It is generally believed that asses' milk effaces wrinkles in the face, renders the skin more delicate, and preserves its whiteness: and it is a well-known fact, that some women are in the habit of washing their face with it seven[1] hundred times daily, strictly observing that number. Poppæa, the wife of the Emperor Nero, was the first to practise this; indeed, she had sitting-baths, prepared solely with asses' milk, for which purpose whole troops of she-asses[2] used to attend her on her journies.[3] Purulent eruptions on the face are removed by an application of butter, but white lead, mixed with the butter, is an improvement. Pure butter, alone, is used for serpiginous eruptions of the face, a layer of barley-meal being pow- dered over it. The caul of a cow that has just calved, is applied, while still moist, to ulcers of the face.
The following recipe may seem frivolous, but still, to please
the women,[4] it must not be omitted; the pastern-bone of a
white steer, they say, boiled forty days and forty nights, till it is
Elephantiasis, too, is removed by an application of goats' gall; and leprous spots and furfuraceous eruptions by em- ploying bull's gall with the addition of nitre, or else asses' urine about the rising of the Dog-star. Spots on the face are removed by either bull's gall or ass's gall diluted in water by itself, care being taken to avoid the sun or wind after the skin has peeled off. A similar effect is produced, also, by using bull's gall or calf's gall, in combination with seed of cunila and the ashes of a deer's horn, burnt at the rising of Canicula.
Asses' fat, in particular, restores the natural colour to scars
and spots on the skin caused by lichen or leprosy. A he-goat's
gall, mixed with cheese, live sulphur, and sponge reduced
to ashes, effectually removes freckles, the composition being
brought to the consistency of honey before being applied.
Some persons, however, prefer using dried gall, and mix with it
warm bran, in the proportion of one obolus to four oboli of honey,
the spots being rubbed briskly first. He-goat suet, too, is highly
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