmSj 6?c. They take it as, hot as they can, in bed, covering themfelves. clofe to provoke fiveat. This plant fmells like natural balfam ; and is fo great a fweetener of the blood, that it is a fpecific in pleurifies and fevers, and is ufcd inflead of tjie je- fuits bark. It is found plentifully about Panama, and, divers other places. That which grows in the moun- tains is efleemed the beft. Cerasee and. Gucu.vis l5 the name that negroes and fome others give to a, j)lant growing irj great plenty in Jamaica. Its fruit is much like a cucumber, and as big ; therefore Sir H. Sloane calls them cucumis puniccus, I fuppofe from its deep-red colour, but the leaves are much fmaller, jagged, and divided ; the fruit generally of the fize of a lemon, of a yellowifh red without-hde, with blunt tubercles j the iniJde is of a mofl glorious red colour, haying TORTUS AMERICANUS. - 39 haying feveral large red feeds, in bignefs and fliipe of tamarind flones or feeds. I huve obferved, if you put the point of the fmalleft pin or needle into gny part of the fruit, it will all fly open in quarters, or mmy parts, turning, as it were, the iiiii de outward, with a fort of guft or explofion, or as if it were fenfibly touched. Some make fine arbours with this plant, ic always clirnbing to any thing it is near, growing fo thick you can hardly Ice through it. Some fuck the feeds, having a Iweet red pujp about them; but the fruit is very hollow, like pops, and purges excellently well. The negroes cure the belly-ache, by mixing with it Guinea pepper. Both leaves and fruit are a great vulnerary : A decoOion or infufion of the roots jn water, wine, or broth, wonderfully evacuates wa- tery humours, and prevails againfl the yellow jaundice, obO;ru£lions of the liver, fpleen, bowels, and mefen- tery. The root, powdered and given with cream of tartar (from a fcruple to forty grains), doth the fame; a fyrup of the fruit doth the like. The diftilled water from the leai-^es and fruit, mixed yf'iih fa! nitri^ makes a beautiful walh, and is good againft the St. Anthony's fire, or any rednefs of the face; inwardly given, with loaf-fugar, it cools and abates the heat of fe;vers. The t)il from the fruit cures burns, and takes awav fears. Ttie wild cucumber grows in great plenty in moft parts of America, from the juice of which I have made f/j- teriiim. We have of the common garden cucumbers^ as good a^ in any part of the world. Gherry-Trf.e. There are two or three forts of what they call cherry- trees, but not to compare with thofe of England. The clammy cherry is a beautiful tree to look at, and bears a fine red fmaU round cherry, but it is clammy in the C 4 mouthi 40 HORTUS AMERICANUS. mouth, not fit to ent ; but birds flrlight to eat them,'- and tuikies and fo^vis will devour them. Tlie Baibn-. does cherry is of a veiy pleafant tartncfs, and makes an excellent red jcllv, which allavs the heat of fevers. The Brazilians call them ibipit-rt^a. CiTILI CaHDIKAL FlO-V-ER. This is called in Chili tupa. Its fiovver is red, and they grow generally on mountains. The root and bark . yield a venomous milk, which will endanger the eves Ike fpurge. It is faid, that the ^erv fmell of the flowers caufes vomiting, and the whole plant is reckone4 a violent poifon, Ch IX A-R'^''>T. This root grows in great pltnty in America. \% hath a root as big asone.*s arm, is crooked and jointed, wth knobs at every jomr like fome canes, very tough, and when )Oung of a gveen colour, very full of pric- kles like a role buth or brier, 'but when older has li;tie or no prickles, and will grow to be bigger than a man's tliumb, and fometimes ten or fifteen tcet high. Tne leaves are li-ke the fmilax afpcra^ or latfapariha ; ti ey are cordate d, fmoorh, of a very dark-green, vi'ith nerves like thofe of the Engli h piantane-leaf. At the end and between the twigs come out the flowers, ftveral together, but from one centre, flandin? on an h.'lf-inch piflil, of an umbel fafhion; each hatii fix pe- t-.s, with veiy fma.l green apices, ftanding round a green fliort ftylus ; after, follow fomany blackilh ber- r es, round, and of the bignefs of thofe of ivy, hav- ing an unfavoury purple pulp, with a purple Itone as big as that of the haw. Sometimes a gum is to be found, which the Indians czW tzitiliy which they chew to ftrengthen or fallen their teeth. 1 have fecn a fort much IiORTUS AMERICAMUS. 41 KTUch whiter, without and within, than the comT'on fort. The ufe and virtues of this root are fo well known for and in venereal cafes, as I need not give any further defcription of it; only jufl mention what ufe Dr. Trapham mide of it in fuch cafes, wno praftifed many years in Jamiica; but he fiiltgave thefoUowing €;lc6tuary : Take puJp of tamarinds and cajf^a fjlula^ of each halj a pound; jucr of ftmptr t'ur, thee pounds; fmall red pppcr or capficum^ dried, one fcrupk ; Win-m tcr's annamon, one fcrnplt and an half ; of melcffts^ ctarificd wii/i th? white oj an rgg, a pound and an half. Put all thrfe into an earthen pot, lohich place in thefun^ flirring the mixture with a ■wooden fpatulay two or three times a-day ; let it fland till it thckens to a due confifi<- ence of a foft ele&uar^, which keep for ufe as a general purge. Trte dofe, from half an ounce to an ounce and an haii ; in clyders, two ounces. Let the patient take half an ounce of this, or two good broad knife- points uiUj, in the morning fading, and as mucli at night going to bed, two hours after having eaten fomc fpare fuppc^r; continue every other or third day till the gonorrhoea ceafes. The dofe may he leflened according as It work.^ ; and thofe davs they do not purge at night, let them take a drachm of china-root in powder, drinking the following dccoftion or infufion of china* root, warm, to fwcat.with; the drink ought to be made new every day, without being fermented with fugar or age. The water is only (o be boiled as that for tea; th^n fo much china-root, fliced, added thereto as may^nakeitof a claret colour; there can be no ex- cefs in the root, neither need there to be added, fave for palate fake, a little fiigar, for it is better without ; let him d:in!c thereof every night in bed plentifullv, about two quarts, the better to fweeten the four juices, winch chinrj* j^^ HORTUS AM ERIC ANUS. ^hina-root powerfully doth in thefe cafes as well as ii^ others, facli as gouts, tertians, hetljcs, confumpiions, &e. and then, to complete the cure and flrengthen 'he, fperinatic vellels, let them take hog-gum in pills for. feme time. 1 am very well aflured, that this Weftrlndia.china** root is 111 every refpetl as efficacious and as valuable as, th«t from the Eaft-Indiesj but the great difficulty is how to prefer ve it from the worms; for, in. a month, or two, it will be bored, and all the farina or mealy, pirt fcooped out, by a. large white maggot with a red head, that breeds in it. I have. tried feveral ways to prevent it; the only way was, to trim it well c^ all its ioit knobs, and then, to bury it in vihke lime. Cinnamon. We have only one fort, called Winter's cirMiamoti,^ ^om.one captain Winter, that firil c.ai"ried it to Eng-, land, where it is well known. The bark hath a fmeli lefembiing tlii? common, cinnamon, but much htOttef and whiter; that taken from the branches is better thaa. tjsat from the body of the tree. It hath a laurel-hke leaf, much like the piemeuta ; its fruit is a little berry ^^ ^'hich is violent hot, and much like cuhebs. See mors of it under Wiiitcr's Bark. Citrons, Both f'A'eet and four, we have in great plenty^ as, Ij^rge and as good as any in the world. Clauy. Beiidcs the garden^clary, we have a very com:?ion plant, that grovv's every where m Jamaica, called wild <;}aTy. The flalk is large, green, and hairy, rifing ^Jjout two feet high ; the leaf like garden clary, hav- ing HORTBTS AMERICANUS. 4;^ ijng m:;ny five-leaved flowers, of a pale-blue colour^ fet in a double row on the upper fide of the branches, and turned like a Ccorpion's tail. Like the heliotropes, it cleanfeth and confolidates wounds and ulcers, and is good againft inflamraatit-ns of the (kin. It is boiltd with coroa-nut oil, to cure the fling of fcorpions aiidj the bite of a mad dog. Ci^OVE-SrRIFE. Two forts of clove- ft life grow in America; flrft, the broad fort, which Fuillee calls onc[^ra laiirifolia Jlorc amplo p!;ntapttalo ; the fecond fort is the female or lef- ler, called onagra minor Jlorc lut^o pentapctalo. The Indians highiy ellviem thcle two Ihrubs, making a poul- tice of the leaf, which mollifies and diffolves all kinds of tumours, which are very common in thef«2 parts. They delight to grow by river- fides. Coca. This herb is famous in the hiftories of Peru, th<^ Indians fancying it adds mucii to their ftiength; others affirm, that they ufe it for charms ; as for inflance, when the mine or ore is hard to work, they thrc/ upon it a handful of this heib chewed, and immedi- ately get out the faid ore with morceafe and in greater quaniity, as they fancy. Fiihermen alfo put fome of this herb chewed to their hook, when they can take no fifh, and they are faid to have better fuccefs thereupon. In ihort, they apply it to fo many ufVs, mofl of them bad, that the Spaniards prohibit the ufe of it ; for they believe it hath none of thofe effetls, but that what they attribute to it is done by the compact the Indians have with the devil. The leaf is a little ("mooth, and lefs nervous than that of the pear-tree ; the llirub does not grow above four or five feet high. The %A HORTUS AMFRICANUS. /The grea.tefl; quantity grows about thirtv leagues frorr? Cicaciay among the Yamm'^y on the frontiers of the Yiui^hos. Tiie tafte of it is fo hai;/li, that it fleas th£ tongfs ilrongl}-. Pi fo tribes it among his poifon planrs. They grow only in tha Tncnntains, and run up upon the higheft trees, with ilalks as big as a man^s v/rift ; and have a broad crooTcec^ pod, about twelve or fifteen inches long and fix inchus |)road, firil green, and then black when ripe, COLILU or CULILU. This plant is mo-e for food than phydc, and is much the fame as Englilh fpinage ; fpr/ie fav it exceeds it, efpecially young and frelh gathered. It grows m great plenty every where, without cultivating, after rains; iind is of great fervice to poor Have.s who, if they can but get fait to feafon it (othcrwife it is apt to purge them, if they eat too much of ii), they will live upoa it weeks together. CoN'TRAY£RVA, This is fo called in Jamaica from its great efficacy againll riORTtifS AMERiCANtJ^. 45 ^gainft poifons, but is in no refpetSl lilie tlie Spanifli contraycrva ; for this plant huh a long round genicu- lated root, in fhape and bigaefs of long birthwort ; fo are its leaf and flower. It liarh a round green climb- ing flem, taking hold of any tree or Ihrub, rifing fi.^ or twelve feet high, covering them wiih i(s numerous branches. The leaves fland on the main flalks, cor- dfated, of a dark-gi een colour ; the flovVers fland on a fhrec-inch foot-ftalk, like other birthworts, of a yel- lowifh colour, the lip covered with a purple farina ; the fruit is hexangular, two or three inches long, contain- ing fix cells, full of finall fl it odoriicroas yellowifh- tiown feeds, of the (hape of an heart. The roots and feeds are very bitter, hot, and odoriferous, and are mofl excelhnt alexipharmics or counter-poifohs, flrcngthening the hcait,. flomach, and brain; tliey cure the bites of feipents, and the poifon of Indian arrows. I am of opinion, it exceeds the Spanifh con- ti'averva, efpcciallv in dropfies. I have feen wonders done with it : It drives out the Imall-pox, meafles, fpotted fevers, plague, or any malignant diflemper; it gently purges fome by flool, but never fails working p ,)werfuily b^' urine, and lometimes bv fweat. I have known it recover leveral in lingering dillcmpers, when their appetites have been wholly loll and the ufe of their limbs, and that only by drniking a limple decoc- tion of the root in water ; but in wine it makes tlie;, Bell llomachic, it being excelfive bitter and aromatic ;. alfo this makes the beft bitter wine in the world", ex^- (ieeding all in the difpenfatories, or Stoughton's drops; ini, if you add fteel to ir, it cures the green fickncfs, dropiles, opens all obftructionSj^ fweeteus the blood, and rellores it to us due cralb. Cooper^ 46 TORTUS AMERICANUS: Coopers Withe. This withy plant is fo called bccaufe coopers make lioops of Its flalks or withes, being very tough and flexible; and although this plant doth not climb or twill round oth r pKints, yet it cannot fupport itfelf, but, growing hy the fide of any tree, it leans upon it, and, bv its many branches, will overfpread it. It hath a leaf of the breadth and fhape of laurel leaf, but not fo thick ^ or glody ; its flowers are inodorous, mixed with pur- ple ftreaks ; and then follow fmall round berries, growing all along the fpikes or twigs of the ftirub, ia colour, fhape, and bignefs of elder berries, for which re.ifon foitle call it Spanifh elder; but that is another plant. It hath an uhcomnion excrefcence, that iS found groAVing among the branches at one time of the year, wiiich is in Ihape exaclly like the ftomach of a tnan, having a thin membrane or Ikin over it, inter- woven varioui]v with innumerable fmall reddifh veins; It adheres to a tender foft flalk, which runs through the upoer part of the excrefcence. Thfs plant is of diverS phvficd ufes. Befs Walker^ who kept a tavern in t*ort-Royal in Jamaica, before the great earthquake in 1692, ufed to iTiake a famous drinkj reckoned of ufe in venereal cafes ; for which fhe boiled the young fender withe fliced in water with a little lignum vita bark, wokvfd k up with fugar or rrielaffes, and then bottled it ; it drank brifk like bottled ale, only bit- te-'ifh. It is a good flomachic, and opens obftru6lions* Tae Iniiuns make a bath of this plant; they flrip nak- d, and p'act; thenllelv.s fo as to receive the fumes 01 !^.-a;n of the liqiior, being covered all over wich a b aiikec or pa^'ilion, after winch they are put to bed, an ' '^ub'ted verv we!) ; by this method, they recover the ule ot then- weak and numbed limbs, and comfort their bowels. CoPALi toORTtS AMERlCANrS. 4'^ Copal. This gum flows from the trunks and branches of fevcral large trees growing on the njountains in Ame- rica, with fruit like our cucumbers, hut of a dark-grey colour, in which is a mealy flour, of a very good tafte. It is a fine clear pure tranlpartnt yellouifli-white guwii very odoriferous. This and ^uvi animi are much the fame. Corals and Corallines. I do net fee writers of America take fo much no- tice of the cOral kind as Sir H. Sloane, who, in his Natural Hiftory of Jamaica, makes fix forts of white toral, and feven forts of baflard corals, or corallines. I never faw any red in Jamaica or America, but I have often feen red worts fl^icking to the white coral, as big as peafe. The white coral is fo plentiful in Ja- tnaica, that they burri it, and make a very white lime for building. 1 am of opinion, that the white is every •Way as medicinal as the rcd ; the corallines are faid to kill worms, but it doth not liatid to reafon. Cotton. Andj fir 11, of the ufeful flirub that fo much cloth is tnade of, although it is but a (hvub, that fcldom rifes above ten or twelve feet. Its laige leaves have five points, iu fliapc ot the Englifh maple or fycamore; the fmaller leaves, nearell the fruit, have only three points, of a deep green. The flowers are like the tree-mallow, or holyhock, but not fo open, of a yellow colour; 'they are fupported wrh a foot-flalk and green cup, compofed of three triangular jagged leaves, which in- dole them but very imperfeclly ; they are vellow at 'tlie top, and fl:reaked vfwh rcd below. The flower or bioflbm is lucceeaed b) a green fruit like a rofe-bud, which j %i HORTUS AMERICANUS: which, v/hen full ripe, grows as big as a little egg, and divides into three or four cells, each of them filled up With between eight and twelve feeds, almofl; as big as peafc ; thefe are wrapped up in a woolly fubflance, ^nown by the narfis of cotton, which (licks to the feed, and, as the pod opriis, they drop down together, if Hot gathered in time. This cotton fhrub differs mach from that which they cultivate at Malta, and many other places in the Straits, and throughout the Levant, which is only a very little antiual plant, that is fown and renewed every year : Now this American cotton Will ftand many years; only pruning them after they have done bearing, and they bear for feven years to- gether. The cotton is fit to gather in January, and may keep picking till May, and then you fhould trim them; or plant ancw. To part the feeds from the cot- ton, they have a little inftrument, called a gin, with two rollers as thick as a finger, and, with two wheels turning contrdry ways, pinching the cotton, and drawing it through between the two rollers, leaving the feed be- hind. Tnele feeds are faid to be good againft the bloody flux, and are counted pecloral; the oil clears the 1km of fpocs and freckles. Cotton-Tree. \Ve have two forts of large cotton-trees in America* one whofe wood is more red, the other very white, and bears a f'uit as bif^ as a large cucumber ; which, at A certain time of the year, opens, and lets drOp a fine dQwn or htk cotton, which, with induflry, may be foiind to be of great ufe, I believe in hats, in the room of beaver ; but at prefent of no known ufe among the Spaniards or Eni^li'h. There are fome of thefe trees fo larje as to make a canoe that will carry fifteen or %w^Dty ho^lheAds of fugar, each hoglhead weighing froun flDRTtrS AMERICANUS. 4^ fiom 12 to 16 crvi. The feeds of thefe trees are much t>f the i'dine quahtv as the other cotton; its green bark, made into a poultice, is good aguinfl inflaintnationsj^ and conlolidates fractured boots. CoWKAGE, 07' CoWnCH, This plant is tribjd amongn; the phafcoli. It is fo Veil known, that there needs no defcnption; and may be felt when not feen. The root provokes urine, the bean the {awv:, and, boiled in oil, cafes the goat and St. Anthonv's fire. C (J R ft. \ NT-Tree.' This is fo called beciuie its fruit is of the fliipe nnd bignijfs of a curranf. . It is a moll flately tail tree, as big as the Kng'iili eln?, and is always grecn^ having a laurel Ic:.', and a whiCiih fweet fli)wer in bunches; after which come bunches of fmall yeilowifh round berries,- in talte like the Lvngiifh haw. J'he birds delight to eat tncm, and buiid their nefts in the trees^ CUKR ATO. . 1 take this name to be a conuption of carc^iia, for fo it is called in Brazil. It is of the aloetickini, and I have made an cxtra£l out of it much like aloes. The leaves are very large and fucculent, five or fix feet Jong, and but five or fi.< inches broad, having a black Iharp prickle at the end, and ftnall hooked prickles npon the edges. It hath, about April,, a flalk as big as a man's leg, about fixteen or twenty feet, running up, as fome aHirm, in a night's time ; but that I quef- tion. The top of it, in l\\diy^ is garnifiied with. fine- yellow flowers for three feet dovni : Tiie people in Jamaica gather them for May-poles. After the flow- ers, appear many pods, bij??er than a man's thumb, D full §0 HORTUS AMERICANUS. full of thin irembn-Txaceous feeds, like parfnip feed; The iuice of this pint fcouis like foap, and in fonie cafes is ultd as fuch. It is full of long and ftrong fibres, w'iich they fepaiate as they do the fiik grafs, and mak^ lines and ropes of ir. It§ juice, with a littie fugar, will poweviully force the terrns, is a great diuretic, and forces gravel orflone; the leaf, roaded in the fire, takes awa ■ the piin and wcaknefs of the limbs. Tha extraft eafes the pain of the gout, and flrcngthengi the part, if ftrained, fluck upon leather, and applied thereto: At firll app;ying it feerns to increafe the pain^ for it draws ftrorgiy a fort o'i di\v from the part, "bar, after tiirce or four hours^ the pain ceafes, and the part grows flronger every d;iy ; it muff lie on until it drops oflF. I alwa\ s fluck it upon iviiite paper, an4 applied it to myfeif, and in two or tlirce days v/as able to walk three or four miles, 6?c« It the cxtraCl is not well boiled, it will draw pimples, and caufe a great iich^ ing. I have given it inwardly in pilis, with good fuc* cefs. It is alfo called tna^uly. Custard- Apple, So called becaufe the pulp is foft when ripe, white, and fwect like a cuflard. The leaf of the tree is ia Ihape of the peach-tree leaf; its fruit is of the mape of four-fop, but not quite fo large, and of a brown- ruiTet and veliowifh colour, and a rednefs on one fide whtn ripe. There is another fort called water-apples, becaufe they are found growing along the banks of rivers. I have feen fome of the apples bigger than what they call a cuflard-apple in England ; they are of a cold watery quality, to that degree that they are reckoned a fort of poifon. The alligators live chiefly upon them, one time of the year, watching their f*iliing into the water ; HORTUS AMERIC ANUS. 51 vrater; there aVe great quantities of thefe trees grow- ■fcg by the lides of the Rio-Cobre, njar the lagoons, See Water- Apples. Daisy. We have a fort of daify gro^vs in Jamaic.i. It is a great vuhierary, and helps all dileaies of the lungs ; its juice cures confumptions of them. Dandelion. It is fmg^ular ajTainfl ob{lru6lions of the vifccra. T!ie juice of the leaves and roots, given in Madeira wine, purifies the blood and juices of the body, and pro- vokes the catamenia. Tlie diUiiled water, made fiiarp with oil of vitriol or fulphur, prevails againfl Ipotted fevers and plagues, D I I D o F. s Is the qame of a plant which grows in all the fouth* ern parts of \ineric i, and in Jamaica. Some merry perl'on ga\'e it the name of dilJo; but in other places it is called flambeau, torch-wood, or prickle-candle, it being in the fhapc of four can lies joined together \\\ angles, growing one out ot anoLher, like the raque^ and are f;om eight to fifteen feet long, fet with diarp prickles all round from top to bottom, green, and full , ot juice. Some bear a yellow huit, others blood-red, without-fide, but of the fame colour as the red within; which is a white fwect pulp, full of iVnall black feeds; and they have all a large white flower, finelling very fweet, which always comes out of that fide of the plant jiext a louth fun. Its fruit is as big as large apples. When they grow old, and the green juice dries away, there is a yellow hufk, or flielly fubllance, ap- pears full of holes like net-work, whicli is called torch- D 2 wood J 52 HORTUS AMERICANUS. wood, for it will burn like a candle and torch; and I have known the Indiins fill the hollownefs of thcfe * with a bituminous fubflance, ma':ing fine flambeaux. Do D D K R ts a ftranore fort of a plant, running oVer and de- ftro\ ing every plant it comes near, therefore is called" by fome hell-weed, or devi"s guis. It hath flrong yellow filamrnts, hv which it flretches over very large and hi'jh trees, covering the plant which it feeds on, and deflroying ir» Tne flowers are white, and con>^lo- merated; it hath a p,ile- coloured feed, (omewhat flat, and twice as bisj as poppy-fvfed. This devouring weed generally takes afier the. quality and properties of the plant on wliich it grows; but in gencal it hath a ca- thartic quality, and opens obfl;ru6tioiis, ^c, DoGSBANE. There is great variety of dog{fcanes in America j and they will be mentioned, as they come, under other names. The blood-flower,, mentioned already, is one fort. Dog Stomes. There are two forts of dogs fl;ones grow in the fa- vannas m America, with double tuberous roots, much like thole in England, It hath a fpecific quality to help imporency m men or women ; and the eifence, juice, or extract, taken morning and nighr, in a glals of generous wme, is faid to poflefs prolific virtues. DoG-V/ooD, This tree is fo well known in Jamaica, that it need- eth no defcription, bemg the chiet and moll lafling' timber in America, every way as good as the Englifh oakj. HORTUS AMERICANUS. 53 *-ik, and having much fuch a leaf; but they never prow fo large. lis bark hath a very firon^r rank {md\y and poifons fiib. I: makes a glorious ihow when in bloiToir), which it will be when thjre is not a green le^f upon It : T ^e blollbnjs are vciy white and iWeet, frnall, an 1 in bunches as full a^ the tree can hold; afterwards come bunches of a inernhr.in)us lnbilaace, looking like hops at a dillatice; in whici is concained its feed. The bark is very rcftringent : I have made a deco6tion of this baik, which would cK-anfe and ftop the great flux of ulcets, and uiake them fit to iical, and curfe the mange in di>gs. Dragon's Blood. The trees that affoid this gum giow in both the In* dies and m Afiica. Indian dragon's btood is a gi>n^ that diflils or diops from the trunk of a tree, whofe leaves are like Iwcrd -blades, of halt a foot long, and green ; at the bottom of which grows round fruit, of the fize of Engliih cherries, yellow at firll, aftenvards red, and of a beautiful blue \vhen ripe ; from which, liavipg take n off the firfl or outward ll;in, it appears like a fort pf dragon, which gave it this name. They cut the trunks of the trees, and there prci'ently flows a liquid liquor, that is as red as blood, which hardens and forms itfelf into little brittle tears or crumb?. V/hen the firll fort is fallen, there drops another fort, which is brought us wrapped. u.p in its own leaves: Chufe that in little tears, ckar and brittle. Dragon's blood of the Can nies flows from the trunk and large branches of two different trees; one of which has leaves lilcc a pear-tree, but longer, and the flower refembles tags at the ends of laces, of a very fine red. The leaves of the other come nearer to the cherry-, tree, arid the fiuil is yellow on the edges, of the big- D 3 nefi 54 HORTUS AMERICANUS. hefs of a hen's e^g; in which is a nut of the (hape of ^ nutmfg, containing a kernel of the fame figure an^ colour : Thefe trees grow pleniifully in the Canary iflands. I faw one in Madeira, in a Portuguefe gar- den, rn the year 1696 ; and in the little iflandof Poito Sanfto they grow in great, plenty. They grow alfo in great plenty in America, efpecially about Portus Santlus,' and are thcie called kinnabris. The juice or gum they make into balls : The befl fort is in drops ; a coarfcr fort is in round cakes ; and the coarfeft of all is that in great lumps, ft is counterfeited with fenegal, and coloured iviih a tindure of brazil. Duck's Meat^- or Pond- Weed, Crows in (landing waters, and is accounted cold aha Tnoiil, taking away inflammations of the liver after a peculiar manner. ii is leckoned good in all outward" jboi fwellings or difeafes of the flcin, and ail inflamma- tions ; flops fluxes or blood and ruptures. Dumb-Cane, This is fo called bccaufe, if any body bites of it, they xai^inot Ipeak lor iome time ; for it burns and be- Tiunibs the tongue, and caufes a- great flux of fpittle. It grows in joints, appcajing like green fugar-canes^^ and therefore fo called ; and feme have been deceived in taking them for lugar-canes. Its fruit is like fome of the criivis ; but the leaves are like Indian fhot, or ©ur wafer-pepper. It hath been ufed with good fuc- cef? in the dropfv, iii the following manner: Take the greenejt and inojl juicy y and heat it in a mortar into a kind of pulp ; then add thereto double the quantity of hog's Jaty or rather tortoife faty or fnake' s fat ; the luhich having agitated jlrongly together^ let it lie for joTue days ; then beat it zvcll again, and keep it for ufe ; obferving. kORTUS AMERICANUS. S5 bbfervin?, the longer it is kept it better anfxers the intention; but it mail be heated and beaten now and then, iefl w^orms breed in it. To prevent that, and alio render the ointment more fine, lafe, and agreea- ble, take of the mafs, beaten as before, warm it, and ftrain it through a coarfe cloih, which boil up to a due confiftence, and keep for ufe; whi^h is thus: Take of this ointment, and chafe it warm into the fwollen parts, and apply as a cataplafm to the fcrotum ; by which method the watery humour will be difchargedi Dv/arf-Elder. This plant is fo called becauie it fomething refem* bles the European dwarf-elder, beini^ a fhort plant, with a round jointed flalk and a reddilh fruit ; but its leaves are much like the large Engliflb nettle,Vith large nerves or veins. It delights in fhadv places. A co- lonel, who had lived many years in Jamaica, affirmed to me, that it was a certain cure for the dropfy, purg- ing off the water gently by urins and flools, by giving its juice or flrong decotlion. Dyin' c Pl \nts. Befides the medicinal plants, they have others for dving in fuch manner that the colour will not come out with often walhing with foap. Such is the root of rielhut or raize-rue, a foit of madder, the leaf whereof is fmaller thnn ours ; and of which they boil the root in Water to dye red. Poqucll is a fort of gold-button, or female fouthern-wood, with green checqaered leaves, which dyes yellow, and holds well ; the flem of it dves green. Ind^go^ that dyes blue, and th« blus- h.rry tree. Panif^ or panqae, dyes black, and tan- ners boil the roots of it with their fkins, which very much thickens them ; Opcponax doib, the fame. Itin D 4 wood: 16 HORTU3 AMERICANUS. tjj'od ; they ufe the chips, with the roots o? pan^c^ mixed with a bl;)ck earth called rvbbo ; thole they boil in water, with wn:ch they dye their fluffs of a fine b!nrk, which fades not like thoie ot Europe : Bclidcs fi'fi Ct logwood, brazd, braziletuOt nicaragua, prickly fcary and icverai othe:s. Docadilla is a fort ot ilons fern, which grows in gieat plenty in South America; the decoftion of which, when drank, refrcfbes after tha fatigue of travelling, and is cftecimcd a greut f'5v'eeter;er of the blood. Eboky- This tree jrrows everv wncre in the fava'onas. It hath a fmall leaf like box, and a ytiiow fl')wer lik(f Englifh broom, and, after rains, puts fortii its fiowers, making the favannis look like Engliih broom -ficids. Its heart, or inner part, is as black as jet. The oil oc it cures the to"oth-ache, cotton being dipped in ii, ancj put into the hoilownefs. Eddos. Bofh the leaf and root of this plant are good food, Th -^t' are three or tour forts of them : Pifo calls them ta:aobay and from tncnce came tlic word tayas ; but they are the largelt iort, and apt to caule a neat in the throat, whicn they call Icratching the throat, fo that only negroes and bogs eat them; and they muft be weli boi'ed ro corvett trut peccant juiCf, which ks like what is m aramith er. The lea\'e^, elp«.cia!!y oi the leffer forr, are very much like dragon arum^ or Wake-iobin. Eider. There is a ffimb in Jamaica known by the name of Spanilb elder, havmg a green jointed ftem, iuii of pith. HGRTUS AMERICANUSi 5^ pith, "like Engliih elder, but hath none of ts "ruitj^ but a loit of a julus, like the long pepper. It cures the cholic, taken in powder fiom a drachm to two ne. This tree is very common, and known to mofi. inha» biters in Jamaica. Tii«; coopers iUake hoops of the youijg HORTUS AMERIGANtfS. young ones for fugar hogfheads. The heart of it is d trery fine veiny wood, and would be of great ufe to joiners for cabinets. The oil is not inferior to rhodz'i HfTif having the fame ufe and virtues. EryngIum, or Erik CO, or vSea-Holly. It is alfo called cryngium Americanum jLrtidum. It jbath fix or feven round fmooth whitifh roots, going ftraight down into the earth, fometimes ten inches long, which uniting towards the furface of the earth, fend forth . le;ucs, fpreading on the ground on every hand, five or fix inches long and one broad, deeply ftriated or jagsed, with little foft prickles on the edges ; the top? ()! heads are like other cryngiumSy having fevcral brown feeds fet round a fmail column. This plant hath a i'ery penetrating ft long fmell. In Surinam it is 'called itnbn, or fugn ferpenturrtt becaufe ferpents will not come iv'here it grows. It is excellent againft the bite of fer- J)ents, a great flomachic, expels wind and eafes the tholic, provokes urine and the cdtamenia. It taftes like fkirrets ; and, having a flrong fmell, is good againft' hyfterics, and that when only fmelt to. Female Fern is fomewhat bitter, v/ith feme aflringency. Dn Nichobs \ndr\-, of Paris, faith, it is one of the pro- bereft things in the world againft flat worms, and ha» fhe advantage over all other things, in that it is agree- able to all foris of people, to thofe that are in fevers "as well as thofe who have none, to women with child and fuch as are not, to infants, old and young people; it allays all the fymptoms in the fick, and procures per- fe6l eafe, fo that it may be given like nurfe's milk. The greater and lefTer female ferns are known by the blackncfs-of the bottom of the ftaik, but it is not fo blac^ HdRTUS AMERICANUS. 55 tbiack as black maiden-hair. Dr Andrews's great re- medy a^ainft worms, which brought away thf folitary bro:id flat worm, four ells" and three inches long, is as followerh: Tukc diagridiujn, cream of tartar, aativm^ nium diaphorft cuniy of each ha' J a fc^-uple ; rhubarb, and the root of female fern, of each half a drachm, pul- verized and mixed ; and let the patient take it in fat broth, at his ufual hour of riling in the morning. This dofe may be increafed or leilened according to the age, ftrengih, or conftitulion. You may wiih good luccefs give of this female fcra by itfelf, mixed with honey, two drachms; or voumay give three drachma of it in a glafs of white wine ; you rtiay give half a drachm, mixed with a littls honey or melaflcs, to a fucking child. Fennel. Crows plentifully in Jamaica.- Ferns. i Ferns are the greatefl: tribe in Jamaica, among the vegetable kind. Sir II. Sloane makes ninety-fix forts, including the hart's tongues, fpleen-worts, maiden- hairs, wall-rues, moon-ferns, and polypodies, as alfd the moifes and capillary planrs. All the ferns in ge- heral are much of the famo nature, as drying, abfter- five, and a little reflringent ; yet as they ditfer in ef- ficacy, I Qiall mention them as they come in their al- phabelic turn. Fig-Tkees. Befides the delicious Spanifli 6g, we have a fort of wild figs, growing fpontaneoully in mod parts of Ja- maica, whofe trees arc very large and fpreading : Sir H. Sloane calls th^mficus Indica inax-i-ma, and mikes five ^o HORTUS AMERICANUS. five forts of them. They dider a little in (hapc, big^ r^ci's of fruit, and largenefs of leaf; but otherwife little pr no dilierence^ all l,)aving a iriilkv juice, which i$ eangfiouG if it flies into the eyes : The juice is thick-^ €ned, by the fun and art, into a gum like bird-lime. Jl is rare to fee any of thefe trees grow up flraigljt of ihcmfclves, but have generally fupporters; for, grow^ ing by the ijde of another, (hey clafp round ir, and .^.'hcn it hath got fome height, it then puts out liitle tranches like a withe, which grow downv/ards to the ground, where they talj:e root, growing bigger and Uronger like ftilts, and then fpreaamg on the top, thev overcome and d^flroy its firft {upporter. There is both uhite and red, but both very fofr, like deal, of which the negroes make bowls, trays, and fpoons^ Its fruit is about the bignefiiof an apricot. They are as large as the cotton-tree, but feldpm (Iraight. That which hath a rcddifh wood, I am of opinion, the balfam cap^v^t.. is got from, or at leail a balfain may be got as good, FiNGRIGOa I believe foin.e negro gave the. namC;, for it is very full of hooked prickles, like cock-ipurs ; and fome call ^he plant fo, which is well known in Jamaica. The blonbm fmcUs as fweet as the Knglilh May. The feeds, when dry, fiick fa ft to any tmng they touch, like burs : I have feen ground-doves and pea-doves^ that covet to eat the feeds, flick fo fafl about them that they could not make ufe of, their wings, lb that you n:ight take them up in your hands. Tiie root of this plant negroes ufe in venereal cafes. Flax-Weed. All forts of flax-weeds are in fome degree, more or ^cfi, eficclual to provoke urine and expel dropfical hu- mours I HORTUS AMERICANUS. 6i- ^ours ; they provoke the tevmjdiate ealc in the g and has the like virtues. A third fort is piqujcien, with a greenifli flower, grows on the fides of the mountain, a yard high. The fourth fort is gdvilu, with a large yellow flower j the Indian women, newiy laid-in, mix the juice of this plant with their broths, to caufe their milk to return, which it does in plenty* GoLDEN-RoD. American golden-rod hath a ftrong thick flriated green flalk, as high as a man, with rough daik-gieen leaves, four inches long, and iinuated about the edges; towards the top of the ilalk are many branches and twigs, fuftaining a great many naked yellow flowers, like thoie of St. John's wort or rag-wort. It is called -vir^ ga aurea major. It is a rooft nobie wound-heib, re- Itringent, and healing all fores and ulcers in the xn'outh, or in any part of the body. It flops all forts of fluxes, inwardly taken ; and yet it provokes urine in abundance, forcing away that tartareous matter which breeds the flone. GopsEBERRY. There are feveral of this kind in America, but not one of them to compare with the European gooieberry. Sir H. Sloane mentions eight forts in his catalogue, xnofl of which are without prickles, except that lort which they call Spanifh goofe berry, which grows like the Englilh bramble. I met with fome growing in the mountains in Jamaica; its flower was fo exadly in the fhape of a rofe, that I took it for one, but it had no fweet fcent. Its fruit is black, cooling, and laxative. GoosE« HORTUS AMERICANUS. 6j GoosE-FooT, or Sowbane. This herb is fo called for its killing (as it is faid) Jiogs, or making a fow caft her pigs, the leaf reliin- b'lng the membranous part of a goofe or duck's loot. It grows very plenty in America, along the fides of highways, in yards, and in fome flreets. li is a ftrong rank weed, of a very cold and moifl quality, even to poilon, as fome affirm. Matthiolus faith, it works up- wards and dou'nv>'ards : But Lycus Neapolitanus gave it againft the (Ir.ingury, and inflammation of cantha- rides. It is better outwardly than inwardly ; for it makes a good poultice or cataplafm, with hogs fat, againfl fvveilings and inflammations. Goose-Crass. There are two plants in Jamaica v/hich refemble dcavcrSt or goofe-gvafs. The fpecific quality of cleavers, or goole-grais, n to Itop fluxes and heal green wounds. The juice of the herb and feed, taken in wine, is good ^ainlt the biting of the fpider called phalangium, GOUROS, Thefe grow intp divers fhapes ; as long, round, crooked, flraight, fome exa6lly in the fliape of glals bottles, and oi ail fizcs, from an ounce to gallons. I had one prefented to me that held nine gallons, and very round. 1 carried to hngland, in the ) ear 17171 two gourds exatlly round like globes, both of a fizc, con- taming fix gallons each. All thefe have a bitter pulp, s^nd feed. The fweet gourd always grows long, as two or three feet, and as big as a man's thigh, which is full of fweet pulp, th.u makes a pleafant fort of iweat-meat or pre- ts;ve, '^he feeds are one of the cold fpecies^ The X.2^ diftiiled ^9 HORTUS AMERICANUS. diftilled water is good in fevers. The pulp, . applied to the e^ t s, abates their inflammation, and all other inflammations. Granadillas. Thefe are tribed among the pafllon-flowers, being the largeft of them all. Its fruit is as big as a fniail mufk-melon, and of the fame fhape and colour ; th« infide next the rind is reddifh, but the pulp ,is white, with many black kernels or feeds. It is of a pleafant taiiifti Iweet tafte, very cooling in fevers. Graffs. Both white and red grapes grow very well in Ame- rica. We have alio a wild grape that grows fpontane- oufly in the woods, !i;-e bunches of Engli(h elder, and of the fame bignels and colour, but of a very pleafant vinous flavour, which are very beneficial to the hunt- ers, to cool and refrefh them ; and when there is no fruit upon its vines, cut but a piece of about a yard long, fuck one end oi it,- and it will afford a great deal of pleafant refrefl:iing water. There is alfo the Ame- rican fea-grape, thrit grows along the Tea- fide, which hath a very large leaf in fliape of a horfe*s hoof, and its fruit as big as the common grape, and, when full ripe, of a bluifii black. Until they are thoroughly ripe there is no eating of them, they are fo rough and reftringent, curing fluxes ,• and when ever fo ripe, they have a flipticity and roughnefs upon the tongue, and binding. They grow by the fide of the fea, and often- times in the fea and fait water, like the mangrove, and therefore are called, by lome, mangrove-grapes. Grasses. We are not without grafs in America ; few coun- tries HORTUS AMERICANUS. ^9 eiies abound with more forfs, and thofe green all the year. Their tribe is one of the largeft of any of the Tfgetable fpecies, including cypieilcs, fea-graffes, 6?C. There are fourteen forrs of dog-gra fs, nine of the land, and five of the water. The ellence or deco6lion of the roots opens obftruclions of the liver, fpleen, gall, reins, and bladder, provokes urine, and eaJcs the cho- lic. The diiiilicd water is given to children for worms, but you would do weJi to give with it a drachm of the powder of female fern, and half a drachm of worm- feed. There are alfo, T;i« millet or panic g^^aflTes, of feveral forts. Scorch grafs, whofe car is like the miilet's: This they feed horIVs with. Bur-grafs, which is hearty food for horfes. The trembling or quaking gralfes. The dadylon, or finger-grallcs, of feveral forts. One fort called Dutch grals. There are about fifteen foits of the cyprefs and ga- langal kinds, which are counted fpecifics againft pef- tilential difeafes, and expel poifon : There is both of the long root and round root. The crofs grafs hath the fame virtues. There are other forts which grow wild, that bear a fort of oats, which are hearty food for horfes, and are commonly called wild oats There i> one of thefe oat* gralTes which is purging, whicn in Chili is called guiU mo. They make a tea of its roots, which they drink hot in a morning, and which purges them like fenna; it grows in marfhy and wet grounds. There are alfo feveral forts of fea-graffes : One ia called the manattee grafs, from the mana'^tee, or fea- cow, that feeds and lives wholly upon this grafs. E 3 Gre£H 7« HORTUS AMERICANUS. Green Withe. This runs up ftraight on the iide of a tree, by itS little clavicles coming; out at every joint, without twift- ing itfelf round the body of the tree. It hath a green fucculent round ft^lk, without any leaves. Perfons that have loft the ufe of their limbs, by the nervous cholic, take thi« root and roaft or broil it over the fire, bruifing it, and applying it to the wrifts, which gives eafe, and ftrtngthens the iimbs. If you put a piece of thiis root into any liquor you defign to ferment, it fets a- woiking immediately. Ground-IvV; It is good for coughs and catarrhs, and will difcufs tumours, for which it is admirable. Groundsel. This differs in nothing from the Englifh fort but ia its leaf, which is more like the daify. The juice, drank from an ounce to two, mixed with a proper vehicle, tvorks upwards and downwards, cleanfing the ftomach and bowels of all corrupt and cold humours. Gu A V AS. Baked or flewed, they eat like Englifh wardens, and are as red. The bark of the tree is very reftringenti and very commonly given in fluxes of the bowels. Guinea-Corn, or Panicum. So called from its great quantity growing all along the coaft of Guinea ; it alfo grows as well in America. I-t is of the millet kind,; of which there a-re feveral forts : Some have red grain,, and forae very white. It is ex- cellent food for man or beaft ; for the ftalks and blades cattle feed upon, as men do upon the grain. I have feea- HORTUS AMERICANUS. 71 iefen a fort that the grains flick clofe to the flalks, whofa head or (pike was above a foot long, tapering to the top, full of very fmall grains or fteds, fet fo clofe ta^ gether that it makes a long pyramid; Guinea-Hen Weed. This plant hath a verv rank fmell, and when cattle eat it, their milk and flefh have a difagreeable tafte. The root, put to aching teeth, eafes them. Gum a n 1 m I . This ffum is a fort of cancamum: It is clear like refin, of a white or whitifh-ycllow, fat and oily. The cleared and mofl tranfparent, and of a ftveet fcent when burnt, is the be ft. Cum Cancamum. This gum refembles feveral forts of gums or refins, of different colours, clotted or flicking together, or of four different colours clinging together, iffuing from a tree of a moderate height : But the difference of colour arifes merely from the different ripenefs or age of the gum ; for that which newly fprings from the tree, when cut, fhall be of a different colour from that which hath come out of the tree for fome time, which colour is owing to the fun and air, it being all the fame gum; as it is very common to have lignum vita: gum of dif- ferent colours, although all from the fame tree. The tree of this gum hath leave* like that of the myrrh, Lemery fiys, it flrengthcns the flomach and bowels^ kills worms, opens obflrudions of the fpleen, ^c. Gum Caranna. This gum flows from the trunk of a tree like a palm, which grows plentifully in New Spaia; Qartbagcna is E 4 the 7® HORTUS AMERICANUS. the only place to have it. It is fo f.imous a cephalic, arthritic, and vulnerary, tliat ir is ultially faid, what tacamahac cinnot cure, caranna can. It is hard, re- linous, clammy, but not very ghitinous ; loftiili and tough; of a drirk olive colour, inclining to a green; ol: a fweet fmell, and fomething aromatic in tafle. It it eommonly wrapt up in plantain-cleaves. Hare's Ears Are accounted panaceas for all forts of wounds, inward or outward. The juice, eifence, or feed, given in powder to a drachm in a glafs of wine, is faid to re- fift the poi f(m of the rattle-fnake; and a cataplafm of the herb, applied to the bitten parr, attracis the venom. Harillo Has a flower like broom, and leaf very fmall, of ftrong fcent, glutinous, and full of balm, which heals all green wounds. Hart's Tongues. They are of the fern tribe, having all the fame vir- tues and fpecific qualities. Hawk-Weed Is fo called from hawks, as is faid, making ufe of the juice to clear the eve-fight of their young ones ; but which fort they ufe, there being many, botanills have not yet fatisfied us. Thofc in America h;ive a fmall fibrous root, from which fprings one round ftalk three or four inches high, with little bunches with long jiarrow leaves, their edges hairy, and their under-fides fpotted with blackifh fpots; at the top of the branches fiand yellow flowers, like thofc of European hawk- Weeds. They arc reckoned cooling, drying, and aflrin- gtnt. HORTUS AMERICANUS. 73 genf, and therefore (lop fluxes. The juice, with honey and roche-alum, makes an excellent eye-wat^r* Hedge-Hyssop. There is a yellovv-flowered hedgc-hvCTop grows in Chili. The Indians eat this herb in thtir (oupSj to refrefh them. It grows in moifl places, near rivers, two feet high. HtLlCHRYbUM, or GoLOEN CuDWiED, GoLD£IJ Tufts, or Locks. It hath a woolly ftalk, with many long narrorf leaves, green on the upper fide, and hoary and woolly on the under fiJe; the flowers grow on the tops of the (talks, in tufts, without any foot flalk ; the out- ward leaves, or capful^, are like filver fc.tles, inclofing the flowers, of a paie-puiplecolour, with yellow thrums as in daihes ; thin tollow many pappoas feeds, as ia othejs ot the kmd. The whole plant is drying and re- Uringent, which makes ii good aoainfl all lorts of fluxes and catarrhs. It is good in quinfr-s, and all ulcers. Herculis. Ti)is fort of pricklv wood is fet thicker and fuller of protuberances and p; ickUs, which are alfomuch longer, than the other forts, fo that thev look like Hercules'-^ club, and it is therefore ca'led Heicults. The wood is very yellow; us blofltmi is almoft like the ca'Iia fif- tuU; after which comes a fiioit flat pod, in fhape and bignefs of a man's thumb: It is firft green, then red, and, when iuli ripe, very black, containing three or four flat feeds, like the Barbadocs flower- fence. The root of this tree, finely fcraped, and applied like a poul- tice to the foultfl ulcer, will clean fe and heal it; as hath been often expciiencedj and fiiil difcoveied, by negroes. Hos- f4 HORTUS AMERICANUS. Hog-Gum. This ?um and its ufes are well known in Jamaica^ It isfo called becaufe hogs, when wounded by the hun^ lers, run to the tree, lance the bark, and rub them- felves with the juice, which not only prevents flies com- ing to the wound, but alio heals it. The juice, when It firft comes out, is of a yellowifh-white, and then turns more yellow, and afterwards black, hard, and b' if tie, like refin. I mufl confefs I do not know the tree itfelf, but hav'e made great ufe of its gum ; and Iknow bv experience, that, inwardly taken, it is an ex- cellent thing in the belly-ache or cholic : Take the juiccy wkm new and frrjh gathered, two fpoonfuh ; mix it with as much water, fweettnid withfugar ; drink it, it will give eafe immediately, and, in four or five hours, ^ive fon.r or five ftools ; it is alfo good to put in a cl} fler. When it is old, it is more of a binding and ftvengthening quality. Made into pills, and given afrer purging, it Hops a gonorrhoea. Take hdg*s lard, four ounces ; the fame of hog-gum ; bees-wax, two ounces; y How 'r/z;i, one ounce ; round birthwort-root in powder, two ounces j mix, and make a balfam : This is a univerial balfam to cleanle old ulcers; it heals them and all green wounds. A piaifler of the hog4 gum alone eales the gout, and flrengthens the part; Hog-Weed'. T 'S pbn* is vulgarly fo called by the planters in lainaica, her mfe tht^y feed their hogs with it, who eaf it ver> greedi.'V It is of the valerian kind. They arei coo'ing and mojrt.^riing plants, full of juice, like pur-» Hanesj having uiucn the fame .virtues. Holly- HORTtrS AMERICANtrS. 75 KoLLY-RosE, or Sage-Rose, Vulgarly fo called; in Latin, ciflas. Sir H. Sloane mentions a fort in Jamaicri, which I met with growing very plentifully in fome of the pooreft ground. It hath a flcm as big as a man's finger, covered with a reddifli brown bark, fmooth, rifing three or four feet high, with branches towards the top, putting forth hoary or woolly leaves, deeply cut or jrjcrged on the edges like nettle, about three inches long and nne broad, having a flrong fcent like the Cun^mon c/^m; between which come the flowers, Handing in a pcnta- J)hyllous calyx, being very large, and of a yellow or orange colour, with five or fix leaves like the crjlus, or like the wild canker-role ; after the flowers, comes a fmall fhort head, made up of three ftrong cartilagi- nous membranes, in which are feeds, pretty large. I have obferved, as I have travelled along the roads, that the flowers opened wide juft at eleven in the forenoon. Cijlus and dwarf cijlus are drying and binding ; they have a bitternefs, and a little heating upon the tongue, which are reckoned I'pecincs for all forts of fluxes. Honeysuckle, or Upright Woodbind. I never could meet with any that was exaftly like thofe in England, either in flower or fcent. There are feveral forts : The hrft hath a green round fmooth jointed ftalk, and at every joint it hath a leaf, whofe foot-ftalk encompades the flalk at the bottom of the joint, like a round cup, which fometimes contains wa- ter ; the leaves are five inches long and two broad^ frnooth and thin like the leaves of gentian or fpider- wort, and have feveral fmall v,*hite flowers, upon long jointed ftalks, refembling other honeyiiicklcs ; after which follow feveral large round black acini, cluftered very f6 HORTUS AMERICAX^US. Very clofe together, making one berrv; in each of which Jies one bhick feed, in a thick pulp, which dries aw.iy. It is a mountsinous plant. The other forts will be mentioned under the title of Wild Sages, The fruits, leave?, and flowers, are of one and the i^ame eflPecl; which is faid to confume the fweilingof the fpleen, and to procure a woman's fpeedy delivery^ The diftilled water of the leaves and fiowers is good to clear the face of morphew, fun-burns, and freckles; a decotlion heals ulcers, Tne oil of the flowers is good againft crampneis, numbnefs, and pal iy. Horse-Tail. I have feen the very fame fort in America, by river- Sdes, as grows in England. It is a fpccific in flop- ping fluxes of blood, whether inward or outward; and heals ulcers and excoriations, if you dry it and pciwder it, flrewing it upon the part ; it is 2\lIo good ia coughs and catarrhs. HouND^s Tongue. This grows in the moft barren parts of South- Ame- rica, where it is called ylo. It grows about two feet high, with blue flowers. In fome parts of Peru, they j^ave no other fort of fuel to clear their quiek-lilver from their iilverj, and to melt it dowru Indian; Shot, This is fo called from its feed being round, black, and fo hard, that,, blown through a trunk or pith, it will kill fmall birds ; they are drilled through, and ftrung to make beads and bracelets. It grows exatfly like the Indian arron'-root, only the flower of this is of a moil beautiful fci^riet colour. The leaves are cooling HORTUS AMERICANUS. 7^ cooling and cleanfing ; applied to the hvpochondros, U'ith water-lily and an;hj;a-oi', thev abate the hard- nels of the fplcen. The juice of the root conetts the corroiive poifon of mercury fublimate ; dropped into the ear, eales pain; and, mixed with fugar, and ap- plied to the navel as a cataplafm, cures a diabetes. Indigo. This plant is called ml and anil. It is a fmall plant, that grows about two feet high, hath a blue greenifti Italk, whole leaves are more blue, fmall, ancJ roundilh, about the bignefs of fenna; the flowers are very fmall, fpiked, and of a purple or reddilh colour; fuccceded by a fmall crooked pod, about an inch long. The way ot making indigo is fo difficult, that many planters never obtain it : I had a Papaw negro that would make indigo with any man in Jamaica ; and, when they mifcarried in making it, would fend far and near to know of him the reafon, and to remedy it : I muft confefs I never pretended to direCl him. Ti-c whole dependance is in due fteepin^ the weed, and beating its liquor. Kow, knowmg few in Europe kno'V how. indigo is made, no more than they do fugar, I will ju(l give a fpecimen of it. The feed is fown ia rows by a ;ine, and, if they have good feafonable wea- ther, that is moderate fhowers of rain, the weed will be fit to cut in lix weeks time, which is done with a crooked knife, in the fhape of a fickle, but not jagged, and are called indigo-hooks. Then thev have three vats or 'cifterns, into which they put the weed, and piefs it down with their feet as clofe as thev can, and, when full, they lay large fticks over it, which are preired down with beams that go acrofs the cifterns, fallened ia a poll in the ground, four or five feet deep ; all which is to keep the weed from riling up when they put wa- ter 73 nORTUS AMERIGANUS. ter to it, which they do as much as it will iinbibc, and over-top it five or fix inches; which, in twenryv lour hours, will grow fp hot that you cannot put your hand into it, and it v/ill boil and bubble like a pot tipiling over the fire, and the water be tinged of a blackith-blue colour. When the weed \s bleeped fQ long that it begins to rot, then they let go the water from it into another lower adjoining ciftem, where it flands about twenty-four hours; and th.t^n they beat, or churn it very well for three or four hours, until its grain appears, and feparates frorn the water. The way of heating is by a pole, with boards made tapering at the uid of the poles, bored full of holes, which they beat, cr churn the liquor with; and when it is near finiCh- ing, they take fome of the liquor, and put it into a porringer, and let it fland, to fee bow the grains, or fine muddy particles, precipitate to the Lottoni ; v{hich if it doth well, and the top looks clear, then they leave off, and let it ftand twenty-four hours longer, for the. mud to feparate fiom the water. They then have two. or three tap-holes, to let out the water into another fmall fquare hole, which runs out as long as it runs cieara Then they lade out all tbat water, and let out the mud into the fquare hole ; which they put inta bags made tapeiing, or like Hippocrates's flecve, of cparfe oznabiirghs, and let the w.iter drain from the mud as long as it will diop. 1 hen they empty tha bags into a Iquare frame, ftir it well together, and dry it; in the fun« If they make it into flat cakes, they, have boxes on pu.rpole ; if into lumps, which they call fig indigo, they put fpoonfuls, or lumps, upon a clotK ftretchcd out, and dry it in the fun. Befides the common indigo, there is another fort called wild indigo, whofe leaves are much fmall.er than the former, but is more hard and woody, growing fome- tzmes HORTUS AMERIGANUS. 79 times eight or ten feet high ; whofe ftalks arc of thcj bignefs ajid colour of EnglilTi broom, but the fiowejf and feed are exaftly hke the former^ Ipecacuanha. There are four fojtj of thefe admirable purging plants. 1. The black forf, which hath a fmall, crookefL Jcnotty, and wijnkled root, almoll like ojarahacciy but liot quite fo big; from which ari'.es a fmall llaik, of *,bout hdif a loot long, partly creeping, and partly rif^ ing up, adorned with a very few leaves, which arc like ihole of the pellitory of the wall. In the middle of thern giow five-leaved white flowers, upon a little foot- ilalk, and a capfula almoll hke a role ; after which come reddilh-biown benies, cf the fize of a fmall cherry, and black when npe ; withjn ks a white juicy pulp, incloling two y<-llpwiQi feed."-, hard, and in (hape of a lentil. The root, when frcih gathered, ii> of a dark-brown colour, of an unpleafant ftrong fmell, a hot and Iharp bittenlh talte, and, when well dried, will teep for many years. Tlie hrll of it that was brought into France was in the year 1O72, by Moniieur Ic Gras, a phyhcian, who had made three voyages to America, but concealed ttie name of it, and called it the Indian root. After him, Abbot Bour de Lot made ufe of it; but Helvetius (however he came by it, or the linowledge of its virtues) \fds the only perlon tnat vras famed tor the ufe of it in all forts of fluxes of the bowels, which gained him great reputation for the cu- ring that diltemper : Upon which, after the king of France was truly fatisfied of the great cures he per- formed, he purchaled the knowledge of his medicine, which proved to be this root. The king fatisfied Hel- vetius ior bis difcovery, appointed him phyfician to one f6 HORTUS AMERICANUS. one of his hofpitals, and made the root known to all his fubjefts in France; where it was ioid for manj^ years at 3 /. pet- pound. 2. The oiher root is like this, but whiter and weaVer. The ufe of both thefe roots is to cure dyfenteriea and diarrhoeas, that is, bloody and other fluxes of thcf bowels, by removing the tenacious morbific matter from the part affected, expelling it by vomit, and fotnetimes bv ftool ; after which it aftimges, binds, and ft lengthens the tone and faculty of the bowels, refto- ying the perfon to his former health. 3. The caap^dy wholV root is thick, foft, and ver- tncous, like' the other fort, and full of tender fibres op filaments; from which root fpring three or four round ftalks, having but one fingle leaf, of a biight-grcen on the upper fide, and on the under a little whitifh. lb bears a flower like a daify, round as a navel, on a fm^le flalk, with manv fmall (ladles, which form them* felves into a beriv, containinsf a feed lefs than muftard- feed. The virtue an 1 efficacv of this root is the fame V'lrh the aforefaid roots; but it is accounted more an-* tidotal, expelling the poilon of aconite or wolfsbane;^ and other like loits of poifons. 4. TfK cnitaga. This excellent plant fcarce rifes the heigtu ot a han:l, with one tender four-fquaro' ftaik, wTiTch is alwavs green, partly lying on the ground^ pu !ing out at the j'>in:s fmall roots, which run again into the earth: at: which joints there come out two fmall Icavts, ft^nding oppoftte to each other, in form and bigncis of moncv-wort, but rougher, and jagged on the ddgts li'.c vervain, fpeedwell, or germander, of a uali'-green, and at every pair of leaves are very fmall Tvhite hooded flowers ; after v/hich come the feed-vef- fels, in bignefs and form of oats, which opening of them felves I HORTUS AMERICANUS. 8i fchemfclves fiied a very fmall round yellowifh feed, lefs than the fmaliefl poppy-feed. The whole plant hath litde or no fmelj, but is of a bitter tafte. It growj generally in meadows and moid favannas. The roots of this plant are very fmall and fibrous, and of a fub-bitter tafle. The more experienced m* habitants of Brazil efleem it as one of their mofl noble purging plants. The juice or a decodion of the plant, or the root itfclf in powder, given in a fmall quantity, fo flrongly moves the mcnfes, that it is not fafe for women with-child to take it, becaufe it purges by ftool at the fame time. The dofes of all thefe forts of roots are from a fcruple to two, drinking with it green tea, or thin polfet drmk. You may alfo|«?ntlv infufe the root in w.'.rm water, whicli pour aw, and that will gently purge; and the remaining root, dried and puU Verized, is more lit for weak perlons for all the afore* faid purpofes. Iron-Wort. We have a fort of this plant growing in Jamaica, it hath a four-fquare flaik, rifing to about tnree feet high, from a white fibrous root. From each fide of the ftalk come out two leaves, oppofite to one another, exa6fly like iron-wort, and of the bignefs of fig-wort. Towards the top come our, all the Way from the foot of the leaves, fphcrical heads, as big and like wild hops (and therefore to called by fome), made up of a great many white flowers, (landing clofe and round together, upon fin inch-long foot*ftaik, like the meadow purple trefoil; after which follow many fmall black fhining feeds, which make the whole head fhew black. This plant hath a fpecific quality to heal all wounds, and Hop all fluxes of blood and other humours. A de-t- codion of this plant, with honey, makes an exceilenjt jxiQuth-wa:er, and for fore throats, ^^ Jaborand. $^ HORTUS AiMERICANUS^. JaBORAND. In America are divers forts of this plant. The fir(t fort hath a yellowifii crooked root, full of fibres, and in fmell and tafte is like the pellitory of Spain ; fiopi which root arifes an afli or grey coloured tender flalk, junning upright for a little way, and then dividing it- felf into branches, putting out upon a foot- (talk three leaves, ftiarp-pointtd like a fpear, with many veins of 9^- pale or v/biti(h green, feeming rough and hairy, but foft to the touch. It hath a tetrapetalous or four- leaved flower; after which follows the feed, in a double capfula, like hemp, comprefied, and in fhape like a heart. This yjjMit is a gieat antidote againil poifon; and Pifo afErmRh, that a captain in Bralil, who was poifoned by eating venomous muQirooms, was imme- diately cured by a native Indian, in the prefence of the Pimce of NalTau, only by taking the juice of this plant; The fecond fort is like the firft, but only the leaves are much larger, and of a deeper green colour, and the flalk more knotty or reaved at an equal diftarice. Tlie virtues' and ufe are much the fame. The third iort is like the bttySy which fome call Spanifh elder. The fouith fort Sir H. Sloane calls piper longuvit 6?c. Thefe two forts are of the fame virtues as the firfl^ but not fo powerful. Jalap. Thefe roots are called mechoacan: There are two forts, white and black; the black is moflly ufed, and is called jalap. It diffeis little or nothing from the four o'clock flower; but it is certain that this fort hath more refin in it than any other mfckoacans^ which is the purging quality, and therefore of more ufe. Choofe that which is heavy, clofe, and fhining when brokc^ ^^hich is the relin part. White HORTUS AMERICANUS. % White jalap is much larger and whiter than the l)]ack or common fort, and is a convolvulous plant, climbing upon trees. It hath a milky, knotty; reddifh, multangular flalk, having here and there folitary leavcS;* which are tender and very green, in flrape of an heart,, fometimes with carlets, andents, and of ah incarnate or pale rofe colour witli- out-fide, and within, towards the bottom of the flower, of a purple colour, Handing in a calyx; and after the flowers come the feeds, as big as peafe, but a little comprelfed as if triangular, contained in a ciflus which ftands out like a navel. The root, on the outfide, is brown, a little rough, of" an oblong^fhape, and large. TheG^ roots are cut longwavs, whereas the black jalap is cu: croirways ; theTe purging, but not fo ft'rong Ks the black (brr, therefore of lels ufe, but of the fame virtues. A gentleman affirmed to me, that by only holdin;; this root a little whiK- in the hand, it took awav the cramp, and never failed; and people ufed to come to him for tlv^ cramp-roor, not knowing what it was, or by any other name. JtSSAMIN'. . There is a great variety and plenty in Jamaica. The true or wild jelfamin is a very large tree, growing wild in woods. It hiith long large thick leaves, in Ihape of a large laurel, with a milky juice, and hath v/hitc odoriferous flowers, perfuming the very woods fhev grow in : But the Arabian jelfamin, which hath a fine white flower, like to orange or lemon flowers, cxceedeth all the reft in fweetnefs. JefiTamins, diflil- led, make a beautiful wafli, and perfume at the fame time. The inhabitants niakt: a wonderful fwect oil olF jeifamins, and, with the mixture of fome other odori- F 2 feioiw 84 HORTUS AMERICANUS. ferous powder and balfams, make it as ftiff as htt^ xvax, foiiTiing thi-m into leveral fhapes and colours^ which the Spanilh ladies put into filver or gold boxes,- and wear them about them. They will keep good- naany years, and aie of great value. K^TMIA. Thefe have moft of them a mallow leaf, and are therefoie tribed amongft the tiee-mallows, or clceas. One fc t hath a niailow leaf, and is of an acid ta(le> like forrel. See SorreK Lacayot A. Is a fort of lemon-balm, wl^ch lafls green all the? year. It makes fine arbours, running up to the tops^ of houfes ; and is an excellent preferve. It is much like the water-lemon. Lagetto Tree Hath a laurel-like leaf. The inv/ard bark may be drawn, only bv pulimg it with the fingers, into the fineft lace that can be wrought with needle and thread, of what breadth and length yoia pleafe; it will alfo bear wafhing with foap, or currato, as white as other lace. The negroes and Indians make fine white ropes ©fit; and I am perfuaded, that fine cloth may be mad« of it, which might turn to great profit and ufe, if peo* pie would take pains to improve what nature offers. Lance-\\''ood. So called from its ftraightnefs and toughnefs. Ne- groes make lances of i", and it feives for rods. The pigeons feed upon the berries, which make them very fat. Laurels. HGRTUS AMERICANUS. 85 Laurels. There is great variety of the laurel kind, or of thofe trees that have a laurel leaf; but as they are moflly known by other names, 1 Ihail ipeak of them as they come in their turn. Lavender, We have two or three forts in America, fome odo- riferous, others without fcent. 1 he lecd tind leaves of the plant are excellent in fits of the mother. Lemons, Befides the common European lemon, which we have in great plenty and as good as any in the wo; Id, we have a water-lemon, iraicli hath a fine large paf- fion-flower, and is theretore tnbed among them. Its fruit is a mofl pleafant fweet with four, and mighty cooling and refrelhing in feveis. It is a climber, and makes fuch thick arbours that you, caa hardly fes through them. Lentils Are a fort of vetch, or fmall pulfe, of which thcr« are many forts that grow wild in America. LiCTi, or Luisi Plant. In Cliili, there is a very common tree called li^ijt the {hade whereof caufes the bodies to fwell of thofe that deep under it ; but more efpecially the face, fo that they cannot fee out of their eyes. The fame doth a (hrub that grows in Providence, and in Bermudas, called the poilon-ftirub; for if you do but go to the leeward of it, the wind will drive its malignant poiloa upon you, fo that a great itching and i'wfliiag all over F 3 your 86 HOilTUS AMERICANUS> your face and hands will enfue immediately. Its ber- ries alfo are a ftrong poiibn : To cure tlie diftempcr, they take an herb called pdlbogui, which is a fort of ground ivy, that bears a berrv as big as a winter-cherry, which they pound with fait, and rub the part affe6led ; by which means the fwtlling goes elfin two or thice days, fo that no ill remains. LiGKUM Aloes. I met with a tree in Jamaica that had a very black heart, and a (ine fcent, much refembinig lignum aloes, being very bitter: A carpenter who fi:fl fhtwed me this tree, called it fwfet iron-wood, A negro that I employed to get fom>e of it, wiien ho brought itni':', faid the fame fort grew with them in Afiic;i, where thev called it columba. Tlie iinefl is the black kind, clofe and heavy. It hath leaves fomething like the olive; after which g:ows a litile round fruit, like the Englifh cherry. There are three colours of it im- ported into Europe: The firfl hath a very thin bark, and under that is a very black heart, clofe and folid like ebony ; the fecond fort is a light veiny wood, and of a tanned colour; the third fort is all fo.id heart, and is called the precious wood of Tamback. Choofe that which is fhining, as green as a leik without, and of a light-yellow witlnn, bitter in 'a He (from whence it hath its name), and wi 1 burn like wax, yielding % fweet fmell. It kills worms, and is cephalic, nar- cotic, flomachic, cardiac, and alexipharraic. We have a wood called iron-wood (for its durable- ncfs, hardnefs, and lading), having a very black heart. Lignum Rhodium, or Rose-Wood. The negroes corruptly call it lignum romm; hv forne it is called candle- wood, becaufe it burns like a candle, and MGRTUS AMERICANUS. 87 and fmells very fu'cet, being full of oil. TIjere is jinother fort of black c.mdie-'.vood, which I take to be the Jigaum alges. Thefe are of the laurel-leaf kind. Lignum Vit.£, Thefe trees grow in aJl or mofl of the woods in Anierica, and are known by all its inhabitants. Its flowers are five-leaved, and of a delicate blue colour, of which may be made a purging fyrup, like fyrup of violets. The fruit is very purging, and for ufe excels the bark: Were it known in Europe as well as here, they would never tifc the bad; or wood, but its fruit. 1 have cured venereal dif aies and vd-ws with this fruit, without falivation. The gum is a mod admi- rable medicine; and tht- life of it is fo well known in, Europe, by the name oi' giiaiacum^ that I need not fay more of it. This tree is one of the ever-greens. Li i IE 5. Of thefe there are many forts in America : They all have the fame virtues as the European lily. See Watei-Lilies. Line, or Lin den -Tree. There are in [-amaica two forts of thefe trees. \ decotlion of the leaves cleanfes and heals fore mouths and cankers, and takes away fwellings in the legs. Limes Are a diminutive lemon. They are Co commoia that the planters fence their plantations and paflurcs in with them; the ftuit is generally ufed, in the room of lemons, to make punch with. The negroes and Indians ufe the root in venereal cafes, and the ftalk to clem their teeth wirh, F 4 Liquid 83 HORTUS AMERICANUS, Liquid Amber Is a natural balfam that flows out, by incifiofl, from the bark of the trunk of a large tree, whofe leaves are like the ivy. Its bark is thick, of an alh colour, and very odoriferous, finelling fomething like amber- gris, from whence it hath its name. The Indians call it ococolf or ocofols. They are plenty in New Spain, The Spaniards call this gum matricalisy for its great virtues in womens diftemp rs, as hardnefs of the womb, opening obftru61ions; it prevents hyfteric fits, and cures the Jijiula in a?io, and all other woutids. I have known defperate ulcers of the throat cured by it, and quinfies and fore mouths. It is good in fcialica rheumatilms, weak,ners of nerves, and contra6led linews. Liquorice. I have feen the European liquorice grow very well in gardens ; but we have two forts of plants that have a liquorice-tafle : The one is a vine, whofe leaves have the true tafle of liquorice, and is therefore called wild liquorice ; it bears a red fruit, in fhort pods like peafe; it winds itfelf round any Ihrub it comes near, rifjng to the height of the tree; the flalks are about the bignefs of a goofe-quill, fet with winged leaves, of equal num- ber on a fide, oppohie to one another ; it hath a fpi- ked clofe papylionaceous flower, of a pale purple, and is pea fafhion ; after which follow fliort greenifh pods, - but black when dry, which contain three or four fear- let peafe, with a black fpot on that part it flicks to. . Thefe grow in both the Indies. In the Eafl-Indies, they make necklaces of the fruit or peafe, which they fay prevent the children that wear them from the fever, make them breed their teeth eafy, and prevent cramps and corivullions* They are of a more beautiful red than jed HORTUS AMERICANUS. 89 red coral ; and, if for nothing elfe, they make beau- tiful-necklaces. I knew a gentleman in Jamaica that made a tea of the leaves, and drank of it many ye.in;, which he faid kept him in gt>od lieaUli. 1 have of^eTi ordered a pfifan of tlie leaves with good fuccefs ia cholics. Tne root of this plant, a.though ir hath not the tafte of liquorice, vet it hath the colour, bo;h out- fide and inlide, of Eng.ilh liquorice- loot. 1 have oblerved flTn^cp to feed greedily upon us leaves. The other wild liquorice is a ihort uprij^iu fhrub, which fome call Iweet-weed. The whole plant tafles like liquorice. Its ftaiks are hexangular, branching out every way like a little tree, about a foot and an half or two feet high, btfet very thick wiih leaves, three at a place, without foot-[^alks, and about half an inch broad and three quarters long, ferrated about the edges, and of a grals-green colour. Ex ahs foliormii come the flowers, on a quarter of an inch ftalk, which are whitifli-biue, and tetrapetalous, w^ith many ftamma (landing round; then follov/s a little round head, or feed-vclfel, not much bii^Ter than great pins heads, containing fuch fmall brov/n feeds as can hardly be dif- cerned. Three fpoontuls of the exprelFed juice of this plant, given morning and night for tiiree or four days, ii> an inialiibie leraedy for a cough. Liu TO Is the name that the South- American Indians give to a flower like the flower de lySy although there be of them feveral colours; and of the fix leaves that com- pofe it, thcic are alw^ays two crowned. Of the root of this flower, dried in an oven, they make a very whice meal, and palle for confectionary^ 9P^. HORTUS AMERIGANUS. LlVER-V/oRT. This plant I found growing in great plentv about ^ mine at St. Faidi's in Jamaica, on tbe (hady banks ojr ihc river-lide, and alio about the hot (piings to wind-r wj.rd. Liver-worts are (b called from rheir great virtue in curing difeafes of the liver, and confeciuently are j|(Ood in the jaundice. They gently purge choler; ttruifed, and boiled in beer, and drank plentifully of, shev help in a gonorrhcga and female weaknefs ; our- vardly applied, are faid to cure m«lignant fcabs, tet- ters, and ring-worms i and to cleanfe and heal old ulcers. hocvs-TnEE. It h alfo called lotus tiee. We have three or four Ibrts of them. 1. This tree hath a very beautiful reddifh flower; its fruk is about the bignels of ihe American clammy, cherrv, of a yellowifh colour, and VGry pleafant to eat, which menand birds covet: but thev have much ftone ■ ■ • :n them, which is the feed. The bark of it cures in- termitting fevers as well as the jefuits bark, as I have often experienced, and that in the fame proportion or quantity; and ti^e bark taken from the limbs and branches is of the lame colour, in all refpefts, as the Peiuvian quill-bark, which is reckoned the bcft. I knew a pradiitioner of phyfic in Jamaica, who ufed no other for many years m fevers, but kept it as a fecret from v'hat tree he had it, moft people fuppofing it was the buiiy-tree bark, but he afHrrred to me that it was ftot. 1 at laft got out of a negro, that ufed to gather 3t for him, what tree it was, which I found to be this fo!t ct locus (there being two or three other forts); upou \vhich I uied it in intermitting fevers, in the room o? -r 'Ui/5 bark, wiih the iike fuccefs, 2. The HORTUS AMERICANUS. 9^ 2 . The flowers of this tree arc more yellow, and its fruit much finaller, but of the fame nature. 3. The firft I ever faw of thefc trees ^^'as about twenty-feven years paft, at one James Pinnor.k's, at Liguanea in Jamaica, who told me it was a Barbadoes locus-tree: It was a tine large fpreading tree, in big- nefs and fhaoe of the Engrliih beech-tree. The fruit is broad and thick, with a hard (hell, and about iix inches long, of a cinnamon colour; wherein were three or four round flat blackifa beans or (tones, bigger than thoie of the tamarind, inclofed in a whitifh fubllance of fine filaments, as fweet as fugar or honey. When frefh gathered, it is faid to purge; which quality it lo- fcth as it grows old. The juice or dccotlion of the leaves expels wind, and eafes ilie cholic pain, bv giving a ftool or two. The inward bark deftroys worms iri young or old. Logwood. It is often called Campeche-wood, from the great quantity growing in the Bdy of Campeche, where the Englifti cut it, and fend it to Jamaica; but not \vith- out great rifk and hazard of their lives, being in the dominioi^s of the Spaniards, who often cut them Oif, In the year 1715, I had an Indian flave, that^I lent down to the Bay of ^ampeche to cut logwood, whom I ordered to fend me up fome of the feed of it, which he did ; and I ordered it to be planted in Jamaica, whoiC it takes to growing admirably well, even in the worfl of the lands ; fo that there are now feed-bearing trees enough to ilock the whole ifland; and, in a little time, the Englilh need not run thofe rilks as formerly lu cutting of this wood, wiiich they ufed to do flanding up to the knees in water, with the mofquitoes lancing and tearing their il«ib, by which many thoufands died, 'k)c.^idt3 ^ HORTUS AMERICANUS. befides every clay running the danger of being cu^ oflT by their envrmies for robbing. Its leaves are muc i of the fhape and bignefs oi I'gnum vii'ir ; its feed is in a> thin membran-aceous cafe, hanging in bunches like the EnCTlith a 1 en-trees. A decoction of the wood floos bloody and other flukes. This is one of the dving^ woods. They now make fences of |hein iq Jamaica^ which are fo thick, and prickly that nothing can pafs through them, and, beirig an ever-greenji you Cdn hardly fee through them. Loose-Strife. The American loofe-ftrifes much refembre thofe in Kngland, and have the fame virtues. They are ex- cellent wound-herbs; flop bleeding, inward or out- ward; cure fore throats, fore eyes, and venereal ulcers. The juice or eflence ftops fpitting of blood, and bloody fluxes. A cataplafm or ointment, made of this plant, is an excellent balfam. The diflilled water is a cof- metic. The whole plant, vm.de into fir!,oak, drives away mofquitoes, &c.. Love-Appi es. So called by the Spaniards, who ufe them in their fauces and gravies; becaufe the juice, as they fay, is OS good as any gravy, and fo by its richn^ifs warms. the blood. The tt uii; of the wild fort is no bigger than a cherry; but thofe that ^row in gardens are as big as a fmali apple, very round and red, and therefore cal- led pomum avioris ; fome call them tomatoes. It hath a Imall fharp-pointed jagged leaf, growing very thick upon its ftalk and branches; its fruit is round and red, or of an orange colour. I have eat five or fix raw at a time : They are fuFi of a pulpy juice, a«d of fmall i-eds, which -jcu fwallow with the pulp, and have fomething HORTUS AMERICANUS. 95 Something of a r;ravy tafte. Its juice is coolin?, and very proper for defluxions of hot humouts in the eyes, which may occafion a glaucomay if not prevented ; it is alfo good in the St. Anthony's hie, and nU inflam- mations; the fruit, boiled in oil, is good for the itch; and a cataplafm of them is very proper for burns. LuciMo. In the province of La Sarrnaf in Chili, and Peruj there is a tree wb.ich is called lucimo. The leaf of it fomewhat refcmbles th it of the orange-tice, or Jlori^ fondio ; the fiuit alio very like a pear ; when ripe, the rind of it is a little yellowifli, and the fl(.fh or pnlp very yellow, with a little bitternels; in the midfl is a very large rough kernel or florte, bigger than the avo- cado pear. Thefe are called in Jamaica viammcts. Macaw-Tuee, So called from a large bird that feeds upon thefiuit of this tree, which is of the palm kind. There arc two forts of them, but they differ in nothincr but the fruit; theie is one bigger ihan the other. This tree is full of fharp prickles from its bottom to the top, and all the ftalks of the bunches, which are exaQly like the common palm. It hath a black flat round nur, in fhape and bignefs of what is called here the horfe-eyc bean, covered over when ripe with a yellow pulp, like the common fmall palm, which the macaw greedily fwallnws. Tne outhde part of the bodv of the tree is exceffive hard; of which the Indians make their bows, and feveral other ufeful things ; but the infide is fall of a foft pithy fubilancc, like the cabbage-tree. Mad Apples. Thefe are tribed among the folanums, or night- Ihides ;. 94 HORTUS AMERICANUS, fiiades ; they are vulgarly called valanghahna, in Ja* - inaica. The only reafon, that I can find, why they are called mad apples is, becaufe they bear fome rc- lemblance to mandrakes : Some have fancied they were the male mandrake, and, imagining them to be poi- ionous, did for that reafon call them mad apples : But I Irtow by experience to the contrary, having eaten ma- ny of them, both boiled and fried ; but the beft way is to parboil them, taking off their outer fkin, which is a little bitterifh, and then fry them in oil or butter, 1 planted, above twenty years ago, half an acre of ground with them, on which my flaves fed, and were well pleafed with the food. They eat fomething like a fquafti, but better than any of the pompion kind ; and are To well known in America, as to need no particu- lar defcription. Angola negroes call them tongu^ and the Congo negroes macumha. Maguey, Of which they make a fine thread called pita, and we call it filk-grafs. It is certainly one of Pifo's cfl- raguatas ; who faith, from maguey they get honey,' vinegar, and drink. Now it is certain, that excellent drink may be made from the pine ; and I believe the, juice, being fo tweet, may be boiled up to a fweet ex- tra6l like honev, and alio its fweet juice, after fer- menting, will turn to good vinegar : But of the pen- guin the natural juice is (harper than any juice of crabs, lemons, limes, or the fharpeft vinegar ; and the fruit fome will eat of until they fetch the fkin off the tongue and make it bleed. Now he faith, the (talks and leaves are good to eat, but none of them can be eaten ; they do indeed make a fine thread. The Wood, he faithj ferves to cover houfes ; but neither of thefe are fit, for they have no wood : lt5 prickles or thorns for needles; neither HORTUS AMERICANUS. 95 neither of thefe hath fuch long (harp prickles, tut very ihoit crooked ones : And the Indians ufe the fruit in- ftead of foap. By this it fhould be the cara§:iata that "vve call curxato; for the leaf of that (not the fruit) many people ufe as fcap for their linen ; and almofk every houfekeeper ufes it to fcour their bowjs, difhcs» plates, and floors. It hath a very large flem, as bi^ as a man's leg, that !.hey may cover their houfes wiih'; but It hath not prickles fit for needies ; So that I ai^ at a lofs which of thefe three forts to aflTign the Chili jwd- guey to. It is certain, nothing of the currato can be eaten. Some Mexicans call the currato TW.'^r^fy, ancj the penguin inagud prunnrum ; (o that it leems moft probable to be orte of thefe, but chiefly this of curra- toes> for fcouring like foap. ^ Mahots. The firfl I ever faw of thefe trees was above twentv years pafl. Walking by the Rio Cobre, near St. J ago de la Vega, in Jamaica, I obferved a very beautiful large fbady tree, full of green leaves, large and round, (luck full of fine red flowers ; and, upon a drift exa- mination, I found it to be one of the tree-mallows. Itjj flower has a little fweetifh fcent, but in exaft fhapeandl colour of the red lily. The fea-niahot, with a yellow flower : The bark of thefe makes fine white ftrong ropes. The bark of thefe trees is often called maho^ from the corruption of maJiau and 'inahot, i3c, Maiden-Hairs. There are many more forts of maiden-Iiairs in America than in Europe, and fome of them much larger; while others, both golden and black maiden- hairs, aie exi€lly like thole of England. TJjc)- are Ipc*-- cilic;i gfi HORTUS AMERICANUS. cifics againft all oHftruc^ions of the lungs, liver, fpleen^ I3c. and heal and dry ulcers. Majoe, or Macary Bitter. Thii; admirable plant hath its name from Majoc, an old negro woman fo called, who, with a fimple de- co6lion, did wonderful cures in the rnoft flubborn difeales, as the yaws, and in venereal cafes, when the perfon has been given over as incurable by fkiiful ph^ficians, bi^caufe thtir Herculean medicines failed them ; viz. preparations ot mercury and antimony. It is alfo called iMacary bitter, from its growing in great plenty in the: bav of iMacary, and being a very bitter pl.nt. I met with fome of it g'owirvg in a fkirt of a wood near St. J''go de la Vega, in Jamaica : It wa$ but a fmali tree that I law, with winged leaves much like the Engnfh ^ih ; the flower I never faw ; but the fruit is m clufltr};, m rV.ape and bignefs of the Canary grape, fi.li gre.;n, then of a bright fcarlet, and wheii full ripe as black as a dama'cene plumb: It hath a yeiiovviih pu'p, with a fub-biiLer tafte; then a large flone, v/ith a k'^'iiel or feed in it, all very bitter. Thi* p'ant was firft (hewn to me bv^ a planter, who had done many exccilrnt cures auiongit his negro Quves, in old inveterate {fu^bo n u'c^'S, and tnat by only boiling the ba;k and leavei, or (lowers and fruit if they happen to be on the? tree when Wanted to make ufe of, giving thein p'eniifuily to dink, and wafhing the fores with fome ol tiie dcco^lion ; ih^^n laving over them a leaf of the jack HI the buih> vunn their fores v/ere healed^ Mallows, Of which there are many forts in America, are di- vided into Luree dillmd cialfcs. 1. Th« HORTUS AMERICANUS. ^7 lo The common mallows, whofe feeds Hick clofe to their outward membrane. 2. Are properly abutilons, whofe membranes are fomething laxer. 3. Are alceas, and are thofe whcfe membranes or follicles are not difpofed as in the others. But all of them arc mucilaginous. Some of them I fhali fpeak of under other names; but as for the common mallow and marih-mallows, their virtues are already fufficiently fct forth in every herb-writer. The moft common mallow in America is a large hairy roiigh mallow, with a yellow flower. Of this I have often made an excellent mucilage, in order for ilnguentum diali/ie^r, ailthough we have the fame ahhca as in Europe. T'here is alfo another mallow: Its flowers are yellow, v»'ith a purple fringed bottom, and coidattd petals. A tea of this h wonderful in di (orders of the ftomach. The Indians make a poultice of it, which they apply' to ripen fwellings, and is counted an uni- vcrfal remedy. It grows in moift grounds, and by river-fides. American mallotv.> with an elm-tree leaf, and flowers {landing in knots at the angles of the leaves with the llalk. American mallows with vine-leaves, and roundifli J>rickly fruit. American mallows with the leaf and outward form of ground-ivy, and huflcs or cells double-forked. American niailows with an ivy leaf, and with a fcarlet red flower. Downy American mallows, with the leaf of the muflc-melon. Mh-Trefoil, or Buckbanes. We have rhany forts of trefoil, and alfo a mavfh- trefoil, or a fori; of buckbane, growing in America ? It hath a leaf like that of the water-lily, with a whits Sower. Marfh-trefoil, or buckbane, hath been of late much experien-vd in Pruflia, to be a wonderful re- medy in goutifh dillempers ; They make a fttong de- codioB HORTUS AMERICANUS. io§ coQion of the leaves in ale, and drink a glafs thereof every four hours daring the paroxyfm ; from whence they find great relief. The decottion hath both a very difagrceable fmeli and tafle, but the plant may- be rendered more pleafant if prepared into a fpirit, li- quid extraft, or fyrup. Dr. Robin fon recommends this plant as fingularly ufeful in hydropic cafes ; and fays, he obferved fcabby poor fheep, which have been put into marfhes abounding with this herb, have foon recovered and been made fat by eating thereof; and that the Germans and other nations highly efteem it; that in all defperate difeafes they have recourfe to it, as a panacea, or univcrfal remedy. Mastick. There are in Jamaica three forts of trees called maftick; viz. black, v/hite, and yellow. See Black, &c. Maaic. Melons. Mu(k and tratcr mdons we have in great pJenty. The feeds of melon and mufk-melon are two of the four greater cold feeds, of which they make emulfions for the ftrangury occafioned by cantharides. They are great diurciics, and abate the heat of fevers and all inflammations. Mil.k:-Wood Is of the latirel-leaf kind. I have feen the boys fn Jamaica get the milk of this tree, which immediately grows fo tough and vifcous, that they would put it upon twigs and branches of trees, by which they would catcTi parrots, pano(j[UCts, and fcveral other birds, both ^rcat and IniaU, G 4 MitK* i04 HORTUS AMERICANUS. Milk-Wort. This is called blue Chili milk-wort. The nativej> make a cold infuGon of this herb ail night in water, and, drank in the mornincr, it proves a fhong diure- tic, and eafes pleuritic pains. It generally giows ca mountainous land. lyljNT. Befides the common mint, which grows here in great plenty, we have alfo an herb tvhich Tmells like the Engliih cat-mint, and is of the fame nature, b'»t ftronger. It is a fpecinp to hailen ojf facilitate labour, or the birth of the child; it expels wind, gives eafe ia the cholic, and takes away cramps and convulfions oc- cafipned by cold and moill humours falling, upon the nerves; it alfo cures barrennefs in women.. MiSLETOES. The very fame fort that grows in England upon oaks, pear-trees, and fome others, grows in America u^on dogwood, which is as hard as the Englifh oak, and of the fame virtue. It is good againll the tailing fick- nefs, is accounted a fpecific for mqfl difeafes of the head, and is one of the chief ingredients in the famous jfulvis fpilepticus of Riverius. The berries, bruifed and the juice expreifed from them, mixed with linfeed oil, and taken inwardlv, cures pleurifies, flitches and ^li pai-ns of the fides, relieves palfies, convulfions, and ^ramps ; made into a, cataplafm, ripens fwellings ai;d fchirrous tumours or impoflhumes. MoON-*WoRT Is of the fern kind, and of the nature of ofmundaSj which wiii be treated of hereafter. Money* HORTUS AMERICANUS. 105 MON'EY-WORT, Which fome call herb two- penny, grows in g^reat plenty in America. The)^ have the fame virtues with the Englifli money-wort, which is a Ipecific for all forts of fluxes of the bowels, and is a good vulnerary. You may make an icxcellent balfam of the green herb^ to heal' wounds. Mosses. American mofles are much the fame with thofe of Europe, and of the fame virtues, differing in v/hat they adhere to ;' fome of which are under water ; fomc fpreading upon the ground ; fomc flicking to trees, wood, and itone ; and fome flicking to rocks that are conflantly wafhed with fait water, I had two forts brought me from a place called Wreclf-Rcef, of the fub-marine corallme kind. The crully mofs fpreads itfelf upon the rocks, afte^r the manner of liver-wort, which the country people in Europe (crape from the rocks, and, being finely pow- dered, they -make a moid malh, and put it inLo vef- fels fit for dvmg the cloth they intend, which it doth of a purple colour. John Francis Abela, in his de- fcription of Melita, mentions this mofs ; winch, he faith, is by the country people called verctiia, which they dye wood with. The other fort 'isfdcw^r/iannus diclus roccrlla tinflo- rum : This makes a noble purple. Before the tucus is reduced into a tindure, the internal part is a whitiGi red, and the external blackifh. The lively colour thereof is drawn out bv maceration in urine, fu bv lit- tie and little they gain the tinclure; and to fix it tijcy life a little Jal alkali, or foda. In making this colour, they put five times the quantity of the plan: to one of urine. ao^ HORTUS AMERICANUS. tirine, or juft; as much as will macerate it, in which it lies a month; then they add a twelfth part of the fal 4lkaliy or foda^ to the macerated herb, which produ-i ceth a violet colour; this they heighten to purple, and then to a fcarlet or fine red, which fome women ufe as a wafh for the face, and is called roccella, Mouse-Ear. It is hot and dry, binding and confolidating, an5 therefore a good wound-herb. ]\^UG-WoRT. There is an herb in Jamaica called mug-wort, that ^rows in all Or mod of the pooreft grounds in Ame- rica ; hay, after a piece of ground is thrown up^ being worn out by planting, commonly the firft weed that appears is this. It is full of branches, which are co- vered with fmall white flowers; its leaves are very much jagged or ragged like rag-weed. In Jamaica, it is called wild wormwood ; the Spaniards call it corho Janta. I fa-w, in the year 1723, a very great cure performed upon a Jew, who, after a fever and ague, had a violent inflammation and breaking out with fores' t>n both iiis legs, which could not be cured by phyfic, nor any ointment in the apothecaries fhops ; at laftj he was advifed to corbo fantat to make a bath of it^ v/hich he did, bathing tv.ice a-day ; and in three or four days he was perfectly well,, all his lores healed up, and the inflammation gone< with the great paiii that attended it. This I Was an eye-witnefs to. MULLIENS Are eKcellerit wound-herbs, either inwardly or out* wardly applied; ihey ftop fluxes of the belly, help ruptures, and are good in all coughs and ulcers in the lungs, fore mouths, and ulcerated piles. Mushrooms. HOPvTUS AMERICANUS. 107 Mushrooms. There are three or four forts of Tnufhrooms or f(in>- gaffes in America, and but one thaC is fit to eat, which jr/the fame with thofc in Europe, and gathered and pickled in the fame manner. Fungi aihi venenati vifcidi, Thefe grow fo like the common inofFenfive fort, that feveral pcrfons have htcn deceived, and killed by eating of them. The fymptom is, that foon after they have eaten of them a hiccough feizes them, then a cold or chill inefs all over the bodv, attended with tremblings, and, at laft, con- vulfions, and death ; for the circulation of the blood is (topped. The antidotes againit it arc, the vahambu, jaborand, nhandiroba^ and fome other plants mentioned clfcwhere. The other mbft venomous fort h one that ri fes out of the ground about f\yi inches high, rounding, and hollow like a bladder, as red as fcarlct^ full of holes like fine-wrought net- work. Mdsk-MallovC. Its ftalks are very hairy and rough ; it hath a yellow flower, almofl as large and like the cotton-fhrub ; its leaf is like the okra ; its fruit is as big as the round bkra, and hexan^^ular. The feed of this plarit fmells as fine as any mulk, and it is therefore called the mulk- tnailow. The Egyptian women fet a great value upon it, for it helps banennels ; it cures a fimking breath, h a very great cordial, and expels wind. The feedi* alfo called abelmojch^ or bamia mofchata. AlusK-WuoD. This is vulgarly and commonly called alligator-wood. The bark of the tree is thin, of a whitilh- brown without ic8 HORTUS AMERICANUS. V'ithout and redJifli within, and of a mofl pleafant fcent, like mufk. If you put a fr.udl piece of this bark into a pipe of tobacco, and fmoak it, it wiil pfer- fume the room imrtiediately. The wood alfo fmells like muik, as well as the bark ; but as it grows old and dry, its fcent wears ofiF, JvIosTARD. Befides the common muftard pLint, we have a wiI4 muflard, or a fort of Egyptian treacle-mulbud. Th^ root of this plant is deep, laige, white, and firmly fixed in the ground by feveral fmaller. The flaik ia very fbrong, round, hairy, and green, riJing to aboyt four or five feet high, fpreadmg branches on every fide, having fingered leaves ftanding on long foot-ftalks. The leaf is divided generally into feven parts or fingers; they are vifcid or clamtnv, will feem to fticic to the band when }'OU fqueeze them, and have a rank difa- g'reeable fmell. The flalks and branches have ihort, green, flrong, flraight prickles. The flowers come out on every fide of the tops of the branches: They are each made up of four long petals of a white colour, •with feme purple thrums or flamina. The pods are fmall, round, and of a pale- green colour, inclofing 4 great many very fmail browrx leeds. There is another fort, that hath a root four or five inches Ions, fmali and white, with lateral fibres draw- ing its nourifhment ; the flalk is round, green, upright, about two feet long, witiiQut any branches, having leaves thioly placed thereon, without any order, ftand-r- ing three always, together, on an inch foot-rft^lk, abou^ an inch and a half long and half an inch broad in the middle; at the top of the flalk is a fpike of tetrapeta- lous floxvers mixed with purple, like the other forts ; alter v.hicli follows a three-inch long pod, fmall, rouni], greeiij HORTUS AMERlCANUS, log ^reen, like the other. The whole plant is balfdmiG and vulnea y : I have feen the vety leaves applied to fores, and they would heal them ; they give eafe in the gout ; boiled in oil, remedy cutaneous difcafes, efpecialiy the le^rofy. The leave?, boiled or decofted in water, expel poiloHj provoke appetite, comlort tlie ftomach, caule expeftoration, and expel wind. The juice, with oil, helps deafnefs, dropped into the ear. The leaves, beatenr and applied to the head, cure its aching from cold. Thele grow in great plenty in all or moft parts of America, even in the worfl and pooreS: grounds, in yards, fides of the highways, and llreets,' without planting or cultivating. Myrtles. Many kinds of myrtle grow in America; as the ple- mento, fil\er-wood, ^c. All thele are ever-greens ; and one fort, vz. myrtus cotnii fdio^ warmeth and ftrengtheneth the ftomach, expelHng the wind, and eafing the cliolic. A bath or fomentation of the leaver ckanles and heals ulcers. All the myrtles are of a hot biting reftringent quality. There is a myrtle in North-America which affords a great quantity of green Wax, of which they make candles in Carolina : I have feen great quantities brought to Jamaica, that burnt Very well. Nahambu, or Nhambi. It hath a fibrous root, from which arifcs a pretty thick hard ftalk, knottv, rough, and hairv ; fo are the branches. It huh a broad, juic\, green leaf, largely indented or dnided, like the American celandine. From between the leaves come the flowers, on a lorg- foot-ftalk, which are linole and monopetalous ; after which comes the fruit, which is round, and as big as a little liO HORTUS AMERICANUS. a little cherrv, covered over with a chefnut-like rougli icoar, m the ihape of a ricmus ; in which are flat ova| feeds, of a Ihinins; yellowifli-brown colonr. Every part of this plant hath a hot fpicy l>?t>ng tafle upon the tongue, with an aromatic flavour, it is an excellent antvdote againft ail forts of cold poifons; for it is laid, that two or three drops of the juice of this plant, put jOpon a toad, immediajiely kills it. The powder of the bark, leaves, and fruit, expels the poifon of aU other venomous creatures. In cholics and belly-aches^ it eafes the pain and expels the wind. Naseeerry-Tree. It is alfo called by fome fappadillo^ ; but I take them to be of the mammee kind, having jnfl fuch art outfide as th£ mdvimee /aj/oia, only they are much fmalier. The fruit s gathered when tree-iipe, but is riot then fit to eat, being hard and milky, for a drop of milk comes out at the end where jt joined to the iootA\^]k ; but when they are laid vp for two or three days, they grow loft and mellow, are of a very pica- fant fweet tafie, and fall of juice, like the Bergamot ,pear. In u there are two or three ftones or kernels, hard, black, and fliining as if pdlifhed, about the big- jjiefs and ^hape of a prune- lione, ^IAVEL-WoRT. We have in America a water navel-wort, that grows in ditches and moft ftanding ivaters in great pltnty. It hath a fmall round root, under the furface of the earih ; at the joints are a great many fmall hairy blackifh fibres, by v^-hich the plant is nounihed ; and from the .fame places are lent up the leaves and flowers, upoi> p:-e!!y long foot-Oaiks. Tbe'-leavcs are round, thick, imudi'-d oa the edges, fmoutiij, abave an inch diame- terj, HGRTUS AMERICAI^fUS. sm tsr, and very green, the foot-ftalk entering in thelf very centre. The flowers Hand clofe toget.er roand their foot-ftalk's end; they are m^ny, joined togetner, and of a greenilh colour. The feeds are broad like par* fnip-feed. The p'ant is fharp to the twflc, and his been taken by fome planters for fcurvy-grafs ; the whole plant is of hot and lubtle paits, plealant and aromatic to the tafte: They 0|>en obftru^lions of the liver and reins, for which no remedy is more proper; the juice of the green leaves is a famous antidote againft poilon; and the native Brafilians procure vomiung with it. It is ufed to take awjy the fpofs which the Portuguefsi call ^5 Jii^ados, which are liver- fpots; and it is faid to kill flieep, if they feed upon it, Nefhritic-Tree. This tree is fo called in Jamaica for its being a (o-^ vereign remedy for the ftone, gravel, and dithculty o( making urine; it is alfo good in obltrutlions of the liver and fpleen. The ufe of it was difcovered to our traders to the main continent of Ame ica, where a Spanifh bifhop did fuch wonders with ic f^r the gravel and ftone, that, being willing it Ihould be known for a public benefit of mankind, he ihewed the Ihrub or tree to fome of our merchants, who foon found the fame tree in Jamaica, but chiefly about St. Jago de la Vega, for which reafon it is bc?li«ved the Spaniard* planted them; for if you go above four or five miles from that town, you will hafdly meet with one of thele trees throughout the ifland. It has a molly flower, th..t fmells as fweet as the Englifh May or hawthorn; is a large fhrub, with little roundith leaves; the whole plant grows alraoft like an Englitti maple, but is full of fir.all prickles ; its leaves glafTv, fmall, and round ; jKs flowers are like the fingrigo ; iu truU is a fmall long rfd ii2 HORTtrS AMfcRICANUS„ red pod, which when ripe ODens of itfelf, turning in- ii.it^ cut, rurJing, and twifting, fhewing a black bean, xyifh a white poppy down fubftance at one end, in the fhape of a kidney. Upon this account, Hiid the Spa- nifli bifhop, nature .points out the ufe of this plant* the bean itfelf is m fliape of the kidney, and that white poppy fubftance about it fignifies the fat of the kidney. It is the bjirk wh)ch is chiefly ufed : When deco6led, it fmells like new wort, but a little bitterifh; of which they muft drink plentifully ; it worketh by urine. I have often given it with good fuccefs; but I am of Opinion the fruit would be found to be prevalent if experienced; for the batk is fo ufed, that it is now- rare to meet with a tree that hath not been barked. NftTLES. There are many forts of nettles growing in Amerka;, and rome of them more ftinging than any in England™ 1 take the American nettles to have the fame virtues as thofe of England. The flinging fort isgoodagainft tympanies or diopfies, occaiioned by a ftoppage of urine : The juice of the leaves is good for thofe that evacuate a vifcid or ptirulent urine, which negroes are v<^rv (ubjccl to ; and, mixed with fugar, milk, and a little flour of brirrJlone, drives out and cures the itch. Thofe that do not fling are much of the fame nature of thole that do; for thofe that ftmg, do it not by any different heat of the plant, but by their downy or hairy prickles being harder and ftiffer, piercing into the fl:m ike points of needles; and when that fliarpnefs is taken away, either by the fire, or the heat of the fun, thole nettles fling no more than dead nettles, which are good pectoral heibs, ^c. Nhan* HORTUS AMERICANUS. 113 NriANDiROBA, or Ghandiroba, 'The firfl time I met with this plant was in St. Tho- #nas in the Vale, in tl^at part called Sixteen-Mile Vv'alk, in Jdjnaica; where I f.iw ir climbing and running up to the tops cf very high trees. It happened to have its fiuit upon ir : Its leaf very much refembles the Englifh ivy-leaf; bur irs fruit is like a green calabalhy Only it has a circular black line round it, and two or three warts, or Jiitle knobs; the infjde of the (hell is full of white flatwfti btans, ihclofed in a white mem-» feranous lubRance; and, when thorough ripe, the fiuit turns brownifli as a ripe calabafli, and the beans or huts are then of a lightifh brown colour^ and have a thin hard trull, in winch is a whiufh kernel, full of 61), and exctOive biiter. The nuts or be.ms, which are generally ten or twelve in a fhell, are lo clofe and cornpreired, that when I have taken them out, I never couIJ place them fo again as to make the (hell contain them. Pifo faith, th-.t he has fecn whole families in Brazil, that have had violent aches and pains, got by the night- air, who have been cured with the oil of thefe nuts, which they may eafily have growing in great plenty in moft parts of America. It cannot be ufed in vicluals, being fo excehive bitter. A French gentleman, fome years paf}^, brought me from Peru fome of thefe nuts, and afked me, if I knew what they were ? I did not fatisfy him whether 1 knew them, but aficed him what the Spaniards called them, and what ufe they put them to ? He told me, that the Spaniards called them avil" la ; and that they were worth their weight in gold to expel poifon, and wifhed I could find them growing in Jamaica; which they do in great plenty, and the ne-* groes tliat I employed to get them for me called them Jaho, H Nickers. ri4 HORTUS AMERIGANUS. Nickers, There are two forts of thefe trees which are called rickers, the bovs plaving with the cone or fruit as they do with marbles : The one hath a yellow cone, the other an a(h-coloured one. Its priekles are ftiort and crooked, as the cocklpur-tree is; it hath a long fpike, full of yellow flowers; the pods or hufks are full of rough prickles,' like the chclnur, but fharper, and fo ftifF aS to prick the' finger if you touch them; within this rough pod or cafe are four or five hard cones, which are called nickers, fo hard that the teeth cannot crack them. , The Indians and negroft make ufe of them in X'enereal cafes, and fay tiiey purge and carry off the caufe, and afterwards bind and ftrengthen the part. Tiiey grow aUo in the haftern parts of the world ; for the Egyptians, in Alexandria, account them a fort of guard for their cbildien againlh witchciaft and forcery,- banjiing them about their n-cks as amulets. The fruit,- finely pulverized, and given half a drachm, helpetli the meagrim, the torture of drawing the mouth of one fide, as aifo convulfions,; and falling ficknefs. NlGHTSHADFS. There h great variety of nighiSiades in American- exceeding in number ttiofe in Europe. 1 . Solanvm bacciferum Americanum flore corymhofo. Sir H. Sloane makes it a valerian wi.h a chickweed leaf. It grows very common in molt parts of America, and feems to be a cold and moift herb; but 1 do not re- member I ever faw any thing- eat of it, or that it is of anv great ufe in phyfjc. 2 . Solarium raccmofum Americanum. It hath a large yound reddifti ftalk of the thicknels of one's thumb, riiiag four or five feet high, fet without order,, with- many HORTUS A MERICANUS. 115 jfnafly very large leaves full of veins, fome greater and feme fmaller. From the joints where the leaves ftand come forth feveral fmall ftalks, with flowers of a pale red, confilting of four leaves, itandins; m cluflers, which brinj forth fiiiall blackilh round feeds, four in a hulk or capfula. The root of this plant is very white and ]arge, like a brionv, and above a foot long; generally the flalks of thefe are as red as an amaranthus, which makes the Englifh in Virginia call it red-weed; and the Indians in New-England dye their fkins with it, and the barks wherewith they make their ballcets. This night-fliade is a familiar purge in Viiginia and Mv'-a'- England; a Ipoonful or two of the juice of the root vvorketh ilronglv, and fo doth the extra6t; but when the root is drv> it loleth its purging quality. I have known negroes in Jamaica who have taken them for a %vild yam, ;iui have eat them as fucn, which made thetn verv lack, and purged them ftrongly.- 3. This is iViQ folaiium luberofum efculenturrty or Vir- ginia potatoe, whofe llalk is two or three cubits high, fometimes five or fix, and is an inch thick, round, juicy» and channelled, forrrewhat hairv, of a green colour, marked with many reddi(h (pots, hollow and branched: The branches are weak, and, if not propped, lie flat upon the ground. It has feveral leaves fet by pairs upon the fame rib; three, fometimes four or more pairs, j^)in in the compofition of one; but one leaf unpaired is greater than the reft. The leaves are fomewhat hairy, of a dark-green coloJr, and (hining upon the upper fide, but underneath neither of fo deep a green nor fhining : Between each pair grow other interme- diate leaves, little and round, which make up the com- pofition above mentioned : The flowers are equal in bignefs to thofe of the wild mallow; they fmell like the lime-tree flowers ; Thefe flowers are fucceeded by II 2 an ii6 IIORTUS AMERICANUS, an equal number of litfle apples, abont the bignefs oi a chefnut, but of an orbicular forni (ike thofe of th< feed-vam in Jamaica), at firft of a datk-^reen colour, but when ripe of a du|>, vviih a great many round flat white feeds. i was lutpnied to ice the Angola fiegrocs eat it as coiilu, or as we dij fpiaage, without any prejudice, b> ing (o hke the deadly Uight-lhade ia Europe The bark of this plant, bruifed and put into water, intoxicates h(h, (o that tlicy may be ealjily taken, but doth nor kill thcni. The le ives are reckoned cooling, reftiingent, and ariod\ ne; the juice, being put up the cnus^ eaics pain and abates inflammation, and it doth io in tryfipelaSf or St. Antnony'^ fire; but it ought to be cautioufly ufed, being very cooling and relfiingtnt, and therciore too repercufTive or repelling. The juice I know to be good in cancerous tumours and inflammations, and the diflillcd water is good in fevers. The leaves, juice, or oil, applied to the head, i:; good in frenzies from heat, and l9r inflammations, and filhares or cracks of the nipples of the bvcaft. 6. Sdanum baccifcrum^ caule et Joins torn nto-inca^ nis fpmofis jlort luteo frudu crocco minore. Tiiis grows very common every where, even about the ftreets of towns and villages. The ftaiks are very thick fet with (iwrt aooked pncicles, the points downwards, wooIijiT, H 3 lound itS HORTUS AMERIGAMUS. found, and about three or four feet high ; the leaves are pretty large, and deeply finuued on the edges, and its big rib is fet uniemeath with fmall prickles, fo that they make a good fence ; the flowers are monopeta- lous, though the ora be divided into five petala, re- fic6led back, of a vellowifti colour, with apices like the reft of the folanuniN ; then come round orange-coloured berries, as big as EiiJliflh pe ife, having five greun cap- fula under them; the berries are full of an orange- coloured pulp, containing fmall white feeds. Their roots are very bitter, and of thin parts, and excellent virtue, efpeciaDy the male: Half an ounce, m powder, purges all humours downwards, opens obilrudions of the liver and proftrates, provokin;^ urine, being ufed in- ftead of the opening roots, which are fo much efleemed. The deco6lion of the roots is diuretic, and good in burning fevers, and with honey in catarrhs, and m the ftrangury, with fome cardamoms it expels wind. The deco6lion of the leaves, with fugar and limes, is good for the itch. The juice of the roots and leaves is good for confumptions, and with fugar for the forenefs of the breaft. 7. Solanum fruticr>fum bacciferiim fpinojum fiore ex- ruleo. This grows like the former, but its leaves and fruit are like thole ot amomiun Plinii. The flowers of this are blue, and the berries red. There are alio, 1. Tjk- fhrubbj' nightfhade, with a branching leaf. 2. T le Ihrubby prickly nightftiade, with peach tree leaves. 3. Tnc flirubby and prickly nightfiiade, with laurel leaves. 4. The climbing niehtfliade, with wooily leaves. 5. T'le woolly nighilhdde, with a mullien leaf, and fciall yeiiow berries. 6. Tree HORTUS AMERICANUS. 119 6. Tree ni^htfhHdc, with a leaf like the common garden iiightfhade, with a rm.ill fcarlet-coioured ben v. 7. Tree nijTbtfhaJf, wiih .m undulated or wa\\:d alinond-tree leaf, wi^li a largt white flower and red fruit. 8. The chmbing nightiliade, with a henbane leaf, and a flower with a purple colour \vithovit, and white within. They have all much the fame nature and quality with the feyen forts mentioned above. Refides tliefe nightfh. ides already mentioned. Father Feuilite takes notice of tyvo forts growing in Chili; the one oak-leaved, buter fwief, with purple flowers; the other the folanui ft (f^henppodio.ides acint.s albcfcrntibiis, 1 he natives were ignorant of the virtye of this plant yntil the negroes came ainongil them, who, were fubjctl to a certain difeale whicii killed them in ihcir prime: It was an extraordinary extenhun of the anuSy attended wuh a fever, which was fo mortal ihat many of them died before they difcovered the remedy. They take the juice of the tops of this plant, mixmg it with rofe- water and a little alum, which they apply to the part, and a little taken inward y cures the diflcmper. The lame, being applied to the eyes, takes away inflamma- tion, pam, and dimnefs. This fovereign plant grow:s -about a yard high, about the mountains of Valparaifo, and many other parts ot South- America. O.AK OF (pAPjPA.DpClA, It hath, a flrong, flriated, woody, folid, flem, as big as one's little finger, growing about three or four feet high. Its leaves are cut and divided jufl as mugworC leaves, but are a, little larger, of a very dark-grcea colour above, but underneath more pale; and upon the top twig com-e out a great manv fmall mulcous flowers, of a yeiipw colour, fet clofe together as in li 4 othcrt .120 HORTUS AMERICANUS. ©rhers of this kind. The fiuit is an cchinated or rbngH hufk, juft; like the fruit of trioulus ; and the fcfd is like grape-feed. The whole plant has a very ftrong •fmelJ, like the others of ti»is kind. There is a notion -of this herb, that if it be put under the fjck's pillow, it foretels death if he fiecp not. tJoiled in ceigilnn^ that is, fefamum and Lurpt wiiie, and applied to the part afteded, it cures empyemas and ablcelFes of the llomach, before they ripen, efpccially if the jmce be drank wiih honey; rnadei«iloa plaiOer with horehonnd, it cures the cramp or fpafm; with honev, eaten fad- ing, it cures the dropfv. The root, b-Mled in the ,tbove- faid oil, takes out freckles or fpots ; bojlcd with cocoa- nut nnlk, it cures ulcers, and fo dorh the hark, piMv- dered and fprinkled upon them ; it eafcs afLer-pains. OlL-N^UT5. Thefe are fo called from the great quantity of oU got out of them; and alfo vulgarly, but very errone- oufly, ca^Ikd agnus cajlus^ they having no relation to that fpecies ; but every body in Jamaica calls it agnus cajluiy or oil-leaves, which they put to their bliliers inftead of meJilot, and ufe no other. The root, de- coded and drank, cures the cholic and fwelling of the belly and legs ; and fo doth the leaves, boiled with wild ginger and ground-ivy, and then fermented with a little fugaror melaffes, which will purge very ftrongly, planters have not only cured dropfies in negroes with this drink, but alfo the yaws and venereal com^plaints, taking away the gummous nodes, and pains in the joint6. The leaves, applied to the head in fevers, remove pain ; a cataplaim made of the green leaves, caffada flour, and a little oil of the nuts, applied to womcns bieafts, fottens and dilculfes the coagulated milk and hardnefs; and,, it not to be difculled, it will ripen it, bring it to digeitiun, and break it. Negroes HORTUS AMERICANUS. ia.i Negroes are troubled with a diftemper in their legs, v«rhich they call a gumea-worm : The firft appearance is a Iwrd (welling, with much pain and inflammation; and Come time after wiil appear, through the flefh and fkin, the head of the worm, as fmall as a knitting- Teedle, which tliey take hold of, and draw it a littlcj and get it round the quilly part of a fmail feather; but if they draw jt fo bard as to break it, many ill acci- dents will attend the part, and fometimes gangrenes enfue. Now, to ripen and forward the work, make a poultice as before diredled, and lay over it one of the leaves, which will foficn and bring the worm out^ by turning the feather every dav, drawing a little at a. time, and by degrees the worm will come entirely out, which fomtrtimes will be leveral yards long, and not bigger than a thread ; fometimes, barely anointing the part with the oil, and laying a leaf upon it, will do. "Xhe oil of thii> nut pur^res flrongly; and I knew one that, would boidly gi\e an ounce or an ounce and an half, in what they call the dry belly-ache, which would go through the patient when nothing eife wouid; outwardly, it is good for cold aches and pains, or cramps and contra6lions. Its oil wiil keep without being fetid or Itinking, and therefore may be converted to feveral uies. Oily Pulse, Which is called zefamum, or Jefamuni, Africanum, The firft time I faw this plant, it was growing in a negro's plantation, who told me, they ground the lecd between two ftones, and eat it as they do corn. I ob- fervcd it hath a fmall long fibrous root, from whence fprings up a (Iraight fquare flalk, like a nettle, t'.vo or three fc^et hi^h, fee about with long leaves oppofite to one another, *ud jagged, much rcfembling the lamium^ OS 122 IIORTUS AMERICANUS. or archangel ; and at thq tops of the Italks come forth divers u'hite flowers, like digttalis ; after which come their fe( d.vefTcls, full of fmciJi white feeds, which the negroes call foonga, or wohngOy which is much like the fago fold in (hops, but very oily. The oil that is drawn from it is called cergdivi oil. The feed is of- ten mixed and ground with coco, to niakc chocolate. In Ethiopia ^ind E,oypt, they ufe the oil as we do oil- olive : It is made by grinding the feed, arid exprefhng the oil, as they do by other feeds. The feed and oil are hot, moifi, emollient, and refolvin.^ ; breed giofs fiourifhmenr, and therefore hurtful to weak flomachs. Propped into the ear, it is good to foften the hard wax, and help deafnefs. A decoction of the plant is good for coughs, pleurifies, inflimmarions of the lungs, baid. fchirrous tumours, and women ufe it for hardnefs of the womb. The herb and feed, boiled m honey, make a good cataplafm or poultice for hard tumours, and dried nerves or fhrunk hnews ; fo doth the oil. A deco6licn of the wjiole herb, flowers, and feeds, its good in clyfters, to foften the belly, and give a flool or two. The juice of the herb or diililied water >s good for fore eyes. The decoded feed fattens, the oil more, and the dregs (which are eaten for fo HORTUS AMERIGANUS. 123 tiays, is good againfl the itch, hard breathing, pleu- rifies, pains in the ftomach, womb, and guts, and i$ every way as effe6lual as linfeed oil. Sir H. Sloane faith, that Mr. James Cunningham, F. R. S, and his very good friend, wrote to him from China, w^here he was phyfician to the EngHfh faftory, informing him,^ that the bean, or mandarin broth, fo frequently men- ttoned in the Dutch Embaify, and other authors, is only an emulfion made ot the feeds of fefamura and hot water. pKRA ^ Is of the mallow kind. The fruit, when green, is rnt crofs-ways with its feeds, diicd, and lent to Eng- land and other parts of Europe, to make their rich foups. Thofe that frequent Pontack's have often eat of It, paid well for it, and knew not what they were eating at the fame time. They are very cooling, emollient, and of great noti- riibment; very proper for dileafes of the breaft, and provoke urine, ftone, and gravel, having all the virtue of the marfh-inaliows. I advifed a perfon that was in a deep conlutnption, and of a depraved appetite, of a cadaverous countenance, and a mere fkeleton, to have always the dried feed of the okras by him, that he might not be without them all the year round; the which I ordered him to have beat mto a fine flour, feparatmg the huflcs from it, and fo to thicken all his broths or foups with this flour; which afforded him fo much Eourilhment, taking away his he6lic fever, that, in lefs than twelve months, he was as ftrong and lufhy as ever he was ail his life-time, and gave me many thanks for my advice. Ol© J24 HORTUS AMERICANUS. Old Mens Beard. It is a ftrange aud uncommon name to give to any fhing of the vegetable kind; bui their great rdemb'anc^ to a whitifh hoar, hangmt: down, makes it fo ca'led. It is no more than the vilcus ot a tree; it hangs dowij Vtpon branches of trees like hair, but chiefly, upon ebo- pi^s and manchioneel trees, of whiti u coioui. Drie4 ^nd beaten very well, it makes good fluffing for fiid- dies, or to pack up any thing, as v;eli as tow or flax, |t is of a drying,, binding quality. Oleander, or Rose-Bay, J met With a very fine beautiful oleander, wiu^ dou- ye carnation flowers, like a role, buc not fo fpreading. They tliat had of it told me, they had the feed from Peru> and called it rofe of Jericho; but I told theiTj that was a great miflake, for it was an oleander with double flowers, having the fame fort of leaf. It is of little or no ufe in phyuc. Some afAiini it is venomous^ iaken inwardly. Olives. In fome parts of the main contineT>t of America, they have of the tre-^-olive, as good and as large as in any part of the woild; in Jamaica, th^y have not got them ; not but that they wouid grow admirably yrell there, as we fee by the wild olives, which grow in great plenty'-. Of thefe there are two or three forts : One is made ufe of for green walks, and hath a fruit like the luke or Lucca, olive. Another fort, they cali olive-trees, are very large, tall, fp-eading trees, whof^ ■^'ood is excellent timber ; and its bark is made ufe of to tan leather, mixmg it with mangrove bark. I have made an excellent reitrmgent ftyptic water of the bark. HORTUS AMERtCANUS. 125 iailc. The bully-tree, aforementioned, bears a verj^ exad olive, which might be improved. O N A G R A Is a fort of yellow-flovi'ereS loofe-flrifci Cr rofe-bay willow herb. OnobrycHis, or Cock's Hea!*. The onobrvchisy in America, feems to be more of tihe hedyfarum kind, or hatchet vetch ; of which there are ieveral forts: 1. Hedyfarum triphylhm fruticofum jlort purpurea Jil qua vane dif.orta.: This hath a woody brown-co- louvcd ftem, having feveral green rough branches, four feet high. The leaves come out on every fide, with- out jlTW order, three alvvays together upon a ftalk, fmoolb above, of a dark-gieen colour, and rough un- derneath ; the tops are long fpikes of flovvers, papilio- jiactous, of a paie purple colour; after thefe fo'low feveral pods, (lender, rough, jointed, and varioufly /urned and diftorttd. The plant purgeth a little; for if an ounce of the dried leaves be put ift a purging de- codion, it furthereth the purging property, caufing jiot only watery humours to be voided, but thofe that are tough and clammy ; alfo, it helps to digeft cold huinoirrs. 2 . Hedyfarum triphyllum ft^ticofum minus. This grows much like the other, 3'. Hedyfarum triphyUwin fruticofum flore purpurea. This grows like the former. The root of this is hot, 2nd a decoiliDn of it, in watet or other vehicle, is one of the bed remedies againft cold fluxes of the belly. The fume or fmoak of the leaves, received with the head covered, cures the head-ache which comts from cold. All the forts of hedyfara, efpecially the feeds, are bitter, and therefore, good Ilomachics and expel- icrs tiS HORTUS AMERICANUS; lers of poifons. They open obIliu6lions, and kill worms. Opuntia. This is an American name for what fome call prickty pears, of which there are feveral forts. J. The common prickly pear. 2. Another kind, whofe flowers are of a beautiful red. It has a fucculent juicy leaf, but no prickle, jior has its fruit. Some call it the true cocJiineal, as i£ its feed or flower was the cochineal ; but that is a vul- gar error : This (hrub is only the food for cochineal, which is an infeft or reptile. Many or moft that have touched or difcourfed upon cochineal, have fallen into miftake, taking the plant they feed upon for the cochi- neal, when the cochineal is an infefl; that feeds upon this plant, and the goodnefs of it is owing to their feeding ; for we have enough of the fpecies flicking to fevera! plants in Jamaica, but thcfe plants not being their proper food, they have little or no red tin£lure in them. From TlaxCala, a city in Mexico, they deal for 2QO,ooo crowns worth a-year. There are four forts of cochineal : i . Is called tvjkaliobe, which is of a black dull colour, but the longeft grain ; 2. Is mif- tekay which is a grey fort, and worft of all; 3. Is guaxacdy in colour between both, and of the fame fize, but much excels the others in goodnefs; the 4th fort, Which is the tlaxcalla, or roftlhy which is the reddeft and richefl of all ; But the merchants, for covetouf- nefs, generally mix all together. Choofe that which is plump, large, well fed, clean, dry, of a filver colour on the outfide, and, when chewed, tinges the fpittle of a bright-red colour; rejeft that which is meagre, fair, and light, and take care there be not fmall fand, grit, or ffones, in the mfide, which will make it weigh, and ^ahance the price. Orawg£s. HORTUS AMERICANU5. 127 Oranges. In America there grow Oranges of all forts in great plenrv, and as good as in any part of the world, and fome as bad, for there are both fweet and four, bitter and infipid. They are fo well known that they need no particular defciiption, and therefore we ihall treat more iaigelv of their virtues. Orange-peels are oiK*, bitter, and hot, and therefore warm and comfort a cold ftomach, expel wind, and help digellion ; chewed and fwal lowed upon an empty fto- mach, they prevent ti echolic. My father, who was aa experienced phyTiCian, made a conferva of the peels of fweet or china oranges, which he adminiftered in cold vifcous humours of the lungs, and in that which fome call rifingof the lights, great fpitting, and (limy matter in the glands, with good fuccefs. If the flowers were added to it, it would make it more prevalent. The famous Boyle faith, orange-peels cure the cholic ; and Etmuller faith, they pro^ oke urine. ^ The effence is a fpecific in the cholic ; the preferved peel is a good ftomachic. Five ounces of the juice ta- ken at a time, drive forth putrid humours by fweat, and fortify the heart. The diftilled Water of the flowers is very odoriferous, and is good againft contagious and peftilential fevers; it alfo helps cold and moift infir- mities of the womb. The butter or ointment made of the flov/ers, and mixed with a little of its ellence, is excellent to anoint childrens ftomachs and bellies, comforts and warms the ftomach and bowels, eafes the gripes, and kills worms. Ortigia Is a plant that grows in Cnili, and is a fort of flings ing palma Chrijii. It is a violent emetic and cathartic. OSMUNDAS. lii HORTUS AMERICANU5. OSMUNDAS Are of the fern kind. The only difFcrence that I fee between ofmundas and common ferns, is in their growing upright without branching, and both flalks, and under the pennas, are full of ferruginous duft,' t?c. They have the fame virtues as common ferns ; befides which, they are accounted fpecifics for rickets in children. A decoftion of them, drank plentifully, forwards the healifig of wounds, ulcers, ^c, OysteR-Greem Is a fub-marine plant ; fome call it Jlanke. It is of the nature of other fea-weeds, which is cooling, drying, and binding; is good againft inflammations- cind the hot gout, and is faid to kill worms. PaICA JiJLLA. This grows about Lima and Callao. Its flowef* rim is white, and is compofed of fix yellow^ petals. It is a purging plant, but rarely ufed, by reafon of its liolencCi They alfo think it a poifon, becaufe it kiUdi' a houfe-animal, called cueiz in Peru and Chili, in Ja- maica called wood-flave; and therefore it is called cueiz-ha-ne, Pajomirtoba. There are two forts of this plant. The firft fort hath a dark-greenifh woody ftalk, rifmg from fibrotis roots about three feet high, havihg many fmall ftalks coming but on each fide ; and upon each ftalk come out eight 6r nine leaves, without any manner of foot-ftalk, op- pohte to one another, abcut two inches long, and half an inch broad where broadel^, which is towards the ftdlk, and then goes off tapering wiih a fliaip point ; at HORTUS AMERICANUS. 129 at the end of the branches come out its flowers, which are pentapetalous, and of a yellow colour ; after the flowers come fmall flat flender pods, from four to fix inches long, which) when ripe, grow brown, and open; their feeds are a little bigger than lentils. It flowers and bears feed all the year. The fecond fort grows much like the former in moft refpefls, only is a little fmaller, and the leaves round inflead of being pointed at the ends. The root is powerful againft: poifon; the feed, bruifed and mixed tvith vinegar, prevails againft ring-worms. The whole plant is cooling and cleanGng> and therefore good in ulcers; fteeped as y^ou do indigo, it will afford a black- iih-blue muddy fubflance, which is excellent for the galled back of a horfe, and other fores. It is called by fome, wild indigo. Palghi is the name that the South- American Indians give to a fort of fmall fage, which grows up to a buflr. The leaf fomewhat refembles rofemary, or what they call wild rofemary in Jamaica. It fmells like Hungary water, and muft contain much volatihty, if we may judge by the fcent and tafte. Palqui Is the name the Indians give to a fort of very fl ink- ing wall-wort, having a yellow flower like it, which cures fcald-heads and fcurf. Palms. T . The date-tree. Tjje unripe dates are very harfh and binding, and the ripe alio while they are frefti, but not fo when they are dry. They ftop vomiting and fluxes, and cheqk the menftrual difcharge; they are X alfQ J30 HORTUS AMERICANUS. alfo proper for relaxation of the fundament and pileS| being taken m red wine. 2. The palm-tree, from which the oil and wine are got. It is from the' fruit that they get oil ; when thev are thorough ripe, there is, between the outward fkm and the (lone, a ycUcvy pulpv fweet fubfkance ; this pulp turns to a thick oil, lik-e butter, as it grows old, and of a reddifh-yellow colour ; alfo, the inward ker- nel turns to oil in ihe lame nianner. It is an excellent fiinpling oil ; the traders for il;aves, when thev expolc them for fale, (have them very clofe, and then anoin{; their bodies, limbs, arid joints with it, which makes them look fmooth, ileek, and young. From the body of the tree by tapping, and the branches before they have fruit, they get a hquor which is called palm- wine, and fo flrong as will inebriate or caufe drunken- nefs. 3 . The palm from which they get the cabbage, which is only the green top, that is about a yard long, the outward pans being taken off, which are thick foldings or coats, one over the other, until vou come near the centre or moft inward parts, which is as white as fnow, arid that which breaks or fnaps fhort without firings is good c<»bbage. I obferved, that afrer the firft coat is puHcd o(F, which is a very gre^n colour without- fide, the iniide is very white, and fo are all the reft un- ti4 vou come to the cabbage, and the nearer you ap- proacn to :r, everv tunicle or coat grows thinner; and perhaps there are five or fix of thefe coats or Jkins be- fore vou come at the good cabbage. I alfo obferved, that thefe fkins are finer and whiter than paper, and with a ftylus or fteel pencil you may write any thing you have a mind, which is not to be rubbed out, but as Lifting as the leaf itfdf, which may be dried and kepi fur -ever in what (hape you pleafe. The trunk of this HORTUS AMERICANUS. 131 t^!is tree is very fniooth and flraight all the \vj.y to the top, which is fonictimes fifty or fiKty feet; but when they are Co tall and old, their cabbage is not good ; one of about fifteen or fixteen feet high, and which looks very green at top, produces good cabbage, and in great qnanLify. From the top i^p'ing twigs or fmall branches, full of fmall flowers ; and then follow fmall round berries, of the bignefs of an hazel-nut, v.'hich the birds cat and mute the ftone, bv which there is a continual fupply of them, otherwife they would foon be dcftroved; for when one is cut down, there is never any Tpring from the root again ; or if the top be broke oH' tiiis, or anv of the palm kind, they never grow ag^in. Tiie o::'lide of this tree is To hard that a bullet will hardly enter info it, but it is not an inch thick; the refl, wi^hin-lid:', is nothing but a foft pappy fubflance. The Spaniards cafed their houfes wiih boards of thefe, which were found to ftand firmer thcxn arv other houfe againll earthquakes and hurri- canes. 4. The coco, or coker, or coco-nut tree. This is the largefl, in j^eneral, of all the palms; for although the cabbage-tree fomctimes, in open ground, and thofe very old, groTv to be forty or fifty feet, yet in general they are feldom above t-.vcnry feet high; whereas the coco-tree generally grows to forty, fiftv, or fixty feet high, and, if no accident happens to break its top, will fland fixty, feventy, or an hundred years. Thev are fmooth and without anv prickles, having no branches but towards the top. Their ftalks, with its leaves, are like large limbs of trees, one flalk being as big as a marj*s arm, and ten or twelve feet long, befet with leaves on each fide, long and narrow, and not above an rnch broad. Near the top come out manv branches or tv\igs, upon which the fruit grows, which is very I 2 l^rg* 132 HORTUS AMERICANUS, large and green, about a foot longr, weighing five xft fix pounds weight. All the fubflance of this fiuit, from its outer part to the (hell, is made up of a tough thready fubflance, of which is not only made cordage and tackle for (hips, but caulking ftufF, which is better to caulk with than oakum : and being fteeped in wa- ter, and beaten oS flax-weed, makes excelUnt cloth for feveral ufes. After this thready fubflance is taken ofF> there appears a large hard fhell, having at the head or top three hcles, and a little protuberance betu'een> vhich fomewhat refemLles the nofe and eyes of a monkev : Thefe fhellsj being poliftied, not only xnake cups to drink in> but alfo are fet in filver for ornament, and feveral other ufes. Within the (hell is a very white fubflance, about half an inch thick, ad^ hering clofe to the fheil, which is firm and hard, tafting like an almond while it is frefh gathered; butj fcraped out and put in the fun, it turns yellow and oily, or fat like butter or like palm-oil, and of the fame ufe; but it will not keep long. The refl of the cavity of this fiiell is filled up with a finc^ clear, fweet, cooling liquor, as pleafant as milk; which w»ll not keep long out of the fhell, foon turning four like vinegar; but, in th« fhell, the liquor will all become a perfeQ kernel in about twelve months time,, if you keep the fruit with its outward bark upon it (otherwife it will not do fo)» Of this kernel are made fine fwectmeats. They alfo draw a liquor from this tree, either by cutting the branches that bear the fruit (to which they faflen vef- fels to receive the liquor), or b-y boring the body and plugging it, after which they let out the liquor wheri and how they thmk lit ; this liquor they call famu- li tafles like new fweet wine ; this they fometime» boil up into a grain like fugar, which they call jagra^ If you expofe the liquor in the fun, it will foon turn HORTUS AMERICANUS. 133 torn to vinegar; but, diflHIcd in its ferment, it makes a Ipirit csdltd orraqua, or rack, which far exceeds that made from rice; and thefe trees being called in fome places tdd'e, it is therefore called toddie-rack. The frefh meat or kernel of this fruit is of great nourifh- ment, therefore good in emaciated bodies; it is faid to be a great provocative, and is good to take away the roughnefs and hoarfenefs of the voice. Bat the Americans, not knowing the great uf^-'S of this tree, do pot fet fuch a value upon it as thofe in the Eall In- dies; for there cannot be found in the whole world a tree that hath fo many necelliuies for the ufe of man- kind; and it may properly be faid of it, that it afford- eth meat, drink, and cloathin^. 5. The palmeto-royal, which makes the bed cover- ing for houfes. 6. The little round thatch, which grows more com- mon than palmeto-royal, and moie made ufe of for covering houfes. 7. The great macaw-tree, already defcribcd. 8. The fm.'.ll macaw-tree. 9. The prickJy-pole. It beareth a fmall round red berry, which pigeons feed on; it hath a fweet yel* low pulj>, between the outward red fkin and the Hone. It is with this prickly palm that the Indians arm their arrows, being as hard as iron: The arrow itfelf is the flag of a fugar or wild cane, that grows out of the middle and top of the cane, being ligiu, ftraight, and fmooih as .a dragon-blood cane. Of- this they take about four or five feet, and, at the end, they puc a fmall {harp fpike, of about a foot long, of tnis prickly palm, in which they make nicks to lay thfir poifon in, and beard it to hinder us being drawn out from the V(ounded part. 10. The large broad round thatch. It i^ fuppofcd 1 3 the 134 HORTUS AMERICANUi the Spaniards in Arneiica get froTn this the gum called caranna, which being of valu-e, they endeavour to con-* ceal it. It is a very large-bodied tree, rather biggef than any other pahns. I have ("eefi feveral hundred of them growing in one fmali favanna. They are about thirty or forty feet high, and have a large branch- ing top, with very thick italics, as thick as a nlan's wrift ; at the end of which is a broad fpreading palm, which when cut into a fan towards the ftalk, will be above a foot over, and make a femicircle of abo\'e two feet ; ihis they ftain or dye of feveral colours, making commodious fans to fan people, and keep off the flies while they fleep. The leaves they blanch,- and mak&' fine bongracts and hats of, 6?tf. PANKE Grows chiefly in the kingdom of Chili, although it is to be found in moll parts of South America. There are two forts; the one, ihey eat the raw ftalks of peeled, which are of a fweetilh agieeable tafte; they alio drink a tea of its leaves, which very much refrefhis them m violent heats. The tanners boil jhe roots together with their ikms, which very much thicken thern : it alfo yieidf a black dye.- It loves' to grow in moift bo^*^' places, and by riveis. The other fort they apply the juice of to eafe the pain, and flop the irnmoderate flux of the piles, taking it mwardiy, and outwardly applied as a poultice. The dycvi mix it in their compofitions to dye black. It grows about a yard high, Papav/s. 1 . Papaya major. They are called trees becaufd they grow as high, but are of no durable fub fiance, and fo foft that one flrokfe of an axe will cut through * them. The floweas are of a yellow colour, and ad- here HORTUS AMERICANUS. 135 htre clofe to the body, having no foot-llalk ; then the fruit comes, upon a fhort foot-ilalk, growing in clufters, of a verdant green without-fide, but, when full ripe, they turn yellow, and reddilh on that lide next the fun; it hath a great number of round foft blackifh feeds, about the bignefs of a pepper-corn', lying in a foft pappy fubftance. The outfide peel, cut thin, makes fine -green tarts; the inward part makes fauctf for pork,* fo refcmbling in colour and talle apple-fauce, as not to be known to the contrary; it is aifo ufed for goofe or duck. When it is thoroughly ripe, it may be eaten -raw, having a pleafant juicy tlivour, like feme apples. AH thefe trees arc very milkv; for if you pull off a leaf, there efTufe feveral drops of white milk, and the fame when you pull off the fruit. Irs milk takes away warts (being very Iharp ^md corrofive}, kills ring-worms, and takes oflF fians on the eves. 2. Spreads itfelf in flowers, and it is very rare to fee any friiit upon tfetem, and thole Imall and long. The flowers are preferved with fugar, and make a fine fweetmcat; 3. Is the female wild papaw, which is every way like the other female, but only its fruit is much fmal- ler and rounder, and when ripe is food for birds. They grow wild in the woods. 4. The male wild papaw, which grows like the former. ParaguaV Tea, Since the South-Sea company fet up in England, this herb came to be known there, and was at the time cried up for the bell of teas. I knew a gentleman that fancied, by drinking of Paraguay tea, it broke the ftone he had in his bladder; indeed^ X faw him often void I 4 fmall 13^ HORTUS AMERICANUS. fmall fhelly pieces of flone, that looked as if it fcaltd or feparated from the outfide of another ; but let the virtues of this plaut be what they will, it brings great fums of money to thofe that, trade in it at Santa Fe. It is brought thither up the river Plate. There are two forts of it; the one called yerva-co?ir.Palos, the other, which is finer and of more virtue, is called yerva Caammi. This lail is brought from the lands belongr ing to the Jeiuits. The great confumption of it is be- tween La Paz and Cafco, where it is worth half as much more as the other, which is Tent fiom Potofi to La Paz. There come yearly into Peru from Para^ guay, the place v/here it grows and has iti name, above 50,000 arrobas, being 12,000 cz^y. of both forts; whereof at leaft one third is of that fort c-d\\e.^Caavitni, without reckoning 25,000 arrobas pf that of Palos, which goes to Chili. They pay for each parcel, con- taining fix or feven arrobas, four ryals (which we call, iji Jamaica bits) ; being the duty called alcavala, or a rate upon goods fold, which, with the charge of car- riage, being above 600 leagues, doubles the lirft price, making it about two pieces of eight the arroba; fo that at PotoS it cornes to about Eve pieces of eight the ar- roba. The carriage is commonly by carts, which carry 150 arrobas, from Santa Fe to Xuxui, the laft town of the province of Tucuman; and from thence to Po- tofi, 1 00 leagues farther, it is carried on mulea. P.ASs ion-Flowers. 1 The granadilla, fpoken of before. 2. Thole called pops, becaufe, if you fqueeze the frait, it pops off, being hollow. The flowef hath a fine purple thrum, like a fringe, and a cro fs one in. the centre of the flower, with a reprcfcntation of three nails; and therefore hath its name of palhon-flowcr^ lepre- HORTUS: AM-EaieANN9. 1.5^ sieprefenting the nails and crofs made ufe of to put oar 3aviour to death. There are man/ dilfercac lort^i of ijicfe flowers. PAjYCo Herb a. Or Indian, plantain for the Ilone» is a plant of am, indillerent iize, ilie ie.;f vv:hsreof is very much jaggedj it frnells hke a rotten icino:i. iis dccotlionii a ladcr Tiiic, and very good dgainit pleurilies; it is alio eXj- ceiient for the choiic and, flpne, A|uch of 15 grow-jj in. Cliili. Peacii-Tkee. There is great plenfy of thcfe trees in Northr Ame* rica. The leaves, decoded, are faid to be a fpecific for the choiic or bcUy-ache ; To is alio the lyrup made of the flou'crs, which clcaiiles fucking chiidrens llomach^ that are apt to puke or throw up thtir food ; it alio purges watery humours. 1 never law but one peach- tree HI Jamaica, and I never faw or heard of it bear- ing any fruu. P£ASE. Befides the forts fpokcn of amongil the beans ther« are fome that are more properly caied peafe. i^ng-^ lilh peafe grow but very nidifrerentiy in tne foutheru parts of America; nay, even in Jamaica, tliey have jQotliing, in the tafte of the fweetnefs mat tney nave lu England, and therefore tiicy ipicUc trie caiavancgs be- fore them« Pellitory of Tiici Wall. American pellitory diflFers little or nothing from that in Europe. If hath a fpecific quality to cure the flran- gury and dropfy, expci^iing gravel or llime from tho- rems 138 HORTUS AMERICANUS. reins and bladder ; and is alfo good againfl coughs, and pains of the pleura, liver, fpleeri, and womb. It grows on Uie fides of Hiady rocks. I'enguins. The fruit is good to clean a fore mouth, if it cart ibe endured. A little of the juice, dropped into wai- ter, quenches thirft and heat of fevers ; a fpoonful of the juice, with a little fugar, given to children, kills -worms, clean fes and heals the thrufh, or any ulcers of the mouth or throat. They are very diuretic ; and the juice, given in rhenifh wine with fugar, brings down the terms in women fo powerfully as to caufe abortion, if given in too great a dofe. Both wine and vinegar mifjht be made from the fruit ; and from the leaves might be made a fine flaxen filk^^ as fine or finer ilian from the filk-grafs, Pennyroyal, Befides the garden pennyroyal, there are two {ortsi 'they refemble it in its leaves, but no way in its biting |)ungent tafte ; and, having flowers like the amaran- thus, I take them to partake more of the nature of thofe than of peniiyroyal. PipPER-GRASS. This plant is fo called from its hot biting tafte, like pepper; but I think it tafles more like taragon, or the land-crefs. Sir H. Sloane makes it to be a' fciatica crefs. Sciatica crefs had its name (as we may fuppoic) from its gieat eflBcacy and power againft the hip-gout. It is alfo a great provoker of tiriiie, and cures the fcurvy and dropfy ; the juice is excellent in cutane- ous diftemperSi mixed with oil of wax. It grows in gfeat plenty ipoiataneoufly in moft parts of America : 1 faw ilORTUS AMERICANUS. 139 i faw a great quantity growing in the church-yard in $t. J ago de la Vega. Peppers, 1 . Piper longum arhoreum altius folio nervofo niinore fplca graciliore ct breviorc. This has feveral flems, riling twelve or fifteen feet high ; they are ftraight, green, fmooth, jointed, and at every joint protuberant or knotty, each joint being about a foot diflunt, and being full of a pithy fubflance like elder; tome call it Spanith elder : Upwards, the joints are at lefs diflance from one another. Towards the top (land the leaves, one at a joint, upon a fhorc foot-flalk; they are two inches long and one broad, ending in a point; the nerves or fibres of the leaf are very large, running longways, making a pleafant (how on a very dark-greeii fmooth leaf, which, when rubbed, is very aromatic. Oppofitc to the leaves comes a julus, about an inch long, {lender, and of a yellowifh pale colour, refem- bling long pepper. The leaves and fruit are very hot, and, d«co£led and drank, are good in the cholic of belly-ache, and in all hydropical difcafes. It alfo makes excellent baths againft all forts of fwellings; it ftrengthens and corroborates the parts. 2. Piper longum racemofum malvacevm. Th\s is commonly called Santa Maria, from its great vir- tues. Its leaves are cordated, or more of the fliape of horfcs hoofs, foft, of a dark-green colour like the mallow, and refemble the Englilh colt-foot, but much larger, being about feven or eight irrches diameter. Itr loves to grow in fhady places. The leaves, being very foft and large, are applied to the head when it aches, and immediately take away the pain ; the fame it doth- in the gout : They are thought to eafe pain in every affe6ied part, and therefore are efteemed as a very tdre M^? HORTUS AMERICANUS. rpre remedy by all Indians and hegroes, as well asL planters. If the julus or pcppei be fcaldcd-in ,water» and dried in the iuii, they grow Ibonger, and more durable fpr ufe. The roor fmells lik.e clover, and is. hot to the tlnrd degree, and reckoned a counter poifoiK Being of thinandiubtle paris, it opens all obflru6lions j if biuiled and applied- as a pouhice to any d ilea fed part, it lipens.and breaks, the fwelling, and cleanfcvS th©. part. T;^^£,.j*jice, or. an ointment made of tfie.ieavev cures baras, (Jcalds> or any inSammation.. The.lcayes^ in adv iler, ate nK>je emollient than mallows. 3. Piper lovgnrri. humiliuk JruBa Jumriiitate caulis prodcunte. 1 iii3,has, a. creeping jointed root; the ftalks are roixnd and greep,. jointed, nling feldom above a foot hi gh^; the ieav:e&.aie. thick, fnccalent, irnooth, and of. a dark-green colour, hiiving lome viijble veins on the upper iarface like thofe. of the, water-plantain, and fotnt^nrnes noicjied at .th.e upper- end oil the leaL xAt tht top pf.the ila.k comes out a fiender four- inch fpike julus, or Ugultit like thofe oi opjiiogiojfnniy. or iome of tlae locg peppers, of aJWeet fmell, and (harp to the tville.likc. thenv and withal foiaewhat balfamic ; the .p!4nt,r^bb^cI,0ilell3.^•C£:v, gratefully. It is hot in the ■fourth degree, a,ud..dry m, the third.r it. flrengtheiij t.|)c.h<;.au, hC'^U the ftojinach-, asd gives a-fweet breath; aM*nw.ates grpf^ ajid thick humours; iefift« poifon, tho iliac palhjC).!, and, cholic; is diu.vetic.; helps the Ci.:tams- ■nia or menles.inf women., helps birth, expels the dead child, opens qbllryclions,. and. cures pains fxogi coldi il ta^keo.away the. cold fit of an. ague.. SsC Ca^jficum Peppers.. Px.UJ.fO. In Chili is a tree-called Peumo ; it bears a red Fruit in the Ihaps of aa olive.. A«deeodion.of th^ark curci the HORTtJS AMERICANUS. ^i% the dropfy ; the timber of it is uTed for building of fliips. Physic-Nut's. Some call them tyle-benies of India. They purge flrongly upwards and downwards, given *^rom three to 'five; they may be candied over, and given unknown to nice "palates ; if the inv/ard film be taken ou^, they will work more gently. The bed way of preparing them is, firit to torrifv them; then take oif the on t- V/ard fkin and inward film, t\r.\t is, the fprout or punc- ium fallens ; then bruife them in a mortar, and fleep them in Madeira wine; and they will purge well all grofs humours. They affoid great quantities of oil, which mav be got by boiling or expreilion-, and which purges ftrOngly ; this oil they ufe or burn in their lamps itl Brafil. If vou rub the ttom?.ch with the oil, it will purge and kill worms ; it cures the itch-, and deterges ulcers. There are three or four forts of thefe trtcs ; but one, in particular) dttlers very much from the reft> vhofe leaves are more divided, and have a very beau- tiful fcarlet flower : Thele never grow fo high as the other forts ; they are called French phyfic-nuts, and their piiigmg quality in more il;cng than any of the other fortSi PlEMENTO. it is alfo called Jamaica pepper, or allfpice. It is fo well known, that it is needlel> to give a particular dcfcription of it. The fruit is excellent againft tha cholic, and all cold and undigefled humours of the flomach and bowels. A decoction of the leaves, or 9. batii made of them, is good in all old aches and pains of the bones« and hcaleth old ulcers. Pigeon- 142 HORTUS AMERICANUS. PlQEON-Pi' ASE. They are fo called from pigeons greedily feeding ppon them, but they fomething refemble a broom- pea. Trom flronor fibrous roots fprings up a ftrai^ljt woodv ftalk, as big as one's finger^ five or fix ftct high, like the common broom-flalk, and it hath yelIo\y flow- ers like broom ; it hath a yello\yifli green pod, about! the length and bignefs of Engliih peafe-cods^ and its pea is much of the fame bignefsj but flatter or com- prefled on both fides. Their leaves are very thin an4 foft, of a dark-green, fmelhng fomething like a rofe when rubbed; they are about two inches broad in the middle, and about three inphes long, coming off ta- pering. They have bloflbms, green peafe, and dry, upon them all at the lame time, and will keep l^earing fo for many j'ears, which makes fome call them feven- years peafe; they are very whpielonie food. In fiiell- ing of them, there is a clammy or gummy fubftance thaj; comes off and flicks to the fingers, hard to be wa!hed off. The juice of t;he leaves, or diftilied water from ^bem, makes an excellent eye-water. There are alfo two forts of heart-peafe : 1. Sir H. Sloane calls it pifum decimuniy five vefi- cariuvi JriiBu nigro alba viacula notato. This has a woody, coineredj rough ftalk, taking hold of any tree or fhrub it comes near with its clavicles, and mount- ing to eight or nine feet ; the tops then falling down, cover the tree or fbrub it climbeth upon. At about every three inches diflance, it puts forth leaves, cla- vicles, and flowers, at the fame place. The leaves Jiand on two and an half ipch long foot-flalks ; they are very much divided or laciniated, cut always inta nine feftions, flanding three together on the fame common p.ctiohs, corning from the end of the foot- ftalk; HORTUS AMERICANUS. 145 ftalk ; that divifion of the three oppofite to the end of the petiolus, or in the middle, is the biggeft, being two inches long, and one broad where broadefl, deeply notched or cut in on the edcres, of a dark-gieen colour, very fmooth, fofr, and thin; the other two at the bafe being of the fame fhapc, and only Imaller, Tiie cla- vicles (land oppofite to the leaf, being five inches long. * £x alis foliorum come the flowers, feveral together, Handing on three-inch long foot-dalks, being white, penlapetalouSj and very operi. After the flowers foiiow' three-cornered oblong bladders, having in each of them three diftintl cells; and in every one of thefe lies, faft- ened to a men)brane, a round dark-brown or black feed, about tlie bigncfs of a frnall field-pea, having three triangular lines meeting at the centre of a clav-coloured or whitifh triangular or cordated fpot (and therefore called pifum cordatuvi)^ which is at the place where it IS joined to the bladder or its lulus. The feeds of this plant caufe greater fleep than opium; brujfed with wa- ter and applied, they eafe the gout, and coldnefs of the joiots with ilidnefs; the juice of the leaves, with black Gummin feed, is good for heart-burning; and mixed With fugar is gpod for a cough. 2. The other fort is pifitvi cordatum non veficarhtm. This grows like the former, only it hath a larger pea, with a white hilus, eye, or fpot. The green leaves bruifed, or their juice, are good for wounds, being a great vulnerary, and cleanfing. The fruit, bruifed and put into water, intoxicates fifh. Pile WORT. We have a plant named Indian pilewort, which i^ called by native Indians guacatane. It is white, like unto pol.um vionianum, but without any fweet fccnt. Monardus lakh, it grows in great pleniy in Hifpaniola. It 144 HORTUS AMERICANUS. tt is mur.b cotti mended to hdp or take away the painj '*in{lanirr)rUion, and fwelling of the piles, and falling- cut of the aviiSf by fomenting the part with a decoc- tion of the whole plant, and (Irewing thereon the dried leaves in powder. • P I L 1. E R I L I. A tfi the n^me that the Spaniards in Peru jrive to the 4}alma Chr^fliy or ricinvs Americam'^. TheA' affirm^ that the leaf of it, applied to the breafts of niufesi brings milk into them, and, applied to their ioinsi firaws it away. ^ce Oil-Nuti PlLOSELLA ts a plant ^'hich hath a fcent like wormwood, but grows like moufe-ear. Thcfe fometimes cover whole fields in South-America and Chilii PlMPSRKELLi There ?»re two kinds of this plant growing In America; 1. This fmall repent, or creeping plant, has rounds fmootb, gve( n, juicy flalks, which, at every joint, flnke it>to the earth fmall white hairy fibres, whereby it draws its imurilhrnrnt, and likewife fmall green fuccu- 3cnt or juicy Kitves, a'.rnoft like tho.fe of water-purf- lane, bcmg roundiUi, tlnck, green, fmoothj and very fn..ill, wiiijout fooi-llnlks, (landing oppofite to one ariother towards the end of its fmall twig. Ex alls Jo-' lioru7n come oui half-inch foot-flalks ; and on them, in a caivx conlifling oi two green leaves, a pentapela- lous or. live-ieavtd flov/tr, of a pale blue colour, hav- ing feme v. hi:;fti Oamina within. After this follow a gicaf number of very fmall flat brown feeds, inclofed in a haid brown capfuU or cafe, covered by fome, firft green. HORTUS AMERICAMUS. 145 j^i'een, afterwards brown, leaves, which are the peri- anthium or calyx of the flower. 2. Has a very deep-blackilh coloured root, which fends up a round brownilh woody (lem, rihng three or four feet high, being divided into branches on every hand. The leaves come out feveral toiiether, fomc greater, fome fmaller, at half an inch diftance, on half-mch long foot-ftalks; they are half an inch long, and a quarter broad at the bafe (where broadeft), of a grafs-green colour, indented about the edges like ger- mander, but fmooth. Oppofite to the leaves come vellow flowers, being ftamineous ; after which follows a two-inch long dark pod, or feed-velfel, fhutting like thofe of the fefamum, but niore like the fpirit-weed, only having two round (ides, and a partition in the XTuddle; in whicli are two rows of feeds, black and quadrangular. Tiic pod, \vhenripe, opens at the end, and fcattcis the Iced like as tiic Ipint-weed. Pimpernells are accounted a peculiar remedy againft the plague, and all malignant or peftilential fevers; alio good againll the bijings of lerpents, efpecially the ratti^-fnake, and an excellent wound-herb, flopping fluxes of humours. Yjv. Bowles lays, they cure can- cers; Morrifon fajs, thev cure plithificks; Ouercetan afliims, they flop immoderate menfes; and HtirmiuSj that they cure madnefs. PiMD VLLS. The firfl I ever faw of ihefe growing was in a ne- gro's plantation, who alErmed, that they grevvr in great plenty in th.eir country ; and they now grow very well in Jamaica. Some call them gub-a-gubs ; and others ground-nuts, bccaule the nut of them, or fruit that ii to be eaten, grows in the ground : Theie arc of the i>ignefs, colour, and fhape, of a fiibur: ; they are co- K veied 14$ HORTUS AMERICANUS. Vered over in the ground with a thin ciftus or flcin, which contains two or three of them, and many of the cif^ufes, with their nuts or kernels, are to be found growing to the roots of one plant. When they are ripe and fit to dig up, the ciftus that contains them is dry, like a withered leaf, ^vl!ich you take ofl, and then have a kernel, reddifh without-fide and very wliite with- in, tafting like an almond, and accounted by fome as *ood as a piftachio; they are very nourifhing, and ac- counted provocatives. Some fay, if eaten much, they caufe the head-ache; but I never knew any fucli ef- feft, even by thofe who chiefly lived upon them ; for xnafters of (hips often feed negroes with them all their Voyage ; and I have very often eat of them plentifullv, and with pleafure, and never found that elTeft. They may be eaten raw, roafted, or boiled. The oil drawn from them by expreflion is as good as oil of almonds ; and the nut, beaten and applied as a poultice, takes av/ay the fting of fcorpions, walps, or bees. Pine-Apple. A moft delicious fruit, called a?ianas. Pinks. We have in America pinks, carnations, and gilly- flowers, growing in gardens; befides which, we have a moft beautiful pink that grows wild in the woods, mixed with white, red, and other colours, in a moft; wonderful manner. Plantain. The common Encrlijfh plantain grows fpontaneoufly here very well ; befides which, we have feveral other forts. 1. Flantago a^uatica, or water-plantain. It is fo well HORTUS AMERICANUS. 147 ivell known in America, that there needs no particular defciiption of it ; it grows like thofe in England. Yoa may find it gjowing alon>; the river-fides, and in wa- tery places. It is thought to hive the fame virtues with land-plantain ; the feed i5 aftringcnt, and the leaves good againfb burns, ^'^^ proper to be applied to hydropic legs. The juice, applied to breads, is a great fecrct in drying up and clearing them of milk. There is another (ort, which Mirgraavc calls* 2. Planta innoininata ; and forrte would have this to be a phalangium^ or fpider-wort. 3. Plantago aquat'ca f^)lio anomalo Jlore Jtipitato purpuvco jemins pulvcrulcnto.. This has feveral large wiiitc roots, two or three inches long,, from which come feveral leaves, four or five inches long, green, fuccu- lent, and ribbed like plantain-Ica^es. In the centre of thcfe leaves riffs a purple jointed ftalk, a foot and a half high, having a fpikc of purple or carnation flow- ers three inches long, and at tlie top three purple pe- tala or leaves; under which is a little fwelling, of a brown membranaceous fkin or hufk, containing a fine dufly feed, wliich is fcaftered with the wind. All thefe plantains arc cooling and rcRringent, and thcicfore good in aneurilms, and falling-out of th^ fundament; they flop fluxes of all forts, and prevent abortions. The feeds, bruifcd and infufed in claret or Madcnawinc, or the juice taken inwardly, and applied outwardly,, abates inflammations. Pi.antain-Tree. This, as well as the banana-tree, hath the name of vnifjt and they are fo alike, that, unlefs pcrfons are well acquainted with them, they would not know one from the other at fight ; but the fruit difters, they being ipuch longer and larger than the banana. The fruit K 2 of 148 HORTUS AMERICANUS. of this tree is the beft of all Indian food for negroes^ and makes them the mod able to peifoim their labour, and therefore confequently muft be of great nourifh- ment. Roafled before they are ripe, they eat like bread; they are eaten boiled or roafted, and one roafl- ed that is ripe, and buttered, eats very delicious. If you thruft a knife into the body of one of thefc trees, there will come out a great quantity of clear Tvater, which is very rough and reftringent, flopping all fort of fluxes : I have advifed perfons fubje6l to fpit blood to drink frequently of this water, which cured them. There is a wild fort of thefe trees, 1?ut much fmaller, although the leaf is broader than either this or the ba- nana; but they bear no fruit, and therefore are of n»- value. Plum-Trees. Of which there are feveral forts, bat none to com- pare in goodnefs to thofe in Europe, 1. The Spanifh yellow plum. 2, The common deep-red ^r purple- coloured plum^ which comes before any leases upon the tree^ Some of them have a knob at the end, and are called the top-knot plum. 3'. Called the hog-plum tree, and is a larger tree than any of the reft, having a lar^e yellow plum, which hath a rankifti fmell, but a pleafant tart tafte. The hogs feedmg upon them, they are called hog-plums ; Iheep alfo feed upon them, when fallen upon the ground. In the year 1716, after a fevere fever had left me, a violent inflammation, pain, and fuelling, feized both my legs, with pitting like the dropfy : I ufed feveral things, to no efrecl. A negro going through the houfe when I was bathing them, faid, " Mafler, I can cure you," HOx^TUS AMERICANUS. 149 you," which I defired he would; and immediately he brought me bark of this tree, with fome of the leaves, and bid me bathe with that. I then made a bath of them, wliich made the water as red as claret, and very rough in tafte : I kept my legs immerged in the bath as long as I could, covering them with a blanket, and then laid myfelf upon a couch, and had them rub- bed very well with warm napkins ; I then covered them warm, and fwcated very much : I foon fou\id eafe, and fell afltep. In uve or fix times repeating this method, I was perfe6lly recovered, and had the full flrength and uIj of my legs as well as ever; giving God thanks for his provid«n:ial care, in bf^ftowing I'uch virtues to mean and common plants, and that the knowledge of them fhould be made known to fo vile and mean ob- jects as negro flaves and Indian^, 4. Maiden plum. 5. Coco plum. Poison-Berries, Sir H. Sloane tribes thefc among the jelTamin-trecs. rOLYPODIUM Are of the fern kind, and therefore tribed amongH jhem. They grow exadly as thofe in England, al- though they have not oaks to grow upon ; I have feea them grow at the bottom of palm-treeS;^ but yet have th^ fame virtues as thofe in England, which are accounted fpecifics, purgers of melancholy humours and tougU phlegm ; they open obftru6tions of the fpleen, and expel wind. A fyrup made of them is good for coughs, fliort- ;iefs of breath, hoarfenefs, and wheezing of the lungs. Pomegranates. Thefc grow in great plenty with U5, and as good as K 3 in t50 HORTUS AMERICANUS. in any part of the world; they have a large fcarkt, flower, and are leflringcnt. Pond or River Weed. Thefe weeds grow in moll rivers in America. They are cooling and drying, flop fluxes, and, outu^ardly applied, take away all inflammations of the ikin, i2t» Popes Heads. Some call them Turks heads, for thev fomething refemble them when they have their turbans on. They grow clofe to the ground, befet all round with prickles^ and are well known in America, growing on the worit fait fandy ground, where nothing elfe will grow buc prickly pears or opuntias. They have on the top a purple flower, like an artichoke or globe-thiflle, and a fmall red or crimfon cod or fruit, of the fhape of a. long red pepper, which hath a very pleafant tart tafte, and \^ very cooling. It is hollow, like the capficum or long red pepper, and full of fmall black feeds. Pop ON AX. This is a name, but very erroneous, that they in Jamaica give to a plant which is of the acacia kind, and is more exaclly like the Egyptian acacia^ or thorn. It is reported, that a certain perion brought the feed of it to Jamaica, and planted it, and faid, if he lived to fee it grow, he fliould get an eftate by it; but how, remains a myflery to this day, unlefs it is for i;s dying quality; its flowers are indeed very odoriferous The dyers ufe the huflc of the pods to dye black; they alfo foak fome of the pods all night in water, then mix a little alum with it, and boil it to a due thicknefs, which makes a very fine black and ftrong ink. I have often made it, and wrote with it, and obferved it never fades or I HORTUS AMERICANUS. 151 or turns vellow, as copperas ink will. I carried fome of the pods with me to England in 17 i7> and gave them to a dyer, who tried them, and faid, they ex- ceeded galls for dying of linen, and, if they would come as cheap, would be preferable : But I alfo ob- ierved, the worms deflroyed the pods and feeds quickly. It is certain that the fuccus acaddy that is one of the ingredients of mithridate, and Venice treacle, is only the hardened juice extra6led by decoQion of the acacia or Egyptian thorn, which I take to be this tree, or at lead to be as good, if not better, having rather a more reftringcnt quality, and therefore proper in all iorts of fiuxes. The name poponax, that they give to thi.s plant, X take to be the corrupted word of opoponax, which is a gum, or inlpinated juice, of a plant called panax hcrac^ liuvi ; but this is not the tree. There is another fort called acacia, but more repre- fents a wild tamarind, and therefore the planters in Ja- maica call it fo; for the fruit is a longifh pod, which, when ripe, opens and turns infide out; it is of a glo- rious red colour. There is alfo another fort, very improperly called wild tamarind, which is a certain acacia, with very large prickles; but I think the flower of this tree is not fo fweet-fcented as that they called poponax. Thefe are fine large fpreading trees, as big as the Englilh elms, but much more (hady and fpread-^ ing. Both the bark and roots of this tree ftink worfe than ajfa jcctida ; they are of a reddifh colour, and dye red. 7"he wood is good timber. Poppy, We have a plant that grows like the Englilh com* mon prickly thiflle, but jts flower is yellow, in the fliape of the field poppy ; and after the flower conp^c K 4 heads 15a HORTUS AMERlCANUl heads that are as big as a walnut, armed thick with fharper prickles than the Jlramoniwm. Its feeds are like the black poppy, but much more narcotic. The whole plant is milky, but of a yellow colour ; vrhich, mixed with womens milk, and dropped into the eye, clears the fight, and takes off fpots or films : It may be for this rcafon it is called argemone. It alfo, waftes funguffcs, or proud flefti. The diftilled water, with the tops of wild tamarinds, makes a good eye- water. The fruit or head is called y%o del inferno^ ox Jicus, inf emails, and well it may, for it contains feeds, enough to fend any that fhould take them wilfully to inferno^ being much ftronger than any opium, as was lately difcovered in Jamaica in the following manner : A nc-r gro man, who had run away Tome time from his maf- ter, lived by ftealing of fiock ; one night he came to a fheep-pen, where there was only a poor old negro man to look after it, to whom he faid, he mufl; have a fheep to-night ; the old man not being able to refift him, gave him good words, and afked him to Imoai; a pipe, which he filled for him, putting in a quantity of the feeds of this plant, and before he had fmoaked out his pipe, he fell into a found fleep, not eafily to be awakened; upon which, as the old fellow knew very well the effeft, he ran to a neighbouring pen, and getting ropes and affi (lance, they fecured him before he was. thoroughly awake; and when he was, he curfed and fwore, faying the old fellow was an obeah man, and had bewitched him. I faw a fat fleer drop down dead of a fudden, fetching two or three flaggers, foamed at the mouth, and died imme.diately : I ordered them to cut his throat; and, after opening him, in his ftomach were found feveral handsfu.1 of the feed of this plant, which I fuppofed killed him. POQUETT. f H'ORTUS AMERICANUS. 153 PoQUETT Is a fort of gold-button, or female fouthernwood, with green checquered leaves, which dyes y^liow, and holds well. The ftone of it dyes green. Potatoes, or Batatas. Potatoes grow in great plenty in mofl parts of Ame- rica, and are a convolvulus plant, with a bell flower; but as they put nothing tor them to run upon, they creep and fpread upon the ground, covering it fo, that it dcftroys grafs that would grow there. They are of feveral cohmis; the roots are fome red, fome very white, nnd fome yellowifli, or fulphur colour; they excotd, in mv opinion, the Irifh or Englifh batata^ They are one of the chief bread kind, as they call it, in America, and are food for white and black; they arc very fine when baked. The flips or vines thev feed hogs and rabbits wiih; and an excellent drink is tnade of the roots, called mobby. Prickly White Wood. This grows like the prickly yellow wood, only the wood within-fide is very white. It hath fmall bunchy flowers; after which come bunches of black triangular feeds, in ftiape and bignefs of buck-wheat ; they are hotter upon the tongue than any Guinea-pepper, and negroes take them for the cholic. The roots of the prickly woods are ufed in venereal cafes. Prickly Withe, Which fome call prickly pear withe. In the centre of the green fuccuient part the;e is a ftrong wire withe, which planters uie, and is very lafl.ing. Pricklv 1^4 HORTUS AMERICANUS. Prickly Wood, There are feveral trees in America that go by the name of prickly woods ; but the mofl common fort, and what is moflly known, is called Prickly Yellow Wood. It hath a leaf like Engliih afli; the outfide baric is brownifh, fet full of protuberances, about an inch or two inches long, and as thick as a man's finger ; at the end of which is a lliort fharp prickle. The infide "K'ood is very yellow, PUMKIM. We have pumkins of various fizes and fhapes, as large as any in England, and as good. This fruit is much eaten; but too much is apt to fuifeit, and to caufe fevers. Purslane. This plant, which is fo much taken care of in Eng- land to cultivate in their gardens, grows wild in mod parts of South America. It is a cooling and moiflening herb, therefore good in burning fevers. I often pre- fcribed, in America, the diftilled water in fevers, efpe- cially where a flux attended them. It takes away the Itrangury, as well as the heat and fcalding of urine in ardent fevers. Eaten raw, it cures teeth that are fet on edge, and faftens them. The juice of the herb is Angularly good in inflammations and venereal ulcers. The herb, bruifed and applied to the forehead and temples, allays the exceihvt heat and pains that occa- Tion want of refl and fleep, and, applied to the eyes, takes away rednels and inflammations. The juice, mixed with vinegar, takes away the St> Anthony's HORTUS AMERICANUS. is5 iire, and pimples in the face. The juice, with the oil of rofes, takes out the fire of burnings bv gunpow- der, lightning, or fcalding, but if it were mixed wiih goofe-greafe it would do better; the juice alfo, made Up into pills with gum tragacanth and arable, cures thofe that evacuate or fpit blood. The feed is more e(Fe6lual than the herb, and is of fingular ufe for all the purpofes above mentioned, Qu AMOCLIT. This is a convoh'ulus plant. It rifes firft with two oblong bioadifh leaves conjoined, refetnbling the fruit of the maple, which remain long without fading, evea ^fier the plant begins to wind itfelf round its prop. The other leaves flioot from the purphlli viny flalks, in an alternate order; they are winged, finely cut and divided, of a daik-green colour, but the young leaves are yellowilh, or pale-coloured, having at firfl but fe\v divillons or wings; afterwards, they are fplit into fe- veral, to the number of thiitecn, with one at the top; the firfl divifions are ufually forked. The flowers are of a moft elegant beautiful red, (hooting alternately from the joints of the viny ftalks, fornetimes fingle, fometimes two together, monopetalous or bell-flowered, all in one leaf, fhapcd like a funnel, and divided into feveral fegments. From the flower-cup the pointal rifes, which is fixed like a nail in -the bottom part of the flower, and has five yellowifli threads and chives within. The\r arc fucceeded by an oblong fruit, itand- ing in a fcaly cup, with a tough bark or fl^in like the otlier bindweeds, which inclofes four oblong blacl^and hard feeds. The tafte of the herb itfelf is fweetilh and moderately nitrous : The whole plant fwells with a thin pale milky juice. The root is a ilrong purge. QuEoNOA, IS,S HORTUS AMERICANUS. QuESNOA, or QuiWA, Is a little white feed like that ot the muflarfl, but Hot fo fmooth; which is good againft falls and bmifes. and die Ipafms^ a fort of convullions. Q U I L L A Y . This is a tree, the leaf whereof fome«vhat refcmbies that of the ever- green oak. Its bark ferments and lathers like foap, arid is better for wafhing wooilea flothes, but not for linen, which it makes yellpw. All tb« Indians make ufe of it for wafhing their hiur and QUt, which is called quill-bark, and comes from the branches of the tree ; Ice that it be heavy and found, dry and firm, breaks a little fbining, and hath a iittl« Ivhite fi>€ck like mofi--, or fome fmall fern threads fijck* ing to the outfide bark or ikin, and is very bitter in tafte, with an afljingent rou>i,h ftipticity upon the tongue : Refufe thai which is full of chives w hen broke^ of a dark or ruffet colour, thick, flat, and very heavy* There is another (ort of this.baik, which comes from the mountains of Potofi : It is much browner and thinner than the former, more bitter and aromatic, and much more fcarce and difficult to be got« This is much ftronger in operation than the other; one ounoe will do as much as three Ounces of the common fort. The firft time I faw it was in a galleon, that lay in Port-Royal harbour in Jamaica, in the year ijQ^, taken by admiral V/ager. R AG Wort.- This is alfo tailed St. James'i wort, and there are many forts of them. They are good wound-herbs, are much commended in quinfies, ulcerated mouths and throats, and difcufs hard fwellings. There is a ragwort grows in Chili, whofe flowers are yellov/: The Indians call it nillque, and make a. tea of it, which they drink after the cold fit of an a:gue, and it abates the heat that follows. It grow* on the rugged fea-banks of Chiii. Ramoon. This is a name they give to a tree that grows in Jamaica, well known to the planters, who give the lops and branches of it to their catde, which makes them fat. The medicinal quality as yet is not known j but i hope in time fome curious perfon will make fomc 158 HORTUS AMERICANUS. fome Uriel enq^uirj into it, and make fome experiments en it. Rampions. There is great variety of thefe plants in America, but of very little medical ufe. Rampions have thtt leaves of ihroat-wort, and purplifh flowers. The di- lliiled water of the roots, leaves, and flowers, of thefe plants increafes milk in women ; a decoclion of the whole plant is cooling and abfrerlive, and therefore good againft inflammations, fores, and ulcers of the mouth and throat. Raquette.. This is one of the dildo trees, and that which Sir 11. Sloane calls cereus crajijjimus, &c. and which Pifo calls Jamacara ; but ficrman calls it cereus ereBus Jruclu rubro non Jpinojo ; therefore the fruit of this Cannot be the hi^a% de Tunay or Tuna figs, as they call them in America ; for they aie full of pricWes, and thcrtfore are tho-fe that we call in Jamaica, prickly- pears ; but this is fuppofed to be the plant that gum Euphorbium is got from. Euphorbium is fo called- irom Euphorbius, phyhcian to King Juba, who firft in- troduced it mto practice and ufe: It was this phvhcian that cured Auguftus Caifar of a di [temper. Choofe shat which is white, bright, and clear; that alfo which- is of a yellowidi colour is good, if it be fo flrarp that, wpon a Imall touch upon the tongue, it burns and heats it; the older the better. Reeds. We have feveral forts, which are mofl exaftly like thole in England, and, l)aving the fame virtues and,. M'iGs,^ I therciore rf;fcr to thofe wiio have written of them at large. Reilbo*,' KORTUS AMERICANUS. 159 R s I L B O M Is a fort of madder that grows in Peru; the leaf of it is fmaller than ours. Tiicy ule it, as the dyers in England, to dys red. Rest-Haruo\v. We have a fort of this plant that differs much from thofe in Ent;land, having no pricldcs. Thefc plants are clammv, and fmell like the ordinary ciftm. They have a peculiar quaiity to provoke urme, to dilfolvc vilcofuies and tartaious humours in the reins and uri* nary palTagcs, and to open obftrudions. Ray affirms, that it cures hernia car no a. Rich. Rice grou's as tvell in Amtrdca as it doth in Africa and other parts. About twenty }eats pall, I lowed fome in a moifl parcel of ground in Jamaica; but happening to plant out of time, it grew verv rank, and did not bear. I cut it down clofe to the ground, and gave it to my horfcs, who eat it as well as Guinea-corn blades. Afterwards it grew up, and, at the ufual or proper time, it bore an extraordinary quantity' of grain* which was bearded like barley, which that with its out* -ward hufk is taken off, and then it is quite white. The Spaniards and Portuguele call it arroz, of which they make a fpirit called arrack ; the Arabians call it arz, and arzi. It is cooling and roflringent; an emulfioa made of it is good againft the ftrangury from caniha- ridcs ; the fine meal or flour takes away the marks of the finail-poxt RlCINUS, There are many kind* or forts of ricinus in Amenca. 1. That i^o HORTUS AMERICANUS. t . That commonly called oil-nut-tree, which ba$ cecn already defcribed. 2. Ricinus Amcricanus major cauhvir€fce7itt. This (difFcrs only, that the ftalks of this are very green and the other reddiflb, and the fruit rather lefs. 3. The phy lie-nut, defcribed beforie. 4. This differs very little from the former, only the leaf is thinner, and more divided at the ends, like bri- ony IcciVcs, and has a fine fcarlet-coloured flower. The fruit is an eafier purge than the common phyfic-nut; the flowers, dried and powdered, purge hydropic water plentifully. 5. The wild cafifada, defcribed before. This plant refembles the flaves-acre, that grows in Provence and Languedoc ; but that has fix or feven points, when old or full grown, and this but five, 6. The true caffada. 7. Wild rofemaryo Rocket. I never could find out but one fort oF rocket ii4 America, and that very little notice taken of it, being a fort of fea-rocket : It grows like that in the Medi- terranean fea, and is fomething like the cruca marinA Anglica. They grow in fait ground near the fea. Thev purge ftrongly ; the diftiiled water, four ounces d;.i!ik warm, takes away the cholic, provokes urine, ana kills woims, Rosemary. Befi:les the garden rofemary, we have a wild Spa- nilli n)l"cmary. This ihrub grows as big as one's arm, covered -viih a light-brown fmooth bark, rifing five or iix feel hi;-ih, haMng many white branches, befet with leaves about an inch diftance from one another; they ara HORTUS AMERICANUS. i5i are two inches long, and a quarter ' f an inch wide, €xaftly like rofemary, but \^erv white underneath, and green on the top or upper-fide as rofc mary, and {land- ing upon the Ihiilc as they di) ; the tops of the branches, for three inches ]en>i;th, are fet thick with fmail white flowers, made up of m.mv llamina; the flower is five- leaved. After this follow'S :i tricoccous fruit, very fmah', flicking clofe to -the ftalk, fmoorh and whitifh, each of tlie three iides-contHminir an oblong broxvn lliinins feed": The whole plant (mells verv gr.itefully and llrong. It is ufed very much in all forts of medicated baths and fomentations for hvdropical perfons : the pnwrVr of the dried leaves is a fpecific in the cholic, and in all cold watery undigefled humours, having all the virtues of rofejnary. The fecond A^rt has feveral fmall woody branches, about four or five feet long, (bme imes rifing upright, and fometimes lying along fhe furface of the earth, having a grey bark ; the twigs have leaves at their ends, about an inch and half long and an inch broad, which fnakes them oval, fnipt about the edges, and of a verv daik green, fomething like tree-germander. The flowers Gonfift of fix green flamina, coming from the fame centre, (landing in a pintaphyllous calyx, coming out ex alis foltorum by very Ihort fn'-»t-fti'ks ; to which follows a green tricoccous feed, w ich afterwards grows as big as that of hdiotropium irtcoccum, only it is Imooth, and of a very pleafant pale-purple colour. The leaves of this plant,, bruifed, are very odoriferous. This much lefembles the teucriuw^ or tree-germander, and has much the fame nrtue, but is rather hotter, R o u N C £ V A L. s Are a fort of peafe, growing in America, in fliape of the Englilh rouncevals; but the pod dilfcrs, and is Kke the calavances. L Rue. tSz HORTUS AMERICANUS- R U E . Fefides the common garden rue, which growls very*' well with us, there are many wild rues, that grow ia great plenty upon rocks in the rnoumains in America, which are commonly called wall-rues, and are tribed among the fern kind. Sir H. Sloane takes notice of four or five forts growing in Jamaica. Thefe wall or wild rues are accounted fpecifics againfl poifons, whe- ther inwardly taken or outwardly received, by the bit- ings of ferpents or other venomous creatures. The following eleftuary is admiraWe for the fame purpofcs: Powder of thtfe rues, four ounces; zedoary^ contra^ yerva of Jamaica y Virginia fnake-rool, and Indian ar-^ row~roct;t of each, in fne pcxudery one ounce ; faffroiiy in potuder, half an ouyict; cochineal, a quarter oj an ounce; the rob or juice of thefe^ with fugar or honey, make an eleBuary according to art; the dofe is from one drachm^ io two, or as much ay and hath the fame virtues ; buc I think it fmells like Florence once. The Itaik is like Englifli common rulhes. This is a great antidote againlt poifon, expels wind, takes away the cholic, and forufica the flomacb, cauUng a good digeftion. 2. That which the negroes call adru. 3. The ruih with which negroes commonly bottom chairs, and make mats, in Jamaica. 4. Which is a cat's tail, or reed-mace. The fe lat- ter rulhes are very aftringcnt, and the iceds ftupify- ing; mixed with butter, or any other proper thing, they kill mice; mixed with hog's fat, but better with jgoofc-greafe, they take away horning and fcaldings. Saffron. That which grows in Ameiica comes far fhort in goodnefs to that in England, litre, alfo grow in great plenty the cniciis, five carthamus falivus, and ciiicu.5 pcrc'nnii^ Tlie fioweis of carthainui arc inuchufcd bv i. 2 the t6i HORTUS AMERICANUS. the Spaniards (who call them baftard fafFron) in all their broths, to give them a yellow colour, which they do ; they are alfo ufed for dying. The feed is what is chiefly ufed in phyfic, or rather the kernel within the feed, which, beaten into an emulfion with honeyed %vater, or with the broth of a pullet, and taken faft- iog, opens the body, and purges watery and phlegma- tic humours, both upwards and downwards ; the feeds do the fame clyfterwavs ; an ele6luary or lohoch, made with fugar or honey, and almonds and pine-kernels,^ cleanfes the breaft and lungs of phlegm ; a drachm of the dried flowers taken, cures the jaundice ; the con- feft, called diacarthamum, is a very great medicine to purge choler and phlegm, as alfo watery humours, jParrots delight to feed upoti them. Sage. • Englifh garden fage grows but very indifferently in the fouthern parts of America, and much care muft "be taken of it to make it grow; but we have feveral flirubs called wild fages, their leaves being much like garden fage, but more odoriferous. 1 . The firft is a »hruh, full of branches, growing to five or fix feet high, and fet full of leaves, very rough and jagged as a nettle, but in ftiape of fage; at the top of the branches come out many yellow or goldeh flowers, confifling of many leaves ; after which come clufters of fmall greenifh berries, like honey fuckles or woodbines ; they are black when lipe, containing fmall feeds. For its great qualities it may well be called a fage, ha^'ing all its vntues. It makes an excel- lent tea to ftrengthen the fhomach; outwardly, if you apply the biuifed heib like a poultice, it will cleanffe the word of ulcers, and heal any wound. The decoc- tion is an excellent bath to llrengtlien the limbs. 5i. K HORTUS AMERJtCANUS. it^ 2. A large wild fage, with white flowersi and com- monly called in Jamaica ^^c^ in the bujlu St. John*s Wort. i hai'c feen a llender plant, which could hardly fupport itfelf, growing amongft bufhes, which had a flower exadly like St. John's wort, but its fruit was like fycamore* Saloman*s Seal, This plant is well known to the negroes in Jamaica* who eat it boiled. Sampier. There is nothing more common in America thart fampiers of feveral forts, which grow in all the fait grounds by the fca ; but the chiefeft is the common fea fampier, the fame that grows in England ; and 1 have eat of it pickled in Jamaica, as good as any ill Europe. It hath the fame virtues. There is another fort, which rcfembles the Englifh kali^ ktlpt or glafs-wort ; another fort hath a thick juicy faltilh leaf, in fhape of purflane, and is good pickled ; another fort hath a turnfole leaf, SampicrS help ftoppage of urine, i3c» Sargassa, or ZargAsso. This is a fea-weed, of which 1 took up much xtk. going from Jamaica through the Gulph. It is ufually about a foot high, having tough, fmall, dark-brown ot blackifh ftalks, on which are feveral fmall leaves, fer« rated about the edges, of a dark-brown colour. It; has many round air-bladders coming out from the Ilalk, on fmall foot- ftalks, very much like to lentils, which gave it the name. The whole herb, when dry, L3 i» i6S HORTU-S AMERICANUS. is hard and brittle. A feaman affirmed to me, that, hy eating of it, he vns cured of a floppage of urine, and brought away a great de^l of land and grofs hu- mours. Sarsaparilla. This plant is commonly known by this name, bat fome call it fmilax, it being thought to be of the fpe- cies of the China-root. The ftalk is. long, fe?pentine, woody, and prickly, cHmbinsj hke a vme or a con- volvulus upoii every fhrub or tree it is near; the flowers are white, and produce a berry, round anc^ fiefhy, like fmall cherries, green at firft, aud as they ripen turn a little reddifli, and when full ripe are black,, containing one or two Ilony feeds, of a whitilh-y^U low, having a white kernel. Although this plant grows in great plenty in Brafil, and other parts of America, yet it is not much taken notice of by the native Indians, the ufe of it having been found out and improved by the expert phyhcians of Portugal and Spain. There are two fpecies of it i the ftalks are alike, but different in bignefs and fhnpe of the leaf. The befl is that of Honduras, which hath a ftalk whofe outfide is very prickly, creeping on the banks in fhady woody places ; the leaves are cordated, and of a diflFerent length and breadth, of a frefh green on the upper fide, the under hde more pale, growing fingle on the ftalks, alternatively, at a good diftance from one another, having large ribs in fhape and man- ner of malabathruviy or Indian leaf; at the foot-ftaik ©f each leaf grow two fmall long tendrils or clavicles, by which it holds fad to the plant it joins to. The flowers grow in bunches, and .are whitifh ; from thence follow the berries in bunches, firfl green, then red, and at lail black, round, and wiijikied or ihrivelled hke HORTUS AMERICANUS. 167 like drv ch Tries, containing one or two hard ftones, pf a whiafli-yellow colour, with a hard white ker- nel, like a rmall almond. The root of this plant is what is made ufe of, and it is long and fniooth, when firfl; gathered, like a withe, without any prickles, hav« xng a thin flcin or bark; between that, and a fmall wire withe in the middle, lires a white mealy fubRancc when dry, which is all that is of ufe ; and of this, ptifans or diet-drinks are made, to fwecten the blood, and lor curing venereal difeafes. The powder of the root is given, from a drachm to two, to caufe fweat. it is reckoned a c^reat alkali, to correct ail faline pun- gent laits in the fluids of the body, and by that means cures venereal diloaies, hclns rhcumarifm, catarrhs, gouts, and all direafes proceedinjf fioin a fuperabound- iug faline acid in tlie blood an J juices of the body,- Sassafras. Some call this ague-tree, from the Indians perform- jn;T great cures i:i agues and fvvelled legs with a decoc- tion of the bark and root of it. The whole plant is ^ great anti-venereal and antifcorbutic, opening all ob- ilruQions, efpecially the diftiUed fpirit and oil. I re- member that my father cured many fcorbutic people with a very fuiong decoction of the root of the tree, ibme that were fo crippled v.-ith pain and fwellings in their knees, that they were forced to u,ie crutches; it ^Hb cures 3. paraplcgiay or nuuib-palfy. Savanna- Flower. This is io called in Jamaica, becaufe it is found all the ) ear round in bloifom, in open favannas. It ia too well knov/n, and it is pity that ever the negro or Indian flavcs fhould know it, being fo rank a poifon: \ faw two drachms of the exprelTcd juice given to L4 a dog,. f,68 HORTUS AMERICANUS. a dog, which killed him in eight minutes time ; but it may be fo given, that it Ihall iiot deftroy a peifon ire many days, weeks, months, or years. Some years paft^ a prattitioner of phyfic was poiloned with this plant by his negro woman, who had fo ordered it that it did not diipatch him quickly, but he was feized with violent gripings, inclining to vomit, and lofs of appetite; af- terwards, he had fmaJl convulfions in feveral parts of him, a hedtic fever, and continual walling of his fleflT^ Knowing that I had made it my bufmefs fome yearS' to find out the virtues of plants, efpecially antidotes^ he fent to me for advice; upon which I fent him fome oihaiidiroba kernels to infufc in wine, and drink fre- quently of, which cured him in time ; but it was a confiderable while before his convulfive fits, left him. Thje whok plant is full of milk; it is always green,- and no creature will meddle with it, ScABI-OUSi We have a fort of fcabious grows in Jamaica, that has a round, ftriated, rough, and pretty large Hem, rifing to three feet high, having, towards the bottom, feveral leaves, fet without order, on a half-inch long ftalk. The leaves are five inches long, and two broad to the middle (where broadefl), from a narrow begin- ning increafing to the middle, and then decreafing to th.e end, indented about the edges, being rough about, having the furface fcabrous or corruijated, after ths manner of fage or fox-glove, and woolly underneath ; tcffi'ards the top, the leaves are fmailer. Out of their ala; come hoary (lalks, an inch long, fupporting a round head of manv white tubulous oblong flowerSi each flower {landing in a chaffy calyx or perianthium, made up of feveral dry brownifh membranes, which aftenvards Gontains three or four fmalli oblong, fmooth-, and HORTUS AMERICANTUS. 16^ and fliining grey feeds, having a few pappous hairs ort their upper ends. This fcabious is almoft hke the SpaniQi fcabious, only the leaves are not fo much di- vided and jagged as the Spanifli. Parkinfon faith, thditfcabious's variation and difference confifteth chief!/ in the leaves and flowers^ not much differing in tafte the one from the other, and therefore their virtues are to be accounted alike. They are hot and dry, of an opening., cleanfing, digeding, and attenuating quality, whereby they are effcdual for all forts of coughs and fhortnels of breath. The followino- de- codion is very good : Dried fcabious, one handful i liquorice- root, ficed, one ounce ; fgs, twdvc ; anni^ feeds and fennel-feed^ of each ati ouncr, hruifcd ; orice^- roots, cut in thin fliccs, half an ounce ; let them fleeif all night in a qu.art of wine ; then boil the next day,- until a third part is confum>d; decant, and fxoeetcfi Tvith honey or fugar ; -whereof take a draught morning and evening, for the difeafes above mentioned. Clari- fied juice ol fcabious, four ounces, taken with a drachirt of Venice treacle, defends from the infedion of the plague or pellilence. The herbalfo, bruifed and ap- plied to any carbuncle or plague fwelling, u found by many experiences, faith Parkinfon, todiilblre or break 'C within the (pace of three hours ; the fame, taken inwardly or outwardly, expels and takes away the poifon of ve- nomous creatures. A decociion of the roots, drank for forty days, cures leprofics, and all breakings-out; the juice does the fame, and heals inu-ard bruifes. Sgammony. Scammony is the rnfpilfated or thicltened juice of at convolvulus plant. People dilier in their opinion of this plant; fome affirm, it is got only from one parti- cular plant; others fay,, tlrere are feveral- nlaats that icammony is made fiom ; fucli as follows : J. CoT.^ x-jO HORTUS AMERICAN'US. 1 . Convolvulus marinus catharticus folio rotunda Jlore purpurco. It grows in Brafil, and in all or mol^ pans of America, near the fea-fhore^ and is known by: tb«^ nanie of convolvuhis SyriccnSy bccaufe it grows in Syria. The root of this plant is Jon? and thick, ftJp- pHed with noarifliment hy many finaii fibrous roQis^ tall of milky juice"; from the roots fpring large green Italks, which creep along the ground, ' or climb upoa ttny thing that is near it. Its leaves are grf^cn, in the form of a heart; after which come white or parpnlh flowers, in (hiipe of a bell. Tfie fruit is. almoil rounds and membranaceous, containing black corr!cred fecd.^ almofl like thdife of the Snanifli arbour-vine. Tiie. whole plant is full of milky juice, and fmells very ilrong; wh;ch juice is boiled to a conhfleuce. Tijis plant grows in great p'tnty about Aleppo and St. John d.e Acre, from whence comes the be{l (cammony. Chufe that which is light, cirev;^ tender, and brittle, being yefinous, of a bitter taPte and a iAi\t unplerifant fineil ; lejetl that which is heavy, hard, and blackifh. The- ^ext plant that fcammony may be got from is, 2. Convolvulus major polyanthin lont^ijjimt hiti^,- Vicqnc repcns Jloribm albis mmoribus odoratiS. Soiree wili have this to be a mechoacan. " ^he foldane'las alio afford fcammony, wdiich purges* firongly dropfical humours. SCORDIUM, or WATER-GERRtANDER. The American water-germander, or fcordiuniy diflferj; fcut iuilc from the Y^u^'iih-fcordium. It is of a hea!m.'| and drying quality, and js accounted a good diureiic, aiexipharmic, flomachic^ petloral, and vulnerary, Scotch Grass. This graHs is To called in J^imaica, being brought hiiner HORTUS AM^^RICANUS. 17^: hither from a place called Scotland, in Bar! acioes. It is a fort of panic grals, or of the millet kind. This is the only grafs to feed our cattle mih; it grows in WJt fwampy places, and therefore is green all the year round ; fifty acres of it will rrjake more money thaa any thing we can plantj and is a good eflate. Sea-Feather, or Sea-Fak. I have picked many of them by the fea-(liores an4 keys; fome blackifh, and fome of a purpliQi colour. Seli-Heai-j or Alheal. Thefe herbs are called in Latin prunfUay or alheal or felf-heal; and the Gprmans call them briinellai or bruncUen, bccaufe they cure that difeafe which they call die brncUy common to foldiers in camps and garri- fons, which is an inflammation of the mouth, tongue, and throat, with blacknefs, accompanied with a ilrong burning fever and diftraction or delirium : The juice of thefe plants is a certain fpecific for that diflemper, and all fore mouths and throats, mixed with a little honey of rofcs and white-wine vinegar. The decoc* flon of the herb, in wine or water, makes an excellent traumatic drink, to forward the healing of all wounds ?md (lubborn ulcers. It is faid to take away the pain and fwelling of the tcfticies, which negroes are apt to have. Above tv\renty years pdli, one captain Picker- ing, a gentleman I knew very well, had a flick with fire at the end of it darted at him, wiiich happened to come jnft under the brow of his eye, and feemed to turn his eye out, and a'l defpaired of his lite. No furgeon being at hand, they fent for an old negro man, well fkilled in plarlts; as foon as he came, he .ran and took of this herb that hath the blaifn or purple flower, and waQied it, reduced the eye as well l^t HORTUS AMERICANUS. as he rould to its place, and then laid on the bruifed herb, bound it up, and the captain was carried home. The next day he fent for a furgcon ; and, when they came to open it, fotind it healed up to admiration; upon \yhich they fent for the negro, and defired him to finifh his cure; which he did in two or three days> only applying the fame thing; and then the captain rewarded the tiegro very well, and defired him to ftiew him the herb. I hi:-. I bad from feveral worthy gentle- men who were there prefent, and affirmed it to be matter of fa 61 and truth, who fince, they told me, ufe it to all green wounds with great fuccefs, and call it Pickering's herb to this day; Semper Vive^ This is the common aloetic plant which aloes is inade from, and is fo well known in America, where it grows in great plenty, that there needs no particular defcription of it. It is common for planters to give their children of its thick flimy juice, for worms^ Aloes, which is only the condenfed or infpiflated juice of this plant, purges and fortifies the ftomach, and is good againfl crude humouis, opens obflruftions, anA cures iurfeits from over eating and drinking ; and, i* diflblved in water, and infpiffated again, it fortifies liiore and purges lefs. It preferves dead bodies, heals and cleanfes old fores. The Indians have a medicine, made of myrrh and aloes, called mocthtr^ which I have ufed with wonderful fuccefs in cleanfing old ulcers, and it will alfo incarnate and heal them if the very bones were bare, whereas other greafy medicines would foul the bone ; it alfo deftroys maggots or worms in fores> which are very apt to breed in thefe hot climates. The juice, drank with milk, heals ulcers in the kidnies or bladder, and kills worms in man or beaft. You muft forbear N HORTUS AMERICAKUS. 175 'forbear giving aloetic medicines to thofe troubled with the bleeding piles, or overflowing of the meufes, to thofe that fpit or vomit blood, or to women with-child. Aloes confifts of two parts, refin and fa!ine ; the one diflolves in common water, the other will ijot but in fpirit of wine. Sensible Plant. This plant is fo called bccaufe, if you touch it never fo lightly, it flirinks as if ft-nfible, and folds its leaves clofe together to the middle nb or (lalk, not falling fiat down to the ground as the iiurnble plant dotli. It hath fcverai fmall ftalks and branches from one root, which are hard and woody, with divers joints, at which are little (hort prickled and winged leaves, oppolit* to each other, fct very clofe tugeiher, and very narrow?, fm.all, fmooth, and of a frclh green colour. It ]iatl> a moffy greenilb white flower. S E p T r o n , or To k m k n t i l. There is a fort of purple fcptfoil, growinjr about a foot high, on ihe banks of th^ river Fiaie. Tije wJboic plant is rellringent^ • SriALDOCK. I have feen them much larger than a man's head. The ouifide flcin is of a len on colour, but very Imooih, and of aline fcent, exceeding lemon or orange; ii^ lind is thick, and full of a volatile ellential oil ; ne.%c the inCde fi;in is a white lubltance, as in citror^s, and then a juicy pulp appears. Ttiofc of tiie Leit fort arc of a deep-red or purple colour; but thofe that are white are very four, and not good. They Uv, if you plant the feed, there is but one in a whole (haddock that will bring forth good and plcaiant fiuit : i have fee a *74 HORTUS AMERICANUS. feen many of them planted and come to bear, but ne» Ver faw a good one produced from the feed. The "befl way is to take a flem or a twig, and ingraft or ino* culate it on a good China orange (lock, &c. The fruit is cooling and rehefhmg, abating di ought and heat iii fevers. Silk-Grass. This plant is of the aloetic kind; The leaf is not fo thick and juicy as femper vive, but much longer; Ibme are five- or fix feet long, but narrow, yet not fo tiarrow as the pine or penguin leaf, nor are they fo broad or thick as the currato. It is full of fmall prickles on each fide or edge of the leaf, and is taper- ing from the ground to the top, ending v/ith a fmall piickle, which makes it of the ftiape of a lance. The chief ufe of this plant is to make filk; which^ as the Indians and negroes make it, is quite coarfe, but Very white, hard, and flrong; of this they make ham- V xnccks and ropes, as alfo fiflimg-nels, which will en*- dure tije water longer than thread. The way that the liegroes drefs it here, is only to lay the blade, or leaf, tipon a flat piece cf wood, and then, holding it fafl at one end, fcrapc off, with a blunt lath or piece of wood, the outwaiu green ("ubflance?, the inward white filk ap- pearing, in iirmuni~ CAted to his excellencv Lord Vaughan, by whofo fa- vour, for the benefit of the atFhtled," faitb Dr. Trap- ham, " it was conmmnicated to. me : The faid Dr, Lawford affirmed, that he had had ^bove one hundred trials of this plant, of which, laid he, I give a drachrn of it, powdered, in any convenient Uquor, and re- peat it, ojics in three or four hours, till the ufual fvmp- t<>m3 of the difeafe abate ; fometimes, 1 give it made dcto a fyrup, of which I give one ounce to three ; alfo, in decodions. and clyfters It is alfo, f^id the fame doftor, an antidote againft poifon, and a grcnt dia- piioretic, e;:pdliag aU jnalignancies in fevers." Tiap- jham faith, the Engli(h in. .Barbadoes called it fnake- weed ; ** and," fakh he, *' after the fymptoms of the bcUy "s^he are removed by this fpecific pUnc, I vrould M 3 have iS« HORTUS AMERICANUS. have them apply a plaifter of hog-gum to ths -ivcalc limbs, ufing warm friOions, and renewing the pkuncf ^cry t^venty-four hours, which reliores the ule of die limbs," &c. 6. Sir Hans Sloane calls tiihymahs ereBus acris pa^ rietarice Joins glabris Jlcrib'js adcaulis nodes tonglomc^ r.atis. This is not ot the fweet nature as the former, and yet more fafe to be taken inwa-^dly than th« reft of the common fpurges, bur muft be ufed with difcretion. •J. The other is a lort of thyme, the frnalltft fpurge of them all, and ihe moll common, for it grows every where, even in the ftrects, between pa\ed ftones and bricks. I have known feveral pcrlcns nle it, with good fucceis, to take off the Ipots or hlms on th^ eves, that have come after the lma!i-pox, and that by only drop- ping the milky juice into them ; but I ftiould think it aaore fafe to mix it with a little honey, for it eats off all forts of warts. The people in Jamaica call it eye*:> bright, for its great cures to the eyes. Spurges are generally of one and the fame kind, only foipe more violent in their operation than others, except the fweet Ipurge called cuiacia, mentioned be- fore, which hath a quite different nature; for, as all other fpurges w^oik upwards and downwards, this doth neither, but operates by fweat and urine. The rea- fon of the others working fo ftrong, is from their abound- • jng with an effential fixed acrid lalt and oil, and there- fore dangerous to be adminiftered without corredling; but, when corre6led, they may be given with fafety in dropfies, lethargies, phrenfies, (^d You may make an cxtra6l of them, which tome ufe as a general purger. Raius faith, that fpurge-laurel, powdered and infuled itt wine-vinegars, cuies cancers. Star- HORTUS AMERfCANUS. 183^ Star-Apple. The fruit of this tree is as round as a ball, as big as the largefl: of our Englilh apples, and, when cut acrofs, refembles a ftar, the feed partition making it fo. It hath a thin Ikin^ containing a foft pulpy fweet fub- llance, but clammy ; the ftones, or feeds, are almoft in (liape of a prune ftone, and nearly as hard, parti/ finooth and part-ly rough. They are fine large fpread» ing trees, whole leaves are in fliape and bignefs of the ciihen-, but of a fine deep-green on the upper fide, and of a fine foliomort underneath. They bear but once a-year, which is about Chridmas, and then their fruit is fold about the flretts^ and much acjmired by fome. St ar-Ston £S. We meet with fevcral of thefe flone's by the fea* fide. They are of the coral kind. Some are called brain-ftones, becaufe upon the furface of them there is a reprefentation of the meanders, windings, and turn- ings, winch appear upon the furface of the brain. Some have Ihining fpccks in them, like ilars; and others are called lole^-llones. Star- Wort. There are feveral forts of thefe plants, Plumief defcribes feven forts, and Sir H. Sloane two. Star- worts are recommended for the cure of venereal tu- mours, as alfo to abate inflammations of quinfies in the throat, and cleanfe and heal ulcers there or elfe- where; to ftop defluxions of all humours, and good ia inward bruifes. Craterus commends a decotiion or fyrup of the flowers, to cure the falling ficknefs. The feeds are aromatic ; arid Pi To fays, the whole herb makes an excellent bath for pains and xnflammauQns, M 4 Stock- laf HORTUS. AM ERIC AN US-. Stockvishiiout, ;^ The Dutch give this wood, that grows about 'the lagooa of Nicaragua, the mime of Jiockvijhhout ; but with us it is commonly called Nicaragua wood. It is but {mall to what logwood is, feems to be very tough, and is about the bignefs of dried ftockfiOi ; which may be the reafon the Dutch call it JlockviJIihout. It dyesr ^ very fine red. Stceckas, "\V"e have a v^ild fort or two of ficochas, : One. fort is called by fome caffidonyy or French lavender; another is a fort of cudweed^ Thefe plants are very aftringent, and therefore proper for fluxes of the bodv, and all defluxions of rheums. A fyrup made of the tops of it, wh^n in flower, is good for coughs and cat£^rr|js. Strawberries. Englifh f^rawbevries will grow in Arpcrica as v/ell as in England, if care be taken of th^m : They are apt. to fpread themfelves in lirings and runners^ covering great quantities of ground ; and then they will bloilom but not bear well. In Chili, they plant whole fields with a fort of flrawberry, rnuch different from ours (i,he leaves are rounder, thicker, and rnore downy}, v.'hich they call friUilla, The fruit is gei^erally as b.ig. as a walnut, and fomeiimes as an hen's egg, of a whi- tifli-red, but not fo delicious ns our wood-flrawberries» and more of the talle of the Englilh little hoboy-ilraw- berries. Sun-Flower. Thefe grow as well and as large, or rathqr larger t^an in England ; they are the \try fame fort, and, hdve all the fame virtues. SUPPLB- H O R T VS ■ A M E R I C A N^ U S. ' i.^ c Supple-Jack T-s" a withe (o called, which is full of round knobs at every five or (ix inches diftanre, and, for tht tough- ^lefs and fupplcnels, called fupple jack. 1 hey are of afl fizes ; but if you do not oil them now and then, tjhey will grow very biutlc, C^c, S\Vf ET-Sop. A leaf, lai.d on pillows or beds, \vill draw all thz chinks or bugs to them, fo as you may be rid of them. S\v:eet.\Vood. Befid.cs the lignum aloes and rhodium, •'/e have another fweet fcented w'ood, <;ommon|y called timber fweet-wood-tree, which is of ih^ laurel-leaf kind. At one time of the year, the pigeons feed upon the berries of thefe trees, and then their inward parts^ and fomc- times' their flefli, is very bitter. Sycamore. 1 have often fcen, as I have rode alcng, a fmali plant among the bulhes, growing about Iik or icvt a feet high, which fcemed not to be able to fupport itUlf, but yet did not climb about any thing: It had a very fmaii flrtJk, and but lew leaves, as large as a laureiji but thin and fofier. At the top were branches of yel- lowi,Qi flowers ; afterwards came winged feed-velfelsj €xa6lly like the fycamore- TaCAM. \HAC. This gum flows from the bodies of large thick tref% like the h'.nglilh poplars, growing plentifully in New Spain and Madagalcar, where they are called /\nzavjr. The leaves arc fraali, and dented, the fruit red, oi the a85 HORTUS AMERICAPvTUS. fize of a large nut, with a peach-like ftone. See tht figure of it in Pfo. It is fa id to eaie all manner of pains in the head, nerves, joints, or v^'omb, and to be very good m vapours. It is io famous among the Indians in America, that they ufe it in all pains what- Ibever, It much refemblcs galbanum, TaMAR IND-S. The tamarind-tree is well known in |amaica. The: pulp of this fruit is purging and very cooling, quench- ing thirO, ar.id abating the heat of inilammatory fe-r vers; the only fault is, it is apt to gripe fume perfons \?io]ently» It opens ob{lrt;i61ions, and is good agamft pimples or breakir>gs-out, whicli proceed from the heat of blood and lalt humours ; vvirh borage-water, it is>. excellent for heat of urine proceeding from a venereat caufe; and is a very good purge, mixed wkh rhubarb and caflia, for the fame difteroper. Here are alFo two or shree wiid tamarind-trees, but t?he fruit is of no ufe ; their bodies are excellent hard timber : The one is called red, arxd the other white,, tamarind; another fort hath leaves like tamarifk or fa^^ viUy but its fruit unlike, which is an excellent relhin- gent to flop fluxes of bloodj^ and cka;nfe and heal cl4 ^jlcers. - Tavo. This i& a large fort of eddo. The roots, erf" thefe, although never fo w^ell boiled, will heat the thioafe (which is called fcratching the throat}, and therefore are generally given to bogs to eat. Tea* « And firft, that which is called Lima tea. FeuilTe faiib, the virtue-of this herb (which is the fame with the I HORTUS AMERICANUS. 187 the China tea) was not known in Peru till 1709: Then we in Jamaica were beforehand with them, fox it hath been known with us above thirty years; and about twenty years pad, a French captain of a fliip affirmed to me, as we were walking toother about our town called St. Jago de la Vega, oblerying this plant grow in fuch plenty, that it was the very fame plant as that of China tea, and that he lived there many years, and had fcen lajge fields of it, and the way of cultivating it ; and all the dilfercnce was, theirs was larger, owing to their cultivation. This plant. Sir H. Sloane takes notice of in his liiftorv of Jamaica, and makes it a lort of hedge-hylfop. Paul Hermanns calls it capraria Curajjavica^ from the Dutch in Cura^oa, who call it cahrita^ from the goats feeding upon it,; but I never faw the goats in Jamaica cat of it. It is called the Icifer tea. Now, to clear the doubt whether this be the iame tea that giows in China and Japan, I will firft Gcfcnbe the plant which is called Weft-lndiaa tea, and then the Eafl-India tea, by which we may fee the dift'crcnce. And firfl, obferve that this plant hath ieveral fmall long brown roots, about two inches long, vhich fend up a Hem three or four feet high (and would be much higher, if cultivated), woody, covered v,^ith a linoothclav-coloured bark, and having Icveral branches;, "Which are very thick fct with leaves, without any or- der ; each leaf is from one inch to two inches long, and about half an inch broad about the middle (where it is biOadell), and then goes oIF tapeiing to a Iharp point, having no foot-ftaiks, of a deep-green colour^ fniooth and thin, being a litile lerrated on its edges;, and they would be much larger if planted in good ground, and taken care of as they do in the Esiil-in- dies. Between the leaves and (talk of the branches eome the Uovvers (landing on a fbort fogt-Ilalk, which i.U. K,ORTUS AMERI.CA-VU-S» 5ire finall and white, feeming to have five leaves, bi.it. {^re only deeply divided into five parts, flanding iii^ a green calyx ; then comes the feed-veirel, which i^ oblong, cylindrical, four-cprnered, but v'ery finall, an(^ when dry is of a light-brown colour, ir^ which are con-, tained a great many {mall brown feeds. Now, to come at the true knowledge of the China tea is no final! difficulty. Bontius hath pretended to give us a figure of the plant, which feems to differ, very much from the defcnption of others, of this plant; and for the better clearing and pafiing.a judgment upon this plant, 1 (ball fet forth the feveral different accounts _ of it, and {jiall begin firfl with Bontius. The annotators upon Bontius fay, it is no wonder,, if, about this noble Afiatic plant, there fhould be fuch. different account.% the natives having fo referved it as a. i'ecret to themfelves, fufferipg no flranger.to fee it grow-^ ing; and if any afked them whence i; came, and where, j-t grew, they would always prevaricate, and never an-^ iWer dire6lly : Somefimcs they xvpuldcall it an herb, ijnothcr time a fhrub, lo that nothing of certainty could, - be concluded from what they laid. As to the figure-, i'ud manner of its grcv/in^, Bontius hinilelt complains^ he was never able to ojt)tain; but at length, by the fa- vour of Lord Caron,, a worthy prefetl ot japan, he, o'btained a draft of the plant, which he hnth given us, which fliews the bignefs of the leaves, f|owe.r>ai3d feed, . which indeed diff^is 'little or noiliitig fi^om^that^ which . grows with us in America, only the leaves are brOrider, and the v'hole plant larger, which mav be owing to, tHeir cultivation. The figure of the plant having not. hitherto been given^ until Bontius gave jt us, it is no., wonder that many have erred ^ about this plant, and- ieem to rrake a difference between tea and tfu, when; tijcy are both, one and the fame plant,, the Qhinef^. callmff tlORTU's AMERICANUS. 189 bulling it ten, and the Japanefe tfia. This Ihrub, faitli Boniius, i.^ of the height and bignefs ot our European currant- bulhes; the {lallcs and blanches, from the foot to the lop, are adorned with tender pointed leaves and flou'ers, which are very numerous, whole leaves, al- though of the fame foim, yet are fo different in big- nefs that, upon one and the (amc ihrub, are accounted five different forts of tea; viz. the firfl and lowelb leaves, neareft the bottom of thd Ihrub, are tiic Lroadefl ; to thefe fucceed a fecohd fort, much fmailer, and fo on 'to the top; and the fmallefl leaf is accounted the bell. The dilFej erice of leaVes is no more thaii what is cummoii to many plants, and is the fame with our American tea. The floWeis are in bignefs, colotir, and Ihapc, like our eglantine or fvveet biici', Eat lioc in fine!!. Tlie ■flower falling off, there remains a fiuit like a navtl, containing a round Biac^ feed ^herein it differs vaflly from the Ameii'can tea). The root is (ibroiis, dif-. pcrfed in very fmall fibres into the ground, to draw its- Tiourifhrri'::nt. The leaves, when green, are fomewhat aromatic, behdes a little hottilh and bitterifli (herein it Idiffers much froiA oursj. Some have tellified, and it fcems mod probable to be true, that this p?ant at fiilt ^rew wild in Cliina, and lay long rtegletled, but by- its culture, high virtues, manner of preparing; aita daily ufe, is but modem as it now appears; and fo Were tobiicco, fugar-canes, and indigo, which in former iirnes were wild, and not minded till the qualities of them were difcoveri^d by the native Indians to peoolc of other nation.s» and then they were foon improved by cultivation, with plealant and profitable tranfpoit* auon thrr^ugh all the known world : and who knows, tvliat perfedUon our wild itS migl.'t be b: ought to, if- tile fame pains and labour \\C-^tt taken with it as in the EaU-Indifi ? Eut I Ih^II notv proceed to other act counts t^o TORTUS AMERICA^^Ui^. counts of the Eaft-India tea ; and the next will be Breynius and Ray's account of it; Who fay, that tea, or tjidt is a fhrub, with manj^ thick branches with dark-green leaves, jagged on the edges like a faw, being in fubftance and form more iike the fpike-willow of Theophraftus than the fweet willow, and of a drying tafte, with feme bitternefs. The flowers are white and five-leaved, and about the tignefs of the female ciftus, having many thrums in the middle ; to thefe fucceed the fruit, which is green fvhen frefh, but when dry is covered with a dark-brown flcin, and the (hape as variable as the Eaflern coccus, fome roundifh, and of that bignefs, or of fputge-laurel, Others twice as long, containing one (ingle feed, others two, and fome three feeds, the hufk being parted into fo many cells or partitions (not unlike the fmall rici^ nusjt which when ripe opens and turns out its feed, which are roundilh, of a tender and light fubftance^ and of a brownifli colour. The next is Monfieur Pommet's account of this tea. His figure of the plant difiFers much from that of Bon- tius, both in leaf, which he makes much broader, and the fruit or feed-veirel, which he makes a perfeft tri- coccos. Indeed, he faith, it hath a flender green thin leaf (but his figure is not fo), pointed at the end^ and a lialQ ferrated or jagged; after the leaves come feve- ral cods, of the bignefs of the end of one's finger, in fliape like the areca, in each of which are two or three berries, of a moufe-coloured grey without, and within having a white kernel, very fubje£l to be worm-eaten; tint lakes no notice of the flower. Monfieur Lemery faith, that tea, or tjia, hath a fmall fibrous root, fending forth branches befet with fmal!, oblong, fharp-pointcd, thin, green leaves, a little ingged or ferrated on the edges ; the flower is white and HORTtrS AMERJCANUS. igi and pcntapetalous, formed lik<; a rofcj with fome fta- mina or thrums, which, when gone, is fucceeded by a little cod, like a fmall haz.l-nur, of a chefnut colour^ containing two or three kernels of an almond Ihape, but Imallerj and of an ill or difagi-eeable talle. So that, bv ail thefe different accounts, this Eaft- india tea agrees with the Wcfl only in the leaf and colour, and divifion of their flowers ; but then the Eaft^ iiidia hath a large flower, whereas the Weft-lndia hath a very fmall one; then, as to the feed-velfel, they al« together differ fo much, that it can never be one and the fame plant, although it mav have the fame virtues, which are very great, if you believe them that write of it: But if the profit in merchandizing of it were not more than its virtues, it would foon be brouirht into iiifefteem. One great rcifon of tea becomirig fuch a, commodity throughout all Europe is, becaufe the Dutch change it for fage, which the Japanefe and Chinefe are great lovers of, which certainly is more medicinal and of more value than their tea, and what thev themfclves are not infenhble of, which makes them prefer our Eu- ropean fage much before their own tea, and wonder at the fame time we fet no greater value or efleem for it* I knew a gentleman in Jamaica who drank no other tea than what grows with us, and although he could not curl it up fo artificially, yet he did it pretty well; and ail that he treated with it praifed it to be the bed: green tea they ever drank in their lives; and I am of diat opinion, for it hath as many virtues. In the fame manner, about forty years paft, I knew a gentleman at Norwich, who ufed to treat the ladies with tea, and they would fay, '* Lord, Sir Thomas, you have the fineft tea in the world 1 it hath fuch a fine flavour! pray where do you get it?" " Oh, ladies, that is ii i'ecret!" Afterwards, he ferioufly told me, and avouched it for a truth, his -tea was only new hay. ig2 HQRTUS AM ER it ANUS. Thorny Apples. ^ There are three lorfs of this plant. One hath a ven \v ite fiower. Of this fort I law growing in a jgaiden in Colchefler, above forty year5 ago : The fur'i geon who had it made both falves and ointments of it, the ufe of which gained him much credit; and there is an account in Gtrrrard, of a gentlewoman in Col- cheRer, who was fo burnt with lightning as to be thought pafl all relief, but was cured by an ointment made of the leaves of this plant. I have known it ex- pciimtntalJv cure conrracled tendons or nerves, by chafing or rubbing in the ointment hot into the part alfe6led. It hath a thiii green (linking leaf, fmelling almoft like opium, and much indented ; ic branches and foreads like a little tree; the ftalks are of a pale- green ; it hath a long tubical whke flower, after which comes Its fruit, wMch is oblong, and in Ihape and big- xit^fs of a walnut with its greeji fhell, fet full of foft prickles while green, but when dry are able to pene- tra;e into the ficih. i thefe contain a vaft: quantity of itn.iii black fectiS, like iho. papdvtr fpinofuvi, and of k fiupitymg qualiry. I know a gendcman at this pre- fent time, that, whenever he hath a fit of the gout,- applics thefc leavts to the part, and it gives eafe inr iibout three hours. The leaves, applied to the head, eafe pain and caufe \J\. Tneie is another fovt, commonly called trumpet* flower (bccaufe it is fo long and large, in the fhape of a trumpet or hauthv.-v), of a fine purple colour wuh^ out-iide, a fine whnc uithin, as loft as velvet, and of a delicate fwe^t fccnt ; lome of them are double-flow- <^red like a trump t ; all its ftalks are black and Ihin- ing ; it& fruit or f^ed-velleis, jnftead of prickles, are fuii of little protuberances like warts; its iced n flai^ iiud of a light-biov.a coluur. Th» HORTUS AMERICANUS. 193 The third fort hath the fame kind of feed-vefTe], but a little more prickly; its lialks are of a (hining black, its flowers of a pale-blue> but hot fo long nor fo large as the former. Thoupa; This is a fhi ub lilvC horrt'-tongue. The flower of it- is long, of an Aurora colour, rcfembling that of birth* Wort ; from its leaves and rind proceeds a yellow rniilk* with which they cure ulcers; bur fome will have it to be a poifon-plant. It grows in Cnili, and moil foUth* ern parts of America. Thro\t-Wort. This plant is fo called from its fpecific quality in curing difeafes of the throat. It hath fome refcm-i blance to the valerian. There is very little of it grows in America. Toad-Flax* There are feveralof thefe kinds of plailts in America, 1. American toad-flax, with a fmall yellow flower. 2. Linaria pahjlris fccniculce folio ^ of Plumier. 3. Linaria minor erecia Ccerulea, of Sir Hans Sloane. It hath a round fingte ftalk, rifing about two feet high, on which are placed leaves alternatively, about an inch and half long, but narrow, like the leaves bf linaria lutea vulf^aris. The tops of the ftalks are branched into feveral long fpikes, fix inches long, full of blue flowers as the others of this kind, after v\rhich follow fo many roundifh turgid fced-vcflels, each di* vided into two cells, in which lie flat brown feeds, Thefe have much the fame virtues as common flax- weed ; the juice, mixed with hogs lard, is a moll ef- fedual remedy for the pain and iweliing of the piles or hasmorrhoids. N Tobacco, 'igi HOl^ttS AMEftlCANUS. T06ACC0. The juice of green tobacco deftroys maggots in foreS teyond any thing that can be made tife of; it makes an excellent healing balfam or falve; an oil, drawn in a retort from dried tobacco^ fcales the bones, cleanfes the fouleft ulcers, and takes away their callous edgesi making them fit to heal ; the white alhes cleanfe the teeth, and kill the viorms iti them. ToOTH-WoRti This plant is fo called from the form and colour o^ the root, which is very white, and is compofed, as it tvere, of a great many teethe We have a fort of it growing in America ; feme will have it to be a fort of lead-woit. This plant hath a vifcous green calyx> in which is a white pehtapetalous flower, like the lychnis fylvejlris Jlore alhoy with a rough vifcid capfula, which catches flies. This plant is not a true climber, and yet it cannot fupport itfelf, it generally growing amongft ihrubs. It is Counted a cooling, drying, and reftrin- gent plant, therefore good in ruptures, and a good vulnerary herb for wounds : Some make it to have the Properties of wild campions, others of lung-wort. Travellers Joy. This is a great climber. I never could underhand Ivliy it is called travellers joy, or what joy travellers leap from it : The country people in England call it hontjiy ; but we never make any ufe of it but to tie rails with, and it iii commonly called pudding-withe, being foft and pappy whilft green, and of a hot biting taftc* The juice and flowers^ beaten and boiled, and then rubbed and applied on the fkin, take off fpots and freckles ; the root, infufed in fa't water^ and mixed with wine, purges all watery humours. Tree«- HORttrS AMERlGANUS. 195 TREt-RoSEMARY. 't'his I happened to meet with by chance. Pulling down lome old houfes, I i'melt a very flrong fmell of rofemary, which made me enquire into the realon of it. They told me, that there was fome rofemary-wood among the timber of the hoiilcs. I then delired they would get me fome of itj which they did ; I found it was only the bark that fmelt, which no rofemary ex- ceeded. Some will haVe it to be a fort of clove-bark tree, which grows in great plenty upon the main con- tinent. I firfl found this tree on Bachelor's Plantation, which was afterwards mine, and is now well known to all or moft planters in Jamaica* I carried fome of the bark with me to England in the year 1717, which kept its fcent very well ; and 1 qucliion not but it would be found, upon experience, to be very ufeful to diftiileis, and of many medicinal uies, TkuM1»et-Tree* This is the common name this tree is called by in Jamaica, I luppofe from its hollownefs. It bears a long. Crooked, foft julus, reprelenting or refembling worms, and hath a very large indented leaf. It is of a very quick growth, growing very ftraight and tall, without any branches, and at the top there is a foft pappy fub- ftance, which fome will eat ; cattle will eat the leaves and its fruit, fo will pigeons. The holly on the top of the tree contains a wliite, fat, and juicy pith, which fome eat ; but the negroes, with this, and with the young tender foft leaves, cure their wounds and old ulcers. I was once in the woods, and was caught in a great (hower of rain, having only an old Congo ne- gro with me, who made me a hut; and I, having heard that fome negroes could make ure, as they called N 2 it. i§6 HORTUS AMERtCANUS. it, I aflced him if he could do it; he faid yes, ana tvent and got a dry piece of this tree, and fplii it, mak- ing a little hole or dent in it with the point of his knife ; he then took a fmall piece of harder wood, and made the end of it to fit that dent ; then he fat down, and held the flat piece between his feet, and with the Upright piece, which centered in the hollow of the Other, twirled it round very fwift betv/een the twd palms of his hands ; it begdn to fmc-ke in a very little time, and fire appeared, which he fo managed that we had foon a very good fire. The juice of the tender tops is aftringerit, and good againft fluxes, im- jnoderate catamenia^ and gonorrhoeas ; it is alfo good againft the immoderate lochia^ if a poultice of the leaves be applied to the navel. Its bark is very tough, and makes as good ropes as thofe of hemp. I knew a phyfician that cured nuuiy dropfical negroes with the afhes of this tree, which afterwards I made ufe of for the fame purpofe ; and I obferved, that rhey were the beavieft afh that I ever faw (which I difcovered by weighing them wirh other wood-afhes), and made a flronger lixivium thaii any others, havmg a greater quantity of nxed fait in th^m; they are theretoie prc- per for dropfical per Ions. Turnsoles,- Thefe plants have their names from their flowers d[lways tUsning to the fun, and are called from the Greek h-liotropiums. There are feveral kjnds of them in Jamaica. 1, Heliotr opium arbor eum mar itimmn!. This plant hath fuccuient or thick juicy leaves, covered over with much white down, like the .American cudweed or cot- ton-weed; the tops are branched out into feveral fpikes of white flowers^ contorted like a fcorpion's tail. 2. A HORTUS AMERICANUS, i^f S. A fort of wild fampier, defc.ibed already, 3. j\ greater fort, with a wiiite flovyer, 4. T'le wild clary. 5. Another fort, wih narrower clary leaves, 6. Heliolropium 7ninits hthofpermi foliis, a fort with a ground Icl leaf. It cools and gently purges by flool, and is couned a fpecific againil the poifon of the phalangium fpider, and againft fcorpions, Va, ERIAN, We have very little or none of the true valerian growing in America, that ever I could find. Sir H, Sloane takes notice of two forts of valerianellas : th« firfl is called hog-weed, mentioned before. Of the fecond fort, the lower pa it of the main Rem is as big a-j one's arm, having a furrowed white bark. It is a climber, taking hold of any palifadoes or trees it comeS near, and branches at the top, rifing feven or eight feet high. Tue branches are many, round, red or green, and brittle, hanging downwards; the leaves come out at tne joints, and »re exatlly like thofe of the greater fort of chick-weed; the tops of the twigs fend out fcveral radii^ or foot-flalks, as from their com* mon centre, like the umbtllifer f^ fultaining each one fmall greenifh-yellow flower, like a fmall cup, being round, undivided, and almoft like mufcus pixydatus in fliape ; after which comes a fmall, long, brown feed, alrnofl like thofe of fome umbtllijer<:^t growing longer from the beginnmg to the top, and being a little tough. It is a cooling and moiftemng herb. It grows in moll hedge-rows and fences every where. Vanillas, o^Banillas. This is a convulvulus plant, climb'ng about flirubs and trees. The fruit or pod is called by the Indians N 3 ia igf HORTUS AMERICANUS. in Mexico mtcafuthil. I have feen it grow in Jamaica, but I never knew any perfon there that could cure it, or bring it to its fine fcent, as the Spaniards do at Cam- peche and Bocatovo Guatulco. It is a vine, with a round, jointed, yellowifti-green ftalk, putting forth here and there leaves of the bi^iefs and fhape of the velvet- leaf; its flowers are of a whiti{h-yellow colour, almoft in (hape of a hand; after the flowers follows a (lender long pod, five or fix inches long, full of fmall feed ; the outfide fliin of the pod is firfs' g een, and when, ripe yellowilh, and, as they dry and are cured, grows black and fhrivelled; upon opening it, the feeds tvithin are fo thick, fm^iH, and fine, that it lools« like velvet. Although they grow in great plenty in mod .parts of America, yet few knov/ how to cure them, fo. at. to ha^'e their true, aromatic fcent, the Spaniards keepr ing- ihe fecret to rhemfelves ; but t:;e Indians, who taught thern, informed me, that they had but two ways of cu- ring them; The firil wa.% when tht-y are juft ripe (for if vou let them ftand tott iong they will Ipiit open of th mfelves, in order to fcatter their feed, and then vou can never cure them) they gather them, and hang them Tip bv one end, in <• Ihady piace, to dry; as they drv, they now and then prefs them gently berwt- en their fin- gers, which makes them fl^t, md then flicken them over tvirh a little oil, which hinders them from dr)ing too fad and fpiitting optn ; and fo repeat, until thev are fit to be rolied up neatlv m papers. The other way is, to gather them as betorc, an i fcald tnem in the fol- lowing liquor; VIZ. Make a brine with fait and water, ilrong enough to bear an egg; then put in a fourth part of chamber-lye, and a realonable quantity of quick- lime, which mix, and boil together about half an'hour; then take it off, and put your vanillas into the liquor; let them remain there until they are thoroughly fcalded ■- ' or HORTUS AMERICANUS. 199 .or parboiled; then take them out, and dry them in the ^ade, or where no lun can come to them. In the {anie manner you may cure Chm.i-root; but inftead of drying it in the (hade, you muft dry it iu the hot fun, 4nd then no worms will lake it ; and if a little of the re4 colour comes out of the root it is never the worfe for iale (fo that you can but keep the worm from it), for the paleft china-root is now become the moll vaiuabic. The Spaniirds h ive a particular way of manuring and cultivating the grounds vvt'iere they plant tncir vanillas, or otherwife they would make o it little advantage of them, as the Japanefe and Chinefe do their tea; and, ^fter plantinjT thein in well-dungcd land, they take care to. mould them up as they grow, and then put poles for them to run upon, as we do hops in England ; then they take them jud in their full ripenefs and fcent, they having a mod particular odoriferous fcent, and yieldmg a great deal of oil and volatile fait. They are very cordial^ cephalic, ftomachic, aperitive, and car- minative, opening all obflruttions, attenuating vilcouS humours, provoking urine and the raenflrual difcharge. It is often mixed by the Spaniards with, their chocolate^i which mak^s it have a pleafant fcent ; and then, to make it of a fine yellow or golden colour, they add anotto, the Spaniards having a very great opinion of '\ts virtues. It is fuppofed, that the fcent in VVar«* ham's apopledlic balfam, for which he got ajpateat^ lyas owing to vanillas, &C. VERVAiri,^ W« have feveral forts of thefe plants. One fort is exadly like that in England; it keepeth green all the year round. This fort is well known by moll or all the inhabitants of America: The Indian and negro cjoclors jpetf^^rm ^reat cures with it in dropues, efpe* N 4 ciilly t0O. HORTUS AMERTCANUS. cially thofe in women, occafioned by obflru6Hons pf the menftrual difcharp«, and that by only giving the Juice of the plant. It is a poweiful reniedy againft worms, as was evident by a gentlt\v'oman in' America, vho was in a lingerino^ confuraprnx condition for lome time, and the occafion of it could pot be found ou^ tv the phyiicians : Her bangs were good, atid fo was her appetite, but fhe fliil walled, and was always com- plaining; at lad, a fkilful Indian gave her the juice of this plant, mixed, with fome fugar, by the ufe of which (he voided, in a few d?ys, a thick worm, abov^ twelve inches long, hairy, and foik^d at the tail, after .which fhe foon recovered, and W'^'i peift£lly \ve!i. The fame perfon reconimended this rfincdy to apother gen,r- tlewoman in Peru, who, by taking it in the fame man- ner, voided many fmall icHii vv<>rn)S, i-nd, among the reft, one very long and flat, like unto a long white girdle; after which fhe alfo became well. It is almofl: certain, that the death of mofl children in Ajnerica is occafioned by worms, entirely owing to their fruit, which is very apt to breed them : This might be often prevented, by taking the juice of this plant, with con- trayeiva infufed in wine ; which wou'd alfo prevent the fever that is occafioned by them. The aroients at- . tributed many virtues to vervain : It is a great cephalic, ,and vulnerary in the difterrpeis of the C) e$ and breaft, in obftruftions of the liver and fple^n; it makes an excellent gargaiifm for difeafes of the throat, and is good againft piles and falling-down of the anus. To take away the hardnefs of the fpleen, bruift I'er- : vain with the v.hHe cf an egg and barley-meal or uiluQi^ jLouT ; make it into a cataplajmy and apply it to the part. Velvet-Leaf. This is a convolvulus plant. It grows in great plenty amonsfl KORTUS AMERIGANUS. fiW amongfl: ebonies, climbing about them. Its leaves are as foft as any velvet, which makes the planters call it velvet-leaf; they are about the bignefs of an Englifh crown piece, rounding like the aJj^Lrahacca^ i3c. of a yellowifh-gieen colour. It is a moft excellent antidote againft poifon, inwardly taken or outwardly applied ; I have feen it heal a wound to admiration, by jufl lay- ing one of the leaves upon the wound; it cures ulcers in the lungs. I knew a phyfician perform great cures on confumptive perfons, who told me that his remedy was only a fviup made of the leaves and root of this plant, for whii:h he had a piftole a bottle. Vines, There are feveral forts of wild vines in America, bearing fruit. 1 . Thofe that climb upon trees, and have a very pleafant, fmall, black grape. '[See Water-Withe. J 2. The wild vine of Virginia. 3. The wild vine of Canada. Wild vines are of the (ame nature, virtue, and qua* lity, as the manured, which aie pleafant to the fto- mach, and provoke urine; ihe leaves make a good mouth-water, and an excellent bath or wafti for the piles, Sc. The allies of the branches clear the eyes of films, fores, and ulcers, and take away the overgrow*>'i, only fmaller and rounder. The floweiift come out at the tops of the branches; they are white, and divided in their margins into five fetlioas ; then come feveral round fmooth berri^es, as big as aa^ jLDgliih pea, containing, in an orange-coloured pulp, fliwo long bro\vn feeds. It loves to grow in Ihady iiioifl places, by the fides of woods. The berries, or whole plant, boiled in whevy cure flUixes; and„ boiled in oil, cure blood-fliot eyes* 4.. The corn violet, dame*s violet, and Venus*6. looking-glars. It puts out its flowers a little before rChriftmas with us in America ; they are of a fine blue colour, with five fe£lipns, making a fine (hov/, like blue, pinks. It grows almoft every where m America. The whole plant is hot and dry in the third degree, and. much of the nature of rocket ; the diflilled water of the flowers, inwardly taken, caufes fwfeat, and, out- wardly, is a good beauty-wafh^ ViRAVIDA, Is the name they give a fort of femper vive in South America; the infufion whereof was uied with great fuc- cefs by a French furgeon* for curing a teitian ague. HORTUS AMERICANUS. ^03 Virginia Snake-Root. This is called polyrhifos Virgimanat or tha lattl&t fnake weed of Virginia. Wake Robin, or Arums, Of which there is great variety. 1. The tdyaSy mentioned before. 2. The leiler tayas. 3. The eddos. Thefe three are eaten as brea3« Jcind, as fhewn before. i^. The dumb-cane, mentioned before. The roots of every fpecies of thefe plants, but efpo* cially of the fpotted ones, have an extraoidmaiy acri-. mony, fo that if you tafte any of them, they will bite your tongue the whole day : But how biting foever they be, if their roota are thoroughly dried, and kept for fome time, they lofe all their acrimony, become •jnhpid in tafte, and may be taken very fately. Ihe dried root, pulverized and mixed with honey, powcii* fully expectorates thick and lough matter, and is therefore excellent in allhmas. The roots of aruni are riie balis in the ilomachic powder of Quercetanus* A drachm of the root in powder, given in a proper ve^ hicie, IS an excellent remedy againft the plague or pes- tilential fevers, and againll poilon; taken in white or Rheniihwme, provokes urine, brings down the monthly purgaiions, purges effectually of tne lochia, and bring* away the cif:^r-birth; taken with iheeps milk, helps iiuvaid ulcers ; the frefh roots and leaves diflilled, Witn a lute mi k, make a fine beau:y-wafh, and is an excellent water tor a:J forts of (potted and malig- xi.inc levers; the powder of the roots, mixed witb fl \i of bnmilone is a iovereign remedy lor a cotv» fu.ijj^Lion; the it^t oiuiicd, or lae leaves, applied' as a jpoui* S04 HORTUS AMERICANUS. a poultice, ripens any boil or plngue-fore ; the juice ©f the leaves cures a polypus in the nofe, and all foul ttlcers. Befides the arums, there are feveral American dra^ gons or dracunculufes : i . The American dragon, with {hipped or jagged leaves, which, upon each knot of the Salk, fends forth two roots from each fide, whica Hick «lofe, if not infinuate or penetrate, inro the bark of the tree; the foot-ftalks of the leaves are longer an., L I N N ^ A N INDEX. Aiiihor*s Names HeUchryfum, or golden cudweed, golden tuiis, or locks Hercules Hog- gum Hog- weed HoUy-rofe, or fage-rofe Honey fuckle, or upright woodbind II or fe- tail Hound*s tongue Indian fhot Indigo Ipecacuanha Iron- wort Jaborand Jalap JelTamia Ketmia Lacayota La get to tree Lance-wood Laurels Lavender Lemons Lentilq Li^li, or luifi plant Lignum aloes Lignum rhodium, or rofe- wood Lignum vitae Lilies Linnaean Name: Conyza virgaia Zanthoxyluvi C. HercuUt J?A?(j metopiam Bocrhaavia diffufa Turner a ulmifolia. Carina In die a C Indigo/era tinBoria^ \ Indigofera argente^i PJychotria evidica Clinopodium vulgar t Piper reticulatum Convolvulus jalaps CPlumieria alba \ Coffea Qccidtntalis. Xiaphne lageito £rylhroxylu7n, J^ajijlora malifomi^ Amyris halfamifera Guiaiacum ojicinale Liae^ L I N N ^ A Author*s Names Line, or linden-tree Limes Liquid amber Liquorice Liutp j^iver-vvor^ Locus-tree Logwood Loofe-flrife! Love-apples Lucimo Macaw-tree Mad apples Maguey Ma hots Maiden-haire Majoe, or mac^ry bittct MaJlows IVIammee-fapota Mammee-tree Manchioneel Mangrove-tree Maple Marigolds Marfh-trefoil^orbuckbanes Mallick Melons Milk-wood Milk-wort N INDEX. Linnaean NamtS Citrus medica, var. K Glycine abrus CScoparia dulcii Lichen C Mahhigia craJfifcUa ^ •Ivmenca courbaril liccmatoxylw.n Campcchia* mini Oenothera Solanum lycoperficim Mamma Americana Cocos Guincenjis S'^lanttvi melongenii £ro7}ielia karatas Jiioijcui Adiantum JPicramnia antidefm^ Achras fapota, Mammea Americana Hippomanc mancinella C Rhiznphora mangle \ Conocarpui crc^ia {Cucumis melo Cucurhita citrulht Brofimuvi fpurium folj^ala paniculata Mint L I N N -^ AN I M D E Xi "■Author^s Names Mint Milictoes Moon-wort Money-woit. MolFcs Moufe-ear Mug-wort Mull tens Mufljroom^ Mufk-mallow Mulk-wood Muftard Myrtles Kahambu, or nhambi Nafcbeny-tree NaveI-^vort Nephritic-tree Nettfe^ Khandiroba,orghandiroba Nickers Nigbtftades Oak of Cappadocia Oil-nuts Oily puife Okra Old mens beard Oleander, or rofe-bay Olives Onagra Onobrychis, or cock's head Opuntia Linn:E3n Names. Bdilota fdaveokns Vifciim vtriicillatum jparthe7iium hyjlerophorhi^ ^ Agar i ens \ Clath rus £aiicellaUiS Hibifcus abehnofciiuz Eluthcria fCleome jpinofa Cleome triphylla Ackras fgpota Hydrocctyle umhellsta Mimofa ungms-cati UrUca Fevillea cordifolia Guilandina bonduc Gmlandina hnduccelh Solanum { Ricinus communis- Sefamum orientale Hihifcus efculentus Tillandfta ufneoide;i Ncrium oleander B'dcida hue eras Mcntzelia afpera Hed\farum Cactus Orangey t I M N JE A N I N D E X\ Author's Names Linnasan Names Oranges Citrus Oitigia Loofa hifpida Ofmundas Ofviunda Oyder-green Ulva laEluca Paica juila Pajomirioba XCaJfia occ'dentalis "^CaJ/ia cbiiifijolia Palghi Palqui Palms Panke Papaws Paraguay tea Paffion-flowers Payco herba Peach-tree Peafe Pellitory of the wajl Penguins Pennyroyal Pepper-grafs Peppers Peumo Phyfic nuts '' Phcsnix da^ylife.i'a Elais GuLncevJis /ireca oleracea "^ Cocos nucifera Tlirinax parvifiora Chama:rops humilis Cocos aculeata \ Carica papaya Carica p^fopofd Cajfine Peragua PaJJiJlora norma lis Amygdalus Pcrfica Eromtlia penguin Lepidiuvi Virginieum Piper adunaivi Ppcr umbellatum , Piper amplexicaule ' Jatropka ciirc7S Jatropha multijida Piemento t I N I^ ^ A N INDEX". ^Mtkor's Namei jiemento PigeoT'-peafe Pilewort Pillenlla Piloitlla Pimpernell Pindalls Pine-apple Pinks Plantain Piantain-tree Plum-trees Poifon berries Polypodium Pomegranates Pond or river weed popes heads Poponax. Poppy Poquet Potatoes, or batatas Prickly white wood Prickly withe Prickly wood Prickly yellow wood Pumkia Linnaean Names Myrtiis pimenta f Cytifus cajan < Paullinia CuraJJavicA C Paullinia pinnata Ricinus communis Corchorus Jiliquofus Arachis hypogxa, ^nanas C Sagittaria lancifoli^ C Alifma cordifolia t Mufa Paradifiaca t eliconia bihai fSpondias momhin Spondias diffufa < Spondias inyrobalanut f Chryfobalanus icaco \ Spathelia fimplex Cefirum nocturnum Polypodium Punica granatwni Caclus mdocaEus Mimofa julijiora Argcmone MexicanO, Solarium batatas Ca^us triangularis Zartthoxyhm C. HcrcuUs Cuiurbita JPurll^iae i I ^r N ^ A N i ^ D t ^. Author's Names Purflane Quamoclit Quefnoa, or quiiti Quillay Ouinchamali Quinquina Ragwort Ramoon Rampioni Raquettc Reeds Reilbon Reft-harrovf Rice Ricinus Rocket Rofeniary Rounctvab Rue Rupture-wort Rufhes SafFroa Sage St. John's wort Solomon's feal Sampler SargalTa, or zargafTo SavfapariUa Saffafras Savanna- (lower Scabious Linn jean Names Portulaca oleraced Ifomota quamoclit ICinchona officinalis Trophts Americana CaHui Pcruvianus Ory£a fdtiva Croton cafcarilla Parietaria microphylla Cyperiis odoratus Cypcrus articulatus , Tvpha latifolia Carthamui tindoriui Lantana annua Varronia ^lobofa Sefuvium portulacajlrufn Fucus rtatans Smilax farfapariUti Laurui faffaphras Echitcs umbtllata Elephantopus Jcahtr Scamii7&ny V- 1 N'N iE A N I N D E x: Author's Names Scammony Scordium, or water-ger- mander Scotch grafs Sea-feather, or fea-fan Self-heal, or alheal Semper vive Senfible plant Septfoil, or tormentil Shaddock Siik- grafs Soap-berriei - Sorrel Sour-fop Spaniili aibour-vme Spider-wort Spikenard Spirit-leaf Spleen-wort Spunges Spurges Star-appTe Star-ftones Star-wort Stockviihhcufc Stoschas Strawberries Sun-flower Supple-jack Linnaean Names Convolvulus Brafilienjts Panicum latijolium Gorgonia^fiabdlutyi Ruellia -paniculata Aloe perfoliata Mimofa Citrus decumana Bromelia karatas Sapindus faponariu C Cijfus acida " \ Hibifcus fabdariffa Annona muricdta Ipomota tuberofa Commelina communis Commelina zanonia Ballota fuaveolens Ruellia clandejiintt Afplenium { C Striimpjia maritiiJva J Euphorbia hypcricifolia • * Euphorbia myrtijolia I K Euphorbia maculata ' Chryfophyllum cainih > Conyza Crrjalpinia veficaria Gnaphalium albican^ Era gar I a Helianihus Paullima trit£7-nata ■^ Sweet-fop L I N N /£ A ?v' I iV b E }^. Author's Names Sweet- fop Sweet-wood .Sycarfiora Tacamabac Tamarinds TayO Tea Thorny apples Thoupa Throat- wort ToacI-fla;t Tobacco Tooth-wort Travellets jov' Tree-rofcinary Tnampet-tree Turnfoles Valerian Vanillas, or banilla* Vervain yelvet-Jeaf • Vines Violets Viravida Virginia fnake-root Wake robin, or arums Wall-flowers Walnuts Water-apple W^ater-crellcs Water hemp-agrimony Watci-liiies Linna::an Names Annona fquamofa Laiirus Banijlcria lauri folia Popuius tacamahac Taviarindiis Indica XyCapraria hiflora Q Tlica hohea Ddtdra fivamonium 'Nicotiavca tahacuvi Plumbago Jcandtns Clematis dicica Cccropic pcitaia f Heliotrcpivm gnaphalodes / '{diotropium Curajfavicum £oerhaavia fcandens Kpidcndrum vanilla Verbena Jamaicenjn Cijfampelos paricra Tfychotria hcrhacca A rijlolochia ferpcntarid Arum Clecme procumhem Juglans baccata. Annona palujlris Sifymbrium najlurtiujn Eupatorium Njmphaa lotus P Water- L I N N ^ A N INDEX; Author's Names Water-withe White maftick White wood Wild ginger Winter cherries Winter-green Winter's bark' Withes Wolfs bane Wound-wort Xiphion Yams { Linnaean Names Vitii labrufca Bignonia pentaphylla Amonum zcrumbct Phy falls Canella alba Winterania candid A rum Jun iculaceurlt Iris martinici-njii • Diofcorea alata \ Diofcorea fativa \Diofcorea bulbiferi^. INDEX INDEX o t DISEASES, REMEDIES, ^c. Dr. Barham, 111 the foregoiiii^ Tvork, mentions^ cither from his own exper.itncc^ or the report of others^ the followni^ articled [ ^o- !• 1 As cj'ording remedies for AGUES— •China-root, Pepper*, Ragwort, SafTafras^ Viravida. ANEURISMS — Plantain. ANUS, difchar^es of blood /"otk the — Flower-gentle. extfnf.on of the — Nightlhades. • fdllmi^ out of the-'-V'i\^vfon^ Plantain, Veivaio. ASTHMAS. See Consumptio>js. BARREMXESS— Vmbergiis, Mint, Muflc-mallow. BLADDER. See Stone, Gravel^ infrtk; Diu- retic, No, II. . . ulcerated — Semper vive. BLEEDING, inward or outward — Blood-flower, Horfe-tail, Loofe-flrife, QuincliamUi. Sec Styp* TIC, No. II. BLOODY FLUX. See Dysentery^ BONES, pains of tht — Piemento. 5^(f RKEUMATrs\f. BOWi^LS, zacak — BalUm capaiba. Coopers withe, P a G round f<;l, I^:DEX OF DISEASES, Groundfel/'Gum cancamum, Piemento. S£.& Ob*- STRHeXIONS. . . l^-r- ' ^ O I ? J ''' '^'/O BREAKL\GS-OUT — Mug-wort, Scabious, ^ama* rinds. . ^ . BREASTS, hardnefsofVie-^OiUnMts, hB.EATHt Jlicrinefs of. See Consumptions. — ^^ Jlinking — JVIufk.- mallow. Peppers. JiRlJISES, inu-ard or outward — Artibcigris, Aven^;. Quefnoa, Scabious, Stai-wort, Winter-green. BURNS — Banana-tiee, Cerafee, Love-apples, Pep* ■ pers, Plantain, Puiflane, Ruflies, Thorny applcSj Water-lilies. CANCEROUS^ULGERS- Calhev.r. CANCERS-*- Flax-weed, Line, Pirnperaell^ Spurges, Wild ginger. CANINE MADNESS— Clary. . CATARRHS— BaJfam Tolb, Grt)und-ivy, Helichryi fum, Horfe-tail, Nightfliades,. Sarfapa>rilla, Stoechas,, CHIGOES— Cafbevv, Mammee-tree. CHOLlC— Attao, Bair^im capaiba, Bean-tree, Bitter- wood, Capfrcum peppers, Ca'afee,, Elder, Eryngium, Flea-banes, Gialfc^, Hog-gum-,. Liquorice, Locus- Tree, Klint-, Myrtles, Nahambu,, Oil-nuts, Oily pulfe. Oranges, Payco herba. Peach-tree, Peppers, Piemento, Prickly white wood. Rocket, Rolemary, Rue, Rufhcs, Spikenard,. Winter cherries, Vv'inter's l/jrk. ...__-_—_ tiiith cojlivenefs — Belfy-ache Mifttd^ C HOLER — Liver-wort, Saffron. CONSUMPTIONS — Anotto, Balfam capaiba, Bal- fam Peru, China-root, Daify, Fox-g!ove, Ger- rriander, Mullieris, Nightfliades, Oak of Cappado- cia, Oi'v pulfe, Okra, Oranges, Polypodium, Sca- bious, Velvet leaf. Wake robin. COrNVULSIONS-^.Mifletoes, Nickers. .J^e Spasms. CON-. REMEDIES, Be. CONVULSIONS, ncrvcus — Mint. •CORNS — Gafhew. COUGHS — Balfain capiiba. Banana-tree, GfouTi^- ivv, Ilorfe-tail, Liquorice, Mullicn?, Oily pulle, Pellitoiv of the wall, Pi^ecn-peafe, Poiypodium, Scabious, StC2chas^ GRAB-YAWS—Arrow-head. CRAMPS-.-Honeyfuckle, Jalap, Mlnr, MifletoeF,, . Oak of Cappadocia, Oil- nuts. S-^c Joints, y?z^. <;^UTANEOUS DLSEASES—Furaiterry, Muftard^ Peppcr-grafs.. DEAFNESS— Mnflarc!, Oily pulfe. ipEFLUXIONS— Balfam Tolu, Banana-tree, Box- thorn, Brafiiletto, Star-wort, StCEchas. rUVBETES— Indian fhot. mARRHOLAS-.- Ipecacuanha, Watev-Iilics. 6"^^ Ev Acu ATioNS, ioo-'libr-r/j!. DROPSIES — Bean-tree, B.^ly^ache weed, Capfjcum peppers, Cafhev\', Cont.rayerva, Dunib-Cinc, DvN'aif- cider. Flux-weed, M.^nchioneel, MaiHi-trefoil, Net- tles, Oak of Cappadocia, Oil-niUs, Pellitory of tite wall, Pcpper-grafs, Peppers, Peumo, Plantain, Ri- cinus, Rofemary, Scammony^ Spurges, Trumpet- , tree. Vervain, Water hemp-a^^rimon}-. DRY BELLY^ACHK— Ambergris, Attao, CaOTada, Oil-nuts, Spurges (fpfcics c^). DYSLN FERY— Anotro, Campions, Cotton, Cotton-' tree, FIea-b:^nes, Ipecacuanha, Logwood, Loofe- ftrifc, Purllane, Taniaifnd.s, W'ater-liiies. EAR-ACHE — Garlic pear, Indian iliot. EMPYEMAS— Oak of Cappadocia. EVACUATIONS, too-Wnral — Air.bergris, Blood- flower, Capficum peppers, Palms, PimperneU, Trumpet-ptree. . . . - EXCORIATIONS— Hovfe-tail. P3^ EYES. INDEX OF DISEASES, EYES, blood-JJiot — Violets. ^ dejluxions of i/zf— Love-apples. See DEf* FLUXIONS. . Jtlms on the — Celandine^ Papaws, Toppv, Spun. ges. Vines. , yor^—^Balfam-herb, Bean-tree, "Eoxthorn, Bra- filletto, Gourds, Haxvk-weed, Loofe-ftrife, Mari- golds, Nightfhades, Oily pulfe, Pigeon-peaie, Poppy» Purflane, Vervain, Vines. FALLING SICKNESS— Mi(letoe?, Nickers, Star- wort. FELONS — Arfmart, FEVERS — Ambergrisj Attap, Brafilktto, Bully-tree, Centaury, Ceralee, Cherry-tree, Gourds, Grana- dillas. Lemons, Melons, Nightfiiades, Oil-nuts, Penguins, Purflane, Shaddock, Sorrel, Tamarinds. \- heBic — Anotto, China-root, Okra. intermitting — Centaury, Locus-tree. malignant — Arrow-root, Balfam Peru, Ce- dar, Contrayerva, Dandelion, Pimpernell, Spike- nard, Spurges, Wake robin. FISTULA IN ANO— Liquid amber. FISTULAS— Flax-weed. FITS OF THE. MOTHER — Ambergris, Lavender. FLUXES — Duck's meat. Flea-banes, Flower-gentle, Germander, C olden-rod, Goofe-grafs, Grapes, Guavas, Hawk-weed, Helichryfum, Holly-rofe, Ipecacuanha, Iron-wort, Logwood, Mangrove-tree, Money-wort, Muliiens, Onobrychis, Palms, Plan- tain, Plantain-tree, Pond or river weed, Poponax, StOEchas, Trum.pet-tree, Violets, Winter-green. See Dysentery. FRACTURiD BONES— Cotton-tree. FRECKLES. 5^^ Cosmetic, No. II. GALL. Set OflsiKuciJo.Ns. GLEETS REMEDIES, Gc, G LLETS — Blood-fiower. COL'T — China-ioor, Cowhage, Currato, Fuftic, Gum caranna. Hog-gum, Marlh-trefoil, Mufiard, Oyfter- green. Peppers, Pigeon-peafej Sarfapariilaj Thorny apples. knotty — AiTmart. ORAV'EL— Anotto, Arfmart, Capficum Peppers, Currato, Gland-flax, Mallows, Nephritic-tree, Okra, Pellit-ory of the wall. Spikenard, Splecii-\vort_, Winter-cherries. -- GRELN SICKNESS— Contrayerva. WOUNDS — Baftard mammer, Goofe-grafs, Harillo, Hog gum, Self-tieal. 3te Wounds. GUI MEA- WORM — Oil-nuts. H/EMORRHOIDS. See Piles. HEAD-ACHE, 6?c. — Ambergris, Attao, Bafil, Gar- lic pear, MiHetoes, Muflard, Oil-nuts, Onobrychis^ Peppers, Purflane, Tacamahac, Thorny appieS;, Water-lilies, Winter's bark. HEAR 1 -BURN — Pigeon-peafc. HERNIA CARNOS'V. See Ruptures. HERPES. See St. Anthony's Fire. HICCOUGHS — Spleen-wort. H I P — A mbergris. HOARSENESS — Banana-tree, Cane«, Oily pulfe. Palms, Polypodium. HORSES, galled backs r/"-— Pajomirioba. HYSTERICS — Buck-wheat, Eryngium, Liquid am- ber. Rue. ILIAC PASSION— Peppers. I MPOSTHUMES— -Capficum peppers. Marigolds, Mifletoes, Oak of Cappadocia, Oily pulfe. Water hemp-agrimony. INFANTS, difeafes o/"— Liquorice, Oranges, Peach- tree, Penguins, P4 IN- X N J) E X - O F ;a I S--E A S E S, INFLAMMATIONS — Cotton-trer, Dude's mcaf^ Coofe-fpotyGouidi^ L^ve-apples, Mallows, Mejoni,/ ..^.:;^Mug-w9)-t,. Night/liades, Q.vfter-green, Peppers/ plantain, rurflane, R.ampions, Water-lilies. See' Eyes, fore J Liver, diftafcs of; Skin, dijtafesof, JTCti— -Lovc-appics, Neitie^ Niglufhades, Qily pulfe^ Phyric-nuts, Water hemp-agrimony. '" JAUNDICE-— Centaur;,-, Fumiterry, Liver-wort, Rue, ^ S^ifFron, . .W^tej hemp-agrimony. ^c.e Y^Li.ow' , J, Jaundice. ' JOINTS, Jlrffnefsajid^ains iu tnc—O'd-nuts, Pigeon- ,. ^- peafe, X^camahac. iSre Rheumatisms. K1D.NIES, ulcerated- — Semper vive. LEGS, injlavimations in the — Mug-wort, Plum-trees, fxjuellings in the — Line, Oil-nuts, SalTafras. ' „ - See Di*opsiKS. i^EPRO^Y— Muftard, ScabiouSj Water hemp-agri-. , mony. LETHARGY— Spurges. LIMBS, cold, lueaky 'ox paralytic — Cacao, Capfjcum peppers, Contrayerva, Coopers withe, Currato, Elder^ Green wrJie^ . Honeyfuckie, Miiletoes, Sage. LINGERING DISTEMPERS — Anotto, Contra- yerva. X^IVER, difeafes of the — Duck's meat. Liver-wort, Pellitory ot the wall. See Obstructions. LIVER-SPOTS— Calhew, Navel- wort. LOCHIA. S.ee Evacuations, too-liberal, fopra; Births, ^c. No. III. LOSS OF APP£TI]~E.™Bitter-v/ood> Capficuxp peppeis, Conirayerva. LUNGS, Set Consumptions, DtFLUxioNs. MADNESS— Piir.pernell. MALIGNANT l LCERS — Calhew. MANGE in do^s — Dog- wood. MEAGRIM. REMEDIES, tSe. . ME A GRIM — Nickers. * MELANCHOLY — Ambergris, Polypodium. . MENSES, iwwo^fr^^^. SccY^v \c\5 \TiO'm^toQ''lihera,'L MERCURL4L POISON — Indian flhot. ' MESENTERY. Su 03!>tructions. , MORBIFIC TAINTS, G?c.— Ambergris, Ipecacu- anha. . MOUTHS, difortcd — Nickers. V ^ Jore — Fuflic, Golden-rod, Iron-wort, Line, Liquid amber, Muliiens, Penguins, Rag- wort, Rampions, Self-heal, \'ines. NAILS of the hands and ioes^ overgrowing Jkins oj the — Vines. NERVES, contra^cd, — Thorny apples. drifd — Oily pulfe. weaknefs of the — Liquid amber, Tacamahac, .. wmmdcd — Ballam capaiba, Balfam Perii. NIPPLFS, y/jT^rfs or crccki c/Mf— -Nightfhades. NUMB PALSY— -Capficum peppers, SalFafras. OBSTRUCTIONS— Avens. Baliam capaiba, Cerafee. Contrayerva, Coopers withe. Dodder, Fl^•niterr^•, Germander, (iraflfes. Gum cancamum. Maiden bans. Navel-wort, Nephritic- trte,Nightfhades,Onobrychis, Peppers, Polypodium, Refl-harrow, Rue, Saffafras, wSempervive, Spikenard, Spleen-wort, Tamarinds, Vanillas, Vervain, Wall-flowcrs, Winter-cherries. PALSIES. Sec Limbs, coUy weakf &c. ]eESTILENTIALDISEASES™Germander,Grafres, Oranges, Pmipcrnell, Rue, Scabious, Wake robin. PHLEGM — Canes, Cardamon, Polypodium, Saffroa. PHRENSIES — Nightfliades, Spurges. F.HTHISICS — Balfam Tolu, Pimpernel]. ^ILES-— Blood-flower, Flax-weed, Garlic pear, Mul- iiens, Nightfliades, Palms, Pankc, Pilewort, Toad- ^ax, Vervain, Vines. PLAGUE INDEX OF DISEASES, n.AGUE — Contiayerva, Dandelion, Pimpernelf^^, Rue, 'Scribious, Wake robin. ?i>E'JRA, pains in the — Geimander, Pcililory of %\vt PLEURISIES — Avens, Ccntmary, Milk-wort, Mifle- m. toPS, OiJy liulfe. Fa) CO lieiba. POiSONS-— An;bergiis, AnottOj Arrow-root, Bdel- jiumj Conlrayjerva^ Ginger, 'Grades, Jaborand, , iL'-gnurn aioes> Mufiard, Nahambu, Navel-wort,' Nliandiroba, Onobrychi.^', Pajomirioba, Peppers/ Rue, Rufhe^, Scordium, Spikenard, Sparges (jp(^- cics i)), Vcivet-leaf, Wake robin. POLYFLS-'-Wake robin. ' PURGINGS. .S.ct Evacuations, toc-hhcral. QUINSIES— -Helichiyium, Liquid amber. Ragwort;, . Star-wort, REINS, 5«' Obstructions, KHEUxMATISMS— Ceniaury, Fnaic, Nhandiroba, Oil-nuts, Peppers, Piemento^ Sarfapanlla, Spikenard/ RICKETS~-afmundns. RING-WORMS™- Celandine, Liver-wort, Pajofni- rioba, Papawr,. RISING OF THE LIGHTS— Oranges, kUPTURES — Duck's meat, Mulliens, Reft-harrow, Tooth-wort. ST. ANTHONY'S FIRE— Cafhew, Cerafee, Cow- hage. Love-apples, Nightfhadcs, Purflane. SCAB or MANGE IN CHILDREN — Broom-weed. SCABS, malignant — Liver- v^ort. Water hemp-agri- , niony, SCALD-HEADS— Paiqui. SCALDS — Peppers, Purflane, Ruflies, Water-lilies. SCIATICA RHEUxMATISMS— Li'iuid amber, Pcpper-grafs. SCURF— Palqui. SCURVY R E M E I) 1 E $, t3c, SCURVY— Pepper-grafs, Saffafra?, Winter's bark SIDES, Jlichis and pains of the — Germander, M;fle!oes. SINEWS, contraticd—~Lk\n'\d amber, O ly pulfe. SKIN, difeafcs of iJ:s. — Claryj Duck's nieat^ O^y pulfe, Pond or river weed. SOLDIERS, dijt ft of^ called die brufn, zvhn it^ camps or grmrfons-'--Sc\(-]:\ed\. , SORES—Bafil, Co!den-iod, Mujt-worr, MuRaid, Pajomiiioba, Rampions, Semper vive, J obaccr. Wake lobin. SPASMS — Ambergris, Oak of Ciippac^ocia, Oil- nuts, Oily pulie, Quelnoa. SPITTING, ^rra^-^Oianges. « of blood — Biier-rofe of America, Loorc- ftrife, Planlain-lree, Purflane, Water-iilics. SPLEEN, difemptrs f/ ^Af— .Splcen-woit. See Ob- STUUCTIOKS. fwellivg and hardnrfs cf the — Honfyfuckk, Indian £hor, Maple, Pellitory cf the Ava^l, Vervain, Water hemp-agrimony. STINGS OF SNAKES, SPIDERS, &c. — Arrow, root, Bafil, Clary, Contrayervn, Eryngium, Goofe- grafs. Hare's ears. Ipecacuanha, Nahambu, Pim- pernell, PindalU, Rue, Scabious, Spider wort. Spur- ges, Tu*nfoIes, Water-lilies, Yams. STOMACH, cold, lueaky &c. — Anotto, Balfam ca- paiba, Balfam Peru, Bitter-wood, Bralilletto, Cap- ficum peppers. Centaury, Contrayerva, Flea-banes^ Germander, Ginger, Groundlel, Gum cancamum, Mailfeiws, Marigolds, Muftard, Myrtles, Oily pulfe, Okra, Oranges, Peppers, Piemcntu, Rallies, Sage, Semper vive. Vervain. STONE — Arfmart, Capficum peppers, Currato, Gol- den-rod, Mallows, Nephrit-ic-tiee, Okra, Paraguay tea, Payco htrba. Spikenard, STRAN- INDEX OF D I SEAS E S, STRANGURY — Anotto, Germander, Goofe-footv Melons, Nightfliades, Pellitory of the wall, Puiflane, Rice, Spleen-wort, Winter-cherries. SURFEITS— Semper vive. SWEATING, immoderate — Anotto. SWELLINGS, cold, (3c. — AiTraart, Caftada, Duct's meat, Goofe-foot, Mallow:, Mifl-^oes, Peppers^ Plum-trees, Ragwort, Sory of the wall, Ta;camahaG. WORMS— Angelyn-tree, Bitter- wood, Cafliew, Cc^ d^ir. Centaury, Female fern. Germander, Grailes, Gum caracamum,. Lignum aloes, Locus-tree, Ono- brychis; Oranges, Oyfler-grCen, Penguins, Phyli'c- nuts. Rocket, Semper vive. Vervain. . in cattle — Semper vive. WOUNDS — Arrow-head, Avens, Ealfaiw capaiba. Clary, Fox-glove, Golden-rod, Hare's cars. Iron- wort, Liquid amber, Loofe-ftrife, Money-wort, Moufe-car, Mulliens, Ofmundas, Pigeon-pea fe* Pimpernell, Ragwort, Sage, Solf-heal, Tooth- Wort, Trumpet-tree, Veivet-leaf, Winter-green, Wound-vv^ort. yaWs ! N D E X or DISEASES, YAW 3 — Lignum vitse, M.ijoe, Oil-nuts. See Crab- Yaws. YELLOWJ AUNDICE— C^rafee, Mangolds, Spleen- wort. C No. II. ] The following qualities are afcribed to the annexed ar-^ ticks: ALOETIC — CurraCo, Silk-grafs, ANODYNE— Mallows, Nhandiroba, Nightfhades^ Peppers, Piemento, Scabious, Tacamahac. APERITIVE — Apples, Avens, Bdellium, CafTia fif-. tula, Ccntaurv, Ceiafee, Contrayerva, Dodderj, Four o'clock flower. Gamboge, Goofeberry, Goofc- foot, Graffes, Groundfel, Jalap, Lignum vitze, Lo- cus-tiee, Nightihades (fpecies 6), Onobrychis, Ri- cinus. Saffron, Scabious, Sorrel, Spurges, Tama- rinds, Turnfoles, Vanillas, Violets, Water hemp- - agrimony. Winter-cherries. ^^ and afitrioards ajlringent and Jlrcngth- • ening — Appie.*, Ipecacuanha. ASTRINGENT — Alder-tree, Alder-tree or button- Tvood, Boxthorn, Brier-rofe of America, Caltroppe, - Campions^. Dog- wood. Female fern. Ferns, Flea- banes, Flower-gentle, Fu llic. Garlic pear. Golden- rod, Grapes, Guavas, Hawk-weed, Helichryfura, . Ho'iv-roiei Manj^rove-tree, Myrtles, Nightihades, 0:J mens beard, Olives, Oyfter-green, Palms, Plan- , t*:n. Pomegranates, Poponax, Rice, Rupture-wort, Ruthej., Septfoii, StCEchas, Tamarinds, Tooth-wort, Trumpet- tree. Winter-green. ATTENUATING — Avens, Canes, Peppers, Scabi- ous, Vanillas. BALSAMIC — Loofe-firife, Muftard, Peppers. CAR^. R E M E D I E S, &c, Cardiac — Ambergris, Banana-tree, Contrayctrji, Lignum aloes, Oran^;e?, Pepper?, Pviir, SL>ikriia.id. CEPHALIC-- -Gum carann<). Lignum" alo^F, Vaniikas, Vervain. See Head-ache, &c. No. L CLEANSING — Avcns, Clary, Fern?, Hercules, JnJi dian (hot, Pajomiriobj, Peppers, Pigeon-peafe, Pwampions, Scabious, Semper vivc, Tobacco, Wa^ ter hemp-agrimony. Winter's bark. COOLING — Alder-tree, Al fines, Caltrcppo, Duck'5 meat, Fuftic, Garlic pear, Gooi'eberry, Hawk-weed^. Hog-weed, Indian (hot, Love-apples, Melons, Night- lliades, Okra, Oyfter-green, Pajomirioba, Plantain, Pond or river weed, Popes heads, Puiflane, Ra.iR^ pions. Rice, Shaddock, Tamarind?, Tooth-woit^I Turni'oles, Valerian, V/aler-IUies, AVinter-grccn. I COSMETIC — Cacao, Cafliew, Ccrafee, CoUon, Cot-. ton-tree, Honey fuckle, Jellatnin, Loofe-ftrifc, OaIc of C;ippadocia, Puiflane, Tamarinds, Tiavcllers' joy, Violets, Wake robin. COUNtER-POISUNi apoteni — Spurges, flecks 5.. Set Poisons, No. I. DIGESTIV*:— Bdellium, Scabious. DISCLSSIVE — Bdellium, Ciove-ilrife, Floripondio, Oiiy pulfe, Water hemp- agrimony. iJiURETIC — Anotco, Afparagus, Balfam capaiba. Bean-tree, Capficum peppers, Cafhew, Contrayerva, Cowhage, Currato, Eryngium, Flax-weed, Gland-' flax. Golden- rod, Graffes, Mallows, MeJoHs, Milk- wort, Nephritic-tree, Nighilhades, Okra, Oranges Penguins, Peppcr-grafs, Peppers, Reft-harrow, Rocket, Sampler^ Sargalfa, Scordium, Spikenard, Spmgts (fpecies ^}, Vanillas, Vines, Wake robin, 1 . Water hemp-agjimony. Winter cherries. DRYING — Aider-tree, Alder-tree or button-wood, Av^nf, Brier-roi'e of America, Buck-wheat, CaiiS- pionf. XNDSX OF DISEASES, pions> Celandine, Ferns, Hawk-weed, Helichryfumi HoUy-rofe, Moufe-ear, Old mens beard, Ovlter- green. Pond or river weed. Scabious, Scordium^ Tooth- wort, Violets, Winter- green. EMETIC — Belly-ache weed. Cocoons, Gamboge^ Goofe-foot, Groundicl, Navel-wort, Ortigia, Phy lie- nuts. EMOLLIENT — Mallows, Oilypulfe, Okra, Peppers.' jF^EVERlSH — Pumkin, ij eaten too much. HEATING — Avens, Buck-wheat, Cacao, Celandine, Cinnamon, Navel-worr, Oily pulfe, Onobrychis, Oranges, Peppers, Prickly white ^Vood; Rolemary, Scabious, Violets. In CARN ATI VE— Semper vive. JNTOXIC.il'ING — Carapullo; MOISTENING — Duck's meat. Hog-weed, Oil/ pulfe, Purflane, Valerian. Narcotic — Lignum aloes, Pigeoia-peafe, Poppy, Rufhes, Thorny apples. NUTRITIVE— Avotado-pear, Cacao, (Calavances^ CafTada, Colilu, Eddos (feme forts )^ Guinea-corn, Mad-apples, NightQiad^s (fpecies 3 j, Okra, Palms, Pigeon-peafe, Pindalls, PI an!ain-tree. Potatoes, Yams. PECTORAL — Balfam Peru, BalfamToIu, Cardamon^ Cotton, Cotton-tree, Nettles, Nightfliades, Oily pulfe, Okra, Saffion, Scordium. POISONOUS — Caflada (with the antidote). Chili tardinal flower, Goofe-foot, Li£ti (with iti anti- dctej, Manchioneel, Mufhrooms (with the antidote), Paica julla, Poppy, Savanna-flower (with the anti" dote). Water-apple, Wolf's bane. PURGATIVE — Belly-ache weed, CafTada, Cocoofis, Nightfhades, Oil-nuts, Ortigia, Paica julla, Phyfic- nuts, Ouamociit, Rocket, Spanifh arbour-vine^ Spurges, Wild ginger; SCOR- REMEDIES, &c, SCORBUTIC — (Sugar, if too much ufed, unitr.iht article) Canes. STOM \CHIC— Contrayerva, Cdopecs w«the, Eryn- giurn, Ginger, Lignum aloes, Muftard, Onobrycliis, Oranges, Scordiurn, Vanillas, Wake robin. Win-* ter's bark. S jVJlitutei for^ ASPARAGUS, garden — Afparagus. BROOK-LIME, En^ljh..~\ixook-Y\mt. CALAMUS AROMATiCUS— Ruihes. CAMPIOXS—Tooth-woit. CAT-MI N'T, EnghJk—^Wiit. CfllMA-ROOT, Eajl-hidia — China-root. FERNS, common — Ofmundas, Polypodium. FLAX-WEED, common — Toad-flax. GUM ARABIC— Cedar. GUAIACUM— Manchioneel. HEMP, European— WdiWov^'s^ Sorrel, Trumpet-tree. JALAP — Four o'clock flower. J tlSUITS BARK — Bully-tree, Centaury, Locus-tree, LAND PLANTAIN— Plantain. LILIES, European — Lilies. LIN'SEED OIL— Oily pulfe. LOOSE-STRI FES, Enghjh — Loofe-ftrife. LUNG-WORT— Tooth-wort. MARSH-MALLOWS— Okra. MISLETOES, £nj//77i— Miaetoes. Q 2 MONEY- INDEX OF DISEASES, MONEY-WORT, Englijh -Money-worL MOSSES, EiU'opean — MolTe.c. NETTLES, Engbjh — Nettles. ■OIL OF ALMONDS— Pmdalis.. PELIITORY, Eurcpean — Peliitory of the ;va;L PERUVIAN OUILL fi ARK— Locus-tree. PURSLAXES--A]riRes, Hog-weed. ' " RED CORAL — Corals and conalJines. REEDS, Engl-Jh — Reeds. RHODIUM — t-m. ROSEMARY, EngljJi—Ro{e.m^ry. S iGE, EnghJIi gavdcn—SixgQ, SAMPIER, £«^/_/4— Sampier. SCABIOUS, ^-/'^we/^— Scabious. SENNA, Alexandrian — B.irbadoes flower fence. SUN-FLOWERS, EnglJh—S^ln-?Lo^^exs. TE \y Eafi-Indian — Tea. TOBACCO— Goc3. WALL-FLOWERS, EngUJk — Wall-flowers. WALNUT-TREE LEAVES, Enghjh~.-C:i{h<^, WILD MARIGOLDS, 'i:if;-o/cvz;i — Mangolds. ' [ No. V. ] Theje are knoiuii or fuppofed proper for. ALOES, making — Semper vjve. ARBOURS — Eignonia, Ccrafee, Lacayota, Lemon§^ Snanifh arbour-vine. ARROVv'S, heading — Palms. ^BALSAMS, making — Ealfam-herb, Balfam nervinum, B'.liam Peiu, Snirit-Icaf, Tobacco, V/inter-green. BATHS and FOMENTATIONS — Broom-weed, Coopers withe. Mug-wort, Myrtles, Peppers, Pie- mento. Plum-tree;, Rofemary, Sage, Spikenard, Spurges, Stcii-wort, Vv'aler hernp-agrimony. Yams. «£D« REMEDIES, ^c, ■ BEDSTEADS and PRESSES, making — Bitter-wood. BITTER WINE, making — Contrayerva. BLACK INK, wifli^/n^— Poponax. BLUE, making — Lidigo. 30\VS, making — Macaw-tree. BROOMS, mjiz;:^'-- -Broom-weed. CArilNET WORK — Elm. CANOES, making — Co; ion-free. CAULKING STUFF, making — Palms. CERGil.lM OIL, 77iaking — Oily pulCe. CHL\KS or BL\^S, keeping azvay — Bitter-wood^ SwetE ibp. CilOLOLATE, W2£7im^— Cacao, Cafhew, Oilypulfe. iijing in — Anotto, Vaniiiai. CL.Orfl, making — Lagetto-trce, P:ilms. COCHLXEAL TO FEED UPON— Opuntia. COCKROCHES, driving away — Bitter-wood, Man- chioneel. CORDAGE, viaking — Palms. CORDIAi S — Ambergris, Arrow-root, Bafil, Mari- golds, Mulk-maliow, Vanillas. CUPS, DISHES, SPOONS, (3c. making— CxXah^i^ Fig-trees, Palms. DEAD BODIES, preferving — Semper vive. DISTILLERS USE — Tree-rofemary. DRLSfK, making — Banana-tree, Calhew, Potatoes, Soircl. DYEPv.S USE — ^^Anotto, Barbadoes flower fence, Bra-» fiiletto, D^mg plants. Indigo, Logwood, Molfes;, Opuntia, Panke, Poponax, Poquett, Reilbon, Saf- fron, Sorre), Stock.vilhhout. EL ATERIU M, making— Cerafee. FENCES — Baibadocs flower fence, Bean-tree, LimCwSj Logwood, Nighifiiades (fpecies 6). FISHING NETS, 7;i^i:7z^— Salk-grafs. FODDEi^ INDEX OF DISEASES, FODDER-— Baftard cedar, Bread-rnut tree, Guinea-* corn, Ramoon, Trumpet-tree. GARGLES, making — FuRic. ' • GREEN WALKS— Olives. GUM, ^KY'/^m^-^-Fig-trees. HAMMOCKS, ma king. —Si\k^gr2ifs, HA rS, ?«tfim^— Cotton-tree. llOOPS, making — Coopers v*ithe, Elra. HOUSES, cafing — ? Hedgc- liyffop, Okra, Saffion. SPIRIT, dijldling a — Calabafh, Canes, Cafhew'-, Marlh trefoil. Palms (fptc-n 4), Rirc. SPOKES FOR WHEELS, w^iz>i^ — Biafillctto. STUFFS, making — Silk^grafs^ SUGAR, wflifiw,.^— Canes, Palms (ffecie^ 4). SWEETMEATS, viaking — ^A\ms(fp€cies^)t F^apawsi SYRUP, making a— Ma rfli- trefoil. Sorrel* TACKLE FOR SHIPS, making-^-VAms, TANNING LEATHER — Mangrove-tree, Olives. Panke. TARTS, PUDDINGS, ^c. ma/^/7zj— Banana-tree. Guavas, Papaws, Sorrel. THREAD, viahng — Maouey. UNGUENTUM DIALTHeX Wfl^^^z^-- -Mallows. VINPLGAr^, makin'j; — Penguins. WIN '' , w^^^no- — Penguins. 4 WOOD, dying joined heads, mention is made of the trees or pla?iis zukich produce . BALSAMS —Balfam capaiba, Balfam'Peru, Balfam Tolu, Ba]fam-tree, Bafil, Baflard mammee. Bdel- lium, Fig-trees, Hariilo, Liquid amber. CABBAGE — Palms (fpecies ^). CINNAMON— Winter's bark. DRINK INDEX OF DISEASES, ^c. DRINK — Grapes, Paltns (/pedes 4), Water-with^. GUM EUPHORBIUM — Raquette. GUxViS-— Balfam-tree, Bdellium, Birch-tree, Brafil- letto, Cafhew, Cedar, China-root, Copal, Dia- gcn's blood, Elemi, Gamboge, Gum cancamum, ,Gum carrnn. Hog-gum, Lignum vitas, Mammee- tree, M. rfchionLel, Palms (Jpccies loj, Tacamahao; White matiick. JESUITS BARK or PERUVIAN BARK— Q«inJ quina. OIL— Palms (/pedes 2), SCAMMONY — Scammony. WAX — Myrtles. WINE— Palms (/pedes 2J, R R Page line 5 i^ fir Tomato-berries read Love-applei - 33 Soi..nums Mad- apples' 9 9 Attoo Attao 55 27 Pnquell Poquett X5.S 4 Stone Stem J65 8 Saloman's Solomon*j 202 1 .-* . Paxariros Paxarios In ihe,]^!^^ ^AN Index, arti cle Pine-apple^ Jor Ananas, read Bijromelia Ananas. jp J^