[49 ] 



The firft of thefe four proceeds from the 

 lungs when they are affected, and therefore may 

 be called the pulmonary glanders: the fécond 

 is called the wafting glanders ; the third the 

 glanders with malignant ftrangles -, and the 

 fourth the farcy-glanders. 



The pulmonary-glanders proceeds from one 

 or more abfcelTes formed in the lobes of the 

 lungs, the purulent matter of which gets into 

 the bronchia, comes up the Trachea, paries 

 through the nafal cavities, and is difcharged 

 by the noftrils like a whitifh liquor, fome^ 

 times appearing in lumps or grumes. In this 

 cafe the horfe runs at the nofe without having 

 the glands affected ; and therefore what he dif- 

 charges cannot be accounted the true glanders. 

 If the horfe be young, he may be relieved by 

 making him work a little ; pectorals mull be 

 adminiftered, and he muft be turned to grafs 

 every year. 



That humour which I call the wafting hu- 

 mour ufually feizes a horfe at the end of dif- 

 eafes caufed by too hard labour, which have 

 been thought cured ; a defluxion is made upon 

 the lungs which produces a whitifh humour, 

 fometimes tinged with yellow, which is dif- 

 charged by the noftrils, he eats and drinks pret- 

 ty well, but notwithstanding he runs out of 

 flefh. 



The ftrangle-glanders produces humours 



which nature is not able to difcharge, and they 



D fall 



