courteous reader = aristotle in his metaphysicks writing of the nature of man hit the nail on the head when he said that man is naturally enclined to and desirous of knowledg and indeed it is palpable and apparent that as pride is the first visible sin in a child whereby we may gather that it was the first sin of adam so knowledg being the first vertue a child minds as is apparent to them that do but with the eye of reason heed their actions even whilst they are very yong even before they are a yeer old even by natural instinct whereby a man may more than guess that knowledg was the greatest loss or at least one of the greatest we lost by the fall of adam knowledg saith aristotle is in prosperity an ornament in adversity a refuge and truly there is almost no greater enemy to knowledg in the world that pride and covetousness excellently said juvenal sat° 7 = *{scire} ..*{=} and again some men are so damnable proud and envious withal that they would have no body know any thing but themselves the one i hope will shortly learn better manners and the other be a burden too heavy for the earth long to bear = the subject which i here fixed my thoughts upon is not only the description and nature of herbs which had it been all i had authority sufficient to bear me out in it for solomon employed part of that wisdom he asked and received of god in searching after them which he wrote in books even of all herbs plants and trees some say those writings were carried to babylon by nebuchadnezzar being kept in the temple at jerusalem for the publick view of the people but being transported to babylon in the captivity alexander the great tyrant at the taking of babylon gave them to his master aristotle who committed them to the mercy of the fire = but since the daies of solomon many have those famous men been that have written of this subject and great encouragements have been given them by princes of which i shall quote an example or two mathiolus his greediness was such to finish his comment upon dioscorides which book is yet in use in the famous universities in leyden in holland & mountpilier in france that he forgot to count what the charges of it might amount to although i rather comend him for his dilligence in studie and care of the worlds good than harbor the least ill thought of him for not counting the middle and both ends before he began the work i say when he came to count the charges of printing and cutting the cuts it far surmounted his estate in this he was abundantly furnished by ferdinand the emperor and diverse other princes of germany as himself confessed furnished him with great sums of money for perfecting that so great so good a work the prince elector of saxony sent him much money towards his charge as also joachim marquess of brandenburg who as he was neighbor to saxony in place so was he in affection to so good a work frederick count palatine of the rhine the cardinal prince of trent the arch bishop of saltzberg the dukes of bavaria and cleveland and the free state of norimberg together with many others so that he had the help of the emperor of arch dukes dukes electors cardinals princes happie is that nation whose magistrates countenance such as mind and study their good i might instance in many more and thereby give you a glimps how magistrates formerly favored this art and which is more how studious they were in it bellonius a man that soared high in the nature of herbs also professed he had the helping hand of kings and cardinals to maintain him in his studies and more than this kings themselves were studious in it amongst which solomon excepted mithridates that renowned king of pontus seems to bear away the bell his writings after his death were found in his country mannor by pompey the great but never a roman of them all had the honesty to print them with his name in the frontispiece so that we have nothing of them but what is quoted by some honest authors especially by plutarch = *{ad} ..*{=} mesue king of damascus avicenna and evax king of arabia labored much in this study and i could well have afforded to have mentioned dioclesian the roman emperor had he not washed out his vertues and defiled them with a purple stain in a most bloody persecution of christians it is quoted in virgil that when a famous prince was proffered by apollo to be taught his arts viz° physick musick augury and the art of shooting in the bow he made choice of physick and to know the nature of herbs = *{ipse} ..*{=} so precious hath the knowledg of the vertues of herbs been in former times to men of quality and indeed happy is that nation whose rulers mind knowledg as solomon saith on the contrary wo to that nation whose king is a child and indeed in ancient times people need little other physick than such herbs as grew neer them some footsteps of which and but a few only are now in use with us to this day as people usually boyl fennel with fish and know not why they do it but only for custom when indeed the original of it was founded upon reason because fennel consumes that flegmatick quality of fish which is obnoxious to the body of man fennel being an herb of mercury and he so great an enemie to the sign pisces = in this art the worthies of our own nation gerard johnson and parkinson are not to be forgotten who did much good in the studie of this art yet they and all others that wrote of the nature of herbs gave not a bit of a reason why such an herb was apropriated to such a part of the body nor why it cured such a disease truly my own body being sickly brought me easily into a capacitie to know that health was the greatest of all earthly blessings and truly he was never sick that doth not beleeve it then i considered that all medicines were compounded of herbs roots flowers seeds &c° and this first set me awork in studying the nature of simples most of which i knew by sight before and indeed all the authors i could reade gave me but little satisfaction in this particular or none at all i cannot build my faith upon authors words nor beleeve a thing because they say it and could wish every bodie were of my mind in this to labor to be able to give a reason for every thing they say or do they say reason makes a man differ from a beast if that be true pray what are they that instead of reason for their judgment quote old authors perhaps their authors knew a reason for what they wrote perhaps they did not what is that to us do we know it truly in writing this work first to satisfie my self i drew out all the vertues of vulgar herbs plants and trees &c° out of the best and most approved authors i had or could get and having done so i set my self to studie the reason of them i knew well enough the whol world and every thing in it was formed of a composition of contrary elements and in such a harmony as must needs shew the wisdom and power of a great god i knew as well this creation though thus composed of contraries was one united body and man an epitome of it i knew those various affections in man in respect of sickness and health were caused naturally though god may have other ends best known to himself by the various operations of the macrocosm and i could not be ignorant that as the cause is so must the cure be and therefore he that would know the reason of the operation of herbs must look up as high as the stars i alwaies found the disease vary according to the various motion of the stars and this is enough one would think to teach a man by the effect where the cause lay then to find out the reason of the operation of herbs plants &c° by the stars went i and herein i could find but few authors but those as full of nonsense and contradictions as an egg is full of meat this being little pleasing and less profitable to me i consulted with my two brothers dr° reason and dr° experience by whose advice together with the help of dr° dilligence i at last obtained my desires and being warned by mr° honesty a stranger in our daies to publish it to the world i have done it = but you will say what need i have written of this subject seing so many famous and learned men have written so much of it in the english tongue nay much more than i have done = to this i answer = 1 all that have written of herbs either in the english or not in the english tongue have no waies answered my intents in this book for they have intermixed many nay very many outlandish herbs and very many which are hard nay not at all to be gotten and what harm this may do i am very sensible of once a student in physick in sussex sent up to london to me to buy for him such and such medicines and send them down which when i viewed they were medicines quoted by authors living in another nation and not to be had in london for love nor money so the poor man had spent much pains and brains in studying medicines for a disease that were not to be had so a man reading gerards or parkinsons herbal for the cure of a disease so may as like as not light on an herb that is not here to be had or not without great diffuculty if possible but in mine all grow neer him = 2 my last though not the least of my reasons is neither gerard nor parkinson nor any that ever wrote in the like nature ever gave one wise reason for what they wrote and so did nothing els but train up yong novices in physick in the school of tradition and teach them just as a parrot is taught to speak an author saith so therefore 'tis true and if all that authors say be true why do they contradict one another but in mine if you view it with the eye of reason you shall see a reason for every thing that is written whereby you may find the very ground and foundation of physick you may know what you do and wherefore you do it and this shall call me father it being that i know of never done in the world before = i have now but two things more to write and then i have done = *{1} ..*{=} 1 the profit and benefits arising from it or that may acrue to a wise man from it are many so many that should i sum up all the particulars the epistle would be as big as the book i shall only quote some few general heads = first the admirable harmony of the creation is herein seen in the influence of stars upon herbs and the body of man how one part of the creation is subservient to another and all for the use of man whereby the infinite power and wisdom of god in the creation appears and if i do not admire at the simplicity of the ranters never trust me who but viewing the creation can hold such a sottish opinion as that it was from eternity when the mysteries of it are so cleer to everie eye but that scripture shall be verified to them rom° i° 20 the invisible things of him from the creation of the world are cleerly seen being understood by the things that are made even his eternal power and godhead so that they are without excuse and a poet could teach them a better lesson = *{excideret} ..*{=} this indeed is true god hath stamped his image upon every creature and therefore the abuse of the creature is a great sin but how much more doth the wisdom and excellencie of god appear if we consider the harmony of the creation in the vertue and operation of every herb this is the first = secondly hereby thou maist know what infinite knowledg adam had in his innocencie that by looking upon a creature he was able to give it a name according to his nature and by knowing that thou maist know how great thy fall was and be humbled for it even in this respect because hereby thou are so ignorant = thirdly here is the right way for thee to begin the study of physick if thou art minded to begin at the right end for here thou hast the reason of the whol art i wrote before in certain astrological lectures which i read and printed intituled semeiotica uranica what planet caused as a second cause every disease and how it might be found out what planet caused it here thou hast what planet cures it by sympathy and antipathy and this brings me to my last premise viz° = *{instructions} ..*{=} and herein let me promise a word or two many herbs plants &c are not in the book apropriated to their propper planets the reason was want of time or some other thing else which many that know me will easily guess at at last the book hanging longer in the press that i imagine it would i took the time and pains though i could ill have spared either to apropriate them all and have for thy benefit courteous reader inserted them in order after the epistle now then for thy instruction = first consider what planet causeth the disease that thou maist find in my semeiotia = secondly consider what part of the body is afflicted by the disease and whether it lie in the flesh or blood or bones or ventricles = thirdly consider by what planet the afflictd part of the bodie is governed that my semeiotica will inform you in also = fourthly you have in this book the herbs for cure apropriated to the several diseases and the diseases for your ease set down in the margin whereby you may strengthen the part of the bodie by its like as the brain by herbs of mercury the breast and liver by herbs of jupiter the heart and vitals by herbs of the sun &c° = fifthly you may oppose diseases by herbs of the planet opposite to the planet that causeth them as diseases of jupiter by herbs of mercury and the contrary diseases of the luminaries by herbs of saturn and the contrary diseases of mars by herbs of venus and the contrary = sixthly there is a way to cure diseases somtimes by sympathy and so every planet cures his own diseases as the sun and moon by their herbs cure the eyes saturn the spleen jupiter the liver mars the gall and diseases of choller and venus diseases in the instruments of generation = seventhly there was a small treatise of mine of humane vertues printed at the latter end of my ephemeris for the yeer 1651 i suppose it would do much good to yong students to peruse that with this book = eighthly yong students would do themselves much good and benefit themselves exceedingly in the study of physick if they would tak the pains to view the vertues of the herbs &c° in the book and compare them to these rules they shall to their exceeding great content find them all agreeable to them and shall thereby see the reason why such an herb conduceth to the cure of such a disease = ninthly i gave you the key of al in the herb wormwood which if because of the volubility of the language any think it would not fit the lock i will here give it you again in another herb of the same planet which in the book either through my own forgetfulness or my amanuensis was omitted and here i shal give it you plainly without any circumstances =