or Anbury; among farriers, denotes a tumor, wart, or swelling, which is soft to the touch, and full of blood.
This disorder of horses is cured by tying a horse-hair very hard about its root, and, when it has fallen off, which commonly happens in about eight days, strewing some powder of verdigris upon the part, to prevent the return of the complaint. If the tumor be so low that nothing can be tied about it, they cut it out with a knife, or else burn it off with a sharp hot iron; and, in sinewy parts, where a hot iron is improper, they eat it away with oil of vitriol, or white salamare.