The booke of faulconrie or hauking for the onely delight and pleasure of all noblemen and gentlemen: collected out of the best aucthors, asvvell Italians as Frenchmen, and some English practises withall concernyng faulconrie, the contentes whereof are to be seene in the next page folowyng. By George Turberuile Gentleman.

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Title
The booke of faulconrie or hauking for the onely delight and pleasure of all noblemen and gentlemen: collected out of the best aucthors, asvvell Italians as Frenchmen, and some English practises withall concernyng faulconrie, the contentes whereof are to be seene in the next page folowyng. By George Turberuile Gentleman.
Author
Turberville, George, 1540?-1610?
Publication
Imprinted at London :: [By Henry Bynneman] for Christopher Barker, at the signe of the Grashopper in Paules Churchyarde,
Anno 1575.
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Subject terms
Falconry -- Early works to 1800.
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"The booke of faulconrie or hauking for the onely delight and pleasure of all noblemen and gentlemen: collected out of the best aucthors, asvvell Italians as Frenchmen, and some English practises withall concernyng faulconrie, the contentes whereof are to be seene in the next page folowyng. By George Turberuile Gentleman." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A14016.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 18, 2024.

Pages

Of the disease of the eylyddes, whiche commeth of the rewme and colde.

ANother disease happeneth to Hawkes, in the eyelyddes, whiche causeth a swelling vnder the the eylydde, betweene the eye & the feare of ye beake (we haue no proper speach for it) if ye remedie it not betymes, it wyll swell rounde about: and thereof commeth the Hawe in the eye, whiche will ouergrow the eye, & stoppe it. And assure your selfe it is a signe of death, if it growe too long. For I haue seene many dye of it in my tyme, for lacke of remedie. Now by Master Amé Cassyans o∣pinion, the remedie is this. Heate the little rounde yron that I spake of afore, & cauterize hir with it softly vpon hir heade, as is said for ye Rewme. Likewise with ye other cutting yron seare hir betweene the eye & the beake. Also pierce hir nares with the lyttle yron, and afterwarde gyue hir the medicine of the Snayles, after the manner aforesayde, foure or fiue dayes togyther. And for wante of that medicine, you maye

Page 299

vse the other, of Larde, Suger, and the Marow of Beefe mingled with the powder of Saffron and Camomill.

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