[45 ] 

 ed thro' the noftril, and this difcharge is the 

 glanders properly fo called. I made frequent 

 injections into the noftril, the difcharge ceafed 

 in four months, the fuelling of the gland 

 was difcuffed, the injection cleanfed the low- 

 er part of the maxillary finus's, and that of the 

 cornets, which hinder the matter's lyinginthem, 

 and a thorough cure was made. This horfe be- 

 longed to Madam Fondu, a miftrefs-carrier, in 

 the Faux-bourg Saint Honoré. 



All the authors that have wrote upon the 

 difeafes of horfes feem to have copied one ano- 

 ther, to maintain that the glanders was a dif- 

 charge accompanied with a very offenfive fmellj 

 I never found that the glanders had any ill-fmell 

 of itfelf, but it may when the matter is confined 

 in the maxillary finufes, or that the aliment has 

 infinuated itfelf, as I have obferved it, by the 

 chinks of old broken jaw-teeth and infected the 

 parts. 



I have again found horfes whofe glanders 

 have flunk very much, but then they have had 

 the ftrangles with decay or farcy. 



I have alfo feen fome with whom the running 

 proeeeded from a putrefadion of the lungs, to- 

 gether with the glanders ; and others with 

 whom the fmell proceeded only from the ma- 

 lignance of the ftrangles which they difcharged. 



4. I faw a horfe belonging to a poor man 

 who worked him in an inveterate glanders for 

 fix years ; and at laft he was knocked on the 



head 



