The noble lyfe a[nd] natures of man of bestes, serpentys, fowles a[nd] fisshes [that] be moste knoweu [sic].

About this Item

Title
The noble lyfe a[nd] natures of man of bestes, serpentys, fowles a[nd] fisshes [that] be moste knoweu [sic].
Publication
[Antwerp :: Emprented by me Ioh[a]n of Doesborowe],
[1527?]
Rights/Permissions

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Subject terms
Zoology -- Pre-Linnean works.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A68218.0001.001
Cite this Item
"The noble lyfe a[nd] natures of man of bestes, serpentys, fowles a[nd] fisshes [that] be moste knoweu [sic]." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A68218.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 11, 2024.

Pages

The Operacion

Plinius saith Iuste of camelion with watere and olye draweth the myse to it and killeth them except yt they dryn¦ke water by and by He that will with driue the myse out of his house / lat hī take a he mowse and fle hym quicke & than let him rōne & he shall dryue a way all the myse that be in the house. The blode of the mouse is a souerayne medecyne tone that is diseased with ye great knottis betweene the skīne & flesshe. Mouse dyrte laxeth sore

Page [unnumbered]

[illustration]

MVsquelibe is a beste in Oriente as grete as a gote / in his one sy∣de groweth an impostume through ye humours a whan it is ripe it rubbeth it a sond agaynste a tre and than ron¦neth it out vpon ye groūde & becōmeth there harde & thicke / and that same is muske yet all his bodi is muske / but yt that cōmeth out of the impostume is ye very trewe muske / and whan it hath loste his swete sauour than it wille be layde or hanged in a stynkynge place or in a pryue & there it geteth his good sauour agayne

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