Selected quad for the lemma: heart_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
heart_n drink_v root_n wine_n 2,867 5 10.6715 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A57242 The experienced farrier, or, Farring compleated In two books physical and chyrurgical. Bringing pleasure to the gentleman, and profit to the countrey-man. ... For here is contained every thing that belongs to a true horse-man, groom, farrier or horse-leach, viz. breeding; the manner how, the season when, ... and what are fit for generation; the feeder, rider, keeper, ambler and buyer; as also the making of several precious drinks, suppositories, balls, purgations, ... and directions how to use them for all inward and outward diseases. Also the paring and shooing of all manner of hoofes, ... The prices and vertues of most of the principal drugs, both simple and compound belonging to farring, ... also a large table of the virtues of most simples set down alphabetically, and many hundreds of simples placed one after another, for the cure of all ... diseases, ... with many new receipts of excellent use and value; never yet printed before in any author. By E.R. Gent. E. R., Gent. 1681 (1681) Wing R13A; ESTC R220639 427,228 473

There are 3 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

and ride him gently upon it and after that set him up warm covered and littered and in a little while you shall see him piss freely let him have it several Mornings together and during the Cure let his Drink be white Water Another Make a strong Decoction that is to say boil the first quantity of water to an half Pint three times over of keen Onions clean pilled and Parsley then take a quart thereof and put to it a good spoonful of London-Treacle and as much of the powder of Egg-shells and give it him And thus do divers Mornings if the Infirmity be great otherwise when you see him offended Things good in General for the Cholick or Stone or for the Gripings or Fretting of the Guts by VVind Centaury Costmary is good for the Gripings of the Belly Camomel Flowers is good for the Cholick and Stone and is good given in a Glister for that purpose the Roots of the Sea holly boiled in white-Wine Rue boiled with Dill and Fennel-seeds in Wine is good Cinnamon sixteen or eighteen of the Berries of Holly purgeth the Body of thick and phlegmatick Humors Hawthorn-berries Cardamum Cloves Pepper Juniper Berries given him or to put a Jagged Onion into his Fundament or to give him a Pipe of Tobaccho at his Fundament Hore-hound Southernwood or the powder of a Stags Pizel dried and given in Beer or the Heart of a Lark swallowed down whole Hysop Cowslips Liver-wort Lungwort the Urine of a Child given him to drink Gentian Aristolochia rotunda Enula Campana or a Glister made of Sope and salt Water or to give him two drams of Myrrh in Wine nettle-Nettle-roots Sperage-roots Dodder bruised and boiled in white-Wine with some Salt amongst it is good to give him Fasting the powder of the wilde Briar Apple-balls Or you may give him by way of a Drink or by Glister this following Drench viz. Two good Handfuls of Mallow leaves boiled in three Pints of New Milk till it comes to a quart Strain out the Milk from the Mallows and give it him either way sweetned with Loaf-sugar luke-warm This is a most Excellent Receipt for the dry Gripes for this will make his Body loose which by this means will free him from those tormenting pains he is troubled with Particular Receipts for the Cholick or Stone Take of white-Wine a quart Fennegreek four Ounces Bay-berries and Pepper of each four Ounces Grains and Ginger of each an Ounce Water-cresses two Handfuls Sage one Handful Sengreen one pound Mints a Handful stamp the Herbs and pound the Spices and put them to the Wine and boyl it then strain it and put two spoonfuls of Honey to it and give it him luke-warm Another Take Cloves Pepper Cinnamon of each one Ounce all made into fine powder and well mixed then put it into a quart of Sack and let it boyl a while then take it off and put to it one spoonful of Honey and give it him luke-warm then Cloath him up and Litter him and let him Fast three or four houres after it then give him Hay and one hour after that a sweet Mash or white Water Another for the Cholick and Stone Take of white-Wine one Pint of Burdock Seeds eight Ounces made into fine powder of Parsley-seed two Ounces two Ounces in powder of Hysop unset Leeks and Water-cresses of each half a handful of black Sope half-an Ounce stamp them well and strain them with the Wine then put to it your Bur and Parsley-seed and so give it him blood-warm this will break the Stone and bring it from him with much ease and cure his Cholick Another for Griping and Fretting in a Horses Belly First blood him in the Mouth with your Cornet Horn and give him a Pint or a Quart of Pork or Beef Brine cold when you see occasion After you have so done strip up your Shirt as high as your Elbow anoint your Hand and Arm with Sallet Oyl Butter or Hogs-Grease and put it into his Fundament and draw forth as much of his hard and baked Dung as you can well get Then take a good big angry red On●on and peel it and Jag it cross-ways with your Knife and Rowl it very well in Salt and Floure of Brimstone and cover it all over with fresh Butter and put it up into his Body as far as you can well thrust it and Tie down his Tuel or Tail close between his Legs to his Surcingle or Girts and walk or Ride him about a quarter of an hour or more then Untie his Tail and you shall find he will purge freely The excellency of this Receipt is That it will cleanse his Maw and Guts and Kill the Wormes within him The next Morning you may give him a comfortable Drink warm made of an Ounce of Horse Spice boyled a little in a quart of strong Beer sweetned with either Hony or common Treacle Or you may give him a Cordial of three Pints of strong Beer with a Toast of Houshold Wheat bread crummed in it and boyled together with a little Mace and when you have taken it off the Fire dissolve into it two or three spoonfuls of Honey with a good big Lump of sweet Butter and he will do well Things good in General for the Dropsey To let Blood first to take away the thin Wheyish Blood the Kernels within the Hu ks of the Ashen Keys Broom Chamomel wild Carrets Centaury the Berries of Elder either green or dry Dwarf Elder Hawk-weed Wormwood Juniper berries Kidney wort wilde Marjorem the Juice of Pellitory of the Wall the Seed of Plantain Bayberries Succory the Bark of the Tamarisk Tree Lady thistle Vervain Peony Seeds Coleworts Smallage Elm boughs Sallow Leaves or whatsoever else that will make him Urine Chiche steeped in water a day and a night Parsley stamped and mixt with white-Wine or Burdock seeds taken the same way Rue red Sage Winter Savoury Time Horse Radish Roots Rubarb Saldanella Salt of Scurvey-Grass Garden Scurvey-Grass Rosemary tops Asarabica Wood bitony China-roots the Juice of the white Lilly-Roots tempered with Barley-Meal and baked and given him for to eat is very good A Particular Receipt for the Cure of the Dropsey Take a Gallon of Ale and set it upon the Fire and scum off the Froth as it riseth then put into it of Wormwood and of Rue the tender tops and leaves without stalks very well picked of each a Handful and boyl it to a quart then strain it and dissolve into it three Ounces of London Treacle and put into it of long Pepper and Grains made into sine Powder of each an Ounce then brew them well together an give it him blood-warm and bath and anoint his Legs that be swelled with Train-Oyl twice a day till it go away and give him Mashes or white Water and feed him with such Meat as he will best eat and if the Weather be seasonable turn him to Grass and he will do well Things good in General for Gravelling To take
used with Honey It is good for Swellings used with Hogs-grease the distilled water of the Herb or ●uice dropped into the Eyes cleanseth them from Films The Branches of the Vine and the Leaves do cool and mightily bind and stayeth Bleeding in any part of the Body and are good to stop a Lask and bloody Flux the Leaves are put into Lotions for sore Mouths and being put into a Poultess with Barley-Meal cools ●nflammations of Wounds All the Violets are cold and moist while they are fresh and green and will cool any heat and distemper in the Body either inwardly given or outwardly applied Impostumes also and hot Swellings they purge the Body of Cholerick Humors the Powder of the Purple Flower helpeth the Quinsey and Falling Sickness it is good for the Liver Yellows and hot Agues The sorts of Vipers Grass are hot and moist as are the Goats-beards it is very good for the Plague poison of venomous Creatures falling Sickness Of Wall or Vipers Bugl●ss the several sorts of them are cold and dry of Complexion it is good against the biting of Vipers or any other venomous Beasts and also against poison or any poisonous Herbs the Roots comfort the Heart tempers the Blood allays the hot Fits of Agues Vineger especially if it be of Wine is cold and piercing to wit cold in the first and dry in the third degree it cuts Phlegm Vermilion is a certain Metal drawn from Quick sulphur and Quick-silver it draweth healeth incarnateth bindeth and comforteth Ulcers Verdegrease is hot and dry in the third degree and is a Corrasive that eateth away dead and proud Flesh and is good to be put into Ointments for green Wounds or for the Scratches Green and white Vitriol may be taken inwardly a few drops of it with other things for the Farcin and outwardly applied to take away Wenns or hard Kernels or to eat away a Quitter-bone or Splint or to take off Warts from the hands if you will stay the eating of it or that you will have it eat no further then where you lay it wet all round where you lay it with water you must take it out of the Glass with a Feather or a piece of Silk Tied to a stick for it will eat both Linnen and Woollen The white is the strongest but the green is most safe for any use Vitriola Caleanthum is reckoned amongst Metals and is a kind of Inkey Earth it draweth and fretteth Vitriola Herba is an Herb that groweth on the VVall and is taken for Pellitory on the Wall W. Wall flower or Winter-Gilliflower all the kinds of them are of a cleansing faculty and of thin parts The yellow kind works more powerfully and are of more use in Physick it cleanseth the Blood and freeth the Liver from Obstructions expelleth the Secundine and dead Foal stayeth Inflammations and Swellings comforteth and strengthneth any weak part out of Joynt cleanseth the Eyes from Films and cleanseth also filthy Ulcers in the Mouth and is a good Remedy for all Aches and Pains in the Joynts and Sinews and is good for the Farcin The VVallnut-Tree the Bark of it doth bind and dry very much and the leaves are much of the same Temperature they kill the VVormes in the Belly with other things put to them they help the biting of a mad Dog or the venom or poison of any Creature the Kernels of them when they are old are very Astringent and will stop a Lask the Oyl of the Kernels taken inwardly helpeth the Cholick and expels VVind the distilled water of the green husks before they be ripe is good to cool the heat of Agues as also to resist the Infection of the Plague being applied to the sores it cooleth also the heat of green VVounds and old Ulcers being Bathed therewith Wold Weld or Dyars-weed is hot and dry of Temperature also the whole Herb heats and dries in the third degree it cuts attenuates resolveth opens disgests it is good taken inwardly or applied outwardly against the venom of venomous Beasts as also for the Plague or Pestilence and is good for green Wounds Wheat is hot and dry in the first degree it hath a certain clammy stopping quality the Oyl of it pressed out between two thick Plates of Iron healeth all Tettars and Ring-wormes used warm The green Corn chewed and applied to the place bitten by a mad Dog healeth it Sliced Wheat-bread soaked in Red Rose-water or Spring-water and applied to the Eyes that are hot red and inflamed or blood-shotten helpeth them And hot Bread applied to the Kernels of the Throat healeth the Kernels thereof the Flower of it mixed with the Juice of Henbane stayeth the Flux of Humors to the Joynts and being boiled in Vineger helpeth the shrinking of the Sinews the Flower of it mixed with the Yolk of an Egg Honey and Turpentine doth draw cleanse and heal any Bile Plague-sore or foul Ulcer the Decoction of Wheat-bran is good to Bath those Places that are bursten by a Rupture and the said Bran boiled in Vineger helpeth all Swellings and Inflammations it helpeth the biting of Vipers and all other venomous Creatures Wasers put in water and given stayeth the Lask and bloody Flux The Willow-tree the Leaves Flowers Seed and Bark are cold and dry in the second degree and binding they are used to stay bleeding of VVounds and all other Fluxes of Blood it helpeth to stay all thin hot and sharp distillations upon the Lungs the Leaves bruised with some Pepper is good for the VVind-cholick The water of the VVillow-tree received of a Branch cut is good for dimness of Sight for Films and to stay the Rheumes that fall into them provokes Urine being stopped the Flowers of it boiled in white-VVine hath an admirable faculty in drying up of humors The Bark worketh the same effect VVoad is dry and without sharpness the wilde VVoad drieth more and is more sharp and biting it is so dry and binding that it is hardly fit to be Given inwardly an Ointment made thereof stancheth bleeding and is good in such Ulcers as are bound with moisture for it takes away the corroding and fretting humors it cools Inflammations quenches St. Anthonies Fire and stayeth defluctions of Blood in any part of the Body VVood-bind or Honey-suckles are cleansing consuming and disgesting the Flowers are good for the Lungs provokes Urine helps Cramps Convulsions Palseys and whatsoever Grief comes of Cold or Stopping the Flowers are more effectual then the Leaves the Seed is as effectual as the Leaves Pond-weed doth bind and cool like as doth Knot-grass but his Essence is thicker then that it is good against consuming and eating Ulcers and all hot Inflammations VVormwood is hot and dry in the first degree just as hot as the Blood it remedies Choler provokes Urine helps Surfeits Swellings in the Belly and is the best Herb for the Yellows that is Take of the Flowers of Wormwood Rosemary and black Thorn of each a like quantity half that quantity of
him stand upon the Trench until three or four of the Clock then give him a warm Mash and order him as you do Horses in Physick Give him this Medicine every other or third day three or four times and you shall find it an infallible Cure Before you use this Medicine you must prepare his Body with Bran prepared and after with a Glyster and your Goose-feathers Another Take better then two handfuls of the Cankerous Moss which groweth upon an old Oaken Pale and boyl it in two quarts of Milk to one then strain it and squeeze the Moss well and give it him luke-warm to drink then take two Goose-feathers and take as much sweet Butter as contains a Wall-nut and with the powder of Brimstone finely beaten and s●arced work them well together with your Knife till the Butter be brought to a high Gold Colour Then take two Feathers the longest you can get in a Gooses wing and first at the Quills end with a Needle fasten two long threads then with your Salve anoint your Feathers all over which done rowl them well in the powder of Brimstone and thrust them up into his Head then fasten the thread on the top of the Horses Head and ride him abroad for an hour or two Airing him in this manner Morning and Evening and when he hath stood a pretty while in the Stable after you have brought him home again untie the threads and draw forth the Feathers and wiping them very dry lay them up till you have next occasion to use them This Disease cometh not suddenly but grows out of long process of time and therefore the Cure must be done by leisnre therefore you must continue the Medicine as your leisure will serve either every day or at the least thrice a week if it be for four or five Months together and be sure it will in the end yield your desire Another which will Cure any high Running Glanders called the Mourning of the Chine Take Elecampane Roots and boyl them in Milk till they be soft that you may bring them to Pap then with a Horn give them to the Horse with the Milk luke-warm being no more then will make the Roots liquid and having anointed your Goose-feathers use him and ride him as you did before Another Take of Agri-pigimentum and of Tussilaginis beaten into powder of each four drams then beating them with fine Turpentine bring them into a Paste then make them up into little Cakes as broad as a Groat and dry them Then lay two or three of them on a Chafing-dish of Coals and cover them with a Tunnel so that the smoke may come up onely at the end thereof and so without auy loss ascend up into the Horses Head through his Nostrils then Ride him till he begin to sweat this do once every Morning before water till the Running be stopped which will be in a very short space considering the greatness of this Disease Another After you have purged him two days before give him this Drink Take of Tanners Owes new made wherein never came Hides one pint of Sallet Oyl four spoonfuls two Heads of Garlick pilled and bruised Feathersew and Sellandine of each one handful chopped very small Anniseeds and Licoris and Bay-berries all finely pulverized of each one spoonful boyl all these a little and give it him blood-warm twice a week fasting and being thus four times drenched will be perfectly cured which seldom or never fails The best Receipt for this Disease is in my First Part. Another Take Cummin-seeds Grains of Paradice and Fennegreek in powder of each half an Ounce of Diahexaple a quarter of an Ounce beat this in a Mortar with a quarter of a pint of Verjuice three spoonfuls of Sallet-Oyl and two spoonfuls of Aqua vitae then put altogether to a quart of old Ale with a good slice of sweet Butter and set it on the Fire till it be ready to boyl then being luke-warm give it him part at his Mouth and part at both Nostrils then ride him pretty roundly for an hour and set up warm let him fast an hour and if you perceive Sicknes to grow give him a pint of new Milk Another for the Glander Keep the Horse fasting for four or five houres then give him this Drink here under written viz. Ten Cloves of Garlick peeled and bruised half a handful of Oaken Moss and one handful of Pollipody of the Oak boyl all these together upon a gentle Fire in three Pints of new Milk till half be consumed then strain out the Milk from the Moss and other Ingredients and put into it three quarters of an Ounce of the powder of Elecampane Roots one Ounce of the Floure of Brimstone half an Ounce of the Juice of Spanish Liquoris and half an Ounce of the powder of Fennegreek well mixt together Then take two handfuls of the innermost Bark of green Elder and boyl it in a quart of Spring water till more then half be consumed then strain it forth and pour it into the other Ingredients and stir them well together and give it him lukewarm some at his Mouth and some at his Nose exceed not above a pint of it at a time warm him very well after it but bring him home cool and Cloath and Litter him up warm and let him fast three or four houres after it and Order him as you do sick Horses with Mashes of Malt boiled Oats and white Water c. Observations upon it This Disease is very difficult and hard to Cure and therefore you must not think that once or twice giving it will get 〈◊〉 Conquest over this sturdy Disease but it must be the work of a longer time a Month or more at least viz. Give it him two or three days together and intermit a day or two between to recruit his spirits and so continue it till you have recovered him But the best and most certain Receipt for the Cure of this filthy and lothsom Disease is by a Receipt at the latter end of the Book which I Refer you principally unto vide T●e best Receipts for the Cure of the Glanders Another to stay it for a time being incurable Take the green Bark of Elder and beat it in a Mortar and strain it till you have a pint thereof Then put that Juice to a pint of old Ale and warm it on the Fire with a good Lump of sweet Butter and an Ounce of Sugar candy and so give it lukewarm ride him after it and let him fast an hour and keep him warm do thus divers Mornings If you are minded to take a general Receipt to Cure all Colds Glanders Heart sickness and to purge away molten Grease Look in the First Part for B●lls Cordial to Cure any c. Things good in General given inwardly to a Hide-bound Horse white-White-wine Sallet Oyl Venice Turpentine Mithridate Loaf sugar Cassia prepared milk of sweet Almonds Verjuice given him Muscadine strong Ale Grunfel Rue Smallage