An excelent pouder to eat | ||||
dead flesh out of any sore | ||||
what ever | ||||
Take a quarter of a pint of the strongest | ||||
a quavite you can get, and a quarter of | ||||
a pint of the best whitwine vineger you | ||||
can get, and as much roch allom* as the | ||||
bignesse of a great wallnutt or somewhat | ||||
more, and beat it to powder and put | ||||
them alltogether into an earthen sace pan | ||||
and so boyle it till all the moyster* be consumed, | ||||
and when it blubbereth in the boyling it is inough | ||||
so keep it for your us* you must put a little in | ||||
the sore wher the dead flesh is or if you desire | ||||
to make an isue where you would have it lay | ||||
som of the powder and bind it down hard with | ||||
a pease on it and it will eat a hole this hath | ||||
bine proved you must make it into fine powder | ||||
before you us it; | ||||
A good watter to kill a ringworme | ||||
or tetter | ||||
Take a great handfull of sallendine* leaves and | ||||
stalks and pound it in a mortar and in the pound= | ||||
ing put in a quarter of a handfull of cleane bay | ||||
salt* that never touched fish and when it is pound= | ||||
ed inough the straine out all the ioyce* and put | ||||
it in an earthen pipkin* and let it boyle till the | ||||
scime rise thicke then straine it from the skime | ||||
and keepe it for your use, when you us any of it | ||||
poure out a little into a sacer* and warme it and | ||||
then washe the sore with it | ||||
For an itch to kill it | ||||
Take some oyle of bayes and som fresh butter and | ||||
brimston pounded and sifted through tiffiny* or | ||||
lane* and som ginger finly powdered, and some | ||||
elycompaine* roots dryed and grated to powder | ||||
and mingle all this together and anoynt the party | ||||
by a good fier and lay them warm to bed do this | ||||
3 severall nights at least and shift no lining* next | ||||
them for a fortnight at least | ||||
Abbreviations are underlined like this Wm. and the expansion may be seen by moving the cursor over it.
An entry outlined like this has a note which may be seen by hovering over it. |
Transcribed by JM and CW