Every Man His Own Farrier Or the Whole Art of Farriery Laid Open Containing

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Either of these poultices must be spread on thin leather, or strong linen cloth, and laid on the part affected. If the symptoms do not abate in three or four days time, recourse must be had to bleeding and purging. In every stage of this dis- order the horse must have warm water and lOS DISEASES OF THE EYES.
Recipe — Mixture for Wounds about the Eye.
mashes. All wounds on the eyelids must be care- fully examined with a suitable probe, or with a quill made smooth at the end, and afterwards dress
...ed with the following mixture.
(RECIPE, No. 71. ) Take — Compound tincture of benzoin, two ounces; Honey of roses, one ounce ; Nitrous acid, from twenty to thirty drops : ^i^ them in a bottle for use.
This will be found very excellent for wounds about so tender a part as the eye. The wound must be dressed with a tent of fine tow, or lint, dipt in the mixture, and introduced into the wound; and, if swelled, the poultice (No. 70, p. 107) must be applied over th^ part; or, in its stead, an equal quaatity of elder and marshmallow ointments, mixed together, and rubbed on the part affected.


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