The marrow of physicke, or, A learned discourse of the severall parts of mans body being a medicamentary, teaching the manner and way of making and compounding all such oyles, unguents ... &c. as shall be usefull and necessary in any private house ... : and also an addition of divers experimented medicines which may serve against any disease that shall happen to the body : together with some rare receipts for beauties ... / collected and experimented by the industry of T.B.

About this Item

Title
The marrow of physicke, or, A learned discourse of the severall parts of mans body being a medicamentary, teaching the manner and way of making and compounding all such oyles, unguents ... &c. as shall be usefull and necessary in any private house ... : and also an addition of divers experimented medicines which may serve against any disease that shall happen to the body : together with some rare receipts for beauties ... / collected and experimented by the industry of T.B.
Author
Brugis, Thomas, fl. 1640?
Publication
London :: Printed by T.H. and M.H., and are to be sold by Thomas Whittaker,
1648.
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Subject terms
Medicine -- Early works to 1800.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A29919.0001.001
Cite this Item
"The marrow of physicke, or, A learned discourse of the severall parts of mans body being a medicamentary, teaching the manner and way of making and compounding all such oyles, unguents ... &c. as shall be usefull and necessary in any private house ... : and also an addition of divers experimented medicines which may serve against any disease that shall happen to the body : together with some rare receipts for beauties ... / collected and experimented by the industry of T.B." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A29919.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 1, 2024.

Pages

Page 170

To make a Iuice of Licoras to stay the Cough comming of Rheume, to be made in the beginning of May.

51 R. Of Licoras ℥ iiii. beate it small, and searce it; then R. of Hyssop m. v. or vi. of Foales foote m. iiii. Rosemary flowers m. i. stampe all these together in a Stone Mortar, and straine them into a faire Bason, with halfe a pinte of faire running Water, or Hyssope water, put in your Powder of Licoras, and boile it, and stirre it untill it be as thicke as good Creame; then straine it through a fine Strainer, and set it againe on the fire, and let it seethe a good space after, ever stirring it untill it be very thicke; then put in of red Sugar Candy ℥ iii. or iiii. and boile them untill they puffe up from the bottome of the Bason.

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