For the cure of gout, bears' grease is employed, mixed in
equal proportions with bull-suet and wax; some persons add
to the composition, hypocisthis[1] and nut-galls. Others, again,
prefer he-goat suet, mixed with the dung of a she-goat and
saffron, or else with mustard, or sprigs of ivy pounded and
used with perdicium,[2] or with flowers of wild cucumber. Cowdung is also used, with lees of vinegar. Some persons speak
highly in praise of the dung of a calf which has not begun to
graze, or else a bull's blood, without any other addition; a
fox, also, boiled alive till only the bones are left; a wolf boiled
alive in oil to the consistency of a cerate; he-goat suet, with
an equal proportion of helxine,[3] and one-third part of mustard; or ashes of goats' dung, mixed with axle-grease. They
say, too, that for sciatica, it is an excellent plan to apply this
dung boiling[4] hot beneath the great toes; and that, for diseases
of the joints, it is highly efficacious to attach bears' gall or
hares' feet to the part affected. Gout, they say, may be allayed
by the patient always carrying about with him a hare's foot,
cut off from the animal alive.
Bears' grease is a cure for chilblains and all kinds of chaps
upon the feet; with the addition of alum, it is still more efficacious. The same results are produced by using goat-suet;
a horse's teeth powdered; the gall of a wild boar or hog; or
else the lights of those animals, applied with their grease; and
this, too, where the soles are blistered, or the feet have been
crushed by a substance striking against them. In cases where
the feet have been frozen, ashes of burnt hare's fur are used;
and for contusions of the feet, the lights of that animal are
applied, sliced or reduced to ashes. Blisters occasioned by the
sun are most effectually treated by using asses' fat, or else
beef-suet, with oil of roses. Corns, chaps, and callosities of
the feet are cured by the application of wild boars' dung or
swine's dung, used fresh, and removed at the end of a couple
The pains attendant upon varicose veins are mitigated by using ashes of burnt calves' dung, boiled with lily roots and a little honey: a composition which is equally good for all kinds of inflammations and sores that tend to suppurate. It is very useful, also, for gout and diseases of the joints, when it is the dung of a bull-calf that is used more particularly. For excoriations of the joints, the gall of a wild boar or swine is applied, in a warm linen cloth: the dung, also, of a calf that has not begun to graze; or else goat-dung, boiled in vinegar with honey. Veal-suet rectifies malformed nails, as also goat-suet, mixed with sandarach. Warts are removed by applying ashes of burnt calves' dung in vinegar, or else the mud formed upon the ground by the urine of an ass.
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