Selected quad for the lemma: water_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
water_n boil_v ounce_n pint_n 6,886 5 11.3309 5 true
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
A78192 The perfect and experienced farrier. Being necessary for all gentlemen-troopers, farmers, farriers, carriers, carmen, coachmen, and horse-coursers, &c. Shewing a most exact, easie and speedy way of curing all sorances and diseases incident to horses (and other cattle.) Wherein is shewed the true anatomy and inside of a horse, with his intrailes, sinewes, and number of bones, and veynes necessary for blood-letting. Never before published. / Written by Robert Barret of Esborne in Sussex, and published for the good of his country. 1660 (1660) Wing B914; Thomason E1022_3; ESTC R208467 19,148 40

There are 5 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

him blood in the necke and in those veines next the place that is infected and launch the knobs annointing them with blacke sope tarre and bay salt once in two dayes and this will helpe him without faile proved The disease of the Wombe of the Mare called the Weather is when the bag or nature cometh out and she is in great paine therfore take white wine vinegar and roch-allum warme and wash the nature bag that cometh out then put it in againe then make a drinke of peach-stone kirnells comfrey nutmegs and sinamon all beaten to powder and boiled in milke or ale and give it the Mare twice in a day and it will helpe her proved The Hungry evill and Consumption of the Flesh is when the horse doth eat his meat fast and greedily and yet prospers not with it but still growes leaner which I think doth proceed from some evill habit in the body although some Farriers do not perceive the cause therefore I advise you to give your horse some Rosemary marigold seed or diapanta sage savin earth-nuts or pig-nuts oranges and lemons steeped in vinegar three dayes and some egges steeped with them and stopped close till the egge-shells be as soft as the orange then take out the egges and the oranges whole and put into the vinegar a quarterne of sugar-candie treakle diapanta savin sage nuts boile them together and milke-warme give it the horse in the morning and let him have the egges and oranges after the drinke riding him for two houres after it then give him sod beanes and pease for the space of six dayes and a little of this drinke every morning and it will cause his flesh to rise againe if you let him blood in the mouth A very good medicine to take either in wine or beere against the Fever Palsie or Convulsion of the Sinewes or to annoynt the body or sinewes withall in time of numnesse or stifnesse Take Galbanum castoreum bedlam pepper amoniacum ladanum dissolved in sallet oyle bayberries graines Rue Isop tansie anniseeds liquorish oile of turpentine Fox-grease or badgers-grease tarre stone-pitch hogs grease take of these things an equall quantity and beat them to powder small and boyle them together then give the horse part in wine and annoint his body and legs with part warming it in with hot coles in a pan then keepe him warme and let him stand drie and either ride or walk him once or twice a day giving him no cold water for nine dayes space but rubbing his body and legs well and as soone as you see him beginne to use his legs you may let him blood in all foure a little annointing him all over with oyle of Copresse and by this meanes the horse may recover his former strength and nimblenesse againe as hath beene proved Balls to give horses when you misdoubt their grease to be over heated by too hard riding Take honey fine hogs lard the herbe called Earsene tobacco savin Rue the tops of stocke-gilliflowers some Isop camomile and smallage shread the herbs small or beat them in a morter then temper the honey and lard with them or boyle them in sacke and give it the horse to drinke this will cause the horse to scowre out the grease and cleanseth his guts from all kinde of wormes proved To helpe your horse if you misdoubt hee hath eaten or drunke any poyson Take Betonie plantain and harts-horne scrape it small and boile it in milke and when you have made it blood warme put in some sallet oyle venice turpentine and fine hogs lard or hogs grease beaten well together before you put it in the milke and this will qualifie the poyson and the horse will doe well againe proved Balls to keepe your horse in breath and health fit for hunting first take Rosemary and marigold-seed anniseeds and liquorish comfrey roots colts-foot cardus and fennell roots all dryed to powder with frankincense mirrhe cominseed turmericke treakle sugat-candy butter temper all these well together and give them to the horse in the morning when you ride him forth before you water him and then you may ride him two or three houres or till your occasion serveth in reasonable time to come in for the longer you ride him after it the better it is for him If at any time your Horse or Oxe cannot Vent give him this glister take tobacco and honey beating it together in a morter and when it is well mixed put some sallet oyle unto it and some hogs-grease then milke-warme put it in his fundament with a straight horne and let one that hath a small hand stirre it gently up and downe in his body and it will helpe him presently proved For a horse that cannot Stale take a small twig made very smooth and annoynt it with oyle then pull out his yard and thrust the twig up in his bladder and that will give him vent which done you shall give a drinke made of fennell seed or the root of Filippendula camomile smallage anniseeds liquorish and some ordinary horse-spice which you usually buy at the Mercers shops boyled all well together in white wine or beere and this will helpe the horse but you must stirre him up and downe a good space after A very good Plaister for Broken bones if the skin be not broke Take the whites of egges bole-armoniacke red lead and salt beat them together and role up the place for three dayes then open it and if the bone begins to sodder together and not swell dresse it as before but if it swell wash the place well with wine vinegar and salt and if the bones be broke thorow the skin you must mixe blacke sope and bole armoniacke together and lay on the outside and make a salve to dresse the wound with of Cats-grease hogs-grease venice turpentine tutsome leaves comfrey leaves and colts-foot boyled all together and strained and therewith annoynt the sore places putting some into the wound with a feather then make an open place betweene the Splints that the corruption may runne away and when it is whole lay on a Charge of pitch rofin masticke bole-armoniacke and red lead and swath up the place and if you let him runne at grasse but one March after the bone will grow as strong as ever it was proved Some never failing Medicines for certaine mortall Diseases and other griefes incident to Men Women Children or other Creatures TAke three pintes of Malmesie or for want thereof good Muskadine boyle therein one handfull of Sage one handfull of Rue being shred small till a pinte be wasted then straine it and set it over the fire againe putting thereto one penny worth of Long Pepper halfe an ounce of Ginger a quarter of an ounce of Nutmegs all beaten together then let it boyle againe a little This done take it from the fire and put to it a quarter of a pinte of strong Angelica water or good Aquavitae a quarter of an ounce of Mythridate a quarter of a pinte of Triacle
THE Perfect and Experienced FARRIER Being necessary for all Gentlemen-Troopers Farmers Farriers Carriers Carmen Coach-men and Horse-coursers c. Shewing a most Exact easie and Speedy way of Curing all Sorances and Diseases incident to Horses and other Cattle Wherein is shewed the true Anatomy and Inside of a Horse with his Intrailes Sinewes and number of Bones and Veynes necessary for Blood-letting Never before Published Written by ROBERT BARRET of Esborne in Sussex and Published for the good of his Country LONDON Printed by T. Fawcet for Fr. Coles dwelling at the Lambe in the Old-Baily 1660. The true Anatomy and Inside of a Horse TO THE READER Gentle Reader MAny Bookes have been published concerning Horsmanship and the Curing of such Diseases as commonly happen to that Beast but I have found that many of their workes are meere Collections out of others and not their owne practice so that they scarcely know the right office of any member but rash by prescribe they know not what as being not able to judge truly of the difference betweene one Sorance and another My Advertisement to you therefore is that You would truly observe every thing which I prescribe and not runne after each new Invention that is onely applauded because it is pollisht over with fine Phrases which I want to set forth my work withall for all the Authors or Eloquence that I have to perswade you is my owne Practice and Experience which that You may understand I have here placed the proportion of a Horse with the Letter B upon every outward Veyne where You ought to let Blood explaining each Sorance and the Cure thereof where I begin with a deformed member in the Head and so preceed to the rest in order and from the outward Grievances referre You to the inward hereafter following THE Perfect and Experienced FARRIER SHEWING A most Exact easie and speedy way of Curing all Sorances and Diseases incident to Horses ALave-eard Horse is unseemly yet the Member is according to the Breed of the Horse but notwithstanding many of them doe prove very good for Service therefore I have thought fit to prescribe you a way how to set and make his Eares stand and be as compleat as any other Horses eares bee First take a paire of Sheares and pare his Eares so small as you desire and then cut away the skin betweene his eares and with a drawing hot Iron seare the Sinew betweene the Head and the Eare untill it begin to looke yellow which done you may annoynt the Sore with Hogs-grease and Butter and Honey boyled together and then put a flat string over his Eares to keepe them as you desire to have them stand washing the Sore once in two dayes with white Wine vineger and Salt warmed together and laying it on the salve with a feather gently that you make not the Horse wilde and fearfull about the head for I have knowne many Horses spoyled by being too hasty with them Wherefore I advise you to deale gently and quietly at all times and upon all occasions throughout every Cure that you take in hand If the Horse eyes be lanke or thick then looke that his Ey-teeth be not grieved or that the Wolves teeth trouble him not if they doe pull them out and let him blood under the eye and in the nose with a naule and annoint his eyes with the fat of a fresh Eele Proved And if hee have a Canker take hogs-grease roch-allum white copresse bole armoniacke and temper them together untill they be so mixed that you cannot discerne the one from the other and put some of the salve into the eye once in two dayes and this serves for any speck or pin or wefe and if the Haw be ranke cut it out and spirt in wine or beere and it will doe well againe Proved For the Canker in the nose take Whitewine vinegat white copresse roch allum sage leaves woodbine leaves and coltsfoot then boyle them together and streine the water dressing the Canker once a day for two dayes and afterwards but once in two dayes this will also cure the Canker in the mouth or any other part so that you put in some Touchwood leaves into the same with a little honey Proved The Lampers are to be cut or burned or salted and the Flapes or Bags are the like but it is good to let blood in the third grise in the mouth before you salt him The Fives are hard round swellings betweene the jaw and the neeke under the Eares For the Cure of which you shall first launch the skin a little against the Kirnell and then seare the Kirnoll with a small hot Iron untill it begins to looke yellow and then annoynt it with oyle of Camomile once in two dayes untill it be whole but alwayes let him blood in the necke on both sides and after hee is whole you may make a charge of Pitch and Rosin bolearmoniacke Masticke and lay it on with Flockes letting it lye untill it fall away of it selfe and then annoynting it once a weeke with a little hogs grease camomile and smalledge boyled together which will serve for any swelling about the head if it be annoynted once a day and will either ripen the sore or cause the Swelling to vanish away The Gare lyeth in the throat and may appeare anywhere about the head or brest but if it appeare in the brest wee call it Anticor these Sorances come suddenly and are cured alike First launch the skinne and then fley it so farre as the swelling goes and with a warme Iron seare the swelling or gelly but not the skinne rubbing the place well with white wood ashes and bay salt and feare not the Cure if hee live but twelve houres after and then you must provide some oyle of Turpentine and liquor the place where it is swelled then may you take this Drinke one pint of Treakle and a pint of sack a spoonfull of the powder of bay-berries and a spoonfull of Turmericke and boyle these together and give it the Horse to drink and it will drive the gellid humors out and the heat of the fire the ashes and salt likewise will draw them ou ward and so cure him Provel The Shoulder-sprained is when he trailes his toe on the ground and carries it wide from his body and if he pricke his toe forward then it is a signe that hee may be Shoulder-pitched which is easily seene for if hee be much lower and close in the top of one shoulder then the other hee is Shoulder-pitched and then you must tye his fore-legs together and so draw him upon some beame by which meanes his shoulder may come in his place againe which done you shall let him blood in the plate-veine and put in a rowell and blow his shoulder annoynting it with oyle of spike nerveoyle and hogs-grease beaten together and if it be but sprained then you need but let him blood in the platevaine and annoynt him and he will doe well
againe in 12 dayes if not then rowel him as before expressed The Parsie is a swelling in any part of the body and breakes out with knobs which is thus cured let him blood in those veines next the place infected and take blacke sope tarre bay-salt and white copresse and mixe them together as you vse them and annoynt the places well once in two dayes and it will helpe him at three times dressing but it is good to launch the knobs that be soft and let out the filth The Splint is apparant to every man and is thus cured Launch the skinne thorow so long as the Splint goeth and when you shall see the knob take your drawing Iron red hot and seare the knob till it begin to looke yellow and then lay a Charge of pitch and rosin bole-armoniacke masticke and sanguis draconis boyled together and some Flockes of the same colour letting it lye untill it fall away of it selfe and then annoynt the place with oyle of turpentine once in two dayes untill it be whole and the haire will come againe and it will be plaine and no ey-sore but a small race like a cut But if it chance to ketch any grit or durt then wash it with wine vinegar roch-allum and butter launch two holes one above the Splint and one beneath and open the skinne so farre as the knob goeth and put in the root of Bares-foot and let it stay in five dayes annointing it with butter once a day The Ring-bones are apparent and the Cure is if they be newly come take up the Shackle veines on both sides of the foot and with a Fleame prick the swell'd places so as they may bleed then boyling hot lay the Charge rehearsed for the Splint but if the swelling be big you must open the foot and draw the swelling with a hot Iron and annoynt the place with Tarre and Turpentine boyled together when the Charge falleth away and not before And if you thinke that the Horse is a little founderd or hoofe bound then you may let him blood in the toe veines and stop his feet with Tarre Turpentine and Hogs-grease with some Hemlockes or Arse-mart in it boyled together seething hot and renew it once in two dayes The Quiter-bone is an Vlcer in the foot which runneth at a little hole with white matter and in the bottome of the hole there lyeth a gristle like a bone therfore search it to the bottome and fill the hole with Verdegrease letting it remaine so three dayes then take it out and if you see that it is not come cleane away stop the hole againe with the same and take away the hoofe as farre as you see it hollow and wrap the sore with browne paper dipped in tarre turpentine and hogs-grease beaten together after the bone is come away untill it be whole The Spraine of the Back-Sinew is a very evill thing yet take the oyle of Spike Venice turpentine Comfry and Tu●som leaves boile them together and straine the oyntment then annoint the place with the fame once in two dayes for nine dayes and most commonly this will helpe but if it doe not you must let him blood and lay a Charge upon it as is show'd in the Splint but if his leg swell it will be good to take up the Shanke veine a little above the knee and salt it and that will asswage the swelling The Colts-evill is easily knowne for that comes but in winter by cold moyst humors therefore ride him into the water once a day and that will cure him but if he have his stones beaten by hard riding or if they chance to swell by some straine which also may happen by covering a Mare I advise you to take oyle of Roses Smallage the herbe called Rosa solis which you shall finde in boggy grounds boile them in white wine vinegar and bath the swelling with it and it will helpe the horse with letting blood on the spur-veines and the neck or you may launch the Horses sheath if need be for it may doe good if it be much swelled FOr Wounds or Prickes in generall take Cats grease Venice turpentine Camomile Tutsom leaves Colts-foot Hogs grease Roch-allum boyle them together and straine them and keepe this Salve alwayes by you for it is good for any cut or pricke but you must remember alwayes first to wash the sore with white wine vinegar and butter warme This is a proved salve For the Impostume in the head you must take the juice of Willowes the juice of Camomile the juice of a Pomegran●t and some Linseed oyle boile these together and milke-warme put it into the eares and either stop them close or sow them together for the space of twelve dayes this also helpeth the worme in the head or any Deafnesse it openeth the pores and is a present remedy for any Giddinesse in the head A very good Oyle to ripen any kind of Swelling or Knobs or Wennes Take Linseed or Hempseed Pelletory Smallage Camomile the rootes of Lillies Hemlocks Speare-grasse Garlicke Bears foot Bores-grease or Hogs grease oyle of Spike and Pigeons dung boile all these well together so as they be like a Plaister then lay it on the wen or swelling once a day for three dayes space and it will breake if not launch it thorow the skin for it will be ripe then wash out all the filth with white wine vinegar and roch-allum together warme annoynting it with oyle of turpentine and hogs-grease untill it be whole This O●le may be used only to such swellings as are old and hard for it will ripen any thing that it is layd unto if it be not so hard as a bone The Fistula every man knowes but few can cure it yet by this Medicine as is well knowne I have healed many which is thus to be applyed Take a pint of the best white wine vinegar a penniworth of roch-allum an halfe penniworth of greene copresse a penniworth of honey and a quarter of a pound of Dogs-grease boile them together untill the copresse be dissolved and open the Fistula on both sides the maine and keepe the crest whole if you can then wash the sore with this water once in two dayes and if there be any bone corrupted it will scale it and heale the sore pr. This will also serve for the Pole-evill as well as any Medicine else with a little turpentine hogs-grease colts-soot and touchwood leaves boiled together and strained cleare that there be nothing in it for I forbid all powders and lime that I have seene vsed but no reason for it save only through ignorance and vse no washing with chamber lye nor any other water but drie the sore well with a soft linnen rag or a piece of spunge and then wash the sore with the water according as is directed but vse not your salve till it have almost done running If your Horse be Wrenched on the loynes or back then take two paire of Pastornes and tye all his foure
take ale cost saven holy thistle treakle and strong ale or beere boyle them together and put in some sallet oyle and give it him this is also good for the bots or small wormes if you pricke him in the mouth The Diseases in the liver gall and spleene I find that if the liver be inflamed with any hot blood or the gall be too full of choller then the spleene cannot discharge his office which is easily perceived for the horse will be weary dull and heavie hot and faint and commonly full of choller in the mouth and eyes his veines will swell and if it be not prevented it will grow to the Yellowes of which I have spoken in the Staggers and now will shew you a very good way Take liverwort elder pill or barbery pill turmericke cominseed venecricke fennell-seed tansie smallage anniseeds liquorish Ivie berries pelletory parsley seed coleander seeds treakle sugar candy and boyle these in wine then straine them and give it the horse to drinke this is good to convert choller it comforts the heart it helpes the collick also if you put in the rootes of Filippendula but let the horse blood in both sides of the necke and mouth and nose and it will cure him proved The Dropsie or Tenpen is a swelling in the belly or may fall into his legs and breake out in watry humours like the Paines which by continuance it will grow unto therefore to prevent it after you have rid him or runne him till he sweat which will cause the watry humours to fly up into his body againe while he is warme let him blood on both sides of the necke and in the mouth then open the skinne betweene his fore-legs raising it two inches long and as much in the hinder part of the belly and put some of the herbe called Seter-wort or beares-foot into the holes and that will draw the evill water away if you let it stay in 4 or 5 dayes giving the horse the same drinke that is prescribed for the Liver and Spleene and when the holes are open use hogs-grease to annoynt them withall trotting him up and downe every day and rubbing his body and legs and he may doe well if you bath his legs with vinegar and salt very hot THe Golden water or Oyntment for the eyes is thus compounded take the Flowers of marigolds and ey-bright daisies of the biggest sort the flowers of rosemary and saladine the inward barke of the palmetree some saffron the flowers of water-lillies and the flowers of the bay tree distill these all together and keepe it by you in a bottle that when your horses eyes beginne to looke yellow or greene like the raine-bow you may put some of this water into his eares warme and stop it in foure or five dayes washing his eyes with some of the water likewise and then to make his eyes comfortable take fresh goose-grease and the marrow of cats bones and rost a Lampre or Eele reserving the fat that drippeth in a clean dish then put some rurmericke unto it and boile them well together then put it into a pot and keepe it till you have need but you must gather the flowers in May or Iune and the water will keepe untill the next yeare if you put some sugar-candy in it The goodnesse of this Receipt cannot be enough valued but you must remember when your horse is grieved to let him blood in the nose with a naule that he may bleed well The Strangullion or Sqinsie is an inflammation of the throat and tongue so that it is ready to stop the horses wind and must be thus cured Let him blood in the plate-veine and wash his mouth with hot vinegar and salt then take leekes alexander honey and bedlam boile them in wine and give it the horse at the nose and mouth annoynting the swelling with dogs dung and honey then let him blood in the mouth and give him no cold water but let him have pelletory to chew in his mouth which will make the rheume voyd away or if he cannot chew put some in his drinke and as soone as the swelling is asswaged annoint the horse with sallet oyle and he will doe well againe proved The Bloody flux or Pissing blood some hold to proceed from the nature of the ground where the Horse goeth or else by a straine for the cure therefore take roch-allum bole armoniacke solder-wood worme-wood polepodium and salt stampe the herbs or drie them to powder and give it him in new milke two mornings and this will cure him if you let him blood in the mouth proved The Mattering of the yard and the Shedding of the Seed which comes in covering time most commonly is cured by washing his yard with white wine vinegar roch-allum and butter and giving this drink in red wine comfrey bole-armoniacke and sugar boiled together Some will give balls made of venice turpentine wheat flower and venecricke every morning for foure or five mornings and this will cure as hath beene well proved Incording or Bursting may come by leaping or by stopping the Horse too suddenly therefore according to my experience I advise you if his guts or the Kell be fallen downe tie all his foure feet together and with warme milke bath the place so that it may be gentle then worke the gu● into his place againe and tie the stones gently with a broad string so as you may put your singer betweene bathing him with vinegar bole-armoniacke salt and butter once a day and give him a drinke made of strong ale or claret wine comfrey masticke and stone pitch and if it be where you can make a trusse for him when you have put in the gut you may lay a Charge on and binde it up with the trusse make the charge of rosin pitch masticke bole-armoniacke and some turpentine they may fall in some place where you may cut the skinne a handfull beside the place and put in the guts and then sow up the rim of the belly with a needle full of silke you must take good hold but not too thicke stirches nor draw it too hard yet be sure to make it fast and annoynt the place with venice turpentine tutsome leaves and dogs grease boyled and strained but be sure to keepe the winde from it for six dayes and afterwards put some hogs-grease in your salve This way I have cured diverse cattell both horses oxen and others proved The Fashions may come by an inward cause as well as an outward for if it begin in the brest or in the groine or cod it is a signe that it proceds from some inward defect and then the knobs will be big and hard like carbunkles therefore you shall make a drinke of Rue or as some call it herb grasse tansie the root of the w●lde vine Isop walnut tree barke turmericke cominseed smallage treakle and bay-salt boiled together in beere or ale and give it the horse to drinke for three mornings together then let
mingle all together stirre it till it be cold then put it into a glass close stopped and shake the glass when you take it out for your use Also it hath been tryed to be specially good for the cure of a quartan Ague Take of it for a Man or woman three spoonfuls for a Child one blood-warme let them bee well sweated for an houre or thereabouts as their strength will beare This medicine is good against the Plague either to prevent or to cure it but it is also good against those diseases that are kin to the Plague and particularly it hath cured multitudes that have been sick of this malignant Fever which of late hath been so common it having a speciall quality to draw all infection from the heart A Remedy for the Plurisie when it is past Blood-letting in which case it is commonly mortall TAke an Apple and cut off the top for a cover and pick out the co●r then fill the hollow place with white Frankincense put it on a shovell by the fire and put the cover upon it then roast it till it be soft round then put it into a sawcer and bruise it altogether till it be well mixed then put so much Sugar to it that will make it savory let the party eat it This will drive away the putrifaction from the Lungs and preserve the party An assured Medicine for to cure the biting of a mad Dog TAke a good handfull of Bittony and a handfull of wild Sage and a handfull of night Shade and of faire Running water a pinte stampe the Herbes and straine them therewith put thereto a penny worth of Triacle or the weight of three pence of Mithridate give it to the patient to drinke two or three mornings This Medicine is good for Cattle and for Dogs bitten with a mad Dog and hath been upon occasion tryed to bee effectuall without Mithridate or Triacle putting a handfull of Rue with the other herbs and using ordinary Garden Sage where the other is not to be had the herbs boyled in milk and strained and six spoonfull given at a time FINIS A Table of the severall Diseases contained in this Booke in each Page according to the Folio IN the Epistle to the Reader I begin with a deformed member in the Head from the outward and inward Grievances in a Horse A most exact and speedy way of Curing all Sorances and Diseases incident to Horses Folio 1. For the Canker in the Nose and how to cure it ibid. For the Lampers ibid. For the Fives with the cure ibid. The Gare and what it is Folio 3. For the Farsie and its cure folio 4. The Splint and how cured ibid. For the Ring-bones and the cure Folio 5. The Quiter-bone is an ulcer in the foot ibid. The Spraine of the back sinew ibid. For Wounds or Prickes in generall Folio 6. For the Impostume in the Head ibid. To ripen any kind of Swelling or Knob Folio 7. The Fistula and the Cure ibid. For the Pole-evill Folio 8. If your Horse bee Wrenched ibid. The Falling of the Haire ibid. For a Horse that is Stifled Folio 9. The Spavin is of two kindes the Blood-Spavin and the bone-Spavin ibid. The Puffing Malenders and Selenders lye in the bout of the Knee and in the Him behind Folio 10. The Tent in a Horses Leg ibid. Windgalls are above the Fetter-locke ibid. The Paines is an evill humour in the body Folio 11. A Horse may bee Poundered divers wayes ibid. A good way to Stanoh blood in any part Folio 12. A good medicine for the Biting of a Mad Dog ibid. If a Horse be Bitten or Stung ibid. A Re-advertisement to the Reader with the Anatomy of the inside of the horse Folio 15. For the Falling Evill what it is ibid. For the Staggers what it is Folio 16. For the Sleeping-evill Folio 17. For a Horse that is Taken called the Frenzie ibid. The Posie what it is ibid. For the Glanders Strangullion and mourning of the Chine ibid. For the Shortnesse of Breath Folio 19. For the Garget in Horses Folio 20. For Wormes in Horses Folio 21. For the Dropsie or Tenpen Folio 22. The Strangullion or Squinsie Folio 23. The Bloody flux or Pissing of Blood ibid. For the Mattering of the Yard Folio 24. For Incording or Bursting ibid. The Hungry Evill and Consumption of the flesh Folio 25. Balls to give a horse when he is overheated Folio 27. Balls to keepe your horse in breath for Hunting ibid. For a horse that cannot Stale Folio 28. A very good Plaister for broken bones ibid. Some never failing Medicines for certaine Mortall Diseases incident to Men Women and Children and other Creatures Folio 29. A Remedy for the Plurisie when it is past Blood-leting Folio 30. To cure the biting of a Mad Dog ibid.