1 68 TheCompIeatHorfeman: or, 



after give him a Quart of clean Oats with two or 

 three Handfuls of fplit Beans amongft them, and 

 break alfo into them two or three Slices of Bread 

 clean chip'd, and then leave him for two or three 

 Hours. 



At Evening, before you drefs him, give him the 

 like quantity of Oats, Beans and Bread, and when 

 he hath eaten them, Bridle, Drefs, and Cloath him •, 

 but you fhall not air him abroad this Evening, be- 

 caufe the' Scouring yet working in his Body after 

 the Heat, he mud not have any Water at all. Af- 

 ter he is drefs'd and hath flood two Hours on his 

 Bridle, give him three Pints of clean Oats warned in 

 Beer and Ale, which will inwardly cool him as if he 

 had drunk Water, and you are fure he can receive 

 no prejudice by it. After he has eaten all his wafh'd 

 Meat, and refted upon it a little fpace, you fhall at 

 his Feeding times,which have been fpoken of before, 

 with Oats and fplit Beans, or Oats and Bread, or all 

 together, or each of them by it felf, according to 

 the liking of the Horfe, feed him that Night in a 

 plentiful manner, and leave a Knob of Hay in the 

 Rack when you go to Bed. 



The next Day early, firft Feed, then Drefs, 

 Cloath, Saddle, Air, Water, aqd bring him home 

 as at .other times j only have a more careful Eye to 

 |iis emptying, and obferve how his Greafe and 

 Foulnefs wafteth. At his Feeding-times, feed him 

 as was laft (hewed you, only very little Hay, and 

 keep your Heating Days and the preparation the 

 Day before, as hath been declared. Thus you fhall 

 fpend the fecond Fortnight, in which your Horfe 

 having received four Heats Horfeman- like given to 

 him, with four Scourings, there is no doubt but 

 his EJody will be inwardly clean. You fhall thereT 

 fore thp next Fortnight order him according to th$ 

 piredions following, 



fil 



