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together and ley theron or
Take the seeds of fennell of parsley of march of dancus of
saxifrage of Caraway and of radish with the gumme of an Ivie
tree, stampe them and meddle them with their owne juyce –
make thereof a plaster and lay upon the veines or upon the –
share if the stone bee in the bladder. /
Alsoe burne a quicke hare and grasshoppers or the seede of spurge
and therewith mingle powder of Canell or some such other –
powder and lett him use that powder with his meate or
Take away the leggs and the heads of grasshoppers or of Cricketts
pound them granum solis and saxifrage to powder and lett –
him drinke thereof with water that cinquefoile hath beene –
sodden in and wine mingled together.
Alsoe a foxe eaten is good for the stone and his greace is good
to annoynt his veines withall but mingle it with the juyce gumme
of an Ivie tree if you have it and make thereof an oyntment
powder of goates blood is good alsoe but the goate must –
first be fedd with Ivie leaves 40 dayes and give him white –
wine to drinke, then take his blood and dry it and mingle
honey therewith or powder of aloes and of mirh and of
salt, this powder will breake the stone.
Alsoe the stones that bee in a cockes mawr beaten to powder
and eaten will breake the stone and soe will sorrell. /
And if the stone that is fallen into the bladder, getting into
the yard doe sticke then and lett the passage of the veine –
make a bath of hockes and of betes and lett him sitt therein –
up to the navill and when hee cometh out thereof annoynt
the share before the bladder with butter use this bathing
5 dayes together. /
Afterwards if need bee and not before lett a virgall bee –
put in through his yarde to put downe the stone into his –
bladder where it may 40 yeares without perrill./
And if hee may well suffer it while hee sitteth in the bath
lett him frott from his fundament to his yarde for –
so with often frotting hee may mak the stone to come out
of his yard. /
Another good bathing is to sitt up to the brest in the bathe –
of salt water wherein saxifrage is sodden both leaves and –
seedes and Colewort that have not beene removed since they
were sowen. The water must seeth for longe till halfe bee sodden
away. And in the bath lett him frott softly his yarde
share downe to the yard and beneth as is before and then –
annoynt him with hott oyntments or oyles to breake the stone. /
The blood of a foxe drinke while it is newe, with white wine –
breaketh the stone and foe doth the juyce of Lymons. /
Many other things are good for the stone, as the stone that
is the spunge of the sea and in the of an ould cocke and –
in the bladder of a swine. /
The stone that a man pisseth pounded and drunke with wine
alsoe the kernells of Cherrystones and of Plume stones bee good –
And the seeds of ash and of gromell and of chicoris Ivie –
harts tonge and mayden haire and the seede of great thistles
with greate white spotted leaves the seede blacke, every of
those hath the virtue to breake the stone, and if they bee –
Compounded together the medicine is of more force.

For Children that cannott pisse
Wash thire bellyes and frott them with water that meach
parsley and hockes bee sodden in and lett him drinke the –
powder of an hare hurned and of grasshoppers or and Cricketts
burned and make a plaster of saxifrage and of the juyce
of merch and of wheate meale ley it from his fundament
to his yard. /

Aqua composita for the stone. /
Take the strongest ale you can gett as many gallons as the
pott will hould and for every gallon take of Liquerice one
z i anyseeds as much birch leaves burnet parietary, water
Cresses saxifrage gromell fillipendula alisanders or the seed
of it parsley or the seed of it penny royall fennell of each
[Mi] bramble leaves M i halfe a roote of elecampane –
and half a pinte of hawes put them into the ale. /

A spetiall medicine for the stone. /
In may distill raisons, [… as you can gett …]

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