Home1797 Edition

AMBURY

Volume 1 · 298 words · 1797 Edition

or Anbury, among ferriers, denotes a tumor, wart, or swellings, which is soft to the touch, and full of blood.

This disorder of horses is cured by tying a horse's 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 too 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 finewy parts, where a hot iron is improper, they eat it away with oil of vitriol, or white sublimate. Many of our farriers boast of a secret which infallibly cures all kinds of protuberances of this kind; the preparation of which is this: Take three ounces of green vitriol and one ounce of white arsenic; beat them to a coarse powder, and put them into a crucible; place the crucible in the midst of a charcoal fire, stirring the substance, but carefully avoiding the poisonous fumes; when the whole grows reddish, take the crucible out of the fire, and, when cool, break it and take out the matter at the bottom; beat this to powder in a mortar, and add to four ounces of this powder five ounces of album rubris; make the whole into an ointment, and let it be applied cold to warts; rubbing them with it every day. They will by this means fall off gently and easily, without leaving any swellings. It is best to keep the horse quiet, and without working, during the cure. What sores remain on the parts which the swellings fall off from, may be cured with the common application called the countess's ointment.