Dunn Dioscorides Samples
Dunn Dioscorides Samples
Dunn Dioscorides Samples
DIOSCORIDE S
OX E Y E PR E S S 2017
Book IV Section 76
The beark of
the root is juiced
being beaten
when it is new,
& set under a
press. But it
will behove the
beaters, after it
is stirred about
to lay it up in an
earthen vessel, &
the apples also
are juiced in like
manner. But the
juice of them
becomes remiss.
BK II Section 91
within it to cool for one day and one night. Then pouring in
more wine of the
Then add this to old white wine eight fingers same kind and
of the same mea-
in depth until it loses its native scent and casts sure with that
away all of its strong greasy smell. Let it cool, formerly given
and melting it,
and taking the bruised flowers of marjoram and and carefully
skimming of the wildest Myrrh, dilute it in wine of many
it, into nine
Herminae of the years standing. Of the marrow of this animal,
fat, cast in 7
drams of Iuncus its scent may be made sweet in this manner. To
Arabicus.
make the smell even sweeter, add forty drams
But if you would of flowers and mix it together with cinnamon.
make it smell
sweeter, add here Then beat it very small and take out the salt
forty drams of
the flowers of before seething it in the manner for which it was
the same, and as
many drams of prepared. When it has seethed a third time, take
Palma, Cassia,
and Calamus,
it off gently and strain it such as if it were new
and one dram and unmixed with blood, and so let it continue
of Aspalathus,
and Xylobal- all night to drink the sweet smell of a different
samum, and mix
herewithall of native scent. When the fat is congealed, take it
Cinnamon, of
Cardamomum, out with a spoon, strain it, melt it, and so set it
of Nardus, of
each one ounce.
up in an earthen vessel to thicken in the manner
But let all be already showed. Then pouring in wine without
beaten very
small. any sea water in it, take it down and let it
After pout in continue all night. Then pouring in more wine
odoriferous wine,
and having of the same kind and of the same measure with
stopped the
vessel close, set is
that formerly given to melting it, carefully skim
fast over it there off the excess marks until you have restored the
abide all night.
Then the day sweet scent and the fat receives all the strength
following pour
out the wine, and odiferous qualities of the thickenings.
and in more of
the same kind,
seethe it together
thrice in like
manner, and
take it off.
On the morrow
after having
taken out the
salt pour out
ye wine, then
having washed
the vessel and
taken away ye
filth that stuck
in the bottom,
and having melt-
ed it and having
strained it, set it
up and use it.
Pedanius Dioscorides (c. 40–90 AD) was a Greek herbalist and physician.
He wrote De Materia Medica, a widely translated, five volume herbal and
pharmacopoeia that served as the foundation for western medicine for
1,500 years.
The illustrations of the swallow, pg. 9, and the bear, pg. 25, are taken from
The Bestiary: A Book of Beasts, translated by T.H. White, and published by
Putnam in 1960. It is available online through the University of Wiconsin
Library. The Mandrake, pg. 21, courtesy of Wellcome Library, London.
The cover image is derived from the Appendix to the Oxford edition, which
itself is derived from the Vienna Codex. It was letterpress printed from a
magnesium plate on Arches Textwove paper. The type is Goudy Old Style.
oxeyepress.org