Search Results for: Meat preparations of blood of any animal
foxglove, so handsome and striking in our landscape, is not mentioned by shakespeare, or by any of the old english poets. the earliest known descriptions of it are those given about the middle of the sixteenth century by fuchs and tragus in their herbals. according to an old manuscript, the welsh physicians
it did not come into frequent use until a century later, and was first brought prominently under the notice of the medical profession by dr. w. withering, who in his acount of the foxglove, , gave details of upwards of cases, chiefly dropsical, in which it was used. a domestic use of the foxglove was...
https://botanical.com/botanical/mgmh/f/foxglo30.html