Cart furni- 
ture. 
A Coeme is 
halfe a 
quarter. 
Husbandry 
tooles. 
Plough 
furniture. 
Flusbandlie furniture. 
A buttrice! and pincers, a hammer and naile, 
an aperne and siszers for head and for taile: 
Hole bridle and saddle, whit lether and nall, 
with collers and harneis, for thiller and all. 
A panel and wantey, packsaddle and ped, 
A line to fetch litter, and halters for hed. 
With crotchis and pinnes, to hang trinkets theron, 
and stable fast chained, that nothing be gon. 
Strong exeltred cart, that is clouted? and shod,’ 
cart ladder and wimble, with percer and pod: 
Wheele ladder for haruest, light pitchfork and tough, 
shaue, whiplash‘ wel knotted, and cartrope ynough. 
Ten sacks, whereof euerie one holdeth a coome, 
a pulling hooke handsome, for bushes and broome : 
Light tumbrel and doong crone, for easing sir wag, 
sholue, pickax, and mattock, with bottle and bag. 
A grinstone, a whetstone, a hatchet and bil, 
with hamer and english naile, sorted with skil: 
A frower of iron, for cleauing of lath, 
with roule for a sawpit, good husbandrie hath. 
A short saw and long saw, to cut a too logs, 
an ax and a nads, to make troffe for thy hogs: 
A Douercourt beetle, and wedges with steele, 
strong leuer to raise vp the block fro the wheele. 
Two ploughs and a plough chein, ij culters, iij shares, 
with ground cloutes & side clouts for soile that so tares: 
With ox bowes and oxyokes, and other things mo, 
for oxteeme and horseteeme, in plough for to go. 
1 To pare horse’s hoofs with.—‘‘ Tusser Redivivus.” 
2 «*Clouting is arming the Axle-Tree with Iron plates.” —T.R. 
3 ** Arming the Fellowes with Iron Strakes, or a Tire as some call it.” 
—T.R. Strakes are segments of a tire. 
4 «Of a tough piece of Whitleather.”—T.R. 
——— 
