An hipponomie or the vineyard of horsemanship deuided into three bookes. 1. The theorick part, intreating of the inward knowledge of the man.2. The first practicke part, shewing how to worke according to that knowledge. 3. The second practicke part, declaring how to apply both hunting and running horses to the true grounds of this art. In which is plainly laid open the art of breeding, riding, training and dieting of the said horses. Wherein also many errors in this art, heretofore published, are manifestly detected. By Michaell Baret ...

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Title
An hipponomie or the vineyard of horsemanship deuided into three bookes. 1. The theorick part, intreating of the inward knowledge of the man.2. The first practicke part, shewing how to worke according to that knowledge. 3. The second practicke part, declaring how to apply both hunting and running horses to the true grounds of this art. In which is plainly laid open the art of breeding, riding, training and dieting of the said horses. Wherein also many errors in this art, heretofore published, are manifestly detected. By Michaell Baret ...
Author
Baret, Michael.
Publication
London :: Printed by George Eld,
1618.
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Subject terms
Horsemanship -- Early works to 1800.
Horses -- Training -- Early works to 1800.
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"An hipponomie or the vineyard of horsemanship deuided into three bookes. 1. The theorick part, intreating of the inward knowledge of the man.2. The first practicke part, shewing how to worke according to that knowledge. 3. The second practicke part, declaring how to apply both hunting and running horses to the true grounds of this art. In which is plainly laid open the art of breeding, riding, training and dieting of the said horses. Wherein also many errors in this art, heretofore published, are manifestly detected. By Michaell Baret ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A04062.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 19, 2024.

Pages

CHAP. 24. An excellent Water for all manner of sore eyes.

TAke of the leaues and rootes of Veruine, of ordinary ho∣ny and of Roman Vitryoll, of each a like quantity, and be∣ing bruised and mixt together, put them into a Still, and distill them, keeping the water in a close glasse, then when you haue occasion to vse it, put out a little, and adde to it the fatte of a Hen, or a little Capons grease, and therewith annoint the sore eye and it will heale it.

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