Among the remedies common to living creatures, fat is the substance held in the next highest esteem, that of swine in particular, which was employed by the ancients for certain religious purposes even: at all events, it is still the usage for the newly-wedded bride, when entering her husband's house, to touch the door-posts with it. There are two methods of keeping hogs' lard, either salted or fresh; indeed, the older it is, the better. The Greek writers have now given it the name of "axungia,"[1] or axle-grease, in their works. Nor, in fact, is it any secret, why swine's fat should be possessed of such marked properties, seeing that the animal feeds to such a great extent upon the roots of plants—owing too, to which, its dung is applied to such a vast number of purposes. It will be as well, therefore, to premise, that I shall here speak only of the hog that feeds in the open field, and no other; of which kind it is the female that is much the most useful-if she has never farrowed, more particularly. But it is the fat of the wild boar that is held in by far the highest esteem of all.
The distinguishing properties, then, of swine's-grease, are
emollient, calorific, resolvent, and detergent. Some physicians
recommend it as an ointment for the gout, mixed with goose grease, bull-suet, and wool-grease: in cases, however, where
the pain is persistent, it should be used in combination with
wax, myrtle, resin, and pitch. Hogs' lard is used fresh for
the cure of burns, and of blains, too, caused by snow: with
ashes of burnt barley and nutgalls, in equal proportions, it is employed for the cure of chilblains. It is good also for excoriations
of the limbs, and for dispelling weariness and lassitude arising
from long journeys. For the cure of chronic cough, new
lard is boiled down, in the proportion of three ounces to three
The grease of a sow that has never farrowed, is the most
useful of all cosmetics for the skin of females; but in all cases,
hogs' lard is good for the cure of itch-scab, mixed with pitch
and beef-suet in the proportion of one-third, the whole being
made lukewarm for the purpose. Fresh hogs' lard, applied as
a pessary, imparts nutriment to the infant in the womb, and
prevents abortion. Mixed with white lead or litharge, it restores scars to their natural colour; and, in combination with
sulphur, it rectifies malformed nails. It prevents the hair also
from falling off; and, applied with a quarter of a nutgall, it
heals ulcers upon the head in females. When well smoked, it
strengthens the eyelashes. Lard is recommended also for phthisis,
boiled down with old wine, in the proportion of one ounce to a
semisextarius, till only three ounces are left; some persons add
a little honey to the composition. Mixed with lime, it is used
as a liniment for inflamed tumours, boils, and indurations of
the mamillæ: it is curative also of ruptures, convulsions,
cramps, and sprains. Used with white hellebore, it is good
for corns, chaps, and callosities; and, with pounded earthen-
ware[3] which has held salted provisions, for imposthumes of
the parotid glands and scrofulous sores. Employed as a friction in the bath, it removes itching sensations and pimples: but
for the treatment of gout there is another method of preparing
it, by mixing it with old oil, and adding pounded sarcophagus[4] stone and cinquefoil bruised in wine, or else with lime
It is reckoned a very good plan also to anoint ulcers with boars' grease, and, if they are of a serpiginous nature, to add resin to the liniment. The ancients used to employ hogs' lard in particular for greasing the axles of their vehicles, that the wheels might revolve the more easily, and to this, in fact, it owes its name of "axungia." When hogs' lard has been used for this purpose, incorporated as it is with the rust of the iron upon the wheels, it is remarkably useful as an application for diseases of the rectum and of the generative organs. The ancient physicians, too, set a high value upon the medicinal properties of hogs' lard in an unmixed state: separating it from the kidneys, and carefully removing the veins, they used to wash and rub it well in rain water, after which they boiled it several times in a new earthen vessel, and then put it by for keeping. It is generally agreed that it is more emollient, calorific, and resolvent, when salted; and that it is still more useful when it has been rinsed in wine.
Massurius informs us, that the ancients set the highest' value of all upon the fat of the wolf: and that it was for this reason that the newly-wedded bride used to anoint the doorposts of her husband's house with it, in order that no noxious spells might find admittance.
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