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A00419 Maison rustique, or The countrey farme· Compyled in the French tongue by Charles Steuens, and Iohn Liebault, Doctors of Physicke. And translated into English by Richard Surflet, practitioner in physicke. Now newly reuiewed, corrected, and augmented, with diuers large additions, out of the works of Serres his Agriculture, Vinet his Maison champestre, French. Albyterio in Spanish, Grilli in Italian; and other authors. And the husbandrie of France, Italie, and Spaine, reconciled and made to agree with ours here in England: by Geruase Markham. The whole contents are in the page following; Agriculture et maison rustique. English Estienne, Charles, 1504-ca. 1564.; Liébault, Jean, ca. 1535-1596. aut; Surflet, Richard, fl. 1600-1616.; Markham, Gervase, 1568?-1637. 1616 (1616) STC 10549; ESTC S121357 1,137,113 746

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of Sea-Holly and of Tasell mixed with white wine is singular in this case A Bath also is verie good and it may be p●epared with water of the Riuer in which shall haue boyled Mugwort Mallowes Hol●hock Camomill Melilot and other such like hearbes and within the Bath to rub the hippes and thighes drawing them downeward with a bagge of Mugwort Celandine Cheruile Smallage Betonie seeds of Nigella and other such like Some esteeme it for a rare remedie for to take the weight of one or two French crownes of the marrow of a Hart to tye it within a little knot of fine and cleane linnen and to put the said knot into the woman her secret place deepe ynough but this to be after the bodie hath beene prepared and purged For the suffocation of the Matrix the legges must be rubbed alwayes drawing downeward and tying them hard to put the partie thereby to great paine put cupping-glasses vpon the thighes rub the stomacke drawing downeward from the pit thereof to the nauell Furthermore she must be made to smell vnto things that stinke and small strong as the feathers of Partridges or shooe soles burnt and below to apply things that are verie sweet smelling as Cloues Marierome Amber Time Lauander Calaminth Penny-ryall Mugwort Ciuer the leaues of white Mulleine which hath his stalke rising verie high you must also giue her to drinke the quantitie of a beane of Mithridate dissolued in the water of Wormewood or fifteene red or black seeds of Pioni● bruised and dissolued in wine The onely remedie for this disease is that if it fall out that the sicke partie be with child that then her husband dwell with her for the remedies before spoken of are dangerous for women with child Sume doe much esteeme in this disease the course following that is that the woman euerie weeke to keepe her selfe free should drinke three spoonefuls of white wine wherein hath beene boyled and steept an ounce of the root of Brionie For the falling downe of the Mother the partie must be caused to vomite to haue her armes rubbed and bound hard to moue great paine to set cupping-glasses vpon her breasts and to cause her to smell vnto sweet and odoriferous things and below to apply things that are of a strong and stinking smell There must be giuen her to drinke the powder of Harts horne or of drie Bay leaues with red wine that is verie sharpe In like manner a Cataplasme made of Garlicke stamped and dissolued in water or Nettles newly braied and applied vnto the bellie causeth the Matrix to returne into his place Holihocks boyled with oyle and the fat of Quailes made in forme of an empla●ster and applyed to the bellie are verie profitable Ashes made of egge sh●lls wherein Chickens haue beene hatched mixed with Pitch and applyed vnto the belly doe put the Matrix againe into the place Some are of opinion that one leafe of Clot-burre put vnder the sole of the womans foot drawech downe the Mother and being applyed vnto the top of the head doth draw it vp on high For the inflammation of the Matrix it is good to make an iniection with the iuice of Plantaine or of Nightshade or of Houseleeke or to apply a Cataplasme made of Barley flower the rinds of Pomegranats and the iuice of Plantaine Houseleeke or Nightshade For the inflammation of a mans yard the same Cataplasme will be very soueraigne if there be added vnto it some quantitie of driered Roses or else take the new dung of a Cow frie it in a panne with the flowers of Camomill Brier and Me●●lot lay it to the cods you shall perceiue the swelling to depart quickly To take away the stinking smell of the feet put within your shooes the scu●●me of yron For to make a woman fruitfull that cannot conceiue take a Doe great with fawne kill 〈◊〉 and draw out of her belly the membrane wherein the fawne ly●●h turne the fawne out of the said membrane and without washing of it drie it in the Ouen after the bread is drawne forth being dried make the inner part and place where the fawne lay into powder giue of this powder three mornings vnto the woman and that by and by after midnight with three or foure spoonefuls of wine 〈◊〉 her not rise of foure houres after and aduise her that her husband may lye with her If a woman with child haue accustomed to lye downe before her time it is good that whiles she is with child she vse with the yolke of a new egge a powder made of the seed of Kermes otherwise called Diers graine and of fine Frankincense of each an equall part or else that she vse oftentimes of the powder of an Oxe pizzle prepared in such sort as we haue set downe among the remedies for the Pleurisie or els● that she weare continually vpon some one or other of her fingers a Diamond for ● Diamond hath the vertue to keepe the infant in the mothers wombe Some say also that the slough of an Adder dried and made into powder and giuen with the 〈◊〉 of bread is singular good for the staying of vntimely birth The Eagles stone is commended for this aboue all other things which being worne vnder the left ar●epit or hanged at the arme of the left side doth keepe the infant and hindereth vntimely birth To bring to bed the woman which is in trauaile of child you must tye on the inside of her thigh not farre from the place by which the excrement of ordure passeth the Eagles stone and so soone as the child is borne and the woman deliuered to take it away for the same purpose to giue her the decoction of Mugwort Rue Ditta●e and Pennyryall or of the iuice of Parsley drawne with a little vineger or of white Wine or Hypocras wherein hath beene dissolued of the powder of the Canes of Cassia of Cinnamon of the stones of Dates of the roots of Cypres of the flowers of Camomill of the root of round Aristolochie or Birthwort or the iuice of Tota bona with white wine or else the leaues of Tota bona stamped layd vpon the secret pa●●● and round about And when a woman is in trauaile of child and looseth all her strength it is good to giue her bread steept in Hypocras or a spoonefull of the water called Claret water which must be prepared in this sort Lay to steepe in halfe a pint of good Aqua vitae according to the measure of Paris about three ounces of Cinna●on well shaued by the space of three dayes in the end whereof let the said water ru●ne through a cleane linnen cloth and dissolue therein an ounce of fine Sugar after put thereto about the third part of old red Rose water and let all stand together in a bottle of glas●e to vse when need requireth This water is principally good for all the diseases of the Mother as also for Fainting Swowning weakenesse
of the Sunne but hath the shadowes of some Trees the top of a Mountaine 〈…〉 other such like thing It hath a verie astringent power as also it is verie 〈◊〉 by which after the manner of Comfrey it healeth wounds vlcers and fistulaes 〈◊〉 well inward as outward it stayeth rheumes and bloudie fluxes healeth the 〈…〉 the mouth and the inflamation thereof Which is more it is verie singular to prouoke vrine and to breake the stone Saxifrage as well the great as the small delighteth in a drie ground chal●●● clayie sandie stonie and altogether barren And it is sowne of small seedes which are found hanging to the rootes thereof It prouoketh vrine and so driueth foorth the grauell of the reines and bladder If you boyle the root and 〈◊〉 thereof in Wine it procureth Women also their termes and bringeth ou● 〈◊〉 after-birth The great and small Burre otherwise called Bardana and of the Greeke● 〈…〉 hath not need of anie great tilling for it will grow either of seed or 〈◊〉 in a leane ground that is drie and vntilled as wee may well see in ditches 〈◊〉 it groweth without anie labour at all and in the high wayes and by-p●●h ● 〈◊〉 the fields The rootes seedes and iuice of the great and small Burre are verie 〈…〉 prouoke vrine to breake the stone of the reines and bladder and to stay the 〈◊〉 flux The iuice is drunke with white Wine or alone and the seed in like manner which is sometimes for the more pleasantnesse sake confected or couered with S●gar The leaues stampt with a little salt and applyed vnto the bitings or 〈…〉 Adders mad Dogges or other venimous Beasts are verie soueraigne The rootes 〈◊〉 seedes of small Burre stampt and layd on cold swellings and rebellious 〈…〉 verie profitable and good Star-thistle so called because it hath little heads at the tops of his stakes 〈…〉 Thistles haue set round about with sharpe prickes after the manner of 〈…〉 groweth in vnhusbanded grounds as well of his root as of his seed Some doe 〈◊〉 esteeme of the seed made into powder and drunke in wine for to prouoke 〈◊〉 and to auoid grauell and herein it is of so great vertue as that the much vse of it 〈◊〉 cause one to pisse bloud sometimes The decoction of the root with honey after 〈◊〉 manner of a honied water doth the like but more gently and without 〈…〉 partie for to pisse bloud Maries Thistle otherwise called Spina alba or white and siluer Thistle or 〈◊〉 Artichoke or Asse-Thistle because that Asses delight much to eat it doth 〈◊〉 fat and well tilled ground and other ordering like to that of Beets and it 〈…〉 that it letteth not to grow in vntilled and vnhusbanded grounds The seed and 〈◊〉 haue as it were the like power to take away obstructions to prouoke vrine and it breake the stone that Star-thistle hath The Italians vse the roots thereof in Salads after the manner of Artichokes and good wines to gather the milke of it for to eat Some make a Ptisane with the root of this Thistle made in powder the seed of Fennell and a little long Pepper to giue to Nurses to vse which haue small store of milke The distilled water of the leaues is good against paine in the sides being drunke with halfe a dramme of the seed of the same hearbe Siluer-grasse so called because the leaues doe resemble siluer on the backe-side doth delight in a moist and grassie ground howsoeuer vnhusbanded it be It hath one excellent propertie aboue all other hearbes for to breake the stone to heale vlcers and malignant wounds within the bodie to stay the bloudie flux and to dissolu● cluttered bloud being taken in drinke Some say that if you put it in halfe a basin full of cold water and couer that basin with another basin or vessell or other couering that there will gather great store of vapours in the hollow of the thing couering it and will turne into the forme of distilled water and that this water thus gathered is verie good to take away the spots freckles staines and dye of the Su●ne out of the face Patience doth willingly grow in coole and moist grounds and we see it ordinarily to grow neere vnto Riuers and little Brookes The root by reason of the great bitternesse and desiccatiue power hath singular commendation against the Plague for being dried and powdred and afterward drunke with wine it driueth away all venime from the heart by the aboundance of sweat which it procureth Some fo● this purpose take away the rinde and core of this root stamping it in vineger and after making a drinke of the vineger the iuice of Rue and Treacle for to take in pestilent Agues The powder of this root drunke with wine is excellent for the suffocations of the Matrix and the wringing throwes of the bellie This powder also killeth the Wormes healeth maligne Vlcers the falling of the haire called Tinea and the Kibes the Farcie in Horses whether it be taken inwardly or applyed outwardly either in iuice or in the decoction thereof Scabious groweth in the same ground that Patience doth that is to say in woods vntilled places and especially in sandie places It is verie proper and appropriate vnto the Cough and diseases of the Lungs fo● the same purpose also the iuice is sometime extracted sometime the hearbe it selfe made into powder and sometime the decoction of it is made to endure for a long time Likewise there is sometime conserue made of the flowers His leaues or rootes applyed to itchie places and the places bare of haire or mixed with oyles and ointments doe great good vnto the same as also vnto plaguie carbuncles for they being rubbed with the iuice of Scabious will be found to vanish away within three houres The iuice of Scabious drunke in the quantitie of foure ounces with a dramme of Treacle not yet one day old is a singular remedie against the Plague so that afterward the partie sweat in his bed and withall continue the drinke for manie times The same remedie serueth for the bitings of venimous beasts if besides the drinke you apply outwardly vnto the soare the leaues of the same hearbe bruised A Liniment made of the iuice of Scabious the powder of Borace and a little Camphire is singular against tettars itch freckles and other infections or desilements of the skin Aboue all other things the decoction of Scabious being drunke the space of fortie daies doth heale the tettar throughly yea though it came of the Pocks as I my selfe haue oftentimes pro●ed by experience Scolopendrium or rough Spleene-wort called also Harts-tongue would be planted in a stonie and grauellie ground which is moistened with some running Brooke and for want of this it must be often watered The rootes thereof must neuer be pulled vp but onely the leaues cut for it cannot be sowne seeing it bringeth forth no seed The decoction thereof made
in white wine is verie good for such 〈◊〉 haue a hard Spleene and are subiect to a quartane Ague B●●onie delighteth to be sowne in a moist and cold ground and neere vnto some wall by which it may be shadowed for it is not 〈◊〉 in loue with the Sun-beames The root hath contrarie properties to the leaues and flowers for the root 〈◊〉 the stomacke and is verie vnsauourie vnto the mouth his leaues and flowers and of 〈◊〉 ver●e good smell and a tast correspondent and answerable The decoction of Betonie made in white wine assuageth the paines of the 〈◊〉 breaketh the stone and healeth the Iaundise The leaues stamped and applyed 〈◊〉 forme of a Cataplasme doe quickly ioyne together the wounds of the head A Cataplasme made of the leaues with Porkes grease doth ripen the tumors called C●●haires and all other sorts of Impostumes The leaues stamped with a little salt doe heale hollow and cancrous vlc●rs To be briefe this hearb hath so manie and so gre●● vertues as that the Italian when he would highly commend a man for his gi●● will say that he hath moe vertues than Betonie Bugle would be planted in a stonie drie and hillie ground in respect whereof the Latines call it Casolida petrosa It craueth no great paines to be taken with 〈◊〉 The leaues thereof are good to conglutinate and soulder together both outward and inward wounds it is likewise put in drinkes for wounds and that is the cause why some doe commonly say That he that hath Bugle and Sanicle will scarce vouchs●●● the Chirurgion a Bugle Lions-paw groweth in a clayish ground being withall fat red and somewhat moist commonly in medowes situated in some high place It hath like properties with Bugle and Sanicle but moreouer it taketh away all the paine and heat of inflammations and vlcers The same hearb stamped and applyed vnto the teats of women and young maids maketh them hard and firme Great Comfrey groweth in moist places and hath the same propertie that Bugle hath that is to say to soulder wounds and this is ●o great in both of them as 〈◊〉 that you put Bugle or Comfrey into a pot wherein flesh is boyling the pieces of flesh will become no more manie but one The root of great Comfrey whiles it is yet greene and newly pluckt out of the earth being spread vpon Leather or vpon Linnen and applyed in forme of a Cataplasme vpon goutie or rheumatike places doth presently appease the paine of the gout being a thing often proued and tried The same root dried and made into powder is good to put in children● pappe which haue their rimme broken as also to stay the flux of the bellie A Cataplasme made of the root of great Comfrey with Beane flower and applyed vnto the place where the childs guts fall downe is a soueraigne remedie to cu●● the same Self-heale craueth a fat ground and where the Sunne beateth not much it groweth of se●des and not of rootes and hath like properties that Bugle and Co●frey haue especially to stay the spitting of bloud the bloudie flux and to conglutinate wounds within the bodie where no man can come to apply tent or oyntment if there be made a drinke of the iuice of the rootes and leaues thereof which being chafed in your fingers or put vnder your tongue doth smell and tast like Myrrhe Water Germander called of the Latines Scordium groweth verie easily and without great paine or toile so that it be planted by little slippes taken from the old stalke and set in a moist ground for it specially requireth to grow well to be pl●●ted in a moist ground and to be often watered It hath the like qualities that Angelica hath against Poyson and the Plague and furthermore the decoction thereof taken as a drinke for certaine daies doth heale the tertian Agues and putteth away 〈◊〉 obstructions of the Spleene and prouoketh vrine Fole-foot must be planted in a verie moist place and craueth to be often watered for so it appeareth when as it is seene to flourish and like best in marish grounds and about currents of waters There groweth a whirish moss● about the root of it which if you gather and picke verie cleane and afterward wrap it in a Linnen Cloth with a little Sal nitrum and so boyle it a little in Lee and afterward lay it to drie in the Sunne you shall haue an excellent match to take fire at a flint and fire-steele for it taketh fire so easily that it will light at the first stroke of the 〈◊〉 Amongst other vertues it is singular good to comfort the lungs and parts aboue the breast whether you take it in a decoction or in a syrrup or in manner of a fume at the mouth or otherwise especially if you mingle some slippes of Hysope and some figges or syrrup with the said decoction The great Colts-foot especially the root thereof dried powdred and taken in the weight of two drammes with wine is singular against the Plague if so the partie sweat presently after It is good also to giue vnto Horses which haue the bots or are short-winded The great and small Carline so called as though it were Caroline because this Thistle was in a diuine manner made knowne vnto Charlemaigne by an Angell for the deliuering of his hoast from the Plague which did miserably annoy them doth require to be sowne and planted in a drie ground and stonie and where the Moone and Sunne doth shine pleasantly The root of the great Carline made into powder and taken the weight of a French crowne is singular good against the Plague the feeblenesse and faintnesse of the Heart for the keeping of the Vrine the breaking of the Stone the paines of the Sides and Conuulsions applyed outwardly after it hath beene steept in vineger it helpeth the Sciatica Eringium groweth in an vntilled rough and drie ground The wine wherein the rootes of Eringium haue been boyled prouoketh the Termes and restrained Vrine breaketh the Stone and casteth out it and Grauell It is good for such as haue the falling Sicknesse Dropsie or Iaundise The decoction of the root is singular good to resist Drunkennesse The distilled water of the young buds of the leaues being drunke euerie day and that so oft as one can is maruellous good for them which haue their bodies troubled with vlcers caused of the French Pocks in as much as it comforteth the Liuer The same water is verie profitable for the quartane and quotidian Agues The root thereof taken either in powder or in a decoction with the broth of those Frogges which are vsed to be eaten or for lacke of Frogges in the decoction of a Goslin or green Goose is a preseruatiue against the poyson of the Toad Hedgefrogge and other venimous hearbes It doth good also in the diseases of the heart being drunke with the decoction of Buglosse or Balme Beares-breech
pure Wheat boyled till it become like pappe with thicke red Wine and apply it vnto the teates vpon plageats as hot as may be endured For belching at the mouth it is good to take fasting a Dredge made of Annise Fennell Caraway and Coriander seed or else to drinke Wine in the morning two or three times and that such as wherein hath beene boyled Bay-berries Annise Coriander and Fennell seed and apply vpon the stomacke a bag full of Rue Wormewood Marierome and Mints For the Hicket it is good to keepe ones breath oftentimes and long to stop both his eares to hold his head awry and his mouth couered and vpward to procure himselfe to neese to labour much to endure thirst to cast cold water in his face which hath the Hicket thereby to cause him to feare Some are of opinion that if he which hath the Hicket doe count and reckon the first saying one or borrowing hee shall haue no moe but that one Against Vomiting take a tost of bread and steepe it in the claret water hereafter described or in the iuice of Mints spread it ouer with the powder of Masticke apply it warme vnto the stomacke renewing it euerie three houres Otherwise take two handfuls of Mints and one of Roses boyle them in Wine take afterward two ounces of tosted bread and let it be well steeped in Wine and afterward compounded with Masticke and the said Mints and Roses make thereof a playster to lay to the stomacke before you goe to meat It is true that if the vomiting be with an ague it will be good to boyle the Mints and Roses and to steepe the tosted bread in vineger In like manner Mints brayed and mingled with oyle of Roses applyed vnto the stomacke is a singular helpe for any kind of vomiting it is good likewise at the end of meat to swallow downe one gulpe of Water or a morsell of Marmalade of Quinces not drinking afterward and in the morning two houres before meat to swallow fiue or six Pepper-cornes whole with Wine or the sirrup of Mints or of Wormewood or greene Ginger preserued It is also good to set cupping Glasses vpon the bottome of the Stomacke or vnder the Nauell and then chiefely when the partie eateth to take rest after meat and to talke or cough any thing at all For the paine of the Stomacke fill a dish with hot ashes sprinkle them with Wine oue● them cast a Linnen cloth which may couer all the dish apply this vnto the pained place or else put vnto the stomacke a hot bagge full of fried Salt or else take the crums of a good thicke Loafe and being dipt as it commeth hot out of the Ouen in the Oyle of Camomill and wrapt in a Linnen cloth let it be applyed vnto the paine or else fill a Swines bladder with the decoction of the leaues of Bayes Organi● Marierome Mints Time Camomill Calamint Melilote Annise and Fennell seed apply it to the paine warme it againe when it shall be cold or else make a cake with a handfull of Wormewood Mints and Roses kneaded with Rye Leauen and Wine and apply it vnto the stomacke For the obstruction of the Liuer vse a decoction made of Succorie the roots of Parsley Smallage Fennell Dogs grasse Patience Butchers broome Cich pease Capillus Veneris Hoppes and Fumitorie vse-likewise oftentimes the shauings of Iuorie For the heat of the Liuer there is nothing better than to vse Lettuce Sorrell Purcelane Hoppes in pottage and sometimes to drinke the water of the said hearbes fasting or the water of Endiue Against the Iaundise drinke fasting of the dung of Ganders the weight of a French crowne well mingled with white wine for the space of nine dayes or else of the decoction of the leaues and roots of Strawberries or else take Missletoe of the white Thorne gathered before the Sunne rise about a handfull three or foure roots of Parsley bray them all together with white wine let them runne through a linnen cloth or strainer and drinke of this euening and morning a reasonable draught This is a more excellent remedie than many others which notwithstanding women with child must not vse but in place of it you must apply to the wrists and soles of their feet the leaues of Missletoe of the Oake of great Celandine and Horehound the whole being brayed with a little wine and made in forme of a Cataplasme Some commend highly against the Iaundise to take of the wormes of the earth to wash them in white wine and after to drie them and making a powder of them to giue thereof a small spoonefull in white Wine or the decoction of Wormewood or of Horehound or to drinke fasting ones owne vrine certaine dayes or to drinke for the space of eight mornings with white wine fasting fiue trottles of ● Goat Some say that to carrie in the left hand three leaues of wild Rocket doth cure the Iaundise Some also hold that to weare vnder the soles of the feet the leaues of Shepheards purse or of great Celandine next vnto their bare feet doth the like For the Dropsie it is good to make a drinke with the seed of Broome pouned and brayed in white wine or to make a drinke of the iuice of the root of Gladiolus or Asarum with white wine or to drinke fasting his owne vrine for the space of certaine dayes to apply in like manner vnto the moist places a Cataplasme of Cowes dung warme with which as Galen testifieth a Physition of Misia did maruellously heale all manner of Dropsies or to apply vpon the swolne place shell-Snayles aliue not washed but carefully bruised A secret remedie against the Dropsie is to drinke with honied water the powder of Glasse seuen times burned and seuen times quenched in the iuice of Flower-de-luce or white wine For the paine or heauinesse of the Spleene drinke wine wherein hath boyled Scolopendrium Sperage and Hoppes or else drinke oftentimes fasting of the broth of red Coleworts halfe boiled or of the decoction of Romane Wormwood or of Pauls Betonie or of small Centaurie or Smiths Forge-water For the paine of the Collicke there is nothing more soueraigne than to weare about him a Ring or Boxe of siluer in which is inclosed some part of the nauell of an infant newly borne and that the Ring do touch the flesh There is also nothing more singular than to drinke in a pretie draught of white wine the red pill which is to be found in the space and cartilaginous gristles of Walnut kernels dried in the moneth of August and made into powder or to drinke foure or fiue ounces of the oyle of Nu●s or of Linseed or of the shells of ripe Nuts or the water of Camomill or the decoction of the seed of Hempe or Wine wherein hath beene steept for the space of tenne or twelue houres the root of Enula campana bruised or the powder of a Stag● pizzle drunke
with water or the dung of Hennes drunke with Hypocras made of honey and wine or a Clister made of Brine or the heart of a Larke swallowed downe while it is fresh and new or the said heart of a Larke fastened to the thigh As concerning outward remedies some approue greatly to take the skin of a sheepe all new or the kell of the intrailes of a sheepe newly killed to apply it vnto the bellie or to make a bag of Millet Branne Wheat and Salt fried together to lap vpon the bellie A Cataplasme made of Wolues dung is also profitable against the Collicke the same dung drunke with a little wine doth verie much good the bones found in the dung of a Wolfe powned small and drunke with wine haue the like qualitie Some say that if you take ashes comming verie hot from vnder the coales of fire and put the said ashes in a dish or pot and afterward poure thereon a good glas●e of Claret wine and afterward couer the said dish with ashes with a linnen cloth foure double and apply it vnto the bellie you shall find release and mitigation of your paine For the ●u●orall ●lux of the Bellie it is good to drinke milke wherein hath beene quenched a gad of Steele or of yron or milke boyled with a halfe quantitie of water and that vnto the consumption of the water or hee shall take of a Stags pizzle with Ces●●rue water to vse Rice parched to take a dramme of Masticke powdred with the yolke of an egge to make a Cataplasme with the flower of Wheat to apply all ouer the Nauell but it must be wrought with red Wine and after baked in the Ouen For the bloudie Flux giue to drinke with red wine the bloud of a Hare dried and made in powder or the powder of mens bones or else gather the dung of a dogge which for three dayes hath fed vpon nothing but bones and this you must drie to make into powder of 〈◊〉 powder giue vnto him that is troubled with such Flux twice a day in milke wherein you shall haue quenched manie stones of the Riuer verie throughly heated in a verie hot fire continue this two or three dayes or else giue to drinke the distilled water of the great Burre o● the decoction of shepheards Purse or the distilled water of Woodb●nd or else giue to drinke the seed of Plantaine in powder or the distilled water of the first buds of the Oake or the powder of Snayles burnt with the powder of Brier-berries and a little white Pepper and Galls or of the Harts and Goats horne burned or rather of the pizzle of a Ha●t prepared as wee haue taught here aboue in setting downe the remedies for the Pleurisie For to stay the flux of Bloud drinke a reasonable draught of the iuice or decoction of dead Nettle make Clysters with the 〈◊〉 of Planta●ne and Horse-taile vse the broth of Coleworts ●odden v●rie tender the iuice of Pomegrants and the substance it selfe Sallads of Plantaine and Sorrell chaw oftentimes some Rubarbe To loosen the Bellie ●ou must eat sweet Cherries or Pea●hes Figges or Mulberries fasting to s●p the first broths of Coleworts of Beets of Mallowes or Lettuces or of Cich-pease without salt to apply vnto the stomacke a Cataplasme made with Honey the gall of a Bull and the roet of Sow-bread or the leaues of Apples of coloqu●●tida to take a Suppositorie made of fat Bacon or the stalke of a Mallow or Beet To kill the wormes of little children it is good to cause them to vse preserued Rubarbe or the c●nserue of Peach flowers to drinke the distilled water of Gentian or the ●●ce of C●trons the iuice of Mints or Basill of Purcelane Rue or Wormwood or else to cause them to swallow with a verie small draught of Wormewood wine of the powder made of Wormes first dried and after burned on a fire-pan red hot and make it into ver●e ●ine powder or of the powder of blessed Thistle or of Coralline the weight of a French crowne also to apply vnto the Nauell a cataplasme made of Wormewood Tansie and an Oxe gall and all this must be done toward the later end of the Moone To stay the excessiue paine of outward Hemorrhoids you must make a Liniment of oyle of Roses wa●●ed in the water of Violets fresh Butter oyle of Linseed the yolke of an egge and a little waxe or else to make a little cataplasme with the crums of a white loafe sleept in Cowes milke adding thereto two yolkes of egges a little Saffron and a little Populeon There may also a little Liniment be made with fresh butter and the powder of Corke-tree burned In the paine of the Hemorrhoids ther● is nothing more singular than the perfume made of shauings of Iuorie To stay the excessiue flux of the Hemorrhoids it is a most singular remedie to drinke a dramme of red Corall or of the scumme of yron with the water of Plantain and also to make a fomentation of the decoction of white Henbane or in place of this a Cataplasme made of the powder of burnt Paper or of the shauings of Lead or of Bole Armoniack with the white of an egge or of three Oyster shells finely poudred either raw or burnt and mixt with a little fresh butter For the stone in the Reines you must drinke often of the iuice or water of the bodie of the Beech tree which water must be gathered in the Spring time in as much as then the bodie or the rinde thereof being 〈◊〉 or cut to the q●●cke doth yeeld a great quantitie of water verie singular for this purpose The fruit of the Eglantin● preserued before it be ripe after the manner of Marmalate with Sugar hauing first taken the kernels from within taken fasting to the end of the last quarter and first daies of the Moone following in drinking somewhat more than a reasonable draught of white wine or of the water of wild Tansie or such other is verie excellent therefore He must also drinke very oft with white wine the pouder of the p●lling of Rest-harrow or Buck-thorne or of the gumme which groweth round about the ri●des of Vines or of the seed of Goose-gras●e finely powdred or to drinke the distilled water of Radish roots and Nettle roots with a little Sugar or the water of Broome or of Dogs-grasse or of wild Tansie the water or iuice of Radish wherein is dissolued the powder of egge-shels burnt or of the stones of Medlars or of the eye of a Partridge or of the braine of a Pie or of the inward skin of th●● stomacke of a Henne or C●pon Euerie man prayseth this decoction whereof Aetius maketh mention in his chapter of Sea-Holly Take the roots of Sea-Holly the pith taken out and make them verie cleane steepe them eight houres in Fountaine water after that to boyle them till the halfe of the water be consumed in the end of the boyling cast
flowers of Marigolds drunke fasting haue great force to 〈◊〉 the termes of vvomen the fume or smoake of them taken through a 〈◊〉 into the secret parts doth the like and causeth the after-birth to come forth and 〈◊〉 young maides out of the Greene-sicknesse The conserue of the same 〈◊〉 haue the same vertue The women of Italie as well to prouoke the 〈◊〉 as to 〈◊〉 them doe frie the juice and tender crops of this hearbe with the yolkes of 〈◊〉 and doe eat them The verie same juice mingled with a little Wine or warme 〈◊〉 is a soueraigne remedie to asswage the extreame paines of the head and teeth 〈◊〉 one vse ●t in manner of a lotion This juice drunke to the quantitie of an ounce 〈◊〉 the weight of a French-crowne of the powder of Earth-wormes rightly prepared 〈◊〉 helpe greatly against the jaundise Some say that to eat oft of Marigold leaues 〈◊〉 make a good countenance the distilled vvater of Marigold leaues being dropt 〈◊〉 his eyes or linnen clothes wet therein and applied vnto them doth heale the 〈◊〉 of the eyes The powder of the leaues thereof dried and put in the hollow 〈◊〉 the tooth doth cure the aking of the same The juice of the flowers of Marigolds 〈◊〉 to the quantitie of two ounces in the beginning of a pestilentiall ague doth 〈◊〉 the plague so that the sicke after he hath drunke this juice doe presently lye 〈◊〉 and be made sweat being throughly couered in his bed it doth cure also the ●ndise and beating of the heart The conserue of the flowers of Marigolds doth 〈◊〉 like To drinke halfe an houre before the comming of the fit of a quartaine agu●●●out three ounces of vvhite vvine vvherein haue beene sleept seuen seeds of Mari●●ds and to go ouer this drinke for diuers mornings together is a soueraigne medi●●● against a quartaine ague CHAP. XVIII Of Beets and Blites white and red BEets as well the vvhite as the blacke and red vvhich is called B●tte and lotte of the inhabitants of Tourraine or Romane of the Picardes are 〈◊〉 not onely in Le●t but at all times especially after December vntill March and in August to the end that there may alwaies be in a rea●nesse both old and young and for to gather feed which may endure good thr●●●●ares And for this cause you must take them vp and plant them againe when they 〈◊〉 put forth fiue leaues and put vnto the roots a little new dung and afterward 〈◊〉 and raise their earth and free them quite from vveeds they are apt and easie ●●ough to grow and though they be cut yet they will spring againe if they be plan●●d in a fat and well manured ground They haue this speciall and as it were admi●●ble qualitie in them namely that they neuer come to their full perfection vntil the 〈◊〉 yeare after they be sowen in respect whereof I could aduise the gardiner not 〈◊〉 gather any seeds of the beets to sow but such as the beet shall bring forth the third 〈◊〉 for of such seed there grow verie faire and goodly beets If you would make choyce of faire beets chuse rather the white than either the ●lacke or red as being the fairest and tenderest but to haue such as shall be verie ●reat and vvhite you must couer the root with the new dung of Oxen and cleaue in ●nder their sprout as is done with Leekes and to lay vpon them a large and broad ●one or a bricke If you would haue your beets red water them with the Lees of 〈◊〉 Wine or else plant them in such a place as wherein they may haue great heat 〈◊〉 the Sunne Beets ●aten in pottage doe loose the bellie the juice of beets drawne vp into the ●●ose doth purge the braine the same juice ●ubbed vpon the head causeth Lice and 〈◊〉 to die The roots of beets roasted in the ashes and eaten do take away the ill 〈◊〉 that commeth of eating Garleeke The root of beets stamped and cast in wine ●oth turne the same within three houres after into vinegar Blites are sowne in March and are not long in comming out of the earth If they 〈◊〉 sowen in a well tilled ground they will also grow the next yeare following with●ut any new sowing in such manner as that the ground will hardly be rid of them 〈…〉 craue no weeding or sweeping Blites doe loose the bellie their decoction wherein hath boyled the roots and ●●aues killeth lic● and nits their leaues roasted amongst ashes or boyled doe heal●●●rnings the first boyling of Blites with the gall of an Oxe and the Oyle of 〈◊〉 ●oth take away all spots out of garments without doing any harme 〈◊〉 presently 〈◊〉 you must wash the place with warme water CHAP. XIX Of Arrach and Spinage THe hearbe Arrach in Latine called Atriplex aswell the white and 〈◊〉 as the greene doe naturally grow in grounds manured with 〈◊〉 and in such place as where there hath beets growne at other time 〈◊〉 become red in the same sort that beets doe in a fat and well 〈◊〉 ground But they are sowne in Februarie March and Aprill and they would 〈◊〉 sowne thin and not thicke and oftentimes watered Some sow them in 〈◊〉 to gather them in Winter They will not be remoued but rather wed 〈◊〉 dunged with good dung often cut and pruned and that with an yron toole 〈◊〉 they may not spend themselues in turning all their substance into leaues But 〈◊〉 after the time that the seed is scattered vpon the earth it must presently be 〈◊〉 with earth and they must be sowne as cleare as may be that so they may 〈◊〉 and come faire and goodly ones In lesse than fi●teene daies they be readie to 〈◊〉 The Italians vse to make a kind of Tart of Arraches They chop small the 〈◊〉 and stampe them with cheese fresh butter and the yolkes of Egges afterward 〈◊〉 put them in paste and bake them in the ouen Spinage so called because his seed is prickly is of two sorts the male and 〈…〉 the female beareth no seed Both of them are ●owen in August Septem●● and October for to be vsed in Lent time and in December Ianuarie and 〈◊〉 for Sommer they beare out the roughnesse of all seasons verie well and 〈◊〉 whether it be frost cold or snow they grow also in any ground so that 〈…〉 well dressed and somewhat moist they require to the end they may prosper 〈◊〉 and spring quickly to be watered euery euening and to be couered either 〈…〉 or stubble they stand not in need to be wed but if they be cut oft they grow the 〈◊〉 And he that would haue them to continue long and flourish must at 〈…〉 cut off the one halfe of the stalke and at another time the other halfe Likewise 〈◊〉 that would haue them to continue sometime without being sowne euerie year 〈◊〉 at the first when he soweth them see that the seed be a good full and
well fed 〈◊〉 for then for some yeares following they will grow without being sowne againe 〈◊〉 though the seed of the second yeare will be somewhat weake for to keepe 〈…〉 the f●ost you must couer them with Walnut-tree-leaues and that before 〈◊〉 or ●ogges doe fall in any manner of sort The inhabitants of Paris know well ynough how profitable Spinage is 〈…〉 make meat o● it Lent which vse to make diuers sorts of dishes thereof for their 〈◊〉 as sometimes they ●rie them with butter in pots of earth sometimes they 〈◊〉 them at a small fire with butter in pot of earth sometimes they make 〈◊〉 of them as also diuers other fashions especially they make a most excellent 〈◊〉 sallade thereof by taking the greene leaues thereof and boyling it in ●aire 〈…〉 i● be soft as pap then take it from the fire and straine it and vvith the backes of 〈◊〉 chopping-kniues chop it so small as possibly you can then put it into a verie 〈◊〉 sweet pipkin or skelle● with a good quantitie of sweet butter and currants verie 〈◊〉 vv●sht and so bo●le it ouer againe a good space then with vinegar and sugar 〈◊〉 i● according to the tast vvhich pleaseth you best and so serue it vp vpon 〈…〉 hard egges or otherwise as you please for it is of all sallads the best The vse of 〈◊〉 is good for them vvhich haue some impediment in breathing or speaking 〈◊〉 vvhich are much troubled vvith the cough especially if such a one in the morning 〈◊〉 the broth of Spinage boyled vvith fresh butter or oyle of sweet Almonds 〈◊〉 loosen the bellie their juice is good against the stinging of Scorpions and 〈◊〉 whether you drinke it or 〈◊〉 it to outwardly CHAP. XX. Of Borage and Buglosse BOrage and Buglosse being hearbes much differing in leaues and flowers are alike notwithstanding in their roots seeds and vertues seruing to put in the pottage whiles their leaues are tender and the flowers are vsed in Salades They are sowne in August or September for Winter vse and 〈◊〉 Ap●●ll for Summer they may be remoued at anie time And as for the seed it 〈◊〉 be gathered halfe ripe that so it may not leape out of his coat And of this 〈◊〉 and Buglosse you shall sow but a verie small quantitie for it is ●o apt and 〈◊〉 of growth the seed so soone ripe and so apt to shed that albeit your vigilance 〈◊〉 verie great yet you shall find it will in short space soone spread and ouer-runne 〈◊〉 ground neither where it is once sowne can it but with great difficultie euer 〈◊〉 be rooted out Buglosse but especially the flower doth minister pleasantnesse vnto men that vse 〈◊〉 times because it cheareth vp the heart purgeth the bloud and comforteth the 〈◊〉 spirits The broth wherein Buglosse shall haue beene boyled doth loose the 〈◊〉 The root that beareth three stalkes stamped with the seed and boyled in 〈◊〉 doth serue to be taken against tertian Agues The wine wherein the leaues of 〈◊〉 shall haue beene steept taketh away all sadnesse The iuice of Buglosse 〈◊〉 and Parsley mixt with Wine or oyle of sweet Almonds is a soueraigne 〈◊〉 to cause the after-birth of women to fall away The iuice of Borage and 〈◊〉 drunken is a preseruatiue against poyson if a man haue drunke it as also 〈◊〉 the biting of venimous beasts Buglosse hauing three leaues being stamped 〈◊〉 his seed and root and drunke doth helpe to put away the shakings of a 〈◊〉 Ague and that which hath foure against the shi●ering colds of quartaines 〈◊〉 water distilled is singular against the do●ages happening in Feauers as also 〈◊〉 the inflamation of the eyes CHAP. XXI Of Leekes both great and small LEekes as well those that are long headed as those that are round doe not require so rich and fat a ground as the hearbes going before and they may be sowne at all times if it were not for the gathering of the seed for which cause they must be sowne in December Ianuarie and 〈◊〉 and there it will be ripe after March and mid August and that if from the 〈◊〉 that they are sowne you goe and tread vpon the Beds and water them not but 〈◊〉 daies after They are wont to be remoued when they grow of seed and that either into 〈◊〉 euerie one being set foure ynches from another and then there is nothing 〈◊〉 from them but the ends and tops of the leaues or into a hole made with a sticke 〈◊〉 then the roots must be made cleane and cropped off as also manie of the leaues 〈◊〉 sand with the earth or you shall plant them to make them great if you 〈◊〉 a bricke vpon the head of them after you haue planted them This must be in ●prill May or all Iune to haue for Summer vse and in August September and ●ctober for the Winter vse in anie case you must weed water and dung them 〈◊〉 times especially the round headed ones Furthermore to make them verie ●●icke put the seed of a Cucumber and of Nauets in a Reed or in Boxe boared through and graft this reed into the head of the Leeke when you plant it the second time or else if you will haue great and grosse Leekes you must put so much of their seed as you can hold in three fingers in an old Linnen Cloth that is foule and put it into the earth couering it with dung and watering it by and by for all this little heape of Seed thus put together will make one great and thicke Leeke Ner● vsed euerie morning the leaues of Leekes with oyle to haue a good voice● although that Leekes be noysome to the stomacke as being verie windie except they be boyled in a second water If you eat Cummin before you eat Leekes your breath will not smell afterward of Leekes The leaues of Leekes boiled and applyed vnto the swol●e Hemorrhoids doth verie much good both against the swelling and paine of them The leaues of Leekes stamped with Honey and applyed informe of a Cataplasme vnto the stingings of Spiders or vpon the biting of venimou● Beasts are soueraigne remedies for the same The iuice of Leekes mixt with vineger and rubbed vpon the browes stayeth bleeding at the nose The seed of Leekes stamped and drunke with white or sweet Wine doth heale the difficultie of making Water The iuice of Leekes drunke with white Wine helpeth to bring Women a bed which trauell in child-birth The seed of Leekes stampt with Myrrhe and the iuice of Plantaine it good to stay the spitting of bloud and bleeding at the nose The seed of Leekes cast in a vessell of Wine doth keepe the Wine from sowring and if it should be sowre alreadie it reneweth it and returneth it to his former goodnesse The iuice of Leekes or Leekes themselues boyled in oyle take away the paine and wormes in the eares Leekes roasted vnder embers and eaten is singular good against the poyson of
difficultie of Vrine it strengtheneth the Reines ●nd healeth the bitings of venimous beasts The distilled water thereof is good a●ainst both quotidian and quartane Feauers it helpeth the French disease and stop●eth salt humors Then lastly Feniculus Porcinus which delighteth a great deale ●ore in the shade than in the Sunne-shine it would be sowne or planted either in 〈◊〉 Spring time or in Autumne it comforteth much the sinewes and strengtheneth ●eake backes To conclude those hearbes which affect the South is first the blessed Thistle of ●hich we haue spoke before Then Veruaine of which there be two sorts the male ●nd the female both desire to be planted from the roots in good ground either in the ●pring or in Autumne This hearbe is of great reputation especially amongst the ●omanes who vse if continually amongst their Inchantments it taketh away the ●aine of the Teeth and it healeth anie old Vlcer it is good against anie Fea●er easeth the paine of the Collicke and expelleth Grauell Then Saxifrage which is of two sorts the great and the lesse they may be sowne or planted in anie good ground which is fat and light in the moneth of March The chiefest 〈◊〉 of this hearbe is to breake the Stone prouoke Vrine helpe womens Termes and 〈◊〉 driue away all euill humours out of the Stomacke Then Pionie of which wee 〈◊〉 spoken before Then Hermole or the Turkes hearbe which loueth a fat blacke and drie mould it may be either planted or sowne The vertue of this hearbe 〈◊〉 to make one to hold his Vrine the powder of it being taken either in Broth or 〈◊〉 white Wine Then Acanthus or Brankvrsine is an hearbe which the auncient A●chitects were wont to carue infolding and imbracing their Columnes or Pyllast●● of the Corinthian fashion Whence it came that the Romanes of auncient 〈◊〉 did call it Marmoralia because such Pillars commonly were of Marble It is 〈◊〉 be sowne in the moneths of March or Aprill in a well tilled Garden his 〈◊〉 are good against the Stone and stay the flux of the bellie Then Aristolochia 〈◊〉 both kinds of which wee haue spoken before Then Perforatio which is so called from the affection that it beareth to the Sunne it may be sowne in the Spring 〈◊〉 in anie light earth The seed of this hearbe beaten to powder and drunke in 〈◊〉 Wine cureth a tertian Feauer and easeth those which are troubled with the 〈◊〉 or Sciatica if the powder of it be cast vpon Vlcers it also healeth them and the decoction of the leaues thereof prouoketh Vrine exceedingly Then Arum 〈◊〉 also delighteth in a good Soyle rather moist than drie it flourisheth most in Iune and the leaues thereof are like the leaues of Millet and when it is in the prime 〈◊〉 hath a yellow colour like vnto Saffron it is to be sowne onely in the moneth of March This hearbe is verie soueraigne against the Gout and driueth away 〈◊〉 flegmaticke humours if it be bruised it cureth old Vlcers and all wounds or ●●tings giuen by the Wolfe the leaues boyled in Wine helpeth bruises and displaced members or bones out of ioint it helpeth the Hemorrhoids also Then 〈◊〉 of which we haue spoke before Then Carline which tooke the name from Charl●● the great King of France who by the vse of it onely cured himselfe of the Plagu● it loueth a drie stonie ground and where it may haue the strength of the Sunn● beames it must be sowne in the Spring time or else planted from the root 〈◊〉 powder of this hearbe being drunke chaseth away all infection and prouok●● Vrine it is good against all Conuulsions and being made into a Cataplasme ●●●tifieth and strengtheneth the heart if it be steeped or mixed well with vineger 〈◊〉 easeth either the Gout or the Sciatica being applyed vnto the place grieued Th● little Germander which differeth not much from water Germander onely it ●●ueth a drie and stonie earth and rather a hot than a cold it loueth the 〈◊〉 beames and is rather to be planted from the root than sowne from the seed 〈◊〉 in the Spring time or in Autumne it is good against infection and helpeth 〈◊〉 Feauers it helpeth the Epilepsis paine in the head and anie other griefes of 〈◊〉 braine it cureth Conuulsions the Gout and warmeth the entrailes Then Nic●●●ana or Tabacco of which wee haue spoken before Then Peper which must 〈◊〉 planted immediately after Winter in a well tilled earth and endureth long in G●●dens without anie helpe of transplanting Then Camomill which is of three 〈◊〉 differing onely in the colours of their flowers for the one is white the other yell●● and the third purple It loueth an earth cold and drie it is best planted from 〈◊〉 root or slippe either in Autumne or the Spring time it loueth to be oft troden 〈◊〉 or pressed downe and therefore is most placed in Alleyes Bankes or Seats in 〈◊〉 Garden It is good against a tertian Feauer and the bath which is made 〈◊〉 strengtheneth much weake members and comforteth the sinewes both of the 〈◊〉 and legges it comforteth also the reines The water thereof also distilled is 〈◊〉 good for the same purposes and the iuice thereof mixed with womans 〈◊〉 Rosewater and the iuice of Housleeke warmed and a Rose-cake steeped 〈◊〉 with a Nutmeg grated on it and so applyed vnto the temples of the head ●keth away all paine therein how violent soeuer it be Diuers other hearbes 〈◊〉 be which are of like natures to these alreadie rehearsed but from the experience 〈◊〉 these a reasonable iudgement may find how to plant nourish and vse anie whatsoeuer There be also diuers purgatiue Simples as Rhubarbe Agaricke and such like which for as much as our Soyles will not endure or beare them I will here omit to speake of them onely a word or two of the hearbe Sene which is somewhat more frequent with vs and is of that delicate holesome and harmelesse nature in his working and operation that it may be tearmed the Prince or Head of Simples Then touching Sene you shall vnderstand that it beareth little small thicke leaues vpon a high large stalke it hath flowers of the colour of gold with diuers purple veines running vpon them Some take the Hearbe which Theophrastus writeth of called Colutea to be Sene but they are deceiued therein for the one is a Tree and no Hearbe and the other is an Hearbe and no Tree besides diuers other differences needlesse here to repeat all which are at large see downe by Anthonie Mirauld Doctor of Physicke and a Bourbonois in his booke intituled Maison Champestre It may be planted either from the stalke or root like Rosemarie in anie good fertile and drie soyle where it may haue the full reflection of the Sunne and the season best and fittest for the same plantation is at the later end of Autumne As touching the choice of the best Sene that hath euer the best reputation which is brought from Alexandria in Syria as
place with a Liniment made of Linseed and the powder of the tooth of a wild Boare or else to apply vnto the place a Cataplasme made of the dung of a young boy of a good constitution fed for the space of three dayes with Lupines and well baked Bread lea●ened and salted and hauing Claret Wine to drinke and no other eyther meates or drinkes and adding to the foresaid childs dung an equall quantitie of Honey Against the Pleurisie drinke presently with the syrrup of Violets or some other appropriate to the Breast whatsoeuer the weight of a scruple of Nettle seed or of the Ash Trees or take three ounces of the distilled water of Maries thistle or of Carduus Benedictus or of Broome a spoonefull of white Wine six springs or straines of Egges that are verie new the weight of a French crowne of the shells of French small Nuts made into powder eighteene graines of red Corall powdred all being mixed together let it be giuen warme with as much speed as may be mundified Barley and the seeds of Melons Gourds Cucumbers and Poppie are in that case highly commended roast a sweet apple vnder the embers mix therwithall when it is roasted the iuice of Licor●ce Starch and white Sugar giue thereof vnto the diseased twice a day two houres before meat or else take the weight of a French crowne of the powder of a wild Bores tooth and cause him to swallow it either with the iuice of sweet Almonds and Sugar Candie or with the broth of red Coleworts or decoction of the water of Barley or some other such like which is appropriate for the Breast or else burne to ashes the pizzle of an Oxe and giue a dram thereof with white Wine if the ague be but small or with the water of Carduus Benedictus or Barley water if the ague be strong and great and assure your selfe that such remedies are singular if they be vsed within three dayes of the beginning of the sicknesse The manner of making these ashes is to cut the pizzle of the Oxe in gobbets and laying it vpon the harth that is close layd to set a new pot ouer it and afterward to lay hot burning coales or hot embers about the pot which must be oft renewed vntill one be assured that it is burnt into powder and the better to iudge of the time he must thinke that this will not be done vnder a whole day It is good to lay a playster of blacke Pitch vpon the grieued side and where it commeth to passe that the paine of the side continueth and that the sicke partie cannot spet cause him to vse the decoction of the flowers of red Poppie or of the powder of them the weight of a French crowne with the water of Scabious and Pimpernell and syrrop of Hysope if there be no great Feauer or Violets if it be great Furthermore for a Pleurisie which is desperate and past hope take a sweet Apple euen a verie excellent one and take the kernels forth of it and fill vp the hollow place with fine Olibanum rost it couered ouer and rolled in stupes vnder the hot embers throughly and then giue it to the sicke of the Pleurisie to eat For the spetting of Bloud cause him to drinke the distilled water of the first little buds of the leaues of the Oake or the decoction of Comfrey or of Plantaine Horse-taile or Knot-grasse otherwise called the hearbe of S. Innocent or to swallow downe some small drops of Masticke or Harts horne or Goats horne burnt or Bole Armoniake or Terra sigillata or Corall or Amber or the powder of the innermost rind of Chestnut tree or of the Corke tree or frie the dung of an Hogge with fresh Butter and of that cluttered bloud which the sicke partie shall haue spet and so giue of these thus fried together to the sicke partie to eat For the beating of the Heart it is good to hang about the neck so much Camphire as the quantitie of a Pease or to drinke two or three ounces of the water of Buglosse and of Baulme some hold the distilled water following for a singular and soueraigne remedie Take two Hogs harts three Stags harts or the harts of three Bulls Nutmeg Cloues and Basill seed of each three drams flowers of Marigolds Burrage Buglosse and Rosemarie of each halfe a handfull steepe them all in Malmesey or Hipocras for the space of a night after distill them with a Limbecke and reserue the water for vse which shall be by taking three or foure ounces when necessitie doth require The conserue of Betonie and Rosemarie flowers Cinnamon water Aqua vitae and Imperiall Waters which wee haue set downe in our worke of the beautifying of mans bodie For the faintnesse of the Heart or Swouning it is good to straine and wring the ioynt of the Ring or Physitions finger as also to rub the same with some piece of Gold and with Saffron for by the meanes of that finger his neere communicating with the heart there is from it conueyed and carried some vertue restoring and comforting the heart For the flagging and hanging breasts of Women make a liniment with the drosse of the oyle of Linseed a little gumme Arabick Tragacanth Mastick and Camphire or with the iuice of Succorie or apply thereunto ground Iuie or the egges of Partridges which you shall change oftentimes or small Basins of the distilled water of young Pine-apples or the iuice of wild Pine-apples To procure much Milke vnto Nurses they must vse the fresh and new-gathered iuice of Fennell oftentimes or the iuice of Smallage or of Beets or the powder of the rootes of Maries thistle adding thereto the seed of Fennell and a little Pepper the fore-hoofes of a Cow burned and drunke with Wine or Broth or other conuenient liquor or the powder of Crystall powdred very finely and drunke with Wine or some broth or let them eat of boyled Coleworts seasoned with Pepper or of the roots of Rapes boyled with Pepper To cause Women to loose their Milke you must apply vpon the nipples of their Breasts the roots of great Celandine ●odden and powned or vse a fomentation of verie sharpe Oxicrate vpon the Breasts or else you shall apply a Cataplasme of the flower of Beanes or an emplaister of Rue Sage Mints Wormewood Fennell Branne boyled and mixed with Oyle of Camomill or the leaues of young and verie greene Gou●ds or of Cray-fishes all to brayed and stamped in a Mortar For the inflammation of the Breasts comming of the great aboundant store of Milke take the dyrt found in the bottome of the Troughes of Cutlers or Grinders and therewith couer the Breast and so you shall asswage the paine in one nigh●● you may adde thereto a little of the Oyle of Roses or if the Milke be much curded without any great inflammation in the Breast you may apply vnto it a Cataplasme of the flower of Rice or of
into the pot Licorice bruised let this decoction coole at leisure And as for outward meanes it is good to apply a Cataplasme made of Pellitorie of the wall vnto the reines or else a Cataplasme made of the root of Cypres and the leaues of Bell-flower boyled in wine The best and most soueraigne of all the rest is to prepare a Bath wherein haue boyled the leaues of water-Pa●sley Mallowes Holihocks March Violets Pellitorie flowers of Broome and Camomill and within the Bath vpon the reines a bagge full of Branne and water-Parsley For the Collick caused of Grauell cause to boyle the leaues and flowers of Camomill in an equall quantitie of water and white wine to the wasting of the third part drinke the decoction warme suddenly the paine will be appeased For the difficultie of Vrine drinke the iuice of Winter Cherries or the decoction of Radish roots in white wine or the decoction of hearbe Patience or of the Thistle said to haue an hundred heads or of Bell-flower or of the white prickly Thistle or of Sperage or of Dogs-grasse or of Rest harrow also apply vpon the yard or secret parts a Cataplasme or Liniment of Fleawort Some hold it for a great secret to drinke white wine wherein hath beene brayed Sowes found in caues and hollow places or to make powder of the said Sowes dryed and so to giue the same to drinke in white wine Others doe greatly esteeme the distilled water of the pillings of the root of Rest-harrow first steeped in Malmesey For the stone in the Bladder it is a singular thing to drinke the iuice of Limons with white wine or to make a powder of the stones of Medlars first washed in white wine and after dryed of Broome-seed Burnet-seed and of the seed of Sperage Holihockes Saxifrage Melons Pompions Citruls and of the hearbe good against pearles and to vse these with white wine There is an hearbe growing at the new Towne LeGuyard called in French Crespinette by those that dwell thereabouts and of this the young Ladie of Villeneufue sister to the late deceased Monsieur Cardinall of Bellay caused to be distilled a Water which is singular against the difficultie of Vrine and the stone in the Bladder as I my selfe haue proued diuers times Some hold it also for a singular remedie to make a powder of the stones of Sponges or of the stone which is found in the head of Cray-fishes or of the shells of small Nuts or of the gumme of Cherrie trees and to take it with white Wine or the iuice of Radishes Or else the distilled water of the stalkes of Beanes red Cich-pease and the seed of Holihock The which followeth of Glasse is a great secret which being burned and quenched seuen times in the water of Saxifrage and afterward made into a verie fine powder and giuen with white wine vnto the partie troubled with grauell doth breake the stone in them in any part of the bodie Another secret is that of the shells of egges which haue brought forth Chickens being brayed brewed and drunke with white wine which breaketh the stone as well of the Reines as of the Bladder For all such persons as pisse in their bed whiles they be asleepe and cannot hold their vrine there is nothing better than to eat oftentimes the lungs of a young Kid rosted or to drinke with wine the powder of the braines or stones of a Hare as also the powder of a Cowes bladder or of a Hogs Sheepe or Goats bladder or the powder made of the roots of Bistort or of Tormentill with the iuice of Plantaine or with the milke of Sheepe or the ashes of the flesh of an Hedgehog For the burning of the Vrine let be taken of shell-Snayles and whites of egges of each a pound of the great and small cold feeds of each halfe an ounce hal●e a pound of the water of Lettuce foure ounces of good Cassia three ounces of Venice Turpentine powne that which may be powned and let it all stand to mix together for the space of a night afterward distill them in a Limbecke in Mari●s bath let this water settle some time before that you vse it giue thereof halfe an ounce euerie morning with a dramme of Saccharum Rosatum continue the vse thereof as long as you are able To make a woman fruitfull which is barren let her drinke foure dayes after the purging of her naturall course the iuice of Sage with a verie little salt and let her continue and goe ouer this course diuers times To stay the excessiue flux of the flowers of Women they must drinke with the iuice of Plantaine the powder of the Cuttle bone or the bone of a Sheepes foot burned or the shells which Pilgrims bring home after their pilgrimage to S. Iames or of Corall or of Harts horne or of the shells of burnt egges or of twelue red graines of the seed of Pionie or to swallow with the yolke of an egge the powder of Tezill or the scumme of yron first dipt in vineger and after made into fine powder And as for outward meanes it is good to apply vnto the Nauell shell-Snayles well brayed or the red in the void space of the Nut burnt and powdred and mingled with wine Make a Cataplasme of Soot or of the scraping got from vnder the bottome of a Caul●rton mingle it with the white of an egge or the iuice of dead Nettle or white Mul●●●ne and apply it vnto the loynes and bottome of the belly Or to fill a bag sufficient full of gros●e salt to dip in fresh water newly drawne out of the Well and to apply it to the hollow of the Reines Some make great account of Cherry-tree gumme infused in the iuice of Plantaine and cast into the priuie parts with small Si●ings 〈◊〉 to apply to the breasts the leaues of Celandine For the white termes of Women after that the bodie is purged it is good to drinke with the iuice of Plantaine or the water of Purcelane the powder of Amber of Corall or of Bole Armoniake or of Terra sigillata or of Steele prepared or of Sponge burnt in a pot or of the Sea-Snayle first burnt and afterward washt in wine And as for outward meanes there must be made a Lee with ashes of Oake wood or of the Figge-tree or of the Osier in which there must be boyled the rind of Pomegranats G●●●s pieces of Corke leaues and roots of Bis●ort and of Peruincle beyond-sea Roses with a ver●e small quantitie of Allome and Salt and of this to make a fomentation or a halfe bath For to cause women to haue their termes they must drinke euerie morning two ounces of the water of Mugwort or of the decoction of Dogs-grasse Cich-pease the seed of common or Romane Nigella of the root of Smallage Cinnamon and Saffron the roots of Radish of the Tasell in which one may dissolue as much Mirrhe as the quantitie of a Beane The iuice
and clifts in the lips as also for those which happen in the hands by reason of Winter cold The gall of a Henne or Capon dropt into the eye doth take away the spots of the eyes if you mixe it with the water of Eye-bright The dung of a Henne dried and finely powdred and applyed to the eyes which haue lost their haire causeth the same to come againe if you mixe it with honey or oyle of Linseed If it be tempered with oyle of Roses and applyed it is good against burnings being brayed with vinegar and honey it cureth within an houre such as are neere strangled by eating of Mushromes for it maketh them to vomite a thicke and flegmatike humor A Physition in Galens time did cure all manner of old Collickes giuing the sicke to drinke of this dung with Hypocras made of honey and wine A hard rosted egge eaten with vineger stayeth the flux of the belly if you mixe with it the powder of Harts horne A Cataplasme made of the yolke and white of an egge well beaten with the iuice or water of Plantaine and Nightshade applyed vnto burnings doth quench and extinguish them The white of an egge beaten and with the powder of Frankincense Mastick and Galls applyed vnto the browes doth stay the bleeding at the nose The yolke of an egge swallowed alone stayeth the Cough and such other distillations as fall downe vpon the lungs and other parts of the breast The yolke of an egge which is layd in the full of the Moone doth cleanse and take away all manner of spots appearing in the face The thin membrane or skin which is on the inside of the egge-shell dried finely poudred and mixt with the white of the egge doth heale the clifts of the lips The egge-shell made into ashes and drunke with wine doth stay the spetting of bloud and is good to whiten and cleanse the teeth to comfort and incarnate the gummes The egge-shels out of which there haue come Chickens being poudred and mixed with white wine doe breake as well the stone of the reines as of the bladder The white of the egge mixed with vnquencht Lime the shell of an egge burnt to ashes old Tyle well poudred and Bitumen maketh a Cement verie excellent to glue and ioyne together againe the broken parts and pieces of Glasses An egge spread vpon wood or any kind of garment doth keepe the same from the burning of the fire CHAP. XVI Of Geese THe Countrey Farme being for the most part vnprouided of the bene●●ts and easements of water especially running streames is not so fit to breed and nourish Geese except for priuate commodities sake it fall out that the Farmer doe make him some Fish-ponds or standing Lakes of his owne and at his owne proper costs and charges For the Goose as well as the Ducke doth loue to swim and to coole plunge and tumble her selfe euerie day neither doe they tread almost any where else but in the water There is great profit and there is great losse also thereof profit because the charge of keeping or feeding them is not so costly as their watch and ward is good and gainefull being indeed better than that of the dogge as hath beene shewed long agoe by the Geese of the Capitoll in Rome who awaking the souldiors and standing Watch were the cause that the enemie was repulsed and driuen backe Againe she declareth when Winter draweth nigh by her continuall squeaking and crying shee layeth egges hatcheth Goslings affoordeth feathers twice a yeare for the Bed for Writing and for Shafts which are gathered at the Spring and Autumne The losse or discommoditie is because they craue a keeper for otherwise they will bruse and knap off the young siences of Trees the hearbes of the Garden and the shoots of Vines as also iniure and hurt the Corne when it is shooting and putting forth his stalke as well by breaking it as by dunging vpon it in such sort as that in the Countries where wild Geese which are fowles keeping together in flocks as well as Cranes doe make their greatest and principall haunt as in Holland Heynault Artoys and other where there is found sometimes a great piece of Corne all wasted and destroyed in lesse than halfe a day And the house or tame Geese doe no lesse harme if they be let alone and suffered to do it for they pull vp the corne by the root besides that where as they dung there will nothing grow for a long time after The best Goose and Gander is of colour either white or gray and she that is of a mixt or two colours is also of an indifferent goodnesse notwithstanding the white doth abound more in laying of egges than the others and hath also a better flesh and it is good to make choice of such a one as hath the knee ioints and space betweene the legges great and large The Goose goeth ouer her laying time thrice a yeare if she be kept from sitting and hatching but indeed it is a great deale better when she is set vpon egges because the young ones thereby brought forth doe nourish better than the egges as also doe encrease the flocke And at euerie laying time some lay twelue egges and moe sometimes others but fiue at the first foure at the second and three at the last and these three seuerall times come betwixt the first of March and the last of Iune And they do neuer forget the place which you shall haue brought them to at the first to lay in so that looke where they lay their first egges they will lay all the rest and in the same place also set them if you will Likewise you must not let them lay out of their walke or fold and for that cause you must keepe them shut in at such time as when you thinke they will begin to lay and if you take not vp their egges they will begin to sit so soone as they haue their full number but and if you take them away as they be layd they will not cease laying till they come to an hundred yea two hundred egges yea so long and so many as some say as vntill their fundament stand gaping and open they not being able to shut it because of the effect wrought by their much laying Geese loue not almost to sit any but their owne egges and at the least you must se● that the greater part that you set her on be her owne And she is not commonly to be set vpon fewer than seuen or nine at the least nor vpon moe than thirteene or fifteene at the most and you must looke she be set vpon an odde number And who so putteth vnder the straw whereupon she sitteth some Nettle roots doth preuent that the Goslings when they be hatched are not so soone hurt Some Geese in a good and fauourable weather do hatch in fiue and twentie dayes at the most And neere vnto the place
your cryes words and goads If you haue bought an Oxe readie vsed and accustomed to draw and that you doe not know his complexion you must trie and find it out when he is yoaked as if he be restie trembling furious or if he will lay himselfe downe in the heat of the day and not to correct him for his faults neither with whip neither with blowes with the Goad for the one maketh him furious and raging and the other hardeneth ●im but rather to bind his legges and so let him stand and fast a certaine time for ●his fault commeth seldome to a●e but such as are ouer-fed Likewise there is a cer●aine manner and way to be followed in feeding of them and the lacke of skill ●herein is not a little fault neither in respect of the soundnesse and safetie of the beast ●either yet in respect of the easinesse of the worke which is attained when the Oxe 〈◊〉 rather somewhat fat than too leane for the beast that is high ●ed if he be outragi●usly heated by too much labour is in manifest danger of death by reason of the ●oulting and running of his grea●e throughout his bodie and though he escape and ●die not yet will he neuer doe anie good Oxen are not to be fed so frankly and full in Winter when they labour not They loue the straw of Pulse as of Fetches Pease and Beanes they are fatned with Barly ●oyled and Beanes bruised and broken And as for Hay it is not grudged them ●nd though he hath it not so largely as Horses haue yet it is his onely meat when hee ●aboureth In the Countrey of Limosin and elsewhere where there is great store of great Turneps men vse to fat them therewith but such a beast is not so strong neither his flesh so fast and ●olide The young sprouts and buds of Vines doe refresh them in Summer and some do willingly giue them faggots to browse vpon at night They leue aboue all other things the young buds of the Vine and of the Elme-tree and such like account they make of the drosse of the Wine-presse The sheaues of Wheat and Rie are good for them and sometimes Branne mixed with siftings both these puffe them vp and make them nothing strong The Acornes doe make them scabbed if they doe not loath them and if they eat not all their fodder Coleworts boyled with Branne make them to haue a good bellie and doe nourish somewhat so likewise doth Barly straw mixed with Branne There may be mingled amongst their prouender the drosse of the vvine made for the seruants but not before it be vvashed and dried but without doubt it is better to giue them such drosse before it be vvashed euen such as it is and so it vvill serue them for their vvine and meat and vvill make them faire deliberate and powerfull Nothing is better to fat them than to feed them with the grasse which groweth in the meadows in Autumne after that they haue beene cut But though this for necessitie sake be the manner of feeding of Oxen in France yet to feed them after the English manner is the ●oundest and best way and maketh them euer more readie either for labour or the market which is to say if you keepe your Oxe for labour onely then in the time of rest to giue h●m either Pease straw Barley straw or Oat straw is a food that will hold well ynough it the beast be lustie and in strength but if he be poore and weake then to take two parts straw and one part hay and mix it together which is called blend fodder is meat that will encrease strength and when you worke him sore then to giue him cleane hay or ful bit of grasse is all that he naturally desireth The Oxe is subject to fewer diseases than the horse And for to keepe him from the most ordinarie old and auncient men did purge them in the end of euerie one of the foure quarters of the yeare and three dayes following Some with Lupines and Cypres-berries brayed together as much of the one as of the other and set forth to infuse in the open ayre one night in a pint or three halfe pints of common water others with other simples according to the custome and diuersity of the place and countrie He is knowne to be sicke and sickly if he eat not when he hath good store of fodder or prouender before him To helpe the Oxe to a stomach when he hath no ●ast in his meat by reason of being ouer-wear●ed or ouer-heated it is vsed to rub his tongue and roofe of his mouth with salt and vinegar If he become faint and vnable to doe any thing there must be giuen to him euerie Moneth beaten Fetches steeped in the water which is to be giuen him for his drinke To keepe him from tyring and wearinesse rubbe his hornes with turpentine made thin and liquid with Oyle but beware and take good heed that you doe not touch his muzzle or nosthrils therewith for Oyle causeth them to loose their sight Against the rising of the heart or desire to vomite his muzzle must be rubbed with Garlicke or Leckes bruised as also giuen him to swallow or thus that is or with a pint of Wine especially when he is troubled with the collicke and with the rumbling of the bellie the collicke is knowne by his complaining and stretching of himselfe in his necke in his legs and in his bellie as also by his often lying downe and rising vp againe by his not abiding in a place as also by sweating in such ●ort as if he had beene in a Bath of vvater Some add thereto the Oyle of Nuts and others giue him boyled Onions in red Wine and others Myrtles with Bay-berries steep● in Wine and they also cause his flesh to be prickt about his hooues or his ●aile vntill it bleed The collicke commeth to him of vvearinesse and more in the Spring than at any other time because as then he aboundeth most vvith bloud In this disease he must be vvalked and couered vvith a couering of Wooll Oxen become swolne and blowne vp by hauing eaten ouer ranke grasse especially if therewithall it vvere ouerladen vvith dew you must take a horn bored through at both ends annoint it with common Oyle and put the fore part of it three or foure fingers into the fundament and to vvalke and course them thereupon vntill they breake vvind and letting still the horne alone in such maner as is aboue said you shal rubbe their bellies vvith a barre The Stithie happening to the Oxe being otherwise called a Mallet or Hammer is knowne vvhen the beast hath his haire standing vpright all ouer his bodie not being so light and liuely as he vvas vvo●t hauing his eyes dead and dull his neck hanging downe his mouth driueling his pace slow his ridge bone and all along his backe sti●●e vvithout all desire of meat and scarce
and Centaurie alike much of all two ounces of the seed of turneps harts 〈◊〉 one ounce and vvith vvhite vvine it will serue to take at three times the day after the three aboue named you shall make him a clyster of the decoction of Wormewood and Rue putting thereto in the strayned liquor two Oxe-galls and an 〈◊〉 of Aloes Against the flux of the bellie which some vse to call the current there is made a drinke of great seruice and vse of the powder of gals with red vvine and the flower of starch tempered together or else i● the flux come of taking cold giue him 〈◊〉 dipt in sweet Red vvine and Rose-water and rub his reines and bellie with 〈◊〉 vvine Oyle of Roses and a little Salt For the flux of bloud passing by vrine you must let him bloud of the veine of 〈◊〉 breast afterward make a decoction of Wheat with sweet Seame and the powder of the rinds of drie Pomegranats straine them all to make a drinke for to giue him euerie morning not putting him to any trauell at all Likewise you shall applie a 〈◊〉 plasme vnto his backe and reines made vvith Kno●grasse Bole●armoniacke and the bloud of the beast mingled together with strong vinegar or thicke red vvine which may also serue for them that haue their reines relaxed or haue beene pricked vvith 〈◊〉 Lancet A restie horse for to make him goe forward must haue a coarde tyed vnto 〈◊〉 cods and it must be so long as that reaching betwixt his forelegs it doe come vp 〈◊〉 high as that the rider may hold it in his hands and so may pull it hard whe●as the horse should offer to goe backward but if it be in a Gelding you must bumbast 〈◊〉 buttocks with a good long sticke taken hot out of the fire and burnt at the end for 〈◊〉 will make him goe and likewise if you vse the same course in his rearings it will ●●●rect him and make him leaue them If the horse at any time vvith eating of his hay doe eat any venimous beast as Sc●●pion Spider or the venimous flie called Buprestis he must be couered till he 〈◊〉 and then in all hast let him bloud in the roofe of his mouth which so soone as it is 〈◊〉 forth shall be giuen him againe to drinke warme and in such quantitie as it 〈◊〉 forth for his meat giue him leekes and wheat boyled together Looke more abo●● in the Chapter of the Neat-heard or Oxe-keeper For the stinging of Vipers a liue Cocke slit through the middest and applied warme vnto the vvound is much worth and presently after this a powder of the 〈◊〉 of yellow Daffodill with strong vvine and Salt made all in a drinke for him or 〈◊〉 the root leaues and fruit of vvild vine made in ashes and drunke with good 〈◊〉 or else take presently that kind of buglosse called Echium and draw out of it a good pint of juice hauing first watered it vvith vvhite vvine or vvater of Card●us 〈◊〉 It you perceiue that the leafe vvill not yeeld you juice ynough of it selfe 〈◊〉 the horse first to drinke that vvhich you haue and after applie the substance of 〈◊〉 hearbe vpon and about the stung place and couer it The Shrew by her biting of the Horse maketh him oftentimes to dye as 〈◊〉 haue oftentimes seene both in Horse and Oxen this is a beast as bigge as a 〈◊〉 of the colour of a We●ill vvith a long snout and a short tayle she fasteneth vpon 〈◊〉 infecteth most chiefly the cods and maketh foure small vvounds for to heal● 〈◊〉 venimous biting you must cause him presently to take downe through the ●●ose ●●●●leaues stamped or powdred with vvater and to applie vnto the place that is 〈◊〉 ●ummin and Garleeke stamped together and in case there be any vlcer you must ●ment the place with Brine or with the decoction of the Mirtle-tree and to scatter ●nd sprinkle thereupon the powder of burned Barley or of a Pomegranat rinde ●ooke more in the chapter of the Ox-keeper The biting of a madde dogge hath for a singular remedie if it be vsed before it be 〈◊〉 daies the flowers of Medicke fodder burned and mixed with old Swines●rease and applied vnto the wound or else to stampe it with old white Wine and ●●use him to drinke it Also the root of the Eglantine-tree made in powder and put ●pon the wound or giuen him to drinke with good old Wine Likewise the Ber●ies of Elder-tree or the juice of the leaues thereof or of Ashe-tree Hens dung swallowed by hap bringeth frets and wrings in the bellie for which ●●ke of old Smallage and drie two ounces and cause him to drinke them with Wine ●nd Honie afterward walke him vntill his bellie rumble and that he begin to dung The leane horse may be made fat if you giue him to eat Fasels or long Pease boy●ed in vvater and mixt amongst his prouender but and if he should be so weake as ●hat he could not swallow them downe you must strengthen and get him into cou●age againe making him sup egge-yolkes with sugar in verie good quantitie warme vvater mixt with Salt and meale of Millet and giuen to the horse doth greatly fat him Also Panicke Rice and Millet boyled and mixt with Beane-meale and Salt ●are excellent good and it would be giuen him foure times a day but not much at a time least the horse should cast it vp againe It commeth to passe sometimes that Mares are troubled with a kind of rage that is to say vvhen they see their owne pictures in the vvater they are taken with loue and hereupon they forget to eat and drinke and drie vp their heat or signe of desiring the horse The signes of this madnesse are manifested by their running thr●●gh the pastures as if they were spurred oftentimes looking round about them as if they sought and desired something They are cured of this madnesse by being brought vnto the water for when they see by their shadows how ill fauoured they be they will forget the first shape which they had beheld before For a Horse that is troubled with the Yellowes you shall first let him bloud in the necke veine and in the roofe of the mouth then take a quart of Ale a handfull of Celandine fine spoonefuls of Honey three ounces of Cummin seed beaten to pouder a little Saffron and a handfull of Tyme boile these together then straine it and giue it the Horse to drinke luke warme If your Horse be troubled with the Staggers you shall first let him bloud in the necke veine and take from him great store of bloud then take Veri●ice and Bay salt beaten together with a good prettie quantitie of Assafetida and dip in Flax hurds therein stop it hard into the Horses eares and then bind them vp so as the medicine may by no meanes fall out and doe thus diuers daies together and if need
from the other the smell of which Elder is so odious 〈…〉 beasts that they haue no desire to come neere it either vnder or aboue the 〈◊〉 so long as it is greene and therefore when these first stickes shall be drie you 〈◊〉 renew them Othersome put Thornes that are verie sharpe and pricking or 〈…〉 of Chesnuts vnder the earth round about the plants of the Artichokes 〈…〉 one neere vnto another to the end that the Rats comming neere vnto the 〈◊〉 may presently be driuen backe againe Others cause Beanes to be boyled 〈…〉 poysoned water and doe put them in the holes of this wicked cattell for they 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sent thereof they run thither presently As concerning Moules we will speake of 〈◊〉 manner of killing them hereafter The root of Artichoke sodden in Wine and drunke is soueraigne against the dif●●cultie of making water for the stinking and strong smell of the arme-pits and of 〈◊〉 vrine also for the hot and scalding fretting of ones vrine whether it come of the 〈◊〉 or of some other cause and so also for the dropsie the pulpe boyled in flesh 〈◊〉 and eaten with Salt Pepper and Galanga made in powder helpeth the weak●sse of the generatiue parts The Italians eat them in the morning raw with bread 〈◊〉 salt whiles they be yet young and tender CHAP. XV. Of Sorrell and Burnet SOrrel and Burnet notwithstanding that they grow vntild in great aboundance yet they may be sowen in fine ground and well manured in the Spring time especially the Sorrell for as for Burnet it groweth likewise and as well in drie grounds nothing tilled or stirred both of them 〈◊〉 planted in gardens must from the beginning be well watered and he that de●reth to gather the seed must take them vp and plant them againe suffering them to ●row to their perfection and then to drie and wither They feare not cold or frost ●either yet aboundance of water but they looke especially the Sorrell that they 〈◊〉 become the fairer to be cut three or foure times a yeare All the sorts of Sorrell as well those of the field as those of the garden haue this ●ertue that being boyled with flesh how old and hard soeuer it be yet they make it ●nder and loose the bodie The leaues of Sorrell rosted in hot ashes haue a singular force to resolue or to cause 〈◊〉 Apostumate the swellings of the eyes or as some Surgeons vse if you take the 〈◊〉 of Sorrell and lap them vp close in a Burre-docke leafe then lay it in the hot 〈◊〉 and rost it as you would rost a Warde then open it and applie it as hot 〈◊〉 the patient is able to endure it to any impostumation or byle whatsoeuer about 〈◊〉 part of a mans bodie it will not onely in short space ripen and breake it but also ●raw and heale it verie sufficiently it is also being boyled in Posset-ale a verie ●●od cooler of the bloud and a great comferter against inflamations which come by ●●urning Feauers A Cataplasme made of the leaues of Sorrell with twice as much 〈◊〉 Swines-grease all beaten and mingled together and afterward put in the leafe of 〈◊〉 Colewort vnder the hot ashes is soueraigne against cold Apostumes The seed of ●orrel powdred and drunke with water or wine doth asswage the paine of the blou●ie flux Sorrell steept in vinegar and eaten in the morning fasting is a preseruatiue ●gainst the plague as also the Syrope or Iuleb made with the juice thereof The ●aues of Sorrell well stamped and applied vnto the wrest doth tame the fiercenesse 〈◊〉 the ague Burnet of the garden being an herbe that some vse to put in their salades whereof 〈◊〉 haue here spoken and which is also the same which the Latinists call Sanguisor●● taken in drinke is good to restraine the monethly termes of women and all other 〈◊〉 of the belly but especially such as are of bloud it is good also to dry vp wounds ●nd vl●ers if it be applied vnto them in forme of a Cataplasme Some doe much ●teeme it in the Plague time and some say that the often vse of Burnet especially 〈◊〉 juice thereof is a verie soueraigne preseruatiue against dangerous diseases be●●use it hath a propertie verie much strengthening the Liuer the Heart and the Spi●●●ts The leaues of Burnet put into the wine make it more pleasant more strong and ●omewhat Aromaticall and of the taste of Millions they are verie good to be put in sallades made with Oyle Salt and Vinegar according as we see them vsed 〈◊〉 day CHAP. XVI Of Harts-horne Trickmadame and Pearcestone AS for Harts-horne and Trickmadame they haue no need of any 〈…〉 or planting for both of them will come in any ground that 〈◊〉 would haue them whether it be husbanded or not True it is that if 〈◊〉 would haue Harts-horne flourish and faire liking you must cut it oft 〈◊〉 it along vpon some roller or cause it to go vpon foot by it selfe for it delighteth to 〈◊〉 so intreated and vtterly refusing to grow otherwise than against the ground 〈◊〉 madame doth nothing feare the cold and doth grow principally vpon the old 〈◊〉 of vines in a stonie and grauelly earth These are put in Summer-sallades 〈◊〉 neither of the●● haue either tast or smell fit for the same The Harts-horne is good● stay the flux of the bellie Trickmadame stamped with Lettuce and applied vnto the pulses doth delay 〈◊〉 heat of an ague The distilled water thereof being often times drunken doth 〈◊〉 roughly heale burning and tertian agues Pearcestone is sowen in a drie and sandie soile and craueth to be much 〈◊〉 euen from the beginning he that desireth the seed must let the hearbe grow to 〈◊〉 perfection and afterward to drie the seed as corne is dried It may be preserued in salt and vinegar after the manner of purcelane and then 〈◊〉 soueraigne for the difficultie of vrine for the jaundise and to breake the stone to pro●●uoke vvomens termes and to stirre vp ones appetite if it be vsed in the beginning 〈◊〉 meat For want of such as is pickled in vinegar you may make the decoction of 〈◊〉 leaues roots and seeds in Wine for to vse in the same disease CHAP. XVII Of Marigolds MArigolds haue not need of any great ordering for they grow in 〈◊〉 fields and in any ground that a man will neither doe they 〈◊〉 to 〈◊〉 sowen euerie yeare for being once sowen they afterward grow of the● selues and beare flowers in the Calends of euery moneth of the yere 〈◊〉 in Sommer as in Winter for which cause the Italians call them the flower of all 〈◊〉 moneths To be short the place where they haue once beene sowen can hardly 〈◊〉 of them If they be neuer to little husbanded and cut many times they will beare 〈◊〉 faire ●lowers and verie great but yet euer more in Autumne than in the Spring The juice of the
called of the Latines Acanthus groweth in stonie and moist places although it loue to be diligently tended or otherwise not to yeeld anie profit The root and leaues are verie mollifying taken in drinke they prouoke vrine and applyed in forme of a Cataplasme they are good against con●ulsions wrenches and contractions of the ligaments They are to good effect vsed in the Clysters of them which haue the Dropsie Diuels-bit so called because it sheweth as though the middle or the heart of the root were gnawed or bitten by some Diuell so soone as it is planted or hath put vp in anie place as though the Diuell did enuie the good which it bringeth vnto men by the incredible vertues that are therein craueth no great husbandrie neither yet anie fat earth or verie moist for as we see it groweth vpon mountaines in bushes and places altogether barren It is true that it groweth also in medowes but yet such as are not verie moist It is found in great aboundance in the medowes of Verriere a borough neere vnto Paris The root and greene leaues being stamped together and applyed vnto Carbuncles and pestilent Buboes doe heale them The Wine wherein they haue boyled is drunke with good successe against the Plague and against the griefes and suffocation of the Mother The powder of the root thereof is verie good against Wormes Cinquefoile so called because of the fiue leaues which it beareth craueth a low waterish and shadowed ground it groweth also in drie and grauellie places The decoction of the root vsed for a Gargle doth assuage the tooth-ach and heale the vlcers of the mouth in a Clyster it slayeth all manner of flux of the bellie as well the bloudie flux as others taken as a drinke it is singular against the Iaundise the stopping of the Liuer and against a pestilent ayre and poyson Tormentill like in stalke vnto Cinquefoile but vnlike in number of leaues 〈◊〉 much as it hath seuen delighteth in the same ground that Cinquefoile doth 〈…〉 not altogether so waterish and called Tormentill because the powder or 〈◊〉 of the root doth appease the rage and torment of the teeth is ouer and aboue 〈◊〉 ●ther remedies most singular against the Plague and against the furie of all 〈◊〉 and Venimes it stayeth likewise all fluxes of bloud whether it be spitting 〈…〉 struous or of the bellie all vomiting and vntimely birth whether it be taken 〈◊〉 by the mouth or applyed outwardly or whether it be taken in substance 〈◊〉 the distilled water onely Perwincle delighteth in a shadowed and moist place we see it grow likewise 〈◊〉 Willow grounds Hedge-rowes and out-sides of Woods The leaues as well in decoction as otherwise doe stay all manner of flux of the bellie or spitting of bloud or otherwise as the monethly termes and whites 〈◊〉 purging hauing gone before and bleeding at the nose if you brui●e the 〈◊〉 and put them in the nose or if you make a collar thereof to put about your 〈…〉 a garland for your head or if you put them vnder and about the tongue After the same manner you shall stay the monethly termes as also preuent vntimely birth 〈◊〉 you apply them vpon the groines Bistort as well the great as the small doth delight in a moist waterish and sh●dowie place it groweth also in high Mountaines The root thereof doth stay all manner of fluxes as the termes and vnwilling 〈◊〉 away of the vrine if it be drunke with the iuice or distilled water of 〈◊〉 it stayeth the flux of bloud comming of a wound if the powder of it be cast 〈◊〉 the bleeding wound it suppresseth cholericke vomits if is befried with the 〈◊〉 of egges vpon a red hot tyle and be eaten by and by It is singular good as well 〈◊〉 the decoction and substance as in the distilled water against all Venime as also against the Plague against Wormes in little children against the Measels Purple● and small Pocks in young children against the bloudie flux and all manner of falls against the paine and rheumes of the teeth if you put it into the hollow tooth 〈◊〉 little Allome and Pellitorie of Spaine Pionie as well the male as the female craueth to be planted or set in drie ground where the Sunne hath his full force The seed or root gathered in the wane of the Moone and hanged about the neck or applyed vnto the wrists alone or with the Miss●ltoe of the Oake is a verie sing●lar preseruatiue against the Falling sicknesse Whereunto notwithstanding I would not haue thee so much to trust as that thou shouldest not looke after some other ●●medie assure thy selfe rather that it is singular in bitings and stingings that are ●●nimous as well taken inward as applyed outward Thirtie seeds of Pionie 〈◊〉 and brayed and the verie kernell made into powder and drunke with wine doth fetch againe the speech when it is lost Paules Betonie both male and female would be either sowne or planted in th● verie same ground with Pionie This hearbe especially the female is verie much commended for his vertues 〈◊〉 the iuice that is pressed out of his leaues and the water that is distilled thereof 〈◊〉 heale all sorts of wounds as well new as old all sorts of vlcers whether maligne 〈◊〉 cancrous swellings and hot tumors itch and all the diseases of the skin and which is more the often vse as well of the iuice as of the distilled water of Paules 〈◊〉 doth perfectly cure the Leprosie whereof we haue a notable and famous testimo●●● of a French King who thereby was throughly cured thereof And this is the 〈◊〉 why this hearbe is called the Leapers hearbe Some doe make a balme thereof 〈◊〉 we will further speake in the Chapter of Balmes in the third Booke which is sing●lar aboue all others for all sorts of wounds and maligne vlcers as also for the Leprosie and that it is so good is proued for that a certaine person well knowne vnto 〈◊〉 hauing a virulent vlcer in manner of a Polypus in his nosthrils of the cure 〈◊〉 manie as well Physitio●s as Surgions being excellent men and dwelling in 〈◊〉 Towne did altogether despaire was notwithstanding wonderfully cured by the application of this Balme and often vse of potions made of the decoction of the leaues of the female Paules Betonie This hearbe is singular also in Clysters for bloudie Fluxes and in drinkes for pestilent Feauers vlcers of the Lungs and obstructions of the Liuer and Spleene Gromell is the same which we call in Latine Milium solis and it groweth better being sowne than pianted it delighteth in a drie and vntilled ground being withall stonie and hauing a good ayre The iuice of the leaues and powder of the seed being drunke with Wine hath a singular vertue against the Grauell and Stone and procuring of the Vrine to passe away There is nothing more singular for the burning of the Vrine than to drinke manie mornings
may grow faire and haue a more pleasant smell it must be planted ●nder the shadow of a Figge-tree or grafted in the rind of a Figge-tree for the 〈◊〉 and sweetnesse of the Figge-tree doth temper the sharpenesse and acrimo●ie of the Rue Some say likewise that Rue will grow fairer if the branches thereof 〈◊〉 set in a Beane or Onion and so put into the ground It is likewise reported that it ●●oweth fairer if one curse and hurt it when they set and plant it But looke how ●●iendly and kind it is to the Figge-tree so much it is enemie vnto and hateth the ●●emlocke likewise Gardiners when they would pull vp Rue for feare of hurting ●●eir hands rub them with the juice of Hemlocke Wild Rue is of greater force than the garden Rue and of a more vnpleasant ●●ell and also a more dangerous smell furthermore of so sharpe a vapour as that if 〈◊〉 come neere vnto the face neuer so little it will breed the wild fire in it The feed 〈◊〉 of the one and the other by the hot and drie temperature it hath drieth vp the 〈◊〉 of man and maketh him barren the same seed in decoction is good for distil●●tions and the moisture of the matrix Rue hath a singular vertue and force against all manner of venime Likewise we 〈◊〉 that the king Mithridates was accustomed to vse an opiate made of twentie ●●ues of Rue two drie Figges two old Walnuts and a little Salt to preserue his state ●gainst all manner of poyson For this cause you must plant in your gardens and 〈◊〉 your sheepecoats houses for your fowle and other cattell great quantitie of ●ue for Adders Lizards and other venimous beasts will not come neere vnto 〈◊〉 by the length of the shadow of it Some also hold it as a tried thing that to 〈◊〉 away Cats and Fulmers from hen-houses and doue-houses there is nothing ●etter than to set Rue at the doores thereof or round about them And that to free a ●ome of fleas and g●ats it is good to water that same with water sprinkled about with branch of rue In the plague time it is not good to put rue neere vnto your nose ●ontrarie to that which we see many men practise because by the sharpenesse of the 〈◊〉 there is caused a heat and excoriation of the part which it toucheth notwith●●anding to draw out the venime that is in a bubo or pestilent carbuncle there is no●●ing better than to applie thereto a cataplasme made of the leaues of rue stampt with leauen hogs-grease onions figges vnquencht lime sope cantharides and a 〈◊〉 treacle If a man haue eaten of hemlocke ceruse mandrakes blacke poppie 〈…〉 other hearbes which through their great coldnesse haue caused them to be 〈◊〉 and blockish they may profitably vse the juice of rue to drinke it for the 〈◊〉 of them from such danger or else the wine wherein it hath beene boyled Th● distilled water of rue powred into vvine and rose-water of each as much is good 〈◊〉 the weakenesse of the sight It is verie soueraigne for the headach and being 〈◊〉 in wine with fennell and so drunke it easeth all obstructions of the spleene or 〈◊〉 and taketh away the pain of the strangurie and also stoppeth any flux being 〈◊〉 with Cummin-seed it easeth all maner of aches and being stampt with home 〈◊〉 flower and the yolke of an egge it cureth any impostumation whatsoeuer All sorts of mints whether garden or wild doe nothing desire the ground 〈◊〉 dunged fat or lying open vpon the Sunne but rather a moist ground neere 〈◊〉 water for want thereof they must be continually watred for else they die it is 〈◊〉 sowne than set but if it be set then it may be either of roots or branches in 〈◊〉 or in the Spring time especially about the twelfth of March or September 〈◊〉 wanteth the seed to sow it may insteed thereof sow the seed of field mints 〈◊〉 the sharpe point downeward thereby to tame and reclaime the wildnesse of it 〈◊〉 it is growne it must not be toucht with any edge toole because thereupon it 〈◊〉 die Neither need you take care to sow it euerie yeare for it will grow of itselfe 〈◊〉 being sowne of set in great aboundance Mints stampt and applyed to breasts too hard and full of milke doe seften 〈◊〉 and hindreth the curding of the milke stampt with salt it is good against the 〈◊〉 of a mad dog stampt and put into a cataplasme it comforteth a weak 〈◊〉 and strengtheneth digestion two or three sprigs of mints taken with the juice of ●●pomegranat stayeth the hicket vomiting and surfets It is good to help them 〈◊〉 haue lost their smelling by putting it oft to the nose Then leaues dried made in 〈◊〉 and drunke with white wine doth kill the wormes in yong children Such as 〈◊〉 milke a●ter they haue eaten it must by and by chaw of the leaues of mints 〈…〉 the qua●ling of the milke in their stomachs for mints haue the speciall 〈…〉 keeping milk from curding as also to keepe chee●e from corruption and 〈◊〉 if it be sprinkled with the juice or decoction of mints being ●pplied vnto the 〈◊〉 it asswageth head-ach commming of cold The water of the whole hearbe distilled 〈◊〉 Maries bath in a glasse Alembecke and taken the quantitie of foure ounces 〈◊〉 stay bleeding at the nose which is very strange thing they that would liue 〈◊〉 must not smell vnto not eat any mints and therefore in auncient time it was 〈◊〉 captaines in warre to eat any mints Calamint otherwise called Mentastrum delighteth in the same ground 〈◊〉 mints we see it likewise grow in vntilled grounds neere vnto high waies and hedg● It prouoketh the termes in women whether it be taken at the mouth or in 〈◊〉 and that with such violence as that women may not in any case meddle with 〈◊〉 if they take themselues to be with child it is singular good vsed in formentation 〈◊〉 the paines of the stomach for the colicke and distillations the juice thereof 〈◊〉 the mouth killeth wormes in the bellie and being dropt into the eare it killeth 〈◊〉 there also Of this Calamint there are three kinds as the stone Calamint the 〈◊〉 Calamint and the water Calamint the water Calamint is excellent to make 〈…〉 the earth Calamint is verie good against leprosie helpeth paine in the 〈◊〉 and comforteth the stomach lastly the stone Calamint is soueraigne against 〈◊〉 and strengtheneth the heart if it be bruised and made into a plai●ter with 〈…〉 sewet it healeth any venimous wounds and to drinke it three or foure daies 〈◊〉 either in ale or wine it cureth the jaundise Thyme as well of Candie as the common doth grow better planted than 〈◊〉 and craueth a place open vpon the Sunne neere vnto the sea and leane and it 〈◊〉 be planted at mid-March in a well ●illed ground that so it may the sooner
sweet smels CHAP. LXXXVIII Of the gouerning of Silke-wormes THe ●arefull Huswife so soone as the Spring draweth neere and that she shall see that the Mulberrie-tree beginneth to bud shall make in readinesse egges of Wormes which shee hath kept all the Winter before to be brooded and sit vpon And if shee see that the Mulberrie-tree is ●●ow to bud shee shall lay fresh dung vnto the rootes thereof during the new Moone of March thereby to bring it forward for otherwise for lack of theleaves of the Mulberrie-tree if it should come to passe that her Wormes should be hatched or bred she should be constrained for their food to haue recourse to the heart of the Thorne Elme leaues the tender branches of Nettles and others And as concerning making of choice of such Wormes as are to be breeders you must take the seed which is but a yeare old and which being bathed in Wine falleth to the bottome and floteth not aboue and withall hath the markes which shall be spoken of hereafter The time of brooding them is the fifteenth or twentieth of Aprill from the fourth vnto the tenth day of the Moone but neuer in the decrease for wrapping their silke round about it they w●ll bring it forth the fourth ●ay at such time as they are strong in such sort as that their ends and huskes will bee greater harder and more finely haired than anie other that are bred at another time for those which are bred in the decrease of the Moone are always feeble and yeeld no profit The meanes to make them breed is after that you haue watered and bathed them with white Wine rather than warme water to lay them neere the fire vntill they be a little warmed then to lay them betwixt two pillowes stuffed with feathers and made likewise somewhat warme or betwixt the breasts of women prouided that they haue not their termes at that time and so a● the Wormes doe breed to take them away with Mulberrie-tree leaues making choice of those which are most tender and then to lay them vpon boords or papers that haue beene rubbed ouer with Wormewood or Sothernewood or some such like hearbe When they are once bred they shall haue the leaues o● Mulberrie-trees giuen them euening and morning encreasing them euerie day as the Wormes shall grow greater and greater vnto the fourth change for th●● also they will stand in need to be fed at noone because they eate more at that time than they were wont but you must bee admonished that when they 〈◊〉 or change you must giue them somewhat sparingly because as then they are weake and feeble And in anie case let not the leaues be rotten moist or wet but if it should fall out that they should be moist then you must wipe th●● throughly with cleane Linnens and drie them at the fire They must also be gathered of Mulberrie-trees planted vpon the toppes of hills and standing open vpon the Sunne and of old trees rather than of young ones and such as beare a fruit somewhat red and blacke and not to gather the said leaues in the morning so long as they are wet with the d●aw or other thing vntill the Sunne haue gone ouer them and further to picke the bad from the good before you giue them vnto the Wormes to ●ate These little beasts may not be touched with your hands but as little as may be for the more they are handled the more they are hindered thereby because they are verie exceeding tender and daintie especially at such time as they doe cast or change And yet notwithstanding they must bee kept verie cleane and neat and all their little dung taken from them euerie three daies The place must likewise be perfumed with Frankincense Garlicke Onions Larde or broyled Sawsages that you may minister matter of pleasure vnto these little creatures and againe if they be weake and sicke these smells refresh and recouer them againe They must also be marked whether they sleepe or no for seeing they are wont to sleepe foure times especially when the cast and change if it happen that anie of them be still eating and sleepe not they must be put apart without hauing anie meat to eat that so they may fall to sleeping for else they would all burst and it is as true that if they be breeding of young they must be soberly dieted After that they haue cast and changed the fourth time within three daies after they will eat better than euer they did vntill such time as their bodies begin to shine and that they make manifold shew of the silke thread that is in their bellies which if it be to come white from them their head is as if it were siluer if that it be to come yellow from them their heads beare the colour of gold if greene or Orange colour their heads fore-tell the same Thus they feeling themselues well filled and fedde they seeke out some resting place for the purpose to fasten themselues vnto and there orderly to auoid their silke euerie one shu●ting vp himselfe in his scale or huske which they make and build vp in two daies or a little more Then you must be carefull to haue in readinesse for them round about the Tables good store of Broome Brakes branches of Vines Oake-tree boughes Chesnut-tree boughes and other things and withall let them be verie drie for moisture is their enemie and then not to giue them ouer vntill they be all fastened and hanged vpon these branches there to make their worke whereof they be so eager as that they grow madde ●●till they be packed vp in their little clewes and bottomes and that in such sort as that a man would thinke that they would be sti●eled then they must haue some helpe and order must be taken that they may not fall downe vpon the earth and if they doe fall to put them vp againe into some place for the purpose They haue finished their worke in two or three dayes more or lesse and as the weather groweth hot or cold at that time And as it is easie to perceiue when they are all 〈◊〉 worke so they make it to be heard verie well when they cease and make an end of their labour They dwell thus and abide altogether for the most part in their huskes twentie dayes more or lesse according vnto the tendernesse softnesse or hardnesse of their bottomes of silke As concerning the choice of their huskes or ●ods the Orange coloured are best and not the yellow and least of all the white or greene and as concerning the taking of the single or of the double the single ●●e more worth because that the male and the female are within the double which ●emale layeth her egges no sooner in the morning than shee coupleth with the male againe The scales or huskes being thus chosen those which are good for encreas● must be put into a place where no dust is and well couered the double
as in other cold Countries and such whereas the Vine could not grow they haue either still continued their drinking of vvater or fetched and procured vvine from other places or else haue prepared some other kind of drinke comming neere in some measure vnto vvine vvhich by the delicatenesse thereof might reioyce the heart and gratifie the tast Whereupon some in stead of vvater haue taken vp the vse of Wine and others of Beere and Ale some of Cyder and Perrie and others of all sorts some of honied vvater or vvater sweetened vvith sugar and others of other drinkes pressed and strained out from fruits or the decoctions of rootes All France Italie Sicilie Spaine and all other Countries which are farre off from the North doe content themselues with vvine the Nation of the Turkes excepted vvho being incensed either by the superstition of Mahumet or stirred up thereunto by the ancient custome of Turks do vtterly abhorre vvine and vse in stead thereof honied water England Scotland Dalmatia Polonia Sarmatia and other Northren Countries doe vse partly vvine as procuring the same from other places and partly Beere in such sort as that by how much the Countries are the colder by so much the more they are giuen and addicted to vvine and drunkennes vvitnesse hereof is not onely Germanie but also Frizeland Dalmatia and Flanders the inhabitants of which countries doe not onely striue who shall drinke most and extoll drunkennesse vnto the skies but also doe scoffe at sobrietie and so highly disdaine such people as striue to liue soberly and temperately as that they think them the most vnworthie of their alliance and companie And yet notwithstanding that so many sorts of drinks be growne in request in stead of water in many countries wine seemeth to me to beare the bell as being the most pleasant delightsome and excellent drink that can be found or thought vpon What is meant by wines THe iuice then of the grape which either runneth from the grape being full ripe or is pressed out with feet or the presse before it be boiled is called new or sweet wine but after that it hath boiled and thereby cast forth all his scumme and dregges it is properly called wine Wherefore this boiling or working by which in fine it is fined and setled from all his excrements is not any manner of putrifaction but rather an effect of naturall heat engendred and naturally rooted in the same for whereas the iuice newly drawne out of the grape doth containe in it many excrements and those diuers in nature which the naturall heat thereof cannot without great strife enforcement and contending concoct and ouercome it is necessarie that in this contention it should worke out a heat boyling and verie great perturbation by reason of the struglings of the two contrarie heats that is to say the naturall which doth concoct the crude and raw matter of the new wine and by that meanes separateth the excrementous parts from it and on the other side the strange and accidentall heat which is kindled and raised in the crude and raw parts of the new wine which encountring the naturall heat no otherwise than is done in the crises of sharpe sicknesses at such time as naturall heat doth concoct the crude and raw matter of the disease and attempteth to make separation of the noysome and annoying matter many disturbances shakings heats and other grieuous symptomes doe fiercely assaile the partie vntill such time as naturall heat hauing ouercome proceed to the separating of the good and naturall humors from the excrementous ones and expell those which were the cause of the maladie And euen so it falleth out in the boiling or working of new wines wherein the accidentall heat is ouercome by the heat of nature without any worke of putrifacation the heterogene and vnnaturall matter being separated from the homogene and naturall the vnprofitable and excrementous humour consumed and the flatulent or windie parts thereof discussed and to be briefe all the profitable iuice is in such sort concocted and digested as that that which before was crude flatulent and hard to be digested is become gentle tractable fauourable and verie agreeable for mens vse as though it were quite changed and altered from his nature Of new pressed wine is made the wine called Cute in Latine Sapa and it is by boiling the new pressed wine so long as till that there remaine but one of three parts Of new pressed wine is also made another Cute called of the Latines Defrutum and this is by boiling of the new wine onely so long as till the halfe part be consumed and the rest become of the thicknesse of honey Sometimes there is a wine made called Passum and it is when the grapes haue endured the heat a long time vpon the Vine The inuenters and first finders out of wine SVch as haue written in Hebrew as also the Scripture it selfe doth testifie that Noe was the first author of wine Nicander Colophonius saith in his verses that wine was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Greeke of the name of a man which was called Oenus and first pressed out the new liquor out of the grape into his drinking cup. Others write that Icarus was the first inuenter thereof and that verie shortly after his inuention he had condigne punishment therefore as being slaine of the dressers of his vineyards they being drunke Whereupon Propertius saith O Icarus th' Athenian clowne Deseruedly thy life throwes downe Athenaeus saith That the Vine was first found neere vnto the Mount Etna and that a dogge passing that way plucked vp a little branch of a Vine tree out of the earth and that Oresteus sonne of Deucalion which raigned in that Countrey caused the same branch to be planted againe vvhereout there sprang manie shoots of Vines vvhich he called Oenus of the name of the dogge which had pluckt the same branch out of the ground vvhereupon also the auncient Greekes called Vines Oenas The Latines say That the Vine is called Vitis quasi vita because that vvine doth quickly restore the vitall spirits being wasted and spent and doth comfort repaire encrease and strengthen the naturall heat that is weakened vvhich is the principall instrument of life insomuch as that by the vse of vvine it is made more freely disposed than it was before to performe all manner of actions requisite for the life of man Old Writers are not of one mind concerning the first originall and inuention of the Vine for euerie one of them almost hath his seuerall opinion But as concerning my selfe I thinke that the Vine was brought forth of the earth as other grasse hea●bes and trees were from the beginning of the world and that it brought forth grapes of it selfe without any tilling or dressing and those like vnto them which the wild Vine called of vs Labrusca doth now bring forth but that the first fathers did not so quickly know the vse and profit
haue For as the enduring of the heat of the Sunne and the vnder-going of vehement exercises maketh stronger and more able the bodies of men that are hot and lustie but on the contrarie doth ouerthrow weaken dissolue and coole weake bodies euen so hot vvines are sooner ripe concocted and digested by heat or mouing either of the Sunne or of some hot fire made neere vnto them but those which are more weake and waterie if you heat them ouer-much doe take great dammage and harme and are weakened more by the working of such vehement heat either of the Sunne stirring or fire vvhich corrupteth and spendeth at once and in a moment some part and portion of their weake and feeble heat vvhich afterward in like manner by little and little will be ouercome and wasted and thereupon such vvines weakened and made vnsauourie It is the meane and middle heat therefore that all things receiue profit by seeing the immoderate and extreame is no lesse harmefull than cold Wherefore after that the weake heat of vvine shall for the most part become wasted and spent by the outward heat of the ayre compassing it round about it groweth sowre and so likewise it is wont to fall out by the maliciousnesse of strong and piercing cold breaking the heart of the weake heat in the vvine and thereby killing the same For when the said heat is quite ouercome and banished so as that the vvine looseth his fragrant odour and pleasant sent of vvine it is not said to sowre and therefore not called vineger but indeed is called by the name not of vvine but of decayed and spent vvine which the Latines call Vappa Furthermore vvhereas amongst waterie weake and feeble vvines there are some raw and greenish ones vvhich wee haue declared alreadie to be enemies vnto cold and moist natures and other which are neither raw not greenish but delicate ones and throughly ripe but therewithall of a thinne and subtile substance and which for their easinesse to be concocted and speedinesse in being distributed become very good and profitable both for sound and sicke and are called of the Greekes Oligophora because they will not admit the mingling of any great quantitie of water with them The first may without any iniurie offered vnto their strength abide to be stirred and carried to and fro especially if with this naturall greenenesse there be ioined some harshnesse and roughnesse But the second cannot endure to be remoued or carried to and fro the reason is the heat of the first is hid and lyeth in a crude and raw matter whereof it standeth it vpon as much as lyeth in it to acquite and rid it selfe a readie helpe whereunto is the moouing and stirring of the same because hereby it is enabled the sooner to shew forth it selfe and to manifest his force in more powerfull and chearefull manner than before because the crude and raw matter wherein it lay as it were couered and hid is become refi●ed and concocted in processe of time Contrariwise the weake heat of the second sort which consisteth in a thinne matter or substance and that alreadie concocted is spent and ouerthrowne with the least motion and hea● and therefore doth very easily euaporate and breath out all his force and strength It seemeth that the opinion of Galen and other auncient Writers affirming that no greene wine doth heat must be vnderstood of this second sort of vvine called of the Grecians Oligophora for that it is possible that the old Writers neuer knew neither euer heard tell that any greenish vvines were naturally growing in places and countries that are hot and scorching Certainely there is great difference betwixt that tartnesse or sowrenesse which is an accidentall vice or fault in vvines and that greenenesse or sharpenesse which is a naturall tast and relish in them pressed out either from grapes naturally greene or else from grapes which haue not as yet growne to their full maturitie and ripenesse For the tartnesse of vvines besides the great sharpenesse and acrimonie therein being such as is in vineger whereby it disquie●eth and offendeth the stomacke membranes and all the sinewes is likewise of that nature as that it cannot by any skill or cunning be subdued and corrected in such manner as that the vvine once tainted therewith can at any time be restored vnto his former goodnesse and made such as may be drunke without the preiudice and hazard of mans health But on the contrarie the greenenesse which continueth in vvines as bred in them besides that it is alwaies free from the foresaid sharpenesse and acrimonie is found not to continue any long time in as much as the raw and cold matter vvherein the heat of greene vvine consisteth is concocted by little and little and thereupon this heat thus as it were buried in this crude matter doth by little and little grow strong and sheweth ●orth his force more effectually so that the said greenenesse is by degrees diminished and wrought out and the vvine made a conuenient and profitable drinke for the vse of men yea and that also euen where this greenenesse through the weakenesse and imbecilitie of heat cannot any whit be wrought out and taken away for so wee finde it seeing that greene vvines are not refrained but ordinarily drunke and vsed Dioscorides was of iudgement That sowre and rough vvines caused headach and drunkennesse vvhereas our harsh and rough vvines the rougher they are doe offend and annoy the head so much the lesse And for a certaintie all manner of drinke by how much it is the more odoriferous and of a thinne and subtle substance so much the more it disquieteth and disturbeth the braine with his vapours and ministreth larger matter for the nourishment of rhewmes and distillations Notwithstanding if sowre and rough vvines doe happen once to cause drunkennesse then such drunkennesse fall●th out to be of the worst sort and most rebellious and hard to be ouercome So then all our sowrish harsh and rough vvines such as are those of Burgundie as they are nothing so odoriferous so neither doe they cause any whit like so many exhalations and vapours and therefore also doe they lesse offend the head and procure drunkennesse than any others And so as that Galen hath therefore restified of them that they ought to be well accounted of and esteemed profitable and fit to be vsed of such as haue the gowt as also of all others which are subiect to the distillations of the braine Such vvines are called mungrell or bastard vvines vvhich betwixt the sweet and astringent ones haue neither manifest sweetnesse nor manifest astriction but indeed participate and containe in them both the qualities Of the consistence of Wine AS concerning the consistence of vvine some is of a thinne subtle and cleere substance and othersome of a thicke and grosse and some of a meane and middle consistence betwixt both Of those which are of a thinne and subtle substance some are weake
and waterish which the Grecians call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is to say not admitting the mixture of any quantitie of water of which we will speake more amply hereafter being as it were like vnto water in thinnesse and colour and hauing little or no sent in them neither yet any manifest heate They nourish but very little for there is is but a very little of their substance turned into bloud but they cause great store of vrine and agree better than any other wines with all sorts of natures if wee may beleeue Gal●n There are other weake waterish and greenish wines very ordinarie in this countrie which are hurtfull vnto old men and all other cold constitutions as hauing in them very small store of heate and yet sometime profitable vnto hot constitutions as in Sommer according to our former aduertisement There are others that are very good but hot and strong of an easie concoction and speedily distributed but nothing lesse vapourous than white wines whereupon they trouble the braine and make men drunken and so proue hurtfull to such as are rheumatike and subiect to distillations Such wines are brought hither out of Gascoigne very well pleasing princes and men of great estate all of them being of a yellow colour either deeper or lighter The wines of Ay as they are inferiour to them of Gascoigne in strength so they are better and without comparison more wholesome The grosse and thicke wines some of them are simply such and consist in mediocriti● and othersome are very grosse and thicke We haue heretofore declared that grosse wines are of a more hard concoction and slow digestion than other wines are but being once concocted and digested they yeeld a more firme and solide nourishment vnto the bodie And of them more than the rest such as are very grosse and thicke which for certaine are hardest to be concocted and digested of all others These sorts of wine for that they ingender many rebellious and obstinate obstructions are not fit to be vsed but of dressers of vineyards and such other as leade a toilesome life as wee haue declared before Such wines as are indifferent thin and indifferent thicke are profitable for many purposes and the rather in that they charge not the head as the strong wines do and those which are of subtile substance neither yet ingender obstructions as those which are thicke and grosse doe The wine called of the Grecians Oligophorum is the holesomest of all others Wine smelleth well or else nothing at all The odoriferous wines are very apt and commodious for the begetting of good humours and to recreat and fetch againe the powers of the bodie but they assaile and charge the head especially if it be of a subtile substance and of a reddish or yellowish colour or of a deepe yellow they are also more hot than the other sorts of wines For that which is such doth help very much for the making of concoction easie and for the begetting of fine and subtile bloud but it filleth the head full of vapours and heate and greatly offendeth the sinewes and vnderstanding whereupon it proueth very apt to cause headach and a world of rheume The wine that hath small or no smell no not any more than water is called waterish Such vtter depriuation or want of smell in wine is a mightie note and most certaine marke that the same is but a weake and cold wine as the strong and mightie smell of the same is a very notable signe of his force and strength Such wine as is neither of an ill smell neither yet without smell but hath a certaine s●inging and vnpleasant sent which it hath gotten either of the soile or of the vessell or by some other occasion is not good for any bodie For as nothing as Columella testifieth draweth to it strange and vnnaturall sents more speedily than wise In like sort nothing impaireth or communicateth his hurtfull qualities sooner to the heart and noble parts than wine when it is drunke Amongst wines some are generous and noble wines and therefore said to be full of wine contrarie to those which are waterish and admitting the mixture of much water These heate much hurt the sinewes make a full braine stir vp frensies mightily increaseth the heate of agues and to be briefe they are not delayed with a great quantitie of water and doe good but to a few There are other which are weake and for this cause called Oligophora and waterie These wines are of two sorts some greenish which haue a sensible cooling facultie fitting cholericke stomaches and hot countries if so be that a strong stomacke can beare them and of these wee haue spoken before others which are waterie and of a thinne substance not retaining any smell but agreeing with all natures be the stomacke neuer so weake and especially with those which are often tormented with the megrim or long continued head-ach they comfort concoction prouoke vrine and sweat and offend the head nothing at all more harmelesse than any other sort of vvine they may be permitted to such as are sicke of agues for that they cannot be said to be of any manifest qualitie as other vvines may for they are neither sowre nor astringent neither yet sweet or sharpe nor yeelding any kind of smell Of these kinds of vvine some as Galen saith grow in euery countrey and coast but much more in this of France than in any other the greatest part whereof doe participate a certaine greenenesse especially vvhen the yeares fall out cold and moist Such vvines are called of the Grecians 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They are not any way noysome or hurtfull to the head but very profitable because as Galen saith they asswage and take away head-ach rising of the cruditie of the stomacke that is to say when the stomacke being weakened and as it were relaxed by the eating of some hurtfull victuals or by the drinking of some such like water is made the receptacle of some offending humour ●lowing thither from the whole bodie Which offensiue humour so contained in the stomacke becommeth corrupt and from that corruption sendeth vp burne and adust fumes vnto the braine which cause like paine in the head to that which commeth of fasting and from these annoyances the head is deliuered by the vse of this vvine vvhich by and by tempereth these putrified ●umes especially if the vvine haue any astringencie in it whereby the stomacke may be fortified and strengthened For such vvines doe by and by driue downeward that which is hurtfull in the stomacke carrying it along with it selfe and casting it forth and therefore verie auaileable for such as liue a loitering and sitting life and apply themselues wholly vnto the reading and studying of good Authors The differences of Wines according to the properties of the Countries IT remaineth now that we briefely discourse of the wines which we vse in Paris and those such as are either growne there or
the streame to bereaue the dogges by that meanes of comming by the sent of him The horsemen shall see to such his escapes and therefore if he haue taken his way into any champion ground they shall find out his traces by the sight of the eye and with the blast of the horne they shall cheere vp and encourage their dogges to a new course If the Hart haue taken the water whether it be for the cooling of himselfe or as the vttermost refuge he hath for the sauing of his life the hunter shall looke at what place the Hart shall haue taken the same and there cast in good store of boughes attending his passage and if they see that he commeth not out of the water they shall cause their dogges to take the water or else if they be afraid of causing them to take cold they shall send to seeke a boat or else if they can swimme they shall put off all their clothes and with a dagger in 〈◊〉 and swimme vnto him to kill him and yet they must looke that they see not vpon him but in some deepe place because that if the Hart find ground for his feet he would be able to hurt one of them with his horns whereas in a deepe place he hath no strength Furthermore there must great wisedome be vsed in the hunting of the Hart when he can no longer hold out but being out of all hope of his life standeth still and suffereth the dogges to barke at him for then he groweth dangerous as being giuen to strike with his hornes the first of the hunters that he can mee● withall And this is the cause why it is growne to a prouerbe A Beere for a Hart and a Barber for a vvilde Bore Wherefore it standeth euerie man vpon to looke vvell to himselfe in comming neere vnto the Hart when he endureth the bay and not to aduenture too farre and hazard himselfe too boldly When the Hart is taken he that shall haue giuen the blow shall ●orthwith thereupon sound the retrait to the end hee may call together his fellow hunters and the dogges and after he hath presented the right foot of the Hart vnto the King or vnto his Lord then to cut him vp as he shall know it meet to be done In the meane time he must not forget to take care of the dogges and to giue them some reliefe sustenance of the prey they haue gotten in hunting vnto the bloud-bound that is vnto the dog which by his sent hath led the way to the Hart his lodging he shall cast the head and the heart as his right and due vnto the rest he shall giue the necke and braine of the Hart or which is better he shall take bread and cut it into little lunches into to a panne with cheese and temper the same both together with the bloud of the Hart in his greatest hea● and afterward put all this prouision forthwith vpon the skin stretched forth vpon the grasse and in the meane space euery man shall put his horne vnto his mouth and therewithall comfort and cheere vp the dogges Some men vse now and then and yet after this first prouision to make a second with the entrailes of the Hart all whole which the master hunts-man doth cast vnto the dogges after they haue ended their feast holding them vp on high and whiles the dogges are eating these entrails they must be cheered vp with the noise of the hornes shoutings and hallowings CHAP. XXVI Of the profit that may be reaped by the killing of the Hart. NOtwithstanding that the hunting as vvell of the Hart as of other vvilde beasts be vndertaken and performed by great States rather for the exercise of the body and recreation of the spirits than for any other desire and hope yet the killing of the Hart is not without great profit and that in two respects the first being for the making of meat thereof and the second for the medicinable helps which may be made of his parts and members As concerning the meat made of the Hart his flesh is not very pleasant if it be not of that part of him which is commonly called the pizzle for to speake generally according to the truth Harts flesh is verie hard of an euill iuice melancholicke hard to digest in the stomacke and verie apt and easie to procure many great diseases It is true that many great Ladies hauing an opinion that the flesh of Harts being eaten often doth free and deliuer men from all danger of Agues because the beast himselfe is not subiect at all thereunto at their rising euerie morning haue accustomed to taste of Harts flesh notwithstanding vvho so is carefull of his health should not touch anie such flesh except it be of some tender Fawne or young Hiude vvhich are made seruices for the most part at the Tables of Princes and great Lords The medicinable helpes vvhich may be prepared and made of the Hart are infinite Some find a bone in the heart of the Hart howsoeuer there be some that thinke it to be false which is singular good against faintnes or swowning trembling and beating of the heart and other effects of the same as also against the venimes poysons and dangers of the plague and likewise against the hard ●rauell of vvomen The bloud of the Hart fried in a frying-panne and put in clysters doth heale the bloudie flux and stayeth the flux of the belly being drunke with vvine it is a soueraigne remedie against poysons The priuie member of the Hart washed diligently in water and the water wherein it hath beene so washed drunken appeaseth forthwith the paine of the collicke and retention of the vrine if it be steept in vineger the space of foure and twentie houres and afterward dried and made in pouder the weight of a French crowne of this pouder being drunke with water of plantine stayeth the fl●xe of bloud and all manner of fluxe of the bellie Likewise dried and poudred it may be mingled with remedies which haue power to prouoke carnall copulation It may also bee made seruiceable and of good vse in the ple●risie and against the bitings of Serpents if it be taken either alone or mingled with things which are good for such diseases The horne of the hart burned made in pouder and drunke with honie killeth the wormes which is a signe that the harts horne hath great vertue against venome and that not much lesse than the horne of the vnicorne The tender hornes of a young hart 〈◊〉 in small gobbets and put in an earthen pot wel leaded and close stopped with clay and afterward put in a hot furnace vntil such time as they be dried they may also be beaten to pouder putting thereto pepper and myrrhe do yeeld a pouder which is singular good against the cholicke taken in excellent wine The marrow and sewet of the hart are good to make liniments and cataplasmes for cold gou●s
annoint the cods withall twice or thrice a day For a Fistula make the hole wider seare it cast into it a salue made of vnquenche Lime so long as till the core or dead flesh within doe fall out For the canker wash it with strong vinegar afterward sprinkle vpon it the 〈◊〉 powder of the root Daffodils Rats-bane and Vnquencht-lime put together into ● pot and burnt to ashes For the Iauar in the houghs or hams seare the places along and ouerthwart with a hot yron afterward applie thereto a cataplasme made of verie new Oxe dung 〈◊〉 vpon the fire vvith Oyle If the horse be cloyed you must take out the naile and pare him to the quicke and till bloud come then making verie cleane the pared place to drop into it 〈◊〉 Brimstone or to fill it vp with an oyntment made of Turpentine Waxe Oyle H●nie and Salt all being made verie hot and a little Cotton also dipped in the same oyntment Or else which is an approued thing to put vpon the hurt place on th● inside of the hoose of the horse the leaues of white female Mullein bruised betw●●● two stones And in case the maladie be a day or two old then you must hold the horse foc● in warme water well salted and lay and bind aloft vpon the foot a 〈◊〉 of Bran Swines-grease and Salt-water or with small Salt and strong Vinegar or the powder of gals or mittles or of the masticke tree and then to seare him aboue 〈◊〉 to fill vp all the hollow of the foot with Porkes-grease and hauing thus dressed it so much and so oft as it shall be needfull let it be made vp filling notwithstanding the hoofe on the inside with pitch and annointing it oftentimes with swines-grease as i● abouesaid And to preserue the hoofe in his soundnesse and strength apply vnto 〈…〉 lost a cataplasme made of boyled mallows stampt and mixt with hony and bran put in the hollow of the hoofe the sewet of a sheepe and aboue the hoofe his owne dung 〈◊〉 For the horse which halteth because of some stroake giuen him by some other horse vpon his sinews take of the sewet of a Male-goat a pound Molibden● halfes pound Resin a pound and Copperas halfe a pound make an oyntment The 〈◊〉 ●●roken or wounded or hauing receiued any other kind of wrench in the Knee or ●oynt by the horse his setting of his foot in some bad and inconuenient place is hea●ed by taking an ounce of Fenugreeke as much of Linseed foure ounces of Swines-grease all this being boyled together so long as till it be thicke and much dimi●shed If the horse interfering doe wound himselfe vpon his hinder feet you must cut away the haire verie short and bare from the place that is hurt and rub it with common salt tying vpon it some prettie plate of thin Lead afterward taking that away ●o wash it with Wine For the spauin in the hammes you must raising the thigh vp on high tie the veine called Fontanella and giue it a wound with a flemme to let it bleed and after to applie the actuall cauterie or hot yron vpon the spauin and to burne it long wise and ouerthwart and to heale vp the seared place as in the Iauar The chaps are healed if you burne them at either end with a round hot yron for his burne will keepe the chaps from going further and then afterward rubbe them with washed Lard in diuers waters or with oyle of Bayes mixt with Masticke Fran●incense Vinegar and the yolke of an Egge The grapes would when the haire is once taken away be washed with the decoction of Mallows of Brimstone and Mutton-sewet afterward applying the drossie parts vnto the places which being taken away there shall an oyntment be made of new Wax Turpentine and Gum-arabecke equally mingled For the hornie swelling in the circle of the houghs or hams you must shaue the disease and put vpon it the drossie parts of the decoction of hollihocke roots stamped and after that a plaister of Mustard-seed the roots of Mallows and Oxe dung all boyled together with Vinegar Cut the head and the taile from a snake and deuide the rest of the bodie into gobbets roast them on a spit gather the fat which droppeth and applie it to the sore or wound The disease of the hoofe or the corne stampe Coleworts that are greene with old Swines-grease lay it vnto the disease and get vpon the horse and ride him indifferently to the end that the medicine may pearce into it For the garrot plucke away the flesh that is dead with a sharpe instrument and wash the place with warme Wine afterward applie plegets thereto moistened in the white of an Egge The disease of the necke pearce the flesh in fiue places on both sides the necke with an yron sharpe like a Naule put a Seton through e●erie hole and let them abide there fifteene daies For the palamie take away the flesh from the palate of his mouth with a very fine instrument and that in such quantitie as that the humour may easily come forth afterward cleanse and rub his pala●e with honie of Roses juice of Chibol●s Scallions and burned Wheat The courbe cut the skin alongst the haire acording to the bignesse of the courbe applie thereto a linnen cloth wet in warme Wine straw vpon it the powder of Verdegrease and thus continue vnto the end of the cure For the Knee swollen take a pinte of strong vinegar wherein you shall temper a little Salt of burnt Copper halfe a pound and of Sinople so much as shall be needfull and necessarie For the Knees that are broken and chapt take common Oyle Linseed ashes of Rie-straw and all being put together make an oyntment thereof to annoint the sore place euening and morning vntill it be wh●le For the chafings which most commonly happen vnto the necke or backe of a horse carrying Saddle-packs or Saddle lay vpon the place the leaues of wild blacke ●ine In old and hard tumours make this cerote Galbanum two ounces Rosin and Waxe of each a pound Gum-ammoniacke and blacke Pitch of each halfe a pound and of oyle so much as shall be needfull to incorporate and make vp all the rest 〈◊〉 good forme But if the tumor be broake and hollow and hath beene an old 〈…〉 verie long continuance then you shall dissolue a quarter of a pound of Allome 〈…〉 pinte of running water and with it first wash the sore verie vvell and the take V●guentum Aegyptiacum and lay it vpon the sore vvith flax hurds doe thus once 〈◊〉 twice a day and the cure will soone be made perfect Against the bots or vvormes make him drinke vvater vvherein Rye hath boyled or mingle amongst his bran some Brimstone or make ashes of the wood of 〈◊〉 Oliue-tree or powder of dried Wormewood together with the cornes of raw ●●pines