, 1 

 ^0 



BOOK IL atid Expert Far ier. 13 



you mull take the lecond rind thereof, and do therewith as 

 before j but then note, that before you wafh and apply the faid 

 juyce to the wound, you mufl: firlt wa(h the forance with warm 

 water, and then apply the Eiid juyce, and he ihall be perfect- 

 ly cured in fhort time. This I never yet experienced by rea- 

 fon I could never yet meet with the Herb. This lecon-d 1 have 

 often tried and I have found it to be infallible, vi2^. Makea 

 Rowl of fat Wool, and fleep the fame in Vinegar and Sheeps 

 fuet fo much as will fuffice, boiled together till it cometh to 

 be very thick, and let the Rowl b: full as long, or rather 

 fomewhat longer than the place gaulcd : .apply this to the fo- 

 rance Philter- wile, and bind upon it a clean linnen cloath, 

 changing.it twice a day, and in fliort time it will be whole. 

 This is right good. "^^"^. 



SECT. 2. C. 



Hippoph. \\J Hat Cure have you for a Canker ? 



^ ' Htfpofents. This is a very loathfome fc- 

 ranee, which if it-be fuffered to run long will lo feller, and 

 corrupt the place where it happeneth that it will violently 

 eat, even to the very botie : if ic fall upon the Tongue^ it will 

 eat the very root in funder j if in the Nofe^ it will eat the ve- 

 ry Grifile through ^ You may calily know this forance, for that 

 the places will be very raw, and bleed often, and many times 

 he Ihall perceive a white fcurrFto grow upon the place grieved. 

 For it is a moil; Cankerous Vlcer^\N\\\ch. oftimes is ingendred of a 

 fretting humour. It cometh two ways, that is, either of 

 naughty, and corrupt blood procured by means of unwholefom 

 meat, or by fome BilUcpu Humonr which came to the Horje by ^'^^^^'^' 

 an extream cold not long before taken, which will caufe his 

 breath to llink loathfomly. I will deliver unto you fundry 

 Cures for this forance, which my felf have experimented, and 

 have found them to be very good. 



Take white Wine half a pint, Roch Alom the quantity of 

 a Wall-nut, Bay fak half a fpoonful, Engl'ih Honey onefpoon- 

 ful, Red Sage, Rue, Ribwort, Honey-Suckle Leaves, Yarrov/, 

 Plantine, Bramble Leaves, of each like much, but of every one 



a ^ 



' :MMi!i^ti^M^^ 



