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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #69970 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69970)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The English Husbandman (The Second
-Booke), by G M
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The English Husbandman (The Second Booke)
- Contayning the Ordering of the Kitchin-Garden, and the Planting
- of strange flowers: the breeding of all manner of Cattell.
-
-Author: G M
-
-Release Date: February 7, 2023 [eBook #69970]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Jonathan Ingram, Krista Zaleski and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ENGLISH HUSBANDMAN (THE
-SECOND BOOKE) ***
-
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Note
-
-Spellings are inconsistent, especially the use of ée and ee. Words
-remain as presented in the original, including the use of u/v and i/j.
-
-Note that while the title page and contents reference a “Tretise, called
-Goodmens Recreation” regarding angling and the fighting cocke [sic]
-this content was not in the original scan and thus is not included here.
-
-
-
-
- THE
- Second Booke of the
- English Husbandman.
-
- * * * * *
-
- CONTAYNING
- the Ordering of the Kitchin-Garden,
- and the Planting of strange Flowers:
- the breeding of all manner of CATTELL.
- Together with the Cures, the feeding of
- _Cattell, the Ordering both of Pastures and_
- Meddow-ground: with the vse both
- of high-wood and vnder-wood.
-
- _WHEREVNTO IS ADDED_
- a TREATISE, called _Goodmens Recreation_:
- Contayning a Discourse of the generall Art
- of Fishing, with the Angle, and otherwise;
- and of all the hidden secrets belonging
- thereunto.
-
- _TOGETHER_
- With the Choyce, Ordering, Breeding, and Dyeting
- of the fighting Cocke.
-
- A worke neuer written before by any Author.
-
- * * * * *
-
- By G. M.
-
- * * * * *
-
- LONDON:
- Printed by _T.S._ for _Iohn Browne_, and are to be sould at his
- shop in _S. Dunstanes_ Church-yard in Fleetstreet. 1614.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-A Table of all the principall matters contayned in this Booke.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-CHAP. I.
-
-How the Husbandman shall iudge and fore-know all kinde of weather, and
-other seasons of the yeere.
-
- _Of Raine._
- _Signes from clouds._
- _Signes from the Moone._
- _Signes from the Sun._
- _Signes from Lightning._
- _Signes from Fowle._
- _Signes from Beasts._
- _Signes from things without Motion._
- _Signes of much Raine._
- _Signes of Snow or Hayle._
- _Signes of Winde._
- _Signes of Tempests._
- _Signes of faire weather._
- _Signes of Winter._
- _Signes of the Spring._
- _Signes of a hot summer._
- _Signes of a long winter._
- _Signes of a forward or backward yeere._
- _Signes of a good or bad yeere._
- _Signes from Christmas day._
- _Signes from the sunne rising._
- _Signes from the twelue dayes in Christmas._
- _Signes from _S. Paules_ day._
- _Signes from _Maudlin_ and _S. Switthens_ day,
- if Corne shall be cheap or deere._
- _Signes from Thunder._
- _Signes of sickenesse or health._
- _The preseruation of health._
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-CHAP. II.
-
-The choyse of Grounds for the Kitchin-Garden, and the ordering thereof.
-
-The Contents.
-
- _The choyce of Ground._
- _The bettering of Grounds._
- _The trenching of Grounds._
- _Of breaking the Garden-mould._
- _Ordering of Garden-beds._
- _Of the fruitfull soyle._
- _The necessariest ornament in a Garden._
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-CHAP. III.
-
-Of the Sowing and Ordering of all manner Pot Hearbes.
-
-The Contents.
-
- _Of all sorts of Pot-hearbs._
- _Of Endiue and Succory._
- _Of Beets._
- _Of Land-Cresses._
- _Of Parcely._
- _Of Sauory._
- _Of Time._
- _Of French Mallowes, and Cheruil._
- _Of Dill._
- _Of Issop._
- _Of Mints._
- _Of Violets._
- _Of Basill._
- _Of Sweet Marioram and Marigolds._
- _Of Strawburyes._
- _Of Borrage and Buglosse._
- _Of Rosemary._
- _Of Pennyroyall._
- _Of Leekes._
- _Of Onyons._
- _Of gathering Onyon-seeds, or the Onyon._
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-CHAP. IIII.
-
-Of sowing of certaine Hearbes which are to be eaten, but especially are
-medicinall, yet euer in the Husbandmans Garden.
-
-The Contents.
-
- _Of Arage._
- _Of Lumbardy Louage._
- _Of Fennell._
- _Of Anyse._
- _Of Comyn._
- _Of Colyander._
- _Of Rue._
- _Of Organy._
- _Of white Poppye._
- _Of Germander._
- _Of Cardus Benedictus._
- _Of Angelica._
- _Of Valerian._
- _Of Elecampana._
- _Of Pepper-wort._
- _Of Phylipendula._
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-CHAP. V.
-
-Of diuer sorts of Sallet-Hearbes, their manner of Sowing and Ordering.
-
-The Contents.
-
- _Of Lettuce._
- _Of Spinage._
- _Of Sparagus._
- _Of Colworts._
- _Of Sage._
- _Of Purslaine._
- _Of Artichocks._
- _Of Garlicke._
- _Of Raddish._
- _Of Nauewe._
- _Of Parsenips and Carrets._
- _Of Pompions or Mellons._
- _Of Cowcumbers._
- _Of the Beanes of Ægipt._
- _Of Skerrets._
- _A most necessary obseruation._
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-CHAP. VI.
-
-Of Flowers of all sorts, both forraine and home-bred, their sowing,
-planting, and preseruing.
-
-The Contents.
-
- _Of Roses._
- _Of the Damaske Rose._
- _Of the redde Rose._
- _Of the white Rose._
- _Of the Cynamon Rose._
- _To make the Cynamon Rose grow double._
- _Of the Prouence Rose._
- _To make Roses smell well._
- _Generall notes touching Roses._
- _Of Lauender._
- _Of the white Lilly._
- _To make Lillies of any colour._
- _To make Lillies flourish all the yere._
- _Of the wood Lilly._
- _Of the Flowre de Lice._
- _Of Pyonye._
- _Of Petiluis._
- _Of veluet Flowers._
- _Of Gilly-Flowers._
- _Of grafting of Gilly-Flowers._
- _Of the smels of Gilly-Flowers._
- _Of the wall Gilly-Flower._
- _Of the Hellytropian._
- _Of the Crowne Emperiall._
- _Of the Dulippo._
- _Of the Hyacinth._
- _Of the Narcissus._
- _Of the Daffadill, Columbine, and Chesbole._
- _An excellent Caution._
- _A new manner of planting Flowers and Fruits._
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-CHAP. VII.
-
-How to preserue all manner of Seeds, Hearbs, Flowers, and Fruits, from
-all manner of noysome and pestilent things, which deuoure and hurt them.
-
-The Contents.
-
- _Of Thunder and Lightning._
- _Of Caterpillers._
- _Of Toads and Frogs._
- _Of the field Mice._
- _Of Flies._
- _Of the greene Flie._
- _Of Gnats._
- _Of Pissemires._
- _Of Moales._
- _Of Snayles._
- _Of Moathes._
- _Of Canckers._
- _Of Garden wormes._
- _An excellent experiment._
- _The Conclusion of the Kitchin-Garden._
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The Table of the second part of the second Booke. Contayning the
-Ordering of all sorts of VVoods, and the breeding of Cattell.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-CHAP. I.
-
-Of the beginning of VVoods, first sowing, and necessary vse.
-
-The Contents.
-
- _Wood better then Gold._
- _The excellent vses of Wood._
- _The plantation of Wood._
- _The fencing of young Woods._
- _When Cattel may graze in springs._
- _The vse of the Clay-ground for Woods._
- _A speciall note._
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-CHAP. II.
-
-The deuision of vnder-Woods, their sale and profit.
-
-The Contents.
-
- _The deuision of Woods._
- _The value of vnderwood._
- _Of the sale of vnderwoods._
- _How to cut vnderwoods._
- _The fencing of sales._
- _The Woodwards duty._
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-CHAP. III.
-
-Of High woods, and their plantation.
-
-The Contents.
-
- _What High-woods are._
- _The beginning of highwoods._
- _The plantation of your highwoods._
- _Of planting the Elme._
- _Of planting the Ash._
- _Obiection._
- _Answere._
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-CHAP. IIII.
-
-The preseruation and sale of High woods.
-
-The Contents.
-
- _Of Trees which take wet inwardly._
- _Of Barke-bound._
- _Of Hornets and Dores._
- _Of the Canker._
- _Of Pissemires._
- _Of Iuye, Woodbine, and Mysselto._
- _Of Thunder and Lightning._
- _Of the sale of tall Woods._
- _How to chuse Timbers._
- _Of Mill Timber._
- _Of Timber to beare burthen._
- _Timber for Poales, Wainescot, &c._
- _Timber for Piles or water workes._
- _The vse of the Elme._
- _The vse of the Ashe._
- _The vse of the Walnut tree._
- _The vse of the Peare-tree._
- _The vse of the Maple, Beech, or Poplar._
- _Of Char-coale._
- _How to valew Tymber._
- _How to measure Timber by guesse._
- _Best seasons for the sale._
- _The time for Chapmen._
- _When to cut downe Tymber._
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-CHAP. V.
-
-Of the breeding of Wood in rich Champaine Soyles.
-
-The Contents.
-
- _How to set all sorts of Quick-sets._
- _Planting of greater Trees._
- _Of the setting of Willowes, &c._
- _The vse of Willowes, Sallowes, and Oziers._
- _The ordering of Willowes._
- _The ordering of the Ozier._
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-CHAP. VI.
-
-Of plashing of Hedges, and lopping or heading of Timber.
-
-The Contents.
-
- _VVhat plashing is._
- _How to plash._
- _The time of yeere._
- _The tooles to plash with._
- _The profit of plashing._
- _The lopping of Timber._
- _What lopping is._
- _The season for lopping._
- _How you shall loppe Timber._
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-CHAP. VII.
-
-Of Pasture grounds, their order, profit, and generall vse.
-
-The Contents.
-
- _Diuersitie and vse of Pastures._
- _Of barraine Pastures._
- _Signes of barrainnesse._
- _Bettering of Soyles._
- _Sowing of good seeds._
- _For abundance of grasse._
- _The imperfection of meanure._
- _To helpe a slow Spring._
- _To helpe naughty grasse._
- _To helpe Sunne-burning._
- _To helpe ling or braken._
- _To helpe marrishes._
- _To helpe mossinesse._
- _The generall vse of barraine grounds._
- _What Cattell to be bred._
- _Of fertile grounds._
- _Deuision of rich grounds._
- _Vse of rich grounds._
- _Ordering of Pastures._
- _Feeding of Cattell._
- _How to know a fat beast._
- _Of Meddowes, and their ordering._
- _Preseruation of Meddowes._
- _VVhen to lay Meddowes._
- _VVhen to mowe Meddowes._
- _Inclination of weather._
- _The manner to mow Meddowes._
- _How to make Hay._
- _To make fine Hay._
- _To make course Hay._
- _Vse of Hay for Cattell of all sorts._
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-CHAP. VIII.
-
-A new method of the Husbandly curing of all manner of Cattell.
-
-The Contents.
-
- _The reason of this Chapter._
- _All diseases to be cured with twelue medicines._
- Of inward sicknesses.
- _The first medicine._
- _The second medicine._
- Of outward diseases.
- _The third medicine._
- _The fourth medicine._
- _The fift medicine._
- _The sixt medicine._
- _The seauenth medicine._
- _The eyght medicine._
- _The ninth medicine._
- _The tenth medicine._
- _The eleauenth medicine._
- _The twelfth medicine._
- _Diseases in the feet._
- _Diseases in the priuie parts, or for stifling._
-
-
-The end of the Table for Husbandry.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Of Angling.
-
-
-CHAP. I.
-
-Of Angling: the Vertue, Vse, and Antiquitie.
-
-The Contents.
-
- _The Vse of Angling._
- _The Antiquitie of Angling._
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-CHAP. II.
-
-Of the Tooles, and Implements for Angling.
-
-The Contents.
-
- _Of the Angle-rodde._
- _Of the toppe of the Angle-rodde._
- _The Angle-rodde of one piece._
- _The Angle-rodde of many pieces._
- _Of Lines._
- _Of colouring of Lines._
- _Of the Corke._
- _Of Angle Hookes._
- _Of other Implements for Anglers._
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-CHAP. III.
-
-Of the Anglers cloathes, and inward qualities.
-
-The Contents.
-
- _Of the ANGLERS Apparell._
- _Anglers Vertues._
- _Certaine Cautions._
-
-
-CHAP. IIII.
-
-Of the seasons to Angle in.
-
-The Contents.
-
- _The Anglers manner of standing._
- _The best seasons to Angle in._
- _Seasons ill to Angle in._
- _Of Fishes haunts._
- _Obiection._
- _Answere._
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-CHAP. V.
-
-Of Baits in generall, and of euery particular kinde, their seasons and
-vse.
-
-The Contents.
-
- _Seasons for bayts._
- _Of Flyes._
- _The making of Flyes._
- _Preseruation of Bayts._
- _Of making Pastes._
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-CHAP. VI.
-
-Of Angling for euery seuerall kinde of Fish, according to their natures.
-
-The Contents.
-
- _Of the Goodgin, Roche, and Dace._
- _Of the Carpe._
- _Of the Chub, Cheuin, or Trout._
- _Of the Eele._
- _Of the Flounder or Sewant._
- _Of the Grayling or Barbell._
- _Of the Breame._
- _Of the Tench._
- _Of the Bleke, Ruffe, or Perch._
- _Of the Pyke._
- _Of Snyckling of the Pyke._
- _Of the Salmon._
-
-
-CHAP. VII.
-
-Of taking Fish without Angles, and of laying Hookes.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-CHAP. VIII.
-
-Of preseruing Fish from all sorts of deuourers.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-CHAP. IX.
-
-Of ordering of Ponds for the preseruation of Fish.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-CHAP. X.
-
-Of the best Water-Lime.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Of the fighting Cocke.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-CHAP. I.
-
-Of the Choyce, Ordering, Breeding, and Dyeting of the fighting Cocke.
-
-The Contents.
-
- _The choyce of the Cocke for battell._
- _The breeding of the battell Cocke._
- _The dyeting of Cockes for battell._
- _Of taking vp Cockes._
- _Of the Cocke-penne._
- _Of his dyet._
- _Of sparring of Cockes._
- _The stouing of Cockes._
- _Of the best dyet-bread._
- _Of the best scowring._
- _The matching of Cockes._
- _The preparing Cockes to the fight._
- _The ordering of Cockes after the battell, and the curing them._
-
-
-FINIS.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-THE FIRST PART of the second BOOKE of the English Husbandman:
-Contayning the Ordering of the Kitchin-garden, and the planting of
-strange FLOVVERS.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. I.
-
-How the Husbandman shall iudge and fore-know all kinde of Weathers, and
-other seasons of the yeere.
-
-
-Although GOD out of his infinite prouidence, is the onely directer and
-ruler of all things, gouerning the yéeres, dayes, minutes and seasons
-of the yeere according to the power of his Will: yet for as much as hee
-hath giuen vs his Creatures, and placed the Celestiall bodies to holde
-their influences in vs, and all things else which haue increasement,
-reuealing vnto vs from their motions, the alteration and qualities of
-euery season, it shall be very behouefull for euery Husbandman to know
-the signes and tokens of euery particular season, as when it is likely
-to Raine, when Snow, when Thunder, when the Winds will rise, when the
-Winter will rage, & when the Frosts will haue the longest continuance,
-that fashioning his labours, according to the temperature or
-distemperature of the weather, hee may with good iudgement and aduise,
-eschew many euils which succéede rash and vnfore-looking actions.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Rayne.]
-
-To speake then first of the generall signes of Raine, you shall
-vnderstand that the olde Husbandmen did obserue rules generall, and
-rules speciall: the generall rules were such as concerned eyther all,
-most, or a great part of the whole yéere: the rules speciall, those
-which concerned dayes, houres, and times present: of which I will first
-speake in this place.
-
-[Sidenote: Signes from Clouds.]
-
-If therefore you shall at any time perceiue a Cloud rising from the
-lowest part of the Horizon, and that the maine body be blacke and
-thicke, and his beames (as it were) Curtaine-wise, extending vpward,
-and driuen before the windes: it is a certaine and infallible signe of
-a present showre of Raine, yet but momentary and soone spent, or passed
-ouer: but if the Cloud shall arise against the Winde, and as it were
-spread it selfe against the violence of the same, then shall the Raine
-be of much longer continuance.
-
-[Sidenote: Signes from the Moone.]
-
-If when you sée the new Moone appeare, you perceiue that some part
-of her Hornes are obscured, or if it be black, or discoulored in the
-middest: if it hang much to the West, if it be compast or girdled
-about, eyther with thicke, or waterish transparent vapours: if it
-looke more then ordinarily pale, or if it shall beginne to raine small
-and mist-like on the fourth or fift day of her age, all these are
-infallible signes of Raine, and the last an assured signe that the
-Raine will continue all that quarter of the Moone following.
-
-[Sidenote: Signes from the Sunne.]
-
-If you shall sée the Sunne rise earely in the Morning, and spread forth
-his Beames violently, yet with a very moyst and waterish complexion,
-and there-withall in the West you doe sée a bedde of thicke vapours to
-arise, increase and ascend vpward, then shall you bee assured that at
-high noone, when those vapours and the Sunne shall méet, there will be
-raine, and that raine of no short continuance: If you shall sée the
-Sunne rise red, and turne sodainely blacke, if it haue many red clouds
-about it mixt with blackenesse, if it haue a spacious Circle about it,
-or if when it setteth you sée it fall behinde a banke of darke and
-blacke Cloudes, they be all most certaine and infallible signes of
-raine, which will presently follow.
-
-[Sidenote: Signes from the Lightning.]
-
-If it lighten at noone, or any time whilest the Sunne shineth, eyther
-with Thunder or without thunder, or if it lighten in fayre weather, or
-if it lighten more then it thundereth, all are most certaine signes of
-raine which will follow.
-
-[Sidenote: Signes from Fowle.]
-
-If you shall perceiue water-Fowle to bathe much: if the Crow wet her
-head at the water brimme, or if shée wade into the water, or if she
-shall cry and call much: if the Rauen shall croake with a hollow or
-sounding voyce: if the house-Cocke shall crow at all houres: if Pigions
-shall come home late to the Doue-house: if Sparrowes shall chyrpe and
-cry earely in the morning: if Bées flye not farre from their Hyues:
-if Flies and small Gnats bite sharpe and sore, all are most certaine
-signes of raine, which will presently follow.
-
-[Sidenote: Signes from Beasts.]
-
-If you shall perceiue your Oxen to eate more gréedily, and with a more
-earnest stomacke then their vsuall custome: if your Kine gaze and looke
-much vpward: if Swine shall play and gambole vp and downe: if Horses
-being at grasse shall scope, course, and chase one another: or if the
-Cat shall wash behinde her eare, all are certaine signes of raine to
-follow.
-
-[Sidenote: Signes from things without motion.]
-
-If Salt turne moyst standing in dry places, if Channels, Vaults, and
-common Sewers stincke more then vsuall: if Bels seeme to sound louder
-then they were wont: if the Tazell at any time close vp his pricks: if
-Soote fall much from the Chimney: If oyle shall sparkle much when it
-burneth, or if Marble, Pauing-stone, or other wals shall sweat, or be
-much moyst, all are most ineuitable signes of rayne which will follow.
-
-[Sidenote: Signes of much Raine.]
-
-If Raine, when it falleth, make great bubbles, or such a noyse as is
-not ordinary: or if raine fall mildely, small, and mist-like: or if
-rayne fall in a calme when no winde stirreth: or if when it rayneth you
-cannot perceiue the Racke or Clouds to moue: if Pullen flye to their
-roust assoone as the raine begins: if the Raine-bow stretch towards
-the South, or if it doe reflect and shéedoole: if you shall sée one or
-more Weather-gals which are like Raine-bowes, onely they arise from the
-Horison but a small way vpward, all these are most certaine signes of
-much raine that will follow.
-
-[Sidenote: Signes of Snow or Haile.]
-
-If blacke Clouds shall turne sodainely white: if about eyther the Sunne
-or Moone be pale, and waterish Circles, or that they séeme to shine
-as through a miste: if the Ayre be thicke and extreame cold without
-frosts: if with the signes of raine be mixt signes of cold also, or if
-windes be nipping and extreame sharp, all are most certaine tokens that
-Snow or Hayle will follow presently after.
-
-[Sidenote: Signes of winde.]
-
-If when the Sunne setteth it looketh red and fiery, and that all that
-part of the Horizon looke red also, or if it looke blewish, or séeme
-greater then his ordinary proportion: If the Moone doe blush or looke
-high colloured, if the Racke ride high, and the Firmament be much
-vaulted: if Woods and Hils séeme to make a noyse: if the Stars séeme
-to shine brighter then vsuall: if it shall thunder in Winter, or if it
-thunder without lightning: if Bels be heard farre off with more ease
-then accustomed, and presently in the same instant be not heard at all:
-If Cobwebs flye much in the ayre: If Hernes or Heronshoes cry much in
-their flying: If fire sparkle much, or if wood or Wainscot cracke much,
-all these are most certaine signes of much winde that will follow after.
-
-[Sidenote: Signes of tempests.]
-
-If you shall perceiue the Morning or Euening Sunne, eyther in the
-Sommer or in the Autumne, to shine hotter or to scortch more then
-accustomed, when the ayre is prest with an extreame blacke cloude,
-or with many clouds, if you perceiue whirlewindes to blow oft and
-violently: if you sée the Raine-bow shall appeare in the West without
-raine: if you sée flames and meteors flashing in the ayre, or if the
-Porpus shall be séene in the fresh Riuer, all are most certaine signes
-of thunder, lightnings and tempests, which will follow.
-
-[Sidenote: Signes of faire weather.]
-
-If the Sun rise gray and cléere in the morning, and likewise setteth
-without darkenesse, not loosing a minute in the declination: if the
-euening skye be ruddy and not fierie, more purple then skarlet: if the
-Moone be cléere when it is foure or fiue dayes olde: if it lighten
-after Sunne-set without thunder: if the dewe fall in great abundance
-and in the rising ascend vp to the mountaines: if the North winde blow
-strong: if the Owle doe whup much and not scrytch: if flyes at night
-play much in the Suns beames: if Crowes flocke much together, and
-cakell and talke: if Bats flye busily vp and downe after Sunne-set,
-if you sée Cranes flye high, and water-Fowle make their haunts farre
-off from the water, all these are most certaine signes of very faire
-weather which will follow after.
-
-[Sidenote: Signes of Winter.]
-
-If water-Fowle forsake the Water: if the Nightingale sing more then
-other Birds, if Cranes flocke together, if Géese fight for their
-féeding place, or if Sparrowes call very earely in the Morning, any of
-these are certaine signes that winter is néere at hand.
-
-[Sidenote: Signes of the Spring.]
-
-If the West winde blowe freshly Morning and Euening: if the colde abate
-and loose much of his vigor, if Swallowes begin to come in and flye
-busily about, if the brest-bone of the Mallard or Woodcocke looke white
-and cléere, any of these are certaine signes that the Spring is at hand.
-
-[Sidenote: Signes of a hot Sommer.]
-
-If the Ramme ride in the Spring, and shew more then an vsuall lust: if
-the Spring haue beene very extraordinarily colde, or if Mildewes fall
-not in the Woodland-Countryes, any of these are certaine signes of a
-hot Summer to follow after.
-
-[Sidenote: Signes of a long Winter.]
-
-If you shall sée the Oake leaden with Akornes: if the brest-bone of the
-Mallard when he is kild looke red: if Hornets be séene after the end
-October, or if Cattell doe trample and tread the earth much, making
-it myrie, or like a new plowde field: any of these are most certaine
-signes that the Winter will be sharpe, long, and cruell.
-
-[Sidenote: Signes of a forward or backward yeer.]
-
-If there fall much Raine before October, by meanes whereof many
-inundations doe follow, and that such wet lye long aboue ground: it
-is a most infallible token that the yéere will be very forward: but
-if the wet doe fall after October then it is a signe that the yéere
-will be indifferent, but and if the wet fall after Nouember, then it
-is held for most certaine that the yéere will fall out very slacke and
-backeward.
-
-[Sidenote: Signes of a good or bad yeere.]
-
-If the Oke Apples, when they are opened, bréed flyes, or if Haruest be
-seasonable, and the Spring warme: if Snow fall in February: if Broome
-put forth great store of Flowers: if the Walnut-trée haue more blossoms
-then leaues: if the flower of the Sea-Onion wither not quickly, or if
-the Spring be preserued from frosts and blasting, then any of these are
-certaine signes that the yéere will proue passing good and fruitfull:
-but if the Oake Apple bréede instéed of a Flye a Spyder: if Comets or
-Meteors oppresse the Ayre: if the Sommer fall out vnnaturally moyst:
-if the dewes when they fall at the rising of the Sunne descend to the
-Riuers: if frosts come in vnseasonable times: if wood-Birds flye to the
-plaines, and refuse couert: if the Sunne haue his whole body, or at
-least thrée parts Ecclipsed: when Corne beginneth to bloome, and is not
-fully Kirneld, then any of these be most certaine signes that the yéere
-will proue bad, barrayne, & fruitlesse.
-
-[Sidenote: Signes from Christmas day.]
-
-Againe, if Christmas day shall fall vpon the Sunday, the yéere shall be
-good, seasonable and abounding with all store and plenty: if it fall
-vpon Munday the yéere shall be reasonable temperate and fruitfull,
-onely something subiect to inundation of waters, losse by shipwracke,
-and some mortality of people, especially women in childbearing: if it
-fall vpon Tuesday, the yéere will proue very barraine and vnfruitfull,
-much dearth will raigne, and amongst people great plague and
-mortallitie: if it fall vpon Wednesday, the yéere shall be reasonably
-seasonable, though a little inconstant: there shall be plenty of all
-things, onely much sickenesse, and great likelyhood of warres: if it
-fall vpon the Thursday, the yéere shall be generally very temperate
-and wholesome, onely the Sommer subiect to moistnesse, much deuision
-is like to fall amongst the Clergie, and women shall be giuen to more
-laciuiousnesse then at other seasons: if it fall on the Friday, the
-yéere shall be barraine and vnwholesome, for sickenesse shall rage with
-great violence, much mortallitie shall fall amongst yong Children,
-and both Corne and Cattell shall be scarce, and of a déere reckoning:
-if it fall on the Saturday, the yéere shall be reasonably good and
-plentifull, onely the people of the world shall be excéeding peruerse,
-& much giuen to mutinie & dissention one against another.
-
-[Sidenote: Signes from the Sunne rising.]
-
-Againe, if the Sunne rise without impediment, and shine bright and
-cléere vpon Christmas day, the yéere will be very plentifull: if it
-rise likewise cléere the second day in Christmas, then Corne will fall
-in price: if it rise cléere the third day in Christmas, there will
-onely be dissention in the Church: if on the fourth day, it foreshewes
-trouble vnto yong persons: if on the fift day, it shewes that many
-good things will increase: if on the sixt, doubtlesse euery Garden
-will bring forth great plenty: if on the seauenth, then is much dearth
-and scarcitie to be feared: if it shine cléere on the eyght day in
-Christmas, then there is likely to be great store of Fish: if on the
-ninth, it will doubtles proue a good yéere for all manner of Cattell:
-if on the tenth, the yéere is likely to yéeld much cause of mourning:
-if on the eleauenth, there will fall much fogges, thicke mistes, and
-great infection will follow after. Lastly, if the Sunne shine cléere
-the twelfth day after Christmas, it fore-shewes much warre and troubles,
-with great losse and bloudshed.
-
-[Sidenote: Signes from the twelue dayes in Christmas.]
-
-Againe, according to these former obseruations, you shall vnderstand,
-that what weather shall fall or be on the sixe and twentieth day of
-December, the like weather shall be all the moneth of Ianuary after,
-what shall be on the seauen and twentieth of December, the like shall
-be all the moneth of February following: what weather shall be on the
-eight and twentieth day of December, the like weather shall be all
-March following: what weather shall be the nine and twentieth day of
-December, the same shall be all Aprill after: what on the thirtieth,
-the same all May: what on the one and thirtieth the like all Iune
-following: what weather shall fall on the first of Ianuary, the same
-shall be all Iuly after: what on the second of Ianuary, the same all
-August after: what on the third, the same all September after: what on
-the fourth, the same all October following: what on the fift, the same
-all Nouember after, and what weather shall fall on the sixt of Ianuary,
-which is Twelft-day, the same weather shall fall all December following.
-
-[Sidenote: Signes from Saint _Pauls_ day.]
-
-Againe, if Saint _Pauls_ day proue fayre, dry and bright, it
-foresheweth plenty of all things the yéere following: but if it be
-misty then it shewes great dearth of Cattell. If there fall vpon that
-day Snow or Raine, then it shewes Famine and Want of Corne, but if it
-be windy, tempestuous, or if it thunder, then it sheweth that great
-warres will follow.
-
-[Sidenote: Signes from _Maudlin_, and Saint _Swythens_ day.]
-
-Againe, looke what quantitie of raine falleth eyther on _Mary Maudlins_
-day, or on Saint _Swithens_ day, be it more or lesse, the same
-proportion will fall for the space of forty dayes after: but if these
-two dayes be fayre and dry all the time of Haruest will be so also.
-
-[Sidenote: If Corne shall be cheape or deare.]
-
-Now if you will know whether Corne shall be cheape or déere, take
-twelue principall graynes of Wheate out of the strength of the eare,
-vpon the first day of Ianuary, and when the harth of your Chimney
-is most hot, swéepe it cleane, then make a stranger lay one of those
-Graynes on the hot hearth, then marke it well, and if it leape a
-little, Corne shall be reasonably cheape, but if it leape much then
-Corne shall be excéeding cheape, but if it lye still and moue not, then
-the price of Corne shall stand, and continue still for that Moneth: and
-thus you shall vse your twelue Graines, the first day of euery Moneth
-one after another, that is to say, euery Moneth one Graine, and you
-shall know the rising and falling of Corne in euery Moneth, all the
-yéere following.
-
-[Sidenote: Signes from Thunder.]
-
-If it shall thunder much the first Sunday of the New-yéere, it shewes
-great death and mortallitie amongst learned men: if it thunder the
-first Munday, it shewes great death of women, and many Eclipses of the
-Sunne: if it thunder on the first Tuesday, it shewes plenty of Corne,
-but much Warre and dissention: if it thunder on the first Wednesday,
-it shewes mortallitie and death amongst the worst sort of people, both
-Male and Female, besides much Warre and bloudshed: if it thunder on the
-first Thursday in the New-yéere, it sheweth much plenty of Corne that
-will follow: if it thunder on the first Friday, it betokeneth the losse
-of great personages, and men of authoritie, many affrayes and murthers,
-with much perill and danger. Lastly, if it thunder vpon the first
-Saturday in the New-yéere, it foresheweth onely a generall plague and
-infection, which shall raigne with strong violence.
-
-[Sidenote: Signes of sicknes or health.]
-
-If you shall perceiue the Summer and Spring time to fall out very
-moyst and rainy, without winde, yet in their owne natures very hot &
-scortching, or if the Southerne or Southwest-winde blow much without
-raine: if many fogs and mists fall in the Morning, and ouercome the
-Sunnes beames at noone also: if the Sunne suffer any large Eclipse:
-if Autumne and Winter be more foggy then moyst or cold: if the Dowe
-or Leauen, of which you mould your bread, doe quickely mould and
-cleaue together without labour: if Dogs runne madde, if Birds forsake
-their nests: if Shéepe rot: if Fennes, Marrish-grounds, and muddy
-places abound with Frogges: if Mud-wals bréede Swine lice or Sowes:
-if Moales forsake the earth: if the small Pocks or Meazels be rife
-and abound in the Spring time, or if women generally doe miscarry in
-childe-bedde, any of these are most certaine signes of much sickenesse
-and mortallitie that will follow the yéere after: and all such signes
-as are directly contrarie to any of these, as if the Summer and Spring
-doe fall out drye and windy: if the South or Southwest-winde bring with
-it euer rayne: if no fogs or mists oppresse the ayre, and so forth of
-all the rest which are before shewed, are most certaine and infallible
-tokens of a very wholesome and healthfull yéere, which will euer follow
-after.
-
-[Sidenote: The preseruation of health.]
-
-Now for the preseruation of your health, and to preuent all such
-sickenesses as are incident to follow in these casuall and daungerous
-yéeres: through euery seuerall moneth in the yéere you shall obserue
-these few precepts.
-
-First, in the month of Ianuary you shall forbeare to let bloud, vnlesse
-vpon violent extreamitie, & that the signes be excéeding good for the
-same, you shall drinke white wine in the morning fasting, & rub your
-head with a course Towell very hard, but yet cleane, for it is a most
-wholesom friction.
-
-In the month of February, you shall not let bloud for wantonnesse, but
-néede: you shall forbeare Hearbe-pottage, for at that time onely they
-are least wholesome: you shall kéepe the soles of your féete from wet,
-and vse euery morning your former friction.
-
-In the moneth of March, the signe being good, you may let bloud
-according to your youth, strength, and necessitie: you may take hot and
-swéet meats and drinkes, especially Almonds, Figs & Reyzins, & vse also
-your former friction.
-
-In the month of Aprill, you may bléed as in the month of March: in it
-also you may purge, by the order of a learned directer: let your dyet
-be hot and fresh meats, and your drinke temperate: also in this moneth
-your former friction is excéeding wholesome.
-
-In the month of May be no sluggard, for the bed is vnwholesome,
-cléerified Way is this moneth a most soueraigne drinke, and Sage
-with swéet Butter is a most excellent breakefast: yong Lettuce is an
-approued good Sallet, and the inthrals or offall of Beasts would by all
-meanes be refused, it is also good to let bloud in this month onely for
-necessitie, and not for pleasure, and beware by all means, not to go
-wetshooed in the dew of the morning.
-
-In the month of Iune obserue the dyet of May, or if you be of youthfull
-bloud it is not amisse if it be a little cooler, and for bléeding let
-it be for vrgent necessitie.
-
-In the month of Iuly eschew all wanton bed-sport: and if each morning
-you take of draught of clarified Butter-Milke it is very wholesome: vse
-coole Iulyps, and meats that are fresh, and not stirring: now forbeare
-Lettice, and bléede not, except it be in cause of great extreamitie.
-
-In the month of August forbeare all manner of Worts, and Cabadges, and
-generally all meats and Spices which are hot and inflaming: but by
-any meanes bléed not at all, except by the direction of most approued
-learning.
-
-In the month of September you may eate any sort of ripe Fruits: you
-may bathe in hot bathes, for colde causes, at your pleasure, and you
-may let bloud according to your necessitie: those foods are best which
-are of lightest disgestion, and those drinkes most wholesome which are
-rather strong then scouring.
-
-In the moneth of October, spare not any bloud, except great extreamitie
-compell you, and for your dyet, let it be of such foods as are most
-strong and nourishing, and your drinke Béere or Ale, of indifferent
-strength, and now and then at the midst, and end of meales, a
-draught or two of such Wines as are pleasant, strong, and wholesome:
-Sallets of Flowers, preserued in Vinegar & Sugar, as either Violets,
-Broome-flowers, or Gelly-flowers of all kindes, or Sampyre, Purslan, or
-Beane-rods, preserued in pickell, are of excellent vse, both in this
-moneth, and the other two which follow.
-
-In the Moneth of Nouember open also no vaine, but for great néed,
-because the blood is then gathered together into the principall
-vessels: Bathing in this Moneth is vtterly to be refused, onely let
-your body be kept warme, and euery colde humour or obstruction, rather
-dissolued by moderate frictions, as is shewed in the moneth of Ianuary
-and February, then by the violence of any other inward medicine.
-Shell-Fish in this moneth is very wholesome, and so are all other sorts
-of Fish, which are not too rawe or slymie.
-
-In the Moneth of December blood-letting should be also forborne, except
-vpon some especiall dayes, as after the fiue and twentieth day at the
-soonest: and for your diet let it be meate which is hot and nourishing,
-but by no meanes that which bréedeth melancholie bloud. Vse strong
-Wine and sharpe Sauces: as for the warmth of your body, next vnto good
-cloathing, let it euer procéed from exercise that is moderate, then
-from toasting, or broiling your selfe against the fire, for in this
-Month that body can hardly be sound whose shinnes are made pyde and
-motley with the fiers scortching.
-
-And thus much touching the experience of the English Husbandman in
-these fore-knowledges, and ayming after the times to come, being
-drawne from the obseruations and rules left vs by succession of times
-of those learned Fathers, and other best knowne and approued in
-these knowledges: yet I doe not binde euery Husbandman to make as it
-were new Créeds of these Principles, but onely to giue them to his
-memory, as things that will neither oppresse nor hurt it, and if in
-any seldome-séene particularitie, any shall vary from the purpose of
-the relation, to remember that there is aboue vs a God of all Truth
-and Knowledge, who will dispose and gouerne all things, according to
-his good Will and Pleasure: to which let euery Creature submit, in
-as much as hee onely knoweth what is for mankinde most best and most
-conuenient.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. II.
-
-The choyce of ground for the Kitchin-garden, and the ordering thereof.
-
-
-A Promise honest and profitable, being seriously made, I holde a sinne
-capitall to neglect, especially where the goodnesse stretcheth it
-selfe ouer a whole Kingdome: and hence I haue assumed to perfect both
-my promise and my labour in building vp that weake foundation which
-I formerly laid, of the English Husbandman: wherein, contrary to all
-other Authors, I am neither beholden to _Pliny, Virgil, Columella,
-Varo, Rutillius, Libault_, nor any other Forrainer, but onely to our
-owne best experienst Countreymen, whose daily knowledge hath made
-them most perfect in their professions: and what better instruction
-can be had then that which we receiue from the professors, being men
-of our owne neighbourhood, acquainted with our Climate and Soile, and
-the necessary things agréeing with the bettering of the same: and not
-resort, as our Translators haue done, to strangers helpe, who tels you
-that you must meanure your ground with Asses dung, when our Kingdome
-hath not so many foure-footed Asses as wil meanure one Acre, and many
-such like things which our Kingdome affordeth not: therefore according
-to the plaine true English fashion, thus I pursue my purpose.
-
-[Sidenote: The choyce of Ground.]
-
-Touching the choyse of Ground, I haue in the former part of this Booke
-shewed you the true nature and goodnesse of euery seuerall Soyle: and
-you are to vnderstand that the best Soyle is best for this purpose,
-because it is least laborsome, and most profitable: yet notwithstanding
-that some of our translated Authors doth vtterly disalow for Gardens
-many Soyles, as namely, all Sands, all Chawkie earths, all Grauell, all
-Earths like dust, and any Earth which chappeth or openeth in the heat
-of Summer, by that meanes depriuing almost halfe our kingdome of the
-benefit of Gardens, yet I assure you there is no Soyle whatsoeuer (if
-it lye from the inundation of water, or be not absolutely boggy) but
-with industry will beare any Fruit, Hearbe, or Flower, plentifully, and
-without any casualtie procéeding from the barraines therof: witnes a
-most worthy Garden in the barren Peake of _Darbyshire_, where there is
-no curious Trée or Plant wanting, nor doe they flourish in any place
-more brauely.
-
-[Sidenote: The bettering of Grounds.]
-
-[Sidenote: The trenching of Grounds.]
-
-Now for mine owne part, I write generally to all Husbandmen, not to
-those onely which liue in fertile and fat Soyles, and therefore I would
-haue no man say, the Soyle where I liue is so barraine, that I cannot
-haue a Garden: for if the Soyle wherein you liue, be barraine, then
-shall you in the latter end of September breake vp your earth more then
-a Spade-graft déepe, and be well assured that at euery Spade-graft you
-breake the mould well, and leaue not the rootes of any wéeds within it,
-then let it rest till the midst of October, at which time if any wéeds
-appeare vpon it, by all meanes let them be pluckt vp by the roots,
-which done, you shall trench your ground at least a yarde and a halfe
-déepe, and then bury in those trenches, if it be a Sand or grauell
-earth, great store of Oxe or Cow meanure, if it be a colde Chalkie
-Clay, or a moyst ground, then great store of Horse meanure, of both
-which meanures the oldest and rottenest is the best: but if you liue in
-such a Soyle as there is neyther of these meanures bred therein, then
-take straw of any kinde whatsoeuer, and spread it in the high-way where
-there is much trauell, & when it is rotten with the beating of Horse
-féet, then cause it to be shoueld vp, & with it fill your trenches,
-but if Straw be wanting, then if you haue any muddy ditches or ponds,
-scowre the mud out of them, & with it fill vp your trenches: & although
-these are not so long lasting as the two first sorts of meanures,
-yet they are sufficient to bring forth increase, & must supply where
-necessity inforceth, alwayes hauing discretion when you sée your
-ground abate in fruitfulnes, to replenish it with fresh meanure.
-
-Now as you fill your trenches with meanure, let one mixe the earth
-therewithall, and as it were blend and incorporate them together: thus
-hauing gone ouer so much ground as you intend to plant or sowe vpon,
-you shall let it rest till the midst of Ianuary, at which time you
-shall breake it vp in trenches againe, but not aboue thrée quarters
-of a yarde déepe, and then fill vp those trenches with meanure as
-before, and lay your earth as leuell as is possible, & so let it rest
-till the beginning of March (if the weather be seasonable for sowing
-or planting) otherwise let it stay till mid-March, and as soone as the
-Moone is changed you shall then dig it vp the fourth time, and make it
-fit to receyue your séede, but in this fourth time of turning ouer your
-earth, you shall dig it but a little better then a Spade-graft depth,
-and euer as you dig it, mixe it with fresh meanure: if your ground be
-subiect to much chapping or rining, then you shall at this last digging
-mixe the earth with ashes and Horse meanure mixt together, which will
-binde and holde the earth from chapping.
-
-[Sidenote: Of breaking the Garden moulde.]
-
-[Sidenote: Ordering of Garden-beds.]
-
-After you haue digd your ground in this order, and made it leuell,
-you shal with an Iron Rake breake the great clods of earth, and bring
-it to as fine a mould as is possible, euer obseruing that if in the
-breaking of the clods or otherwise, you perceiue the roots or stalks of
-any wéeds to arise, you shall presently with your hand pull them out,
-and cast them on heaps, that they may serue eyther for the fire or the
-dunghill: which done, you shall tread out your beds in such orderly
-sort, that you may passe from one to the other without eyther treading
-vpon the beds, or striding ouer them: & thus much for the barraine &
-sterrill ground, which although all ancient & late writers reiect, as
-not worthy to be imployed to this vse, yet beléeue it, being husbanded
-as is said before, it will equall in fruitfulnes the best ground.
-
-[Sidenote: Of the fruitfull Soyle.]
-
-Touching your rich and perfect grounds, which of themselues are apt
-to put forth with little labour, you shall onely at the latter end
-of September breake vp the Earth, and making greater Trenches, fill
-them well with Oxe meanure, and then turning the Earth vpon the
-meanure, leuell your ground very carefully, breake the clots and
-rake it very painefully, and then treade out your beds, as is before
-sayd, artificially; but if the ground which you breake vp, be eyther
-gréene-swarth, or much ouergrowne with wéeds (as these rich soyles
-must euer be the one or the other) (for they will not be idle, but
-continually bringing forth) then at this first digging and dunging you
-shall haue diuers which shall follow the Spade, who shall take away
-all manner of roots, gréenes, grasse-tufts, stones, or whatsoeuer may
-bréede anoyance to the ground: which worke being perfected, you shall
-let the ground rest all winter till the beginning of March, that the
-frost may mellow and ripen the mould, and also kill the roots of such
-wéeds as the Spade hath turned vp, and haue béene omitted to be pulled
-away.
-
-Now so soone as March is come, vpon the first change of the Moone, you
-shall digge vp this Earth againe, leuell it, and order it in all points
-as was sayd of the barraine Earth, onely there will néede no more vse
-of meanure, but as soone as it is digged, raked, leuelled, and brought
-into a fine mould, you may then tread out your Beds, as aforesayd, euer
-proportioning the quantitie of them according to the quantitie of your
-séedes, hauing the most of that which is most in vse, and the least of
-the contrary.
-
-Now as touching the fencing and inclosing of your Garden, I haue in
-the former Booke shewed you the same at large, and giuen seuerall
-instructions, according to mens seuerall abilities, with this caution,
-that whether your fence be wall, pale, dead-hedge, ditch, or quickset,
-yet it must be so high that it may with assurance kéepe all manner of
-Pullen from flying ouer the same, who are the greatest enemies to a
-Garden that may be.
-
-[Sidenote: The necessariest Ornament in a Garden.]
-
-There would be also in this Kitchin-Garden, if with conueniency it may
-be brought to passe, eyther a Pumpe, Well, or Cesterne, which might
-flow continually with water all the Summer time, for the watering of
-Hearbs, as shall be héereafter declared. And thus much touching the
-choyce of ground for a Kitchin-garden, and the ordering of the same.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. III.
-
-_Of the sowing and ordering of all manner of Pot-hearbs._
-
-
-When you haue prepared your ground, and cast your beds in an orderly
-fashion, as is before spoken, you shall then take your Séeds which
-Séeds would by no meanes be aboue a yéere olde: and hauing sorted them
-seuerally, euery one by it selfe, and appointed the beds which shall
-seuerally receiue them: you shall in this manner sowe your Pot-hearbs,
-which craue not much roote, because their onely benefit is in the
-leafe: take your séeds and put them into a wooden Tray, then take your
-Garden moulde, the finest that may be, being made almost as fine as
-ashes, and mixe your Séeds, and that mould very well together, then goe
-to the bedde where you meane to bestow them, and hauing newly rackt
-it (to stirre vp the fresh mould) with your hand sprinkle and sowe
-them all ouer the bed, so thicke as may be: which done, with a fine
-Rake, rake the bed gently ouer, then taking spare fine mould, put it
-into a ridling Siue, and sift it ouer the bed better then two fingers
-thickenesse, and so let it rest: thus you shall doe seuerally with
-euery séede one after another, bestowing euery one vpon a seuerall bed.
-
-[Sidenote: Of all sorts of Pot-hearbs.]
-
-[Sidenote: Of _Endiue_ and _Succorie_.]
-
-Now for your Pot-hearbs, which are most generally in vse, they be
-these: _Endiue_ and _Succorie_, which delight in moyst ground, and
-will endure the winter. _Bleete_ of which there be two kindes, Red and
-White: this Hearbe neuer néedeth wéeding, and if he be suffered to shed
-his séed it will hardly euer to be got out of a Garden.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Beets.]
-
-Then _Beets_, which must be much wéeded, for they loue to liue by
-themselues, and if they grow too thicke you may take them vp when they
-are a finger long in their owne earth, and set them in another bed, and
-they will prosper much better.
-
-[Sidenote: Land-Cresses.]
-
-Then land _Cresses_, which is both a good Pot-hearbe and a good
-Sallet-Hearbe: it loueth shadowie places, where the Sunne shineth
-least, and standeth in néed of little dung.
-
-[Sidenote: Parcely.]
-
-Then _Parcely_, which of all Hearbs is of most vse, it is longest in
-appearing aboue ground, and the elder séed is the quicker in growth,
-but not the surer; but eyther being once come vp increase naturally,
-and doe hardly euer decay: it cannot grow too thicke, but as you vse it
-you must cut off the toppes with your knife, and by no meanes pull vp
-the rootes: if it be put into a little pursse, and beaten against the
-ground, to bruise it a little before it be sowne, it will make it haue
-a large crisped leafe.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Sauory.]
-
-Then _Sauory_, of which are two kindes, the Winter-_Sauory_, and
-Summer, both delight in leane ground, and are quicke of growth, and
-long lasting.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Time.]
-
-Then _Time_, of which are also two kindes, the running _Time_, and the
-Garden _Time_: they delight in fertile ground, and from the séede are
-very slow of growth, therefore it is best euer to set them from the
-slip. The running _Time_ doth delight in the shadow, but the Garden
-_Time_ in the Sunne.
-
-[Sidenote: French Mallowes.]
-
-Then French-_Mallowes_, which will ioy in any ground, and are quicke of
-growth.
-
-[Sidenote: Cheruill.]
-
-Then _Cheruill_, which will not by any meanes grow with any other
-Hearbe.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Dill.]
-
-Then _Dill_, which may be sowne almost in any moneth of the yéere as
-well as March: it endureth all weathers, but loueth the warmth best.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Isop.]
-
-Then _Isop_, which in like manner as _Time_ is, slow of growth from
-the séed, and therefore fitter to be set from the slips, after it
-hath once taken roote it encreaseth wonderfully, and will hardly be
-destroyed.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Mints.]
-
-Then _Mints_, which flourish onely in the Summer time, but dye in the
-Winter, it delighteth most in the moyst ground.
-
-[Sidenote: Violets.]
-
-Then _Violets_, the leaues whereof are a good Pot-hearb, and the
-Flowers preserued in close glasse pots, with strong Wine-vinegar and
-Sugar, a most excellent Sallet: it doth delight to grow high, and will
-grow spéedely eyther from the plant or from the séed.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Basill.]
-
-Then _Basill_, which would be sowne in the warme weather, as at the
-beginning of May, for the séed is tender, and when you haue sowne it,
-you shall presse the earth downe vpon it with your féet, for the séede
-can endure no hollownesse: if you sowe it at the fall of the Leafe, you
-shall sprinkle the séede with Vinegar, and when you water it let the
-Sunne be at his height.
-
-[Sidenote: Sweet Marioram.]
-
-Then swéet _Marioram_, which would be sowne on rich ground, and farre
-from Sunneshine, for it taketh no delight in his beames.
-
-[Sidenote: Marigolds.]
-
-Then _Marigolds_, which renew euery moneth, and endure the Winter as
-well as the Summer: this Hearbe the oftner you remoue it, the bigger it
-groweth.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Strawberries.]
-
-Then _Strawberries_, whose leaues are a good Pot-hearbe, and the fruit
-the wholesommest berry: this Hearbe of all other, would be set of the
-plant, and not sowne from the séed, for the oft changing and remouing
-of it causeth it to grow bigger and bigger: it groweth best vnder the
-shadowes of other Hearbes, but very sufficiently in beds, or else where.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Borage and Buglosse.]
-
-Then _Borage_ and _Buglosse_, both which are of one nature: they would
-be sowne in small quantity, for where they take they will runne ouer
-a whole Garden: the séed must be gathered when it is halfe ripe it is
-so apt to shed, and when you gather it you must plucke vp the stalkes,
-leaues & all, and so laying them one vpon another thrée or foure dayes,
-their own heat will bring the séed to ripenes.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Rosemary.]
-
-Then _Rosemary_, which is an Hearbe tender and curious, yet of
-singular vertue: it is soone slaine with frost or lightening: it
-will grow plentifully from the séede, but much better from the slip,
-it delighteth to be planted against some Wall where it may haue the
-reflection of the Sunne, for to stand vnpropped of himselfe, the very
-shaking of the winde will kill it.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Penyroyal.]
-
-Then _Penyroyall_, which most properly is vsed to be mixt with
-Puddings, made of the bloud of Beasts, & Oatmeale: of it there be two
-kindes, Male and Female: the Male beareth a white flower, and the
-Female a purple: it must be sowne in small quantity, for it will runne
-and spread ouer-much ground: it delighteth most in moyst earth.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Leekes.]
-
-Then _Leekes_, which would haue a fertile ground, and as soone as they
-be shot vp a good length you shall cut the blades to the polt, and then
-remoue the heads, and set them borderwise about your other beds: this
-remouing after the cutting off the blades, wil make them grow bigger,
-and prosper better, as for thrusting Oyster-shels or Tyle-shreads vnder
-them, to make the heads bigger, it is a toy, for if the mould be loose
-and good, the Léeke will come to his perfect growth: they may be sowne
-both in March, Aprill, May, and Iune, and they may be remoued all Iuly,
-August, September and October.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Onions.]
-
-Then _Onions_, which differ not much from the nature of Léekes, they
-loue a fertile Soyle, and would be sowne with the séeds of Sauory: when
-they come vp if they grow too thicke, as is often séene, you shall
-plucke vp some and spend them in the Pot and in Sallets, to giue the
-rest more roome, and some you shall take vp and replant in other beds,
-which you may preserue for séede: those _Onions_ which you would not
-haue to séede, you shall cut off the blades in the midst, that the
-iuyce may descend downeward, and when you sée the heads of the _Onions_
-appearing aboue the earth, you shall with your féet tread them into the
-ground: there be some very well experienst Husbands, which will take
-the fayrest, goodliest and soundest Onions they can get, and in this
-moneth of March set them thrée fingers déepe in the earth, and these
-of all other bring forth the purest and best séede, for which purpose
-onely they are preserued: as soone as your séed-Onions are knotted, you
-shall vnderproppe them with square cradles, made of stickes, least the
-waight of the boules which carry the séede, should breake the blades.
-
-[Sidenote: Of gathering Onion-seede, or the Onion.]
-
-The time of gathering your séede is, when it is all turned purely
-blacke, and the time of gathering the Onions is, when the heads doe
-forsake the earth, after they be gathered you shall lay them on a dry
-floore for a fortnight, or more, and then binde them vp in ropes, and
-hang them where they may haue the ayre of the fire, onely note that
-shall gather your Onions in the increase of the Moone, as they were
-sowne, and not otherwise.
-
-Many other Pot-hearbs there be, which for as much as they differ
-nothing, eyther in sowing, planting, or ordering, from these which I
-haue rehearsed, I will héere omit them, and thinke this sufficient,
-touching the sowing and ordering of all manner of Pot-hearbs.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. IIII.
-
-_Of the sowing of certaine Hearbs, which are to be eaten, but
-especially are medicinall, yet euer in the Husbandmans Garden._
-
-
-[Sidenote: Of Arage.]
-
-Of Hearbes which are medicinall, I will begin with _Arage_ or _Orache_,
-which being colde and moyst is very excellent against the hot Gout: it
-is to be sowne in any moneth, from February till December: it loueth
-much moisture, and therefore must be oft watered: it must be sowne
-excéeding thinne, and quickly couered, for the ayre is offensiue.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Lumbardy Loueage.]
-
-Next it is _Lumbardy_, _Loueage_, which being hot and dry, is very
-purgatiue, it desireth a very fruitfull ground, but if it be sowne
-where it may haue much shadow and some shelter accompanied with
-moysture, it will grow in any ground, the moneths for sowing thereof,
-is, from the midst of February till Haruest.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Fennell.]
-
-_Fennell_ is also hot and dry, and it comforteth the stomacke, openeth
-the inward vessels, and helpeth disgestion; it may be sowne in any
-moneth, and vpon any indifferent ground, especially if it be a little
-stony, the séede would not be very old, though of all other it be the
-longest laster.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Anise.]
-
-_Anise_ is hot and dry, it dissolueth humors and obstructions, and is
-very comfortable to weake stomacks, it delighteth in a good and loose
-mould, and is to be sowne in the height of the Spring onely.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Comin.]
-
-_Comin_ is of the nature of _Anise_ and _Fennell_, and mixt with
-either, is very soueraine against all inward sicknesses procéeding from
-cold, it loueth a fruitfull rich earth & much warmth, and therfore the
-later it is sowne in the Spring, it is so much the better, and aboue
-all things it would be sowne in the hottest time of the day, & if it
-be mixed with other séeds, it is so much the better, and appeareth the
-sooner.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Coliander.]
-
-_Coliander_ is of the nature of the earth, cold & dry, it helps
-disgestion, & suppresseth vapours which offend the braine, it may be
-sowne vpon any indifferent ground, & in any month except December and
-Ianuary, the elder the séedes are the better so they be sound, and they
-desire much watering.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Rue.]
-
-_Rue_ or _Hearb-grace_ is hot and dry, & is very soueraigne against all
-inward infection, putrifactions, and impostumations, it ioyeth in any
-reasonable ground so it grow warme and dry, the moneths fittest for the
-sowing thereof, is March, Aprill or May, and the mould would be firme
-and not subiect to ryuing, whence it procéedes that no meanure is so
-good for the encrease thereof as horse-dung and ashes mixt together:
-the beds would be made high & discending, that no moysture may stay
-thereon, they must be carefully wéeded, for in their first growth
-otherwise they are soone choaked.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Organie.]
-
-_Organie_ is hot and dry, and excellent against any sicknesse of the
-liuer, the ground in which it most ioyeth would be a little stonie, and
-full of rubbish, yet by no meanes vndunged, the moneth fittest for the
-sowing thereof is March and September, the Moone being in _Libra_ or
-any other moist signe, it must be continually watred till it appears
-aboue the earth, but after forborne, for being once well bred, it is
-euer certaine.
-
-[Sidenote: Of white Poppy.]
-
-White _Poppy_ is cold and moyst, and much prouoketh sléepe: it delights
-to be sowne in a rich, warme, dry ground, in the moneths of March,
-September or Nouember.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Germander.]
-
-_Germander_ is hot and dry, and excellent against the Kings euill;
-obstructions of the Spléene and hardnesse of Vrine; it is a hard
-hearbe, and will prosper in any ground, it is to be sowne, either in
-the spring or fall of the leafe, and is most comly for the setting
-forth of knots in Gardens.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Cardus Benedictus.]
-
-_Cardus Benedictus_, or the blessed Thistell, is hot and dry, it is
-very soueraine against most inward sicknesses, stancheth blood, and is
-a great comforter of the braine, it delighteth in a rich ground and
-a loose well tempered mould, it must be sowne very shallow, and not
-couered aboue two inches déepe, the first quarter of the Moone is best
-to sowe it in, and in the moneths of March, May or September, if you
-sowe a little fine flaxen Wheat with it, no doubt but it will prosper
-the better.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Angellica.]
-
-_Angellica_ is hot and dry, it openeth and dissolueth obstructions, is
-an excellent cordiall against poyson, and all infections, it helpeth
-the collicke, and cureth the biting of madde dogges or venemous beasts,
-it loueth a fruitfull dry mould, but may not indure the trouble of
-wéedes, it is to be sowne in March or Aprill, & it flourisheth in Iuly
-& August, it hath a swéet odour, and helpeth all euill & infected ayres.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Valerian.]
-
-_Valerian_ is hot & dry and preuenteth infection, it helpeth stitches
-and other griefes procéeding from windy causes, it loueth to grow in
-moist and low places, the ground being well meanured, and till it
-be shot at least a handfull high, it must be kept with continuall
-watring, the moystest time of the yéere is the best to sowe it in.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Elecampana.]
-
-_Elecampana_, is hot and moyst, and good for offences in the lungs, or
-any outward ioynt, being troubled with paine procéeding from colde: it
-is better much to be set then sowne, yet notwithstanding it may safely
-enough be sowne at any time after mid-March, the ground being rich,
-soft, and loose, and the séede strowed very thinne, and at least two
-fingers distance one from another.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Pepperwort.]
-
-_Pepperwort_ is hot and drye, yet of the two much more hot, it is good
-against all kinde of aches, and other paine in the ioynts, or sinewes:
-it delighteth in a rich blacke Soyle, fat and loose: it would be sowne
-in February, and remoued in September.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Philipendula.]
-
-_Philipendula_ is very hot and dry, and is good against abortiue
-births, Stone, Strangury, or any griefe procéeding from colde causes:
-it may be sowne in any barraine, stony, or grauelly Soyle, in the
-months of May, Aprill, or September: it neither desireth much wéeding,
-nor much watering, but being once committed to the ground appeareth
-sodainely: and thus much of those Hearbes which are fit for Medicine,
-of which though there be many others, yet they differ not in their
-ordering from these already declared.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. V.
-
-_Of diuers sorts of Sallet-Hearbes, their manner of sowing and
-ordering._
-
-
-[Sidenote: Of Lettuce.]
-
-Amongst the many numbers of Sallet-Hearbes I thinke it not amisse
-to beginne first with _Lettuce_, which of all other whose vertue is
-helde in the leafe, is most delicate, tender, and pleasant: the ground
-then in which it most delighteth, is that which is most fertile,
-best laboured, and of the finest mould, being soft, loose, and more
-enclining to moysture then drinesse: it may be sowne in any moneth of
-the yeare, from February to Nouember; it is very quick of growth, and
-will appeare aboue the earth in foure dayes after the sowing: it would
-at first be sowne thicke, and carefully kept with morning and euening
-watrings, if the season be dry, but not otherwise: after it is growne
-and faire spread aboue the earth, which will be in a moneths space or
-there-abouts, you shall chuse out the fairest and goodliest plants,
-and taking them vp with the earth and all, about their rootes, replant
-or remoue them to a new bed of fresh mould, and there set them a foote
-distance one from another, and fixe their rootes fast and hard into the
-ground: then couer or presse them downe with Tyle or Slate stones, to
-make them spread and not spring vpward, by which meanes the leaues will
-gather together, and cabbadge, in a thicke and good order, for it is to
-be vnderstood, that the oftner you remoue your _Lettuce_, the fairer
-and closer they wil cabbage. There be diuers which obserue to remoue
-_Lettuce_ as soone as sixe leaues are sprung aboue the ground; but I
-like better to remoue them when they begin to spindle: they are most
-estéemed in the moneths of Aprill, May, and Iune, for in Iuly they are
-supposed to carrie in them a poysonous substance.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Spynage.]
-
-Next the _Lettuce_ I preferre the hearbe _Spynage_, which delighteth in
-a well-dunged earth, and may be sowne in Aprill, March, September, or
-October: it would not be mixed with other séedes, because it prospereth
-best alone.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Sparagus.]
-
-_Sparagus_ ioyeth in a fertill moist ground, the mould being made light
-which couers it, and the ground well dunged, the Spring is the best
-time to sowe it, and it must be sowne in long furrowes or trenches made
-with your finger, and not vniuersally spread ouer the bed as other
-séeds are: it loueth moysture, but may not endure the wet to lye long
-vpon it, and therefore the beds would a little descend it: must not be
-remoued till the rootes be so feltred together, that they hinder the
-new branches from springing vp, which commonly is two yeares.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Colworts.]
-
-_Colworts_ or _Cabbadge_ séede delighteth in any well husbanded ground,
-and may be sowen in all sorts and seasons as _Lettuce_ is, and must
-also in the like manner be remoued, after the principall leaues are
-come forth, which will make them to gather together, and cabbadge
-the better: and as they may be sowen in any season of the yeare, so
-likewise they may be remoued at all seasons likewise, except the frost
-or other vnseasonable weather hinder you: and although some men will
-not allow it to be sowen in clay grounds, grauell, chalke, or sand,
-yet they are deceiued; for if the earth be well ordred, they will grow
-plentifully, onely you must obserue when you remoue them to let them
-haue earth roome enough.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Sage.]
-
-_Sage_ is in Gardens most common, because it is most wholesome, and
-though it may be better set from the slip then sowen in the séede,
-yet both will prosper, it loueth any well drest ground, and may be
-sowen either in February, March, September, or October: it loueth also
-to grow thick and close together, and will of it selfe ouercome most
-wéedes: it asketh not much dung, neither too great care in watring,
-onely it would be oft searched, for Toades and other venemous things
-will delight to lye vnder it, the more Sunne and ayre it hath, the
-better it is.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Purslane.]
-
-_Purslane_ is a most excellent Sallet-hearbe, and loueth a fertile
-soile, and though it may be sowen almost in any moneth, yet the warmest
-is the best, as Aprill, May, Iune, or Septemb. Buck ashes are an
-excellent meanure for them, and for most Sallet-hearbs else, but aboue
-all they loue dry dust and house-swéepings, they are apt to shed their
-séede, whence it comes that a ground once possest of them will seldome
-want them, they may also be remoued, and will prosper much the better.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Artichokes.]
-
-_Artychokes_ loue a fat earth, and may be sowen in February or March,
-the Moone encreasing, the séedes must not be sowen together, but set
-one by one a good distance asunder; they must lye somewhat déepe, and
-be firmely couered; yet if you can procure them, I rather wish you
-rather to set them from Slips or young Plants, then sowe them from the
-séedes, for they doe so naturally loue the earth, that you can hardly
-slip so wast a leafe from an _Artychoke_ as will not take roote; if you
-sowe the séede, you must be carefull to wéede and water them well, for
-the first leaues are very tender: also if you remoue them after their
-first springing, the fruit will be bigger and better.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Garlicke.]
-
-_Garlicke_ is best in September and Nouember, to be set from the cloue,
-in & about the borders of beds, or other séedes, halfe a foote one
-from another, and in February, March, and Aprill, to be sowen from the
-séede: it must be ordered as you order _Onyon_ séede, it loues not much
-wet nor extreame drought, onely it desires a good mould which is rich
-and firme, yet not too much dunged.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Raddish.]
-
-_Raddish_ loueth a fertile ground, that is well dunged, chiefly with
-mans ordure, that is déepe trencht, and hath an easie and light mould,
-and the séedes would be placed either in rowes, or about the borders of
-beds, as you doe _Garlicke_: the manner of sowing it is with a dibble
-or round sticke, to make a hole into the ground almost a foote déepe,
-and then into that hole to put not aboue two séedes at the most, and
-then close the hole vp againe, and let the holes be foure fingers one
-from another, it may be sowen in most months of the yéere if the frost
-hinder not, and to make the roote large & tender, and to kéepe the
-branch from séeding; you shall as it springs crop off the principall
-leaues which grow against the heart of the root: to tread them downe
-into the earth after they haue fast roote is good also.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Nauew.]
-
-_Nauew_, if the earth haue any small goodnesse in it will grow
-plentifully, neither is offended with any ayre, onely the mould would
-be loose and rough, for otherwise it many times turneth to Rape: the
-séede naturally commeth vp very thicke, therefore it is expedient to
-remoue them and plant them thinner, for that best preserueth their
-natures, they may be sowne in February, March, Aprill, September, or
-October.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Parsneps and Carrets.]
-
-_Parsneps_ or _Carrets_ are of one and the selfe nature, they delight
-in a good fat earth, and would be sowne reasonably thicke, in long
-déepe trenches like furrowes, hauing a gentle and easie mould either in
-the moneth of Ianuary, February, or March, or in September, October, or
-December, they must be carefully well wéeded, and if the earth be fat,
-they néede not much watring or other attendance.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Pompyons.]
-
-_Pompyons_, _Gourds_, or _Mellons_, desire a very good ground, or by
-Nature or Art, the séedes must be sowne very thinne, as at least halfe
-a foote one from another, they would lye reasonably déepe, yet the
-mould very gentle which couers them, they are subiect to spread and
-runne ouer much ground, therefore as they grow you must direct their
-stemmes so as they may not annoy one another, and when they flower you
-shall lay broad Tiles or Slate stones vnder them, that the fruit nor
-flower may not touch the earth; if you plash them vp against trées
-or walles where they may haue the reflection of the Sunne, the fruit
-will be larger, pleasanter, and sooner ripe: they néede no wéeding
-nor watring after you sée them appeare aboue the earth, and the best
-seasons to sowe them in, is February, March, or Aprill, those are the
-best _Pompyons_ which haue the smallest séedes, and are of the most
-yellowest complexion.
-
-[Sidenote: Of the Cowcumber.]
-
-_Cowcumber_, is a delicate, pleasant, yet very tender fruit, and
-delighteth in an extraordinarie fat earth, especially during the
-opening or sprouting of the séede, therefore the best and most
-vndoubted safest way for sowing them is, first in some corner of your
-Kitchin garden to make a bed of two or thrée yards square of olde Oxe
-dung, and Horse dung mixt together, and at least a yard or better high
-from the earth, then couer this bed of dung with the richest garden
-mould you haue, better then halfe a foote thicke: then thereon place
-your séedes halfe a foote likewise one from another, and be most
-sure that your séedes be hard and sound (for any softnesse in them
-sheweth rottennesse) then couer them foure fingers thicke with the
-like mould: then within seauen or eight dayes, after you shall sée
-them appeare aboue the earth, but in any wise let them continue still
-till the principall leaues be come forth, and they begin to créepe out
-in length, then with your hand griping the whole plant, take it vp by
-the rootes with the earth and all, and plant it in a bed new digged &
-trimmed for the purpose with a rich loose mould, and so replant and
-remoue each roote seuerally one after another, and they will grow and
-bring forth in great plenty. Now by the way you must obserue, that as
-soone as you haue sowne your séedes you shall prouide a Mat, Canuasse,
-or other couering, which being placed vpon stakes ouer the dung bed,
-shall euery night after Sunne-set be spread ouer the same, and not
-taken away till the Sunne be risen in the morning, for this will defend
-the séedes from frosts and other cold dewes which are very dangerous.
-Now if any demand why these séedes are thus sowne first on the bed
-of dung, they shall vnderstand that besides the warmth and fertility
-thereof, that the séedes are so pleasant and tender, that wormes and
-other créeping things in the earth will destroy them before they can
-sprout, which this bed of dung preuenteth. The months most fit for
-sowing these séedes, are Aprill, May and Iune onely, for other are much
-too colde, and in this manner you may sowe any tender séede whatsoeuer.
-
-[Sidenote: Of the Beane of Egipt.]
-
-_Beanes_ of _Egipt_ delight in a moyst watrish ground, rather fertile
-then any way giuen to barrainnesse, yet will plentifully enough prosper
-in any indifferent earth: they are rather to set then sowe, because
-they must take strong roote, and be fixed somewhat déepe into the
-earth, and the moneth which is most proper for them, is the latter end
-of Ianuary, all February and the beginning of March onely.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Skerrets.]
-
-_Skerrets_ are a delicate roote, white, tender, and pleasant, little
-differing in tast or excellencie from the _Eringo_. They delight in a
-rich mould, moyst and well broken, and must be set déepe in the earth:
-after they be a finger length aboue the ground they would be remoued,
-and planted in a fresh mould, which will preserue them from spéedie
-séeding, for when they runne to séede, they loose the vertue of their
-roote. The moneths fittest for the sowing of them is March, Aprill, and
-May, and if you desire to haue them all Winter, you may then sowe them
-in September and October. And thus much for Sallet-hearbs, and rootes
-of all natures, of which kindes though there be diuers other, yet you
-shall vnderstand, all are to be ordered in the manner of these before
-rehearsed, that is to say, such as haue their vertues in the stalke
-or leaues, like _Spynage_, _Sparagus_, _Purslayn_, and such like,
-those which cabbadge or knit together in hard lumps, like _Lettuce_,
-_Colworts_, and such like, and those whose goodnesse liues in their
-rootes, like _Raddish_, _Carrets_, _Skerrets_, and such like.
-
-[Sidenote: A most necessary obseruation.]
-
-Now for a most necessarie obseruation, euery Gardner ought to beare
-this rule in his memorie, that all Pot-hearbs must be sowne thicke, and
-but thinly couered, as namely not aboue thrée fingers: all hearbs which
-cabbadge must be sowne thicke, and déeper couered, as a full handfull
-at least, and in their remouing planted thinne, and well fixt into
-the earth: and all rootes must be sowen thinne and déepe, as almost a
-foote either let into the ground, or strewed in déepe furrowes, digged
-and laide vp for the purpose, in which the quantity of your séede must
-onely direct you: for if you haue occasion to sow hardly a handfull,
-then you may set them one by one into the ground at your leasure, but
-if you haue occasion to sowe many Pecks or halfe Pecks, then you shall
-turne vp your earth into déepe furrowes, and in the bottome thereof
-scatter your séeds, and after rake it into a leuell, and you shall not
-onely saue much labour, but gaine your purpose.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. VI.
-
-_Of Flowers of all sorts both forraigne and home-bred, their sowing,
-planting, and preseruing._
-
-
-Hauing written sufficiently of Pot-hearbs and Sallet-hearbs, which are
-the ornaments of the Husbandmans Kitchin or Table, I will here speake
-of flowers, which either for their smels, beauties, or both, are the
-graces of his Chamber. And first, because my maine ayme and scope is
-English Husbandrie, I will begin with those flowers which are most
-proper and naturall for our climate, of which because I holde _Roses_
-both for their smell, beauties, and wholesomnesse to excéede all other,
-I thinke it not amisse to giue them the first place and precedencie
-before all other.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Roses.]
-
-You shall vnderstand then that _Roses_ are generally and aunciently
-but of thrée kindes, the Damaske, the red, and the white, and what are
-different from these are but deriuations from them, being by grafting,
-replanting, and phisicking, somewhat altered either in colour, smell,
-or doublenesse of leafe.
-
-[Sidenote: Of the Damaske Rose.]
-
-To speake then first of the Damaske _Rose_, it is fit that all
-husbandmen know, that _Roses_ may as well be sowne from the séede, as
-planted from the roote, Syen, or branch onely, they are the slower in
-comming vp, more tender to nourish, and much longer in yéelding forth
-their flowers, yet for satisfaction sake and where necessitie vrgeth,
-if of force or pleasure you must sowe it from the séede, you shall
-chuse a ruffish earth loose and well dunged, and you shall cast vp
-your beds high and narrow: the moneth which is fit for their sowing
-is September, and they must be couered not aboue four fingers déepe,
-they must be defended well all the Winter from frosts and stormes, and
-then they will beare their flowers plentifully all the next Spring
-following: yet this is to be noted, that all _Roses_ which rise from
-the séede simply, their flowers will be single like the _Eglantine_,
-or _Cyphanie_, therefore after your plants are two yéeres olde, you
-must graft one into another, as you doe other fruit, and that will
-make them double and thicke: also you must remember that those yellow
-small séedes which are in the midst of the _Rose_, are not true _Rose_
-séedes, but those which lye hid in the round peare knob vnder the
-_Rose_, which as soone as the leaues are fallen away, will open and
-shew the séede. And thus much touching the sowing of all sorts of
-_Roses_, which is for experience and knowledge sake onely, for indéede
-the true vse and property of the _Rose_ is to be planted in short slips
-about fourtéene inches long, and the small tassels of the roote cut
-away, they would be set halfe a foote into the ground, in the same
-manner as you set ordinary Quick-set, and of like thicknesse, rather a
-little slope-wise then vpright: and though some thinke March the best
-season, yet doubtlesse September is much better for hauing the roote
-confirmed all the Winter, they will beare the sooner and better all the
-Sommer following; you must be carefull to plant them in faire weather,
-and as néere as you can vnder shelter as by the sides of walls, and
-such like couert where the Sunne may reflect against them, and if they
-be planted on open beds or borders, then you must with Poales and other
-necessaries support them and hold them vp, least the winde shake their
-rootes and hinder their growing.
-
-[Sidenote: Of the red Rose.]
-
-The red _Rose_ is not fully so tender as the Damaske, neither is it so
-pleasant in smell, nor doubleth his leaues so often; yet it is much
-more Phisicall, and oftner vsed in medicine, it is likewise fitter to
-be planted then sowen, and the earth in which it most ioyeth would be a
-little rough or grauelly, and the best compasse you can lay vnto it, is
-rubbish or the sweeping of houses, the moneths to sowe or plant it in
-is March or September, & the time to prune and cut away the superfluous
-branches is euer the midst of October.
-
-[Sidenote: Of the white Rose.]
-
-The white _Rose_ is of lesse smell then the red, and will grow in a
-harder ground, his vse is altogether in Phisicke as for sore eyes and
-such like: it will grow into a Trée of some bigge substance, and is
-seldome hurt with frosts, stormes, or blastings: it would likewise be
-planted from the roote against some high wall, either in the moneth of
-February or March, and the oftner you plant and replant it, the doubler
-and larger the flower will be: for the earth it much skilleth not,
-because it will grow almost in euery ground, onely it delights most in
-the shadow, and would be seldome pruned, except you finde many dead
-branches.
-
-[Sidenote: Of the Cinamon Rose.]
-
-The _Cinamon Rose_, is for the most part sowen, and not planted, whence
-it comes that you shall euer sée the leaues single and little, the
-delicacie thereof being onely in the smell, which that you may haue
-most fragrant and strong, you shall take a vessell of earth, being full
-of small holes in the bottome and sides, and fill it with the richest
-earth you can get, being made fine and loose, then take Damaske _Rose_
-séedes which are hard, and sound, and stéepe them foure and twenty
-houres in _Cinamon_ water, I doe not meane the distilled water, but
-faire Conduit water, in which good store of _Cinamon_ hath bin stéeped,
-or boyled, or milk, wherin good store of _Cinamon_ hath bin dissolued,
-and then sow those séedes into the Pot, and couer them almost thrée
-fingers déepe, then morning and euening till they appeare aboue the
-earth, water them with that water or milke in which the seedes were
-stéeped, then when they are sprung vp a handfull or more aboue the
-ground, you shall take them vp mould and all, and hauing drest a border
-or bed for the purpose, plant them so as they may grow vp against some
-warme wall or pale, and haue the Sunne most part of the day shining
-vpon them, and you shall be sure to haue _Roses_ growing on them, whose
-smell will be wonderfull pleasant, as if they had béene spiced with
-_Cinamon_, and the best season of sowing these is euer in March, at
-high noone day, the weather shining faire, and the winde most calme.
-
-[Sidenote: To make the Cinamon Rose grow double.]
-
-Now if you would haue these _Roses_ to grow double, which is an Art yet
-hid from most Gardners, you shall at Michaelmasse take the vppermost
-parts of the Plante from the first knot, and as you graft either Plumme
-or Apple, so graft one into another, and couer the heads with earth
-or clay tempered with _Cinamon_-water, and they will not onely grow
-double, but the smell will be much swéeter, and looke how oft you will
-graft and re-graft them, so much more double and double they will proue.
-
-[Sidenote: Of the Prouince Rose.]
-
-The _Prouince Rose_ is a delicate flower for the eye more then the
-nose, for his oft grafting abateth his smell, but doubleth his leafe
-so oft that it is wonderfull, therefore if you will haue them large
-and faire, you shall take the fairest Damaske _Roses_ you can get,
-and graft them into the red _Rose_, and when they haue shot out many
-branches, then you shall graft each seuerall branch againe with new
-grafts of another grafted Damaske _Rose_: and thus by grafting graft
-vpon graft, you shall haue as faire and well coloured _Prouince Roses_,
-as you can wish or desire: and thus you may doe either in the Spring or
-fall at your pleasure, but the fall of the leafe is euer helde the best
-season.
-
-[Sidenote: To make Roses smell well.]
-
-Now if your _Roses_ chaunce to loose their smels, as it oft happeneth
-through these double graftings: you shall then plant _Garlicke_ heads
-at the rootes of your _Roses_, and that will bring the pleasantnesse of
-their sent vnto them againe.
-
-[Sidenote: Generall notes touching Roses.]
-
-Now for your generall obseruations; you shall remember that it is good
-to water your _Roses_ morning and euening till they be gathered; you
-shall rather couet to plant your _Roses_ in a dry ground then a wette,
-you shall giue them much shelter, strong support, and fresh dung twise
-at the least euery yeare, when the leafe is fallen, you shall cutte
-and prune the branches, and when the buds appeare you, then begin your
-first watring.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Lauender.]
-
-_Lauender_ is a flower of a hot smell, and is more estéemed of the
-plaine Country housewife then the dainty Citizen: it is very wholesome
-amongst linnen cloathes, and would be sowen in a good rich mould, in
-the moneths of March or Aprill.
-
-[Sidenote: Of the white Lilly.]
-
-The white _Lilly_ would be sowen in a fat earth, in the moneths of
-October and Nouember, or in March or April, and the séedes must be
-sowen excéeding thinne, not one by any meanes touching another, and the
-mould which couereth them must be sifted gently vpon them.
-
-[Sidenote: To make Lillyes of any colour.]
-
-If you would haue your _Lillyes_ of a purple colour, you shall stéepe
-your séedes in the Lées of red wine, and that will change their
-complexion, and also you shall water the Plants with the same Lées
-likewise: if you will haue them scarlet red, you shall put _Vermillion_
-or _Cynaber_ betwéene the rinde and the small heads growing about the
-roote: if you would haue them blew, you shall dissolue _Azure_ or
-_Byse_ betwéene the rinde and the heads, if yellow _Orpment_, if gréene
-_Verdigreace_, and thus of any other colour.
-
-[Sidenote: To make Lillyes flourish all the yeere.]
-
-Now to make them flourish euery moneth in the yéere, you shall sowe
-your séedes some a foote déepe, some halfe a foote, and some not two
-inches, so they will spring one after another, and flourish one after
-another.
-
-[Sidenote: Of the wood Lilly.]
-
-The wood _Lilly_ or _Lilly_ of the vale, delighteth most in a moyst
-ground, and may be sowen either in March or September, it is very faire
-to looke on, and not so suffocating in smell as the other _Lillyes_ are.
-
-[Sidenote: Of the flower de Lice.]
-
-The _flower de Lice_ is of excellent beauty, but not very pleasant to
-smell to, it loueth a dry ground & an easie mould, and is fittest to be
-sowen in the moneth of March.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Pyonie.]
-
-_Pyonie_ or the blessed _Rose_, loueth a good fat earth being somewhat
-loose, and may be sowen either in March or September, it asketh not
-much watring, onely some support because the stalkes be weake.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Petillius.]
-
-_Petillius_ or _Indian eye_, may be sowen in any ground, for it
-desireth neither much water, nor much dung, and the best season for
-sowing, it is Iune or September, for it will beare flowers commonly all
-the Winter.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Veluet flower.]
-
-_Veluet flower_ loueth a rich fertile ground, and must be much watred:
-the season best for the sowing is August, for commonly it will beare
-flowers all the Winter.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Gylliflowers.]
-
-[Sidenote: Of grafting of Gylliflowers.]
-
-_Gilliflowers_ are of diuers kindes, as _Pynks_, _Wall-flowers_,
-_Carnations_, _Cloue Gilliflowers_, and a world of others, which
-are of all other flowers most swéet and delicate: all but the
-_Wall-gilliflower_ loue good fertile earths, and may be sowen either
-in March, Iuly, or August. They are better to be planted of Slips
-then sowen, yet both will prosper. They are very tender, and therfore
-the best planting of them is in earthen Pots, or halfe Tubs, which at
-your pleasure you may remoue from the shade to the Sunne, and from the
-roughnesse of stormes to places of shelter, they grow vp high on long
-slender stalkes, which you must defend and support with square cradles
-made of stickes, least the winde and the waight of the flowers breake
-them: these _Gilliflowers_ you may make of any colour you please, in
-such sort as is shewed you for the colouring of _Lillyes_, and if
-you please to haue them of mixt colours you may also, by grafting of
-contrary colours one into another: and you may with as great ease graft
-the _Gylliflower_ as any fruit whatsoeuer, by the ioyning of the knots
-one into another, and then wrapping them about with a little soft
-sleau’d silke, and couering the place close with soft red Waxe well
-tempered. And you shall vnderstand that the grafting of _Gylliflowers_
-maketh them excéeding great, double, and most orient of colour.
-
-[Sidenote: Of the smels of Gylliflowers.]
-
-Now if you will haue your _Gylliflowers_ of diuers smels or odours,
-you may also with great ease, as thus for example: if you will take
-two or thrée great cloues, & stéepe them foure and twenty houres in
-Damaske _Rose_ water, then take them out and bruise them, and put them
-into a fine Cambricke ragge, and so binde them about the heart roote
-of the _Gylliflower_, néere to the setting on of the stalke, and so
-plant it in a fine, soft, and fertile mould, and the flower which
-springeth from the same, will haue so delicate a mixt smell of the
-Cloue and the Rose-water, that it will bréede both delight and wonder.
-If in the same manner you take a sticke of _Cinamon_, and stéepe it
-in _Rose_ water, and then bruise it, and binde it as afore-said, all
-the flowers will smell strongly of _Cinamon_: if you take two graines
-of fat Muske, and mixe it with two drops of Damaske _Rose_ water, and
-binde it as afore-said, the flowers will smell strongly of Muske,
-yet not too hot nor offensiue, by reason of the correction of the
-_Rose_ water: and in this sort you may doe either with _Amber-greece_,
-_Storax_, _Beniamin_, or any other swéet drugge whatsoeuer; and if in
-any of these confections before named, you stéepe the séedes of your
-_Gylliflowers_ foure and twenty houres before you sowe them, they will
-take the same smels in which you stéepe them, onely they will not be so
-large or double, as those which are replanted or grafted.
-
-[Sidenote: Of the Wall Gylliflower.]
-
-Now for your _Wall Gylliflower_, it delighteth in hard rubbish, limy,
-and stonie grounds, whence it commeth that they couet most to grow
-vpon walles, pauements, and such like barraine places. It may be sowen
-in any moneth or season, for it is a séede of that hardnesse, that it
-makes no difference betwixt Winter and Sommer, but will flourish in
-both equally, and beareth his flowers all the yéere, whence it comes
-that the Husbandman preserues it most in his Bée-garden; for it is
-wondrous swéet, and affordeth much honey. It would be sowen in very
-small quantity, for after it haue once taken roote, it will naturally
-of it selfe ouer-spread much ground, and hardly euer after be rooted
-out. It is of it selfe of so exéeding a strong and swéet smell, that it
-cannot be forced to take any other, and therefore is euer preserued in
-its owne nature.
-
-[Sidenote: Of the Helytropian.]
-
-The _Helytropian_ or flower of the Sunne, is in nature and colour like
-our English _Marigold_, onely it is excéeding huge in compasse, for
-many of them will be twenty, and foure and twenty inches in compasse,
-according to the fertilenesse of the soyle in which they grow, and the
-oft replanting of their rootes, they are excéeding goodly to looke on,
-and pleasant to smell, they open their flowers at the rising of the
-Sunne, and close them againe at the Sunne setting, it delighteth in any
-soyle which is fertile either by Art or Nature, and may be sowen in any
-moneth from February till September, the oft planting and replanting of
-the roote after it is sprung a handfull from the earth, maketh it grow
-to the vttermost bignesse, it would haue the East and West open vpon
-it, onely some small Pent-house to kéepe the sharpnesse of the winde
-from it.
-
-[Sidenote: Of the Crowne Emperiall.]
-
-The _Crowne-Emperiall_, is of all flowers both forraigne and home-bred,
-the delicatest and strangest: it hath the true shape of an Emperiall
-Crowne, and will be of diuers colours, according to the Art of the
-Gardner. In the middest of the flower you shall sée a round Pearle
-stand, in proportion, colour, and orientnesse, like a true naturall
-Pearle, onely it is of a soft liquid substance: This Pearle if you
-shake the flower neuer so violently will not fall off, neither if you
-let it continue neuer so long, will it either encrease or diminish in
-the bignesse, but remayneth all one: yet if with your finger you take
-and wipe it away, in lesse then an houre after you shall haue another
-arise in the same place, and of the same bignesse. This Pearle if you
-taste it vpon your tongue, is pleasant and swéet like honey: this
-flower when the Sunne ariseth, you shall sée it looke directly to the
-East, with the stalke bent lowe there-vnto, and as the Sunne ariseth
-higher and higher, so the flower will likewise ascend, and when the
-Sunne is come into the _Meridian_ or noone poynt, which is directly
-ouer it, then will it stand vpright vpon the stalke, and looke directly
-vpward, and as the Sunne declineth, so will it likewise decline, and at
-the Sunne setting looke directly to the West onely. The séedes of this
-flower are very tender, and therefore would be carefully sowen in a
-very rich and fertile earth well broken and manured. The seasons most
-méete for the same, is the latter end of March, Aprill, or May, for the
-flowers flourish most in May, Iune, and Iuly. As soone as it is sprung
-a handfull aboue the earth; you shall remoue it into a fresh mould,
-and that will make it flourish the brauer: the roote of this flower is
-like an Apple, or great flat Onion, and therefore in the replanting of
-it, you must be carefull to make a hole large and fitte for the same,
-and to fixe the mould gently and close about the same. In the Winter
-it shrinketh into the earth, and is hardly or not at all discerned, by
-meanes whereof I haue séene diuers supposing it to be dead, to digge
-vp the earth, and negligently spoyle the roote, but be not you of that
-opinion, and in the Spring you shall sée it arise and flourish brauely.
-
-[Sidenote: Of the Dulippo.]
-
-The _Dulippo_ is but a little short of the _Crowne Emperiall_ in
-pleasantnesse and rarenesse, for you may haue them of all colours
-whatsoeuer, in such sort as was shewed you for the _Lillyes_,
-_Gylliflowers_, and other rootes: they are tender at their first
-springing from the séede, and therefore must be sowen in a fine rich
-mould, in the warmth of the Sunne, either in March, Aprill, or May:
-but after they are once sprung aboue the ground, they are reasonable
-hard, and will defend themselues against most weathers: the roote of
-this flower is shaped like a Peare, with the biggest end downeward, and
-many small thréeds at the bottome; therefore you must be sure when you
-remoue or replant it, to couer all the roote in fresh mould, and let
-not any part of the white thereof be vncouered: this flower by monethly
-replanting, you may haue to flourish in all the Summer moneths of the
-yeare, for in the dead of Winter it shrinketh into the ground, and is
-hardly or not at all perceiued, the stalkes of these flowers are weake,
-therefore to support them, and defend them from the shakings of the
-windes with little square frames of stickes, will be very good and
-necessary, it must be oft watred.
-
-[Sidenote: Of the Hyacinth.]
-
-The _Hyacinth_ is a flower more delicate to the eye then nose, and
-is of a good strong nature, for it will endure any reasonable earth,
-and may be sowne in any moneth of the Spring, from the beginning of
-February till midde-Iune: it onely hateth tempests and stormes, and
-therefore is commonly sowen or planted néere vnto walls or other
-shelter. You may haue them of any colour you please, as is shewed
-before of other flowers, and in this alteration or mixture of colours
-their greatest glorie appeareth, they will flourish all the Summer
-long, and if they stand warme, appeare very early in the Spring.
-
-[Sidenote: Of the Narcissus.]
-
-The _Narcissus_ is a very curious and dainty flower, and through his
-much variety and alteration in growing, they are supposed to be of
-diuers kindes, but it is not so, for in as much as they are séene to
-be of diuers colours, that is but the Art of the Gardner, as is before
-exprest in other flowers, and whereas some of them grow single, some
-double, and some double vpon double, you shall vnderstand that such as
-grow single, grow simply from the séede onely, those which are double
-and no more, are such as haue béene planted and replanted, the small
-thréeds of the rootes being clipt away, and nothing left about it
-that is superfluous, and those which are double vpon double, are the
-double plants grafted one into another. This _Narcissus_ loueth a rich
-warme soyle, the mould being easie and light, it may be sowne in any
-moneth of the Spring, and will flourish all the Summer after. Before it
-appeare aboue ground it would be oft watred, but after it skils not how
-little, for it will defend it selfe sufficiently.
-
-[Sidenote: Of the Daffadill, Colombine, and Chesbole.]
-
-[Sidenote: An excellent Caution.]
-
-Not vnlike vnto this is your _Daffadill_ of all kindes and colours,
-and in the same earths and seasons delighteth either to be sowen or
-planted, and will in the same manner as your _Narcissus_ double and
-redouble his leaues; so will your _Colombine_, your _Chesbole_, and
-almost any hollow flower whatsoeuer. Many other forraigne flowers
-there are which grow plentifully in our Kingdome: but the order of
-their planting and sowing differeth nothing from these which I haue
-already declared, being the most tender and curious of all other,
-therefore I will end this Chapter with this one _caution_ onely, that
-when you shall receiue any séede from any forraine Nation, you shall
-learne as néere as you can the nature of the soyle from whence it
-commeth, as hot, moyst, colde, or dry it is, and then comparing it with
-ours, sowe it as néere as you can in the earth, and in the seasons that
-are néerest to the soyle from whence it came, as thus for example: if
-it came from a clime much hotter then ours, then shall you sowe it in
-sandie mould or other mould made warme by strength of meanure, in the
-warmest time of the day, and in those moneths of the Spring, which are
-warmest, as Aprill or May, you shall let it haue the Sunne fréely all
-the day and at night, with Mats, Penthouse, or other defence shield it
-from sharpe windes, frosts, or colde dewes.
-
-[Sidenote: A new manner of planting flowers and fruits.]
-
-I haue séene diuers Noblemen and Gentlemen, which haue béene very
-curious in these dainty flowers, which haue made large frames of wood
-with boards of twenty inches déepe, standing vpon little round whéeles
-of wood, which being made square or round according to the Masters
-fancie, they haue filled with choyse earth, such as is most proper to
-the flower they would haue grow, and then in them sowe their séedes, or
-fixe their Plants in such sort, as hath béene before described, and so
-placing them in such open places of the Garden, where they may haue the
-strength and violence of the Sunnes heate all the day, and the comfort
-of such moderate showers, as fall without violence or extraordinarie
-beating, and at night draw them by mans strength into some low vaulted
-gallery ioyning vpon the Garden, where they may stand warme and safe
-from stormes, windes, frosts, dewes, blastings, and other mischiefes
-which euer happen in the Sunnes absence, and in this manner you may not
-onely haue all manner of dainty outlandish flowers, but also all sorts
-of the most delicatest fruits that may be, as the _Orenge_, _Limond_,
-_Pomgranate_, _Poncythron_, _Cynamon-tree_, _Oliue_, _Almond_, or any
-other, from what clime so euer it be deriued, obseruing onely but to
-make your frames of wood, which containes your earth, but déeper and
-larger, according to the fruit you plant in it, and that your Alleys
-through which you draw your Trées when you house them be smooth and
-leuell, least being rough and vneuen, you iogge and shake the rootes
-with the waight of the Trées, which is dangerous. And least any man may
-imagine this but an imaginary supposition, I can assure him that within
-seauen miles of London, the experiment is to be séene, where all these
-fruits and flowers with a world of others grow in two Gardens most
-abundantly. Now for such flowers or fruits as shall be brought from a
-colder or more barraine ground then our owne, there néedeth not much
-curiosity in the plantation of them, because a better euer bringeth
-forth a better encrease, onely I would wish you to obserue, to giue all
-such fruits or flowers the vttermost liberty of the weather, & rather
-to adde coolenes by shaddow, then encrease any warmth by reflection,
-as also to augment showers by artificiall watrings, rather then to let
-the roote dry for want of continuall moysture; many other notes and
-obseruations there are, which to discouer, would aske a volume larger
-then I intend, and yet not be more in true substance, then this which
-is already writ, if the Reader haue but so much mother-wit, as by
-comparing things together, to draw the vses from the true reasons, and
-to shunne contrary by contraries, which what Husbandman is so simple,
-but he can easily performe, and hauing the true grounds of experience,
-frame his descant according to his owne fancie, which is a Musicke best
-pleasing to all men, since it is not in any one mans power to giue a
-generall contentment. And thus much for flowers, and their generall and
-particular ordering.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. VII.
-
-_How to preserue all manner of seedes, hearbs, flowers, and fruits,
-from all manner of noysome and pestilent things which deuoure and hurt
-them._
-
-
-[Sidenote: Of Thunder and Lightning.]
-
-It is not enough to bequeath and giue your séedes vnto the ground, and
-then immediatly to expect (without any further industrie) the fruit of
-your labours, no goodnesse seldome commeth with such ease: you must
-therefore know that when you lay your séedes in the ground, they are
-like so many good men amongst a world of wicked ones, and as it were
-inuironed and begirt with maine Armies of enemies, from which if your
-care and diligence doe not defend them the most, if not all, will
-doubtlesse perish, and of these enemies the worst and most violentest
-is _Thunder_ and _Lightning_, which in a moment killeth all sorts of
-flowers, plants, and trées, euen in the height and pride of their
-flourishing, which to preuent, it hath béene the practise of all the
-auncient Gardners, to plant against the walles of their Gardens, or in
-the middest of their quarters, where their choysest flowers grow, the
-_Lawrell_ or _Bay_ Trée, which is euer helde a defence against those
-strikings.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Caterpillers.]
-
-Next vnto _Thunder_ and _Lightning_ are _Caterpillers_, which are a
-kinde of filthy little wormes, which lye in Cobwebs about the leaues,
-deuouring them, and poysoning the sap, in such sort, that the Plant
-dieth spéedily after: the way to kill these, is to take strong Vrine
-and Ashes mixt together, and with it to dash and sprinkle all the
-Plants cleane ouer, and it will both preuent their bréeding, or being
-bred will kill them: the smoake of Brimstone will doe the like, yet if
-they be excéeding much abundant, the surest way to destroy them, is to
-take olde, rotten, mouldy Hay, and setting it on fire, with the blaze
-thereof burne the Cob-webs, and then with the smoake smother and kill
-the wormes, and they will hardly euer bréede in that place againe.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Toades and Frogges.]
-
-Next these are _Toades_ and _Frogges_, which are very poysonous and
-great destroyers of young Plants, chiefly in their first appearing
-aboue the ground, and the auncient Gardners haue vsed to destroy them
-by burning the fat of a Stagge in some part of the Garden beds, from
-which earth all creatures that haue poyson in them, will flye with all
-violence: other Gardners will watch where the Kite pearcheth on nights,
-and gathering vp her dung, scatter it vpon the beds either simply, or
-mixt with the shauings of an olde Harts horne, and no venemous thing
-will come néere it.
-
-[Sidenote: Of the field Myce.]
-
-Next these are field _Myce_, which will roote séedes out of the earth,
-and deuoure them aboundantly, which to kill you shall take _Henbane
-seede_, and beate it to pouder, and then mixing it with swéete Oyle,
-fresh Butter, or Grease, make thereof a bayte; and when you finde
-where they scratch or roote, lay some part of the bayte in that place,
-and they will gréedily eate it, and it will kill them: there be other
-Gardners which will take a Wéesell, and burning it to ashes, scatter
-the ashes on the beds, and then no field _Mouse_ will come néere them.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Flyes.]
-
-Next these are _Flyes_, as flesh-_Flyes_, _Scarabs_, _Hornets_,
-_Dores_, and such like, which are great destroyers of Séeds and Plants,
-when they appeare in their first leafe, and are soft and tender, which
-to destroy, you shall either take _Orpment_ mixt with milke, or the
-pouder of _Allome_, or the ashes of any of these _Flyes_ burnt, and
-with it sprinkle your beds and young plants all ouer, and it will kéepe
-_Flyes_ that they will not dare to come néere them.
-
-[Sidenote: Of the greene Fly.]
-
-If the gréene _Fly_, which of all other _Flyes_ is most gréedie to hurt
-Séedes and Plants, doe offend your Garden, you shall take _Henbane_
-leaues, _Houseleeke_, and _Minte_, and beat them in a Morter, then
-straine forth the iuyce, and then adde thereto as much Vinegar as
-was of all the rest, and there-with sprinkle your beds all ouer, and
-the gréene _Fly_ will neuer come néere them. Some hold opinion, that
-if you plant the hearbe _Rocket_ in your Garden, that it is a safe
-preseruatiue against these gréene _Flyes_, for it is most certaine that
-the very smell thereof will kill these, and most sorts of all other
-_Flyes_ whatsoeuer, as hath béene found by approued experience, and the
-sylts of olde auncient Abby Gardens, which a man shall seldome finde
-without this hearbe planted in them.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Gnats.]
-
-Next these are _Gnats_, which although it be the smallest of all Flyes,
-yet it is the greatest, quickest, and sharpest deuourer of tender
-Plants of all other, for it biteth déeper and more venemously sharpe,
-then those which are of much bigger substance: the best way to destroy
-them is morning and euening, to smoake and perfume your beds either
-with wet Rosemary, or with mouldy Hay: some vse to burne _Calamint_,
-and some Oxe dung, and sure all are very good, for the smoakes are very
-sharpe, and styflle as soone as it is receiued.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Pismyers.]
-
-Next these are _Pismyers_, which also are very noysome vnto Gardens,
-for they will digge vp, and carrie away the smaller séedes to their
-hills, and in short space spoyle and deface a bed of his encrease, and
-the best way to destroy them, is, if you finde their hill, to poure hot
-scalding water vpon them: or if vpon your Garden beds you strowe Ashes
-or Lyme, but especially that which is made of chalk, they will by no
-meanes come néere them, as you shall finde by experience.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Moales.]
-
-Next these are _Moales_, which digging and vndermining the earth,
-turneth vp Séedes and Plants in a confused fashion, to the vtter
-destruction and ruine of the Husband-mans labour, the cure whereof is
-to take them in such sort, as shall be shewed in this Booke, where I
-speake of Pasture grounds; but if you finde that their encrease and
-continuance multiply with your labour, it shall be then good for you
-to plant in diuers places of your Garden the hearbe called _Palma
-christi_, in other places _Garlickes_ and in other places _Onyons_, and
-it is an assured rule that no _Moale_ will come néere where they grow
-for the strength and violence of their smell, is poysonous and deadly
-to those blind vermines.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Snailes.]
-
-Next there are _Snailes_ of both kindes, blacke and white, which are
-as much offensiue to Gardens, as any other crawling thing, for they
-féed of the tender leaues of plants, and of the outmost rindes of the
-daintiest hearbs or flowers, the way to destroy them, is to sprinkle
-vpon the beds and other places of their aboad good store of chimney
-soote, which by no meanes they can endure, because it is mortall and
-poysonous.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Moathes.]
-
-Next there are _Moathes_ or _Moaghts_, which are very pernitious in
-a Garden, for they destroy both Séeds and Plants, and there is not
-better or more certaine way to kill them, then by taking olde horse
-hoofes, and burning them, with the smoake thereof to perfume all the
-places where they abide, and it will in an instant kill them; with this
-smoake onely you may kéepe Arras hanging, Tapistrie, Néedle-worke,
-Cushions, or Carpets, or any woollen cloath or garment whatsoeuer safe
-from _Moathes_ as long as you please, neither néede you to vse it aboue
-once or twice a yéere at the most, as shall be more at large in another
-place declared.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Cankers.]
-
-Next these are _Cankers_, which are a kinde of filthie wormes, which
-deuoure both the great and small leaues of all sorts of swéet Plants,
-especially _Lettuce_, _Cabbadge_, _Colaflours,_ and such like; and the
-way to destroy them, is to scatter amongst your Plants, Goose-dung,
-or to sprinkle the iuyce thereof with a wispe of _Rue_, or hearbe of
-_Grace_ ouer all the beds, and though some with a rustie knife vse to
-scrape them from the leaues, and so kill them on a Tyle-shread, yet for
-my part I hold this the néerer way, and both more certaine and more
-easie, as experience will approue.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Garden Wormes.]
-
-[Sidenote: An excellent experiment.]
-
-Lastly, are your Garden _Wormes_ which liuing in the hollowes of the
-earth féede much vpon your tender Garden séedes, and the soft sprouts
-which first issue from them, especially from all sorts of kirnels, in
-which they delight more then in any other séede whatsoeuer, as you may
-finde by experience, if you please to obserue accidents as they happen,
-without which obseruation you shall hardly attaine to the perfection
-of an excellent Gardner: for if you please to make this triall, take
-the kirnels of a faire sound Pippin, and deuide them into two parts,
-then sowe the one halfe in a Garden bed well drest and trimmed for the
-purpose, where the worme hath liberty to come and goe at his pleasure,
-sowe the other halfe in some riuen boule, earthen pot, or halfe Tub,
-made for the purpose with the same earth or mould that the bed is, and
-then set the vessell so as no worme may come there-vnto, and you shall
-finde that all those Séedes will sprout and come forth, when hardly any
-one of those in the bed of earth will or can prosper, there being no
-other reason but the extreame gréedinesse of the deuouring worme, which
-to preuent, you shall take Oxe dung, and burn it to ashes, then mixe
-them with the earth where-with you couer your Séedes, and it will both
-kill the wormes, and make the Séedes sprout both sooner and safer. And
-thus much for the preseruation of Séeds and Plants, from all noysome
-and pestilent creatures, which being practised with care and diligence,
-will giue vnto euery honest minde the satisfaction he desireth.
-
-[Sidenote: The conclusion of the Kitchen Garden.]
-
-Now to conclude this small tract or Treatise of the Husbandmans
-_Kitchen Garden_, I would haue euery honest Reader vnderstand, that I
-haue not taken vpon me to modell out any curious shape or proportion,
-but onely figured out a perfect nourcerie, shewing you how to bréed
-and bring vp all things fit for health or recreation which being once
-brought to mature and ripe age, you may dispose into those proper
-places which may become their worthinesse, in which worke I would haue
-your owne fancy your owne directour, for I may giue preheminence to
-that you least like, and disestéeme that most which to you may séeme
-most worthy, therefore let your owne iudgement order your Garden, like
-your house, and your hearbs like your furniture, placing the best in
-the best places, & such as are most conspicuous, and the rest according
-to their dignities in more inferiour roomes, remembring that your
-galleries, great chambers, and lodgings of state doe deserue Arras,
-your Hall Wainscote, and your meanest offices some _Boscadge_, or
-cleanly painting: from this alligorie if you can draw any wit, you may
-finde without my further instruction how to frame Gardens of all sorts
-to your owne contentment.
-
-
-
-
- THE SECOND PART
- OF THE SECOND BOOKE
- of the _English Husbandman_: Contayning
- the ordering of all sorts of VVoods, and
- the breeding of Cattell.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. I.
-
-_Of the beginning of Woods, first sowing, and necessarie vse._
-
-
-[Sidenote: Wood better then Gold.]
-
-[Sidenote: The excellent vses of Wood.]
-
-It is a Maxime held in Plantations, that no land is habitable, which
-hath not Wood & Water, they two being as it were the only nerues &
-strength of a mans safe and wholesome liuing, and I haue heard many
-wise Gentlemen, exercised, and ingaged, in the most noble and euer
-laudable workes of our new Plantations, both of _Virgina_ and the
-Summer-_Ilands_ affirme, that they had rather, for a generall profit,
-haue a fertile wholesome land, with much wood, then (wanting wood)
-with a Mine of gold: so infinite great is the vse of Timber (whose
-particulars I néede not rehearse) and so insufferable is the want,
-when we are any way pinched with the same. And hence it springeth that
-our olde auncestors (whose vertues would God we would in some small
-measure imitate) when they found any hard and barraine earth, such as
-was vnapt for grasse; or at least such as bare but grasse that would
-kéepe life, not comfort life, they presently plowed it vp, and sowed
-thereon Acornes, Ash-keyes, Maple knots, Béech apples, Hawes, Slowes,
-Nuts, Bullis, and all other séeds of trées in innumerable quantity,
-as may appeare by the Forrests of _Del la mere_, _Sherwood_, _Kings
-wood_, and many other within this kingdome of huge great spaciousnes
-and compasse, from whom when the wood is spoiled, the soyle serueth to
-little or no purpose, except it be the kéeping aliue of a few poore
-shéepe, which yéeld but little profit more then their carkasse. Thus
-euen from the first age of the world hath our forefathers béene euer
-most carefull to preserue and encrease wood, and for mine owne part I
-haue euer obserued in all those places where I haue séene Woods decayed
-and destroyed, that the charge of stubbing and other necessaries
-allowed; those lands haue neuer againe yéelded the former profit, for
-the greatest exhaustment that euer I saw of wood ground was to bring it
-to tenne shillings an Acre when it was conuerted to pasture, and being
-kept to wood, it was worth euery seauentéenth yéere one and twenty
-pound. A simple Auditor may cast the account of this profit, but such
-is our gréedinesse, that for our instant vse we little respect the
-good of ours, or our neighbours. But it is no part of my Bookes method
-to call offences to question, but onely to right the Husbandman in
-his iourney to ordinarie profit. Know then that there is nothing more
-profitable to the Husbandman, then the encreasing and nourishing of
-wood; from whence (as our common lawes termes it) springs these thrée
-bootes or necessary commodities, to wit House-boote, Plowe-boote, and
-Fire-boote, without the first we haue neither health, couert, ease,
-nor safety from sauage beasts: without the second we cannot haue the
-fruits of the earth, nor sustenance for our bodies, nor without the
-last can we defend off the sharp Winters, or maintaine life against
-the numbing colds which would confound vs. The consideration of these
-thrée things only, might enduce vs to the preseruation of this most
-excellent commodity: but the other infinite necessities & vses which
-we make of wood, as shipping, by which we make our selues Lords of the
-Seas: fencing which is the bond of concord amongst neighbours: solution
-& trial of Mines, from whence springs both our glory in peace, and our
-strength in warre, with a world of others sutable vnto them, should be
-motiues vnresistable to make vs with all diligence hast to the most
-praise-worthy labour of planting wood, in euery place and corner, where
-it may any way conueniently be receiued.
-
-[Sidenote: The plantation of Wood.]
-
-If then the Husbandman shall liue in a high barraine Countrey (for
-low-valleyes, marshes, or such grounds as are subiect to inundations,
-seldome nourish wood well) or in a soyle though not vtterly barraine,
-yet of so hard and sower encrease, that the hearbage doth in the profit
-but in small quantity, I would wish him after a generall triall of
-his earth, to deuide it into thrée equall parts, the first and the
-fruitfullest I would haue him preserue for pasture for his Cattell of
-all kindes: the second and next in fertility for corne, being no more
-then those cattell may till, and the last & most barraine to imploy
-for wood: which though he stay long for the profit, yet will pay the
-interest double. And this ground thus chosen for wood, I would haue
-him plowe vp from the swarth about the latter end of Februarie, and
-if it be light earth, as either sand, grauell, or a mixt hazel earth,
-then immediatly to sow it with Acornes, Ash-keyes, Elme & Maple knots,
-Béech-apples, Chesnuts, Ceruisses, Crabs, Peares, Nuts of all kindes,
-Hawes, Hips, Bullice, Slowes, and all manner of other wood séeds
-whatsoeuer, and as soone as they are sowne with strong Oxe harrowes of
-iron, to harrow and breake the earth, in such sort, that they may be
-close and safely couered. And in the plowing of this earth, you must
-diligently obserue to turne vp your furrowes as déepe as is possible,
-that the séede taking strong and déepe roote, may the better and with
-more safety encrease, and defend it selfe against stormes and tempests,
-whereas if the roote be but weakely fixed, the smallest blasts will
-shake the Trées, and make them crooked, wrythen, and for small vse but
-fire onely.
-
-[Sidenote: The fencing of young woods.]
-
-[Sidenote: When cattell may graze in Springs.]
-
-After you haue harrowed your earth, and laide your séede safe, you
-shall fence your ground about with a strong and large fence, and
-hedge, ditch, pale, or such like, which may kéepe out all manner of
-foure-footed beasts, for comming within the same, for the space of
-tenne yéeres after: for you shall vnderstand, that if any cattell
-shall come where young wood is péeping aboue the earth, or whilst it
-is young, tender, and soft, they will naturally crop and brouse vpon
-the same, and then be sure that the wood which is so bitten, will neuer
-prosper or spring vp to any height, but turne to bushie shrubs and
-ill-fauoured tufts, pestring the ground without any hope of profit,
-whereas if it be defended and kept safe the space of tenne yéeres at
-the least, it will after defend it selfe, and prosper in despight
-of any iniurie: and then after that date you may safely turne your
-cattell into the same, and let them graze at pleasure, and surely you
-shall finde it a great reliefe for your young beast, as your yearling
-Haiffers, Bullocks, Colts, Fillies, and such like: for I would not wish
-you to let any elder cattell come within the same, because the grasse
-though it be long, yet it is sower and scowring, and by that meanes
-will make your cattell for labour weake and vnhealthie, whether it be
-Oxe or Horse, and for milch-Kine, it will instantly dry vp their milke,
-but for idle heilding beasts, whose profit is comming after, it will
-serue sufficiently.
-
-[Sidenote: The vse of the clay ground for Wood.]
-
-Now if the earth whereon you sowe your wood, be a stiffe clay ground,
-and onely barraine through the extreamitie of colde, wet, or such like,
-as is séene in daily experience: you shall then plowe vp the ground at
-the end of Ianuarie in déepe furrowes, as is before rehearsed; and then
-let it rest till it haue receiued two or thrée good Frosts, then after
-those Frosts some wet, as either snow or raine, and then the next
-faire season after sowe it, as afore-said, and harrow it, and you shall
-sée the mould breake and couer most kindely, which without this baite,
-and order, it would not doe, then fence it as afore-said, and preserue
-it from cattell for tenne yéeres after.
-
-[Sidenote: A speciall note.]
-
-And here is to be noted that one Oake growing vpon a clay ground, is
-worth any fiue which growes vpon the sand, for it is more hard, more
-tough, and of much longer indurance, not so apt to teare, ryue, or
-consume, either with Lyme, Rubbish, or any casuall moysture, whence
-it comes that euer your Ship-wrights or Mill-wrights desire the clay
-Oake for their vse, and the Ioyner the sand Oake for smoothnesse and
-waynscote. And thus much for the sowing of Wood, and his generall vses.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. II.
-
-_The deuision of vnder-Woods, their sale, and profit._
-
-
-[Sidenote: The deuision of Woods.]
-
-[Sidenote: The valew of vnder-wood.]
-
-Whosoeuer be a Lord or Master of much vnder-wood, which is indéede
-young spring-wood of all kindes, growing thicke and close together,
-either from the séede, as is declared in the former Chapter, or from
-the rootes of former salles, the first being a profit begotten by him
-selfe, the other a right left by purchase or inheritance, and desire,
-as it is the dutie of euery vertuous husband, to make his best and
-most lawfullest profit thereof, hauing not left vnto him any president
-of former commodity. In this case you shall suruay the whole circuit
-of your wood, with euery corner and angle there vnto belonging, and
-then as your abilitie and the quantity of your ground shall afford,
-you shall deuide your whole wood either into twelue, seauentéene, or
-one and twenty parts of equall Acres, Roodes, or Rods, and euery yeare
-you shall sell or take to your owne vse one of those parts, so that
-one following yearely after another, our sales may continue time out
-of minde, and you shall imploy as you please so much wood euery yeare
-of either twelue, seauentéene, or one and twenty yeares growth. And in
-this you shal note that the sale of one and twenty, doth farre excéede
-that of seauentéene, and that of seauentéene as farre that of twelue:
-but in this it is quantity, and your necessity that must direct you,
-and not my demonstration: for there be fewe Husbands but know that an
-Acre of one and twenty yéeres growth, may be worth twenty, nay thirty
-pounds, that of seauentéene worth eight or ten pounds, and that of
-twelue, fiue and sixe pounds, according to the goodnesse of the wood,
-insomuch that the longer a man is able to stay, the greater sure is
-his profit: but fewell and fence must of necessity be had, and if a
-man haue but twelue acres of wood, I sée not but he must be forced to
-take euery yéere one acre for his owne reliefe, and if hée take more,
-hée must either necessarily spoyle all, or driue himselfe into extreame
-want in fewe yeares following: and therefore it is méete that euery
-good husband shape his garment according to his cloath, and onely take
-plenty where plenty is; yet with this husbandly caution that euer the
-elder your sale is, the richer it is, as you may perceiue by the well
-husbanded Woods of many Bishoprickes in this land, which are not cut
-but at thirtie yeares growth.
-
-[Sidenote: Of the sale of vnder-woods.]
-
-When you haue made your deuisions according to your quantity, you
-shall begin your sale at an out-side where cariages may enter without
-impeachment to the springs you intend not to cut, and a pole or halfe
-pole according to the quantity of ground, you shall preserue (being
-next of all to the outmost fence) to repaire the ring fences of your
-Wood, and to seperate the new sale from the standing Wood: and this
-amongst Woodwards is called Plash-pole. Then at the latter end of
-Ianuarie you may begin to cut downe your vnder-wood, and sell it either
-by acres, roodes, perches, poles, roddes, or dozens, according to the
-quantitie of your earth, or the abilitie of your buyers. And in this
-sale I cannot set you downe any certaine price, because true iudgement,
-and the goodnesse of your wood must onely giue you direction, things
-being euer valewed according to their worth and substance, and this
-sale or the cutting downe of vnder-wood, you may continue from the
-latter end of Ianuarie, till midde Aprill, at which time the leafe
-begins to bud forth, or somewhat longer if necessitie vrge you: the
-like you may also doe from the beginning of September, at which time
-the leafe beginnes to shed till the middest of Nouember.
-
-[Sidenote: How to cut vnder-woods.]
-
-Now for the manner of cutting downe your vnder-woods, although the
-lawes of the Kingdome shew you what dutie you shall performe therein,
-what Timber you shall preserue, and how néere each Weauer shall stand
-one to another, yet I would wish you both for your owne and the
-Common-wealths sake, to performe somewhat more then that to which you
-are by law compelled, & therefore you shall giue direction to your
-wood fallers, that when they shall méete with any faire and straight
-well growne sapling, Oake, Elme, Ash, or such like, to preserue them,
-and let them stand still, being of such fit distance one from another,
-that they may not hinder or trouble each other in their growing, and
-when you shall finde vpon a cluster many faire Plants or Saplings; you
-shall view which is the fairest of them all, and it preserue onely, and
-the rest cut away, that it may prosper the better: also if you finde
-any faire and well growne fruit Trées, as Peares, Chesnuts, Seruisses,
-and such like, you shall let them stand and cleare them from the
-droppings of the taller trées, and you shall finde the profit make you
-recompence. Now for the generall cutting vp of the wood, you shall cut
-it about sixe inches aboue the ground, and drawing your strokes vpward,
-cut the wood slope-wise, for that is best to hasten on the new Spring;
-and those Weauers or young which you preserue and suffer to growe
-still, you shall prune and trimme as you passe by them, cutting away
-all superfluous branches, twigges, and young spyers, which shall grow
-either néere vnto the roote, or vpon any part of the boale, which is
-fit to be preserued for Timber, and if you shall finde that the earth
-haue by any casualty forsaken the root, and left it bare, which is
-hurtfull to the growth of the Trée, you shall lay fresh earth vnto it,
-and ram the same hard and fast about it.
-
-[Sidenote: The fencing of salles.]
-
-[Sidenote: The Woodwards duty.]
-
-Thus when you haue made an end of cutting downe your sale, and that
-the wood is cleansed and carried away, and all the loose and scattered
-stickes raked vp into seuerall heapes, and caried away also; for it is
-the part of euerie good husband and Woodward, not to sée any wood lye
-and rot vpon the ground; you shall then with the vnder-wood preserued
-in the Plash-pole, deuide by a strong hedge this new cut downe sale
-from the other elder growne wood, and for tenne yéeres, as before is
-spoken, not suffer any foure-footed beast to come within the same; from
-which rule you shall learne this lesson, that it is the Woodwards duty
-euery day to looke ouer all his young Springs, and if by any mischance
-or negligence cattell shall happen to breake into them (as many times
-they doe) then shall he not onely driue forth or impound such Cattell,
-but also suruay how farre and which Plants they haue cropt, and hauing
-spied them, with his wood Bill, presently cut the Plants so brouzed
-close by the bottomes of the last shuts, and then they will newly put
-forth againe, as well as if they had neuer béene hindred: which done,
-he shall finde out where the cattell brake in; and then mend the same,
-so well and sufficiently, that it may preuent the like mischiefe.
-Also if these young springs shall stand néere vnto Forrests or elder
-Woods, which are full of wilde Deare, and be no purlewes belonging vnto
-the same, the Woodward then shall neuer walke without a little dogge
-following him, with which he shall chase such Deare out of his young
-springs, because it is to be vnderstood, that the brouzing of Deare is
-as hurtfull to young wood, as that of any other cattell whatsoeuer.
-And thus much touching the ordering and gouernment of vnder-woods, with
-their sales, and the nourishing vp of greater Timber.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. III.
-
-_Of High Woods, and their Plantation._
-
-
-[Sidenote: What high Woods are.]
-
-[Sidenote: The beginning of high Woods.]
-
-High Woods are those which containe onely Trées for Timber, and are not
-pestred or imbraced with the vnder growth of small brush wood, such
-as Hazels, White-thorne, Sallowes and Poplar are; these for the most
-part consist of Oakes, Ash, Elme, Béech, Maple, and such like, growing
-so remote and seperate one from another, that although their tops and
-branches méete, and as it were infolde one within another, yet at
-the rootes a man may walke or ride about them without trouble. These
-high Woods had their first beginnings from the séeds, as was before
-declared, and nourisht from age to age amongst the vnder-woods, which,
-when men began to want foode for their bréede-Cattell, and that from
-the super-abundance of young Woods, they found some might conueniently
-be spared, they forth-with in stead of cutting downe their young wood
-aboue the earth, began to digge it vp by the rootes, and with stubbe
-Axes to teare the meane sinewes from the ground, so that it might not
-renew or encrease againe, and then leuelling the earth, and laying it
-smooth and plaine, to leaue nothing standing but the tall Timber trées,
-betwéene which the grasse had more libertie to growe, and Cattell more
-abundance to féede on, and all be not so long and well able to fill the
-mouth, as that which growes in the thicke springs, yet much more swéet
-and better able to nourish any thing that shall graze vpon the same, by
-reason that the Sunne and Frosts hauing more frée power to enter into
-the ground, the earth is so much the better seasoned, and bringeth
-forth her encrease with more swéetnesse.
-
-[Sidenote: The Plantation of high Woods.]
-
-Some are of opinion, that these high Woods may as well be planted as
-sowne, and that many of them from the first beginning haue béene so, to
-which opinion I consent in part: for doubtlesse I am perswaded, that
-many small Groues of Ash, Elme, Béech and Poplar haue béene planted,
-for we sée in our daily experience, and the new walkes in _More-fields_
-by _London_, are a perfect testimonie, that such Plantations may
-be without trouble or danger: but for the Oake to be taken vp and
-replanted, is very hard, and very seldome in vse, neither shall a man
-in an whole Age sée any Oake remoued come to perfection or goodnesse,
-but growe crooked, knottie, and at the best, but for the vse of fewell
-onely: but for the other before rehearsed, you may remoue them when
-they are a dozen yeares of age, and plant them where you please: and if
-the earth haue in it any goodnesse at all, they will take root and grow
-both spéedily, and plentifully. And since I am thus farre entred into
-the plantation of Woods, I will shew you how you shall plant and remoue
-euery Trée in his due manner and season.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Planting the Elme.]
-
-And first for the planting of the Elme, which is an excellent Trée for
-shadow, and the adorning of walkes or dwelling houses, you shall make
-choise of those Plants which are straightest, soundest, the barke euen
-and vntwound, and at least eightéene or twenty inches in compasse:
-these you shall digge out of the ground, roote and all, then at the
-top of the head, about thrée fingers vnder the knot, where the maine
-armes seuerally issue forth, you shall a little slope-wise cut the head
-cleane off them, and mixing clay and a little horse-dung, or fine ashes
-together, couer the head round about there-with, then ouer the same
-wrap Mosse, or fine Hay, and binde it about with soft clouen Oziers,
-or some such like bands, then with a sharpe pruning Bill cut euery
-seuerall branch of the roote within a finger or two of the stocke;
-which done, and the roote pickt cleane, you shall make a hole to be
-digged in the place, where you meane to plant the Elme iust of that
-depth, the hole was from whence you digged out the Elme, that so much
-and no more of the Elme may be hidden in the earth, then was formerly
-at his remouing; and this hole you shall make spacious and easie; and
-that the mould be soft and loose both vnderneath and round about the
-roote of the Elme, which done, you shall place your Elme in the same,
-straight and vpright, without either swaruing one way or other, which
-for your better certaintie, you may proue either with plumbe, leuell,
-or other instrument, which being perfected, you shall with rich fresh
-mould well mixt with olde meanure, couer and ram the same fast in the
-earth, in such sort, that no reasonable strength may moue or shake it:
-and all this worke must be done in the encrease of the Moone, either in
-the moneth of October, or at the latter end of Ianuary: but the latter
-end of Ianuarie is euer helde the best and safest, for there is no
-question but you shall sée flourishing Trées the next Summer after: and
-in this sort you may likewise remoue either Béech, Witcher, or Popler,
-bestowing them either in Groues, Walkes, Hedge-rowes, or other places
-of shadow, as shall séeme best to your contentment: for their natures
-being alike, their growthes and flourishings haue little difference.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Planting the Ash.]
-
-[Sidenote: Obiection.]
-
-[Sidenote: Answere.]
-
-Now for the replanting or remouing the Ash, though not much, yet there
-is some difference, for it is not at the first so spéedie a putter
-forth, and flourisher, as the others be: but for the first yeare
-laboureth more to bestow and fixe his roote in the earth, then to
-spread forth his vpper branches, and although some Woodwards are of
-opinion, that so much as the Ash is aboue the ground, so much hée will
-be vnder before he begin to flourish outwardly, yet experience doth
-find it erronious, for though it be for the first yéere a little slower
-then other Trées, yet when it beginneth to flourish, it will ouer-take
-the spéediest grower. Therefore when you do intend to plant Ashes for a
-spéedy profit, you shall not according to the olde custome chuse the
-smooth, small, long Plants, which are hardly thrée inches in compasse,
-and haue put out hardly any branches, and are such as grow from the
-rootes of elder Ashes cut downe before, which our auncient Woodwards
-haue vsed to slip or cleaue from those rootes, no, these are the
-worst sorts of Plants: but you shall take the true ground-Ash, which
-springeth from his owne proper roote, being smooth, euen, sound, and
-straight without bruise, canker, or other impediment. This you shall
-digge vp by the root, being as is before said almost twenty inches in
-compasse, and hauing cleansed the roote, you shall leaue each spray
-not aboue halfe a foote, or eight inches in length; but for the small
-thréeds or tassels of the roote, those you shall cut cleane away close
-by the wood, and so plant it in euery point, as was shewed you for the
-planting of the Elme, onely the top thereof you shall by no meanes cut
-off, because it is a trée of pith, which to deuide or lay bare, were
-very dangerous; and the best season for the planting of this Trée, is
-euer in the encrease of the Moone, at the fall of the leafe, which is
-from the beginning of October till midde Nouember, and at no other
-time, for it would euer haue a whole Winter to fasten his roote, and to
-gather strength, that it may bud forth his leafe the Summer following.
-Thus you sée how you may plant Groues or Copses at your pleasure, and
-make vnto your selfe high Woods according to your owne pleasure. But
-you will obiect vnto me, that you liue in such a champaine Countrey,
-that albe these Plantations might bréede vnto you infinite pleasure,
-yet the pouerty thereof in wood is such that these Plants are not
-there to be found for any money. To which I thus answere, That in this
-Kingdome there is not any Country so barraine, or farre off remote from
-wood, being a soyle fit to receiue wood: But his next neighbour-Country
-is able to furnish him, especially with these Plants at an easie
-reckoning: as for example, I hold _Northampton_ shire one of the
-barrennest for Wood, yet best able to beare wood, and hath not he his
-neighbour _Huntington_ shire and _Leicester_ shire about him, where
-nurceries of these Plants are bred and preserued for the sale onely:
-Nay, euen in _Holland_, in _Lincolne_ shire, which is the lowest of all
-Countries, and most vnlikely to holde such a commodity, I haue séene
-as goodly Timber as in any Forrest or Chase of this Kingdome: and thus
-much for the planting of high Woods.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. IIII.
-
-_Of the preseruation, and sale of high Woods._
-
-
-[Sidenote: Of Trees which take wet inwardly.]
-
-It is not sufficient for the Husbandman to sowe, plant, and encrease
-wood about his grounds, conuerting his earth to the vttermost and
-extreamest profit that may spring from the same: but he must also
-be diligent to preserue and nourish his timber trées from all
-inconueniences that may any way annoy or afflict them: and to this
-end hée shall daily walke into his Woods, and with a searching eye
-suruay euery Trée which is of any account, and sée if he can finde any
-fault or annoyance about the same, and if casting his eye vp to the
-top, where the maine armes shoote forth themselues, he perceiue that
-by the breaking off of some arme or other riuen boughes, the wet and
-droppings of the leaues is sunke and fretted into the Timber, which in
-time will corrupt the heart, and make the Trée hollow. In this case he
-shall presently mount the Trée, and with his Bill, either cut the place
-so smooth that the wet may not rest thereon, or else hauing smoothed
-it so much as he may with conuenience, mixe stiffe clay and fine hay
-together, and with the same couer the place, in such manner, that it
-may put off the wet till it haue recouered new barke.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Barke-bound.]
-
-If hée shall perceiue any of his younger Trées to be Barke-bound, that
-is, so stiffe and straitly tied within their owne ryndes, that they
-cannot encrease or prosper: in this case he shall with a sharpe drawing
-knife, made in the proportion of a narrow _C_ draw and open the barke
-euen from the top of the bole of the Trée downe to the roote, and then
-clap Oxe dung into those slits, let the Trée rest, and in short space
-you shall sée it mightily encrease.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Hornets and Dores.]
-
-If he shall perceiue that _Hornets_, and _Dores_, or such like, haue
-found some little hollownesse in one of his Trées, and séeketh there
-to shelter and hide themselues, which in little space they will soone
-make larger, he shall forth-with besmeare all the place with Tarre and
-Goose-dung, and it will driue them thence.
-
-[Sidenote: Of the Canker.]
-
-If he shall finde that by the droppings of other Trées, some of his
-Trées shall grow cankerous, and loose their barke, which is an accident
-very vsuall, and the Trées whose barkes are so lost, will with great
-difficulty after prosper. In this case he shall annoynt the place with
-Tarre and Oyle mixt together, and then couer the place with clay, where
-the barke is wanting.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Pismyers.]
-
-If he shall perceiue any _Pismyer_ hilles or beds to be made against
-any of his Trées, which is very noysome, for they are great destroyers
-of the barks of Trées: he shall then with hot scalding water kill them,
-and throw the hill downe leuell and plaine with the earth.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Iuy, Woodbine, and Misseltoe.]
-
-If he shall find any _Iuy_, _Woodbine_, or _Mysteltoe_ to grow in or
-about any of his principall Trées, which doe strangle, suffocate, and
-kéepe them from encreasing, he shall forth-with digge vp the roots
-thereof, and then cut it away or loosen it from about the barks of the
-Trées.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Thunder and Lightning.]
-
-Lastly, if he shall perceiue that by _Thunder_, _Lightning_, or other
-plantarie stroakes, any of the armes of his well growne Trées be
-blasted or slaine, he shall forth-with cut them away, euen close to the
-quicke Wood, and make the place smooth and euen where they were ioyned:
-thus shall the carefull Husbandman with a vigilant eye, regard euery
-enormous and hurtfull thing that may offend his Timber, and by that
-meanes possesse more benefit from a fewe Roodes, then others doe from
-many Acres.
-
-[Sidenote: Of the sale of tall Woods.]
-
-Now when either necessity or the vrgent occasions of any néedfull vse,
-enforceth the Husbandman to make sale of any part of his tall Wood,
-in which Marchandise there is many prety and obscure secrets, such as
-are hard to be shewed by any Verball demonstration, for truly there
-is not any trucking or marting whatsoeuer, in which a man may sooner
-deceiue, or be deceiued, men buying and selling in a manner hood-winkt:
-for it is most certaine that no man can certainely tell either what
-peny-woorth hée selleth, or the other buyeth, so long as the Trée is
-standing, there be in Trées so many secret faults, and likewise when
-they are downe, and come to the breaking or burkning (as the Wood-man
-tearmes it) so many vnexpected vertues, as for mine owne part I haue
-often séene a Trée whose out-side hath promised all good hope, the
-barke being smooth and euen, the body large and great, and the armes
-high set on, and spaciously extended; yet when this Trée hath béene
-felled, and came to burkning, there hath béene found a hole in the
-top, which hath runne cleane though the heart, and vtterly spoyled the
-whole Timber: so likewise on the contrary part I haue séene a Trée very
-foule at the top, which is suspitious for rottennesse, whose armes haue
-growne so close and narrow together, that they haue promised little
-burthen, yet being cut downe, I haue séene that Trée passing sound, the
-armes double the loades in valuation, and the price being lesse then
-any, the proofe and goodnesse to excéede all; so that I must conclude
-it all together impossible to set downe any fixed or certaine rules
-either for the buyer or seller: but for as much as there are diuers
-worthie obseruances for both parts, and that it is as necessary to buy
-well as sell well, I will runne through euery particular obseruation,
-which doth belong both to the one and the other partie, with which
-when a mans minde is perfectly acquainted, he may with much bolder
-confidence aduenture to buy or sell in the open Market.
-
-[Sidenote: How to chuse Timbers.]
-
-[Sidenote: Of Mill Timber.]
-
-[Sidenote: Timber to beare burthen.]
-
-The first thing therefore that either buyer or seller should be
-skilfull in, is the choyse of all sorts of Timbers, and to know which
-is fit for euery seuerall purpose, the crooked and vneyely being for
-some vses of much higher price and reckoning then that which is plaine,
-straight, and euen growne, as thus for example. If you would buy Timber
-for Mill-whéeles, the heads of round Turrets, or any kinde of any worke
-whatsoeuer, you shall chuse that which is crooked and some-what bent,
-being sound, firme, and vnshaken. If you will chuse Timber for Summer
-Trées, Baulks, Iawnies, or Tracens, you shall chuse that which is most
-hartie, sound, and much twound, or as it were wrythen about, which you
-shall with great ease perceiue by the twinding or crooked going about
-of the barke, the graine whereof will as it were circle and lay round
-about the Trée. This Timber which is thus twound or wrythen, will by no
-meanes ryue or cleaue asunder, and therefore is estéemed the best to
-support and beare burthen, and the heart thereof will endure and last
-the longest.
-
-[Sidenote: Timber for Pales, Wainscote, &c.]
-
-If you will chuse Timber for Pales, Singles, Coopers-ware, Wainscote,
-or such like, then you shall euer chuse that which is smooth, euen, and
-straight growne, without any manner of twynding or shaking, which you
-shall perceiue by the straight and euen growing vp of the barke, whose
-crests will ascend straight and vpright, euen from the roote to the
-bottome, which is an assured token that all such Timber will shiuer and
-ryue into as thinne parts as a man would desire.
-
-[Sidenote: Timber for Pyles or Water-workes.]
-
-Lastly, if you would chuse Timber to make Pyles of, to driue into the
-earth, for the framing of Weares within the water, the heads of Ponds,
-or any other worke within the water then you shall chuse that which is
-most knottie (so it be sound) for that will driue without splitting,
-and continue in the earth the longest: and of all Timbers the Elme
-is accounted the best for this purpose, for it will continue almost
-euerlastingly in the earth without rotting; yet notwithstanding, the
-Oake is excellent good also: and thus much for the generall choise of
-Oakes.
-
-[Sidenote: Vse of the Elme.]
-
-Now if you would chuse Timber for weather-boards, or to be vsed in
-water-workes, or to make Planks for low moyst Vaults, then you shall
-chuse the biggest, soundest and smoothest growne _Elme_, it is also
-excellent good to make Kitchen tables of, or for boards, for the vse
-of Butchers. If you will chuse the most principallest Timber, for
-Cart or Waine Axel trées, for the naues of whéeles, or for any other
-vse of toughnesse, you shall chuse the _Elme_ onely, for it excéedeth
-all other Timbers, and though some Husbandmen are of opinion, that
-the _Elme_ Axel-trée when it is throughly heated, is then most apt to
-breake, they are much deceiued, for it will endure farre beyond Ash or
-any other Timber, except Yewgh, which for the scarsity is now of little
-vse in such a purpose. And herein you must obserue, that the _Elme_
-which you chuse for Axel-trées must be straite, smooth, and without
-knots, but that which you chuse for naues, must be most knotty, twound,
-and the hardest to be broken or hewed asunder.
-
-[Sidenote: Vse of the Ash.]
-
-If you will chuse Timber for Ploughes, ordinary Axel-trées (for
-those of _Elme_ are speciall) the rings of whéeles harrow bulls, and
-such like, then you shall chuse the fairest, straightest, biggest,
-and smoothest growne Ash that you can finde, and from the roote end
-vpward, you shall cut out a length of Axel-trées, aboue it a length of
-shelbordes, and aboue it (if the Trée be so large) a length for heads
-and Skeathes, the largest armes which are somewhat bending, you shall
-elect for rings for whéeles, and so according to the bignesse of the
-Ash, and as your eye can proportion out what will be made of the same,
-you shall make valuation thereof.
-
-[Sidenote: Vse of the Wall-nut tree.]
-
-If you would chuse Timber for ioyned Tables, Cupbords, or Bedsteds,
-you shall then make choise of the fairest Walnut-trée you can finde,
-being olde, straight, vnknotted, and of a high boale: and although
-either Oake, or Ash will reasonably well serue for this purpose, yet
-the Walnut-trée is by many degrées the best of all other, for it is
-of smoothest graine, and to the eye most beautifull, prouided that by
-no meanes you put it into any worke, before it be excéedingly well
-seasoned.
-
-[Sidenote: Vse of the Peare-tree.]
-
-If you would chuse Timber for Ioynt-stooles, Chaires, or Chests, you
-shall then chuse the oldest Peare-trée so it be sound, for it is both
-smooth, swéet, and delicate, and though it be a very soft Wood, yet
-in any of these frames it is an excéeding long laster, and the heart
-thereof will neuer bréede worme, nor will it in any time loose the
-colour.
-
-[Sidenote: Vse of the Maple, Beech, and Poplar.]
-
-If you would chuse Timber for Trenchers, Dishes, or any Tourners ware,
-or for any in-laying worke, you shall then make choise of the fairest
-and soundest Maple, being smooth and vnknotted, for it is the plainest
-graine, and the whitest Wood of all other: and although either the
-Béech or Poplar will reasonably well serue for these purposes, yet is
-neither the colours so good, nor the Timber so long lasting. Many other
-Trées there are which may serue for many other purposes: but these are
-of most vse for our English Husbandman, and will sufficiently serue to
-passe through all his businesses.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Char-coale.]
-
-Touching Char-coale, you shall vnderstand, that Oake, Elme, and Ash,
-make your longest and best enduring Coale: the Birtch the finest and
-brightest Coale, and the Béech or Sallow the swiftest Coale. Now for
-your small Coale, the twigges of the Birtch makes that which kindles
-the soonest, and the White-thorne that which endures the longest.
-
-[Sidenote: How to value Timber.]
-
-Thus when you know how to chuse euery seuerall Trée, and the true vse
-and profit which can any way be made of the same, and by a practised
-experience can cast by the suruay and view of a standing Wood, the
-almost entire profit that may arise from the same, deuiding in your
-memory how many are for euery seuerall purpose, and to what reckoning
-they may amount one with the other, and blemishing (if you buy) the
-good with the bad, or making good (if you sell) the bad with those
-good ones which grow néere them, you may then boldly venture into any
-sale either as a buyer or seller at your pleasure, and sure if you
-know (as it is fit you should doe) the Market-able prices of all sorts
-of Timbers in those places, where you are either to buy or sell, as
-what a Mill-post is worth, what so many inches of well squared Timber,
-contayning so many foote in length, what a dozen of boards of such a
-size, what so many naues, spoakes, rings, sparres, or tracens, or what
-so much sound and good Plough-timber is worth, and then looking vpon a
-Trée, and computing what may euery way be made of the same, allowing
-the wast which will hardly sometimes defray the charge of breaking vp
-the Trée, you cannot but with great ease draw into your minde the true
-value of euery Trée, and the vttermost profit or losse may any way rise
-from the same.
-
-[Sidenote: How to measure Timber by gesse.]
-
-And in this worke I would haue you to obserue this rule very carefully,
-that is, when you come to any great Timber-trée, to fathome or embrace
-it about with both your armes, and then knowing what quantity your
-fathome is, and how many fathome girdleth the Trée round about, you may
-from former experience giue a certaine gesse what inches of squared
-Timber that Trée will beare, for if you haue found in former trials
-that twice your fathome in the rough barke hath borne twenty, or two
-and twenty inches squared, and now finde that the present Trée on which
-you looke, is no lesse, but rather with the bigger, you may boldly
-presume, that being sound, this trée can carrie no lesse square of good
-Timber: and thus much for the knowledge and choise of tall Woods.
-
-[Sidenote: Best seasons for the sale.]
-
-[Sidenote: The time for Chap-men.]
-
-Now to come to the seasons & fittest times for sale of these high
-Woods: you shall vnderstand that it is méete for euery good husband
-which intendeth to sell any of his high Woods, to walke into the same
-immediately after Christmas, & whether they be in woods, Groues,
-hedge-rowes, or other places, to marke with a special marke all those
-Trées which he intendeth to sell, as well for the wéeding and cleansing
-out of all such as are decayed and wasted, as also to know the true
-number of both the good and bad, and thereby in some measure to compute
-the profit which will arise from the same, for to make sale of them
-otherwise confusedly, might bring much losse to a man happily, selling
-away those that would encrease their valewes, and kéepeing them which
-daily would decrease their goodnesse, or so vnorderly vnmixing his
-Wood, that where one faire and good Trée would draw a mans eye from
-beholding diuers which are doated, now that onely taken away, the rest
-will remaine, and neuer be sale-able, and therefore euer as néere as
-you can so suite and match your Trées together, that in your sales
-you may neuer passe away an absolute worthie Trée: but you may euer
-couple some which haue defects to goe with it, as in these dayes we sée
-Warriners and Poulters sell Rabbets, a fat and a leane euer coupled
-together. When you haue thus marked out what you meane to sell, and
-disposed your sale according to your best profit, after notice giuen
-vnto the Country in the Market Townes néere adioyning, you shall begin
-your sale the Candlemasse following, which sale you may continue all
-the Spring, according to the greatnesse thereof, or the quicknesse of
-buyers. Now for any rules or orders to be obserued in these sales, I
-can prescribe you none certaine, because it is méete that euery one
-binde himselfe to the customes of the Country in which he liueth,
-whose variations are diuers, for almost euery one is seuerall, onely
-in the maine they holde together, which is that they seldome make
-publike sales for money downe vpon the head, but for a certaine payment
-some fewe moneths after, which makes the Marchandise more lookt to,
-and the sales goe away the faster; and in this the Sales-man must be
-circumspect in the choise of his Chap-men, and where hée findeth any
-doubt there to make one neighbour stand bound for another, as for
-the earnest penny it is euer ouer and aboue the price, and must be
-laide downe at the binding vp of the bargaine, which earnest is in
-some Countries foure pence in the pound, in some eight pence, and in
-some twelue pence, according to the goodnesse of the Timber, and hath
-euer béene taken for a fée due to the Sales-man for his paines and
-attendance: and sure if he be carefully honest, it is a merrit well
-bestowed: if otherwise, it is much too much for falshood, for in him
-consists the owners losse or profit, and therefore it may become any
-man, of what place so euer, to take a strickt account from such an
-officer: or if he haue any doubt euer to ioyne with him in commission,
-another of contrary faction.
-
-[Sidenote: When to cut downe Timber.]
-
-When you haue made sale of your Timber, you shall by no meanes let it
-be cut downe till the end of Aprill, at which time the sap ascending
-vpward, will loosen the bark, and make it come from the body of the
-Trée easily. You shall cut your Timber downe close by the earth, not
-digge it vp by the rootes, vnlesse you meane vtterly to destroy it, for
-from the spurnes of the roote will arise new Spiers, which in processe
-of time, will come to another Trée. As soone as you haue felled your
-Oakes, you shall with your Axe immediatly whilst the sap is wet, take
-all the barke from the body and the armes, and setting it end-wayes
-as vp one by another, so place it, that the winde may passe through
-it, and dry it, and then sell it to the Tanners, which will giue you a
-good price therefore, according to the worth and scarsity thereof. When
-your Trées are barkt, you shall then sawe the body into such lengthes
-of Timber, as shall be méete for the purpose for which it is bought,
-or in such sort as it may be best portable: the armes also you shall
-hewe from the body, and so burken or breake them vp, as they may be fit
-to be loaded: all which done, and the Timber caried away, you shall,
-if you intend to haue the Wood renew, fence in the sale, and kéepe it
-safe from Cattell: and thus much for the preseruation and sale of high
-Woods.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. V.
-
-_Of the breeding of Wood in rich champaine soyles._
-
-
-Nature which is the most perfect worke-mistresse of all things (as all
-the Philosophers say) but I say our good God out of his most diuine
-wisedome, hath allotted to euery soyle, if we will note it, through
-the whole course of this Kingdome, particular profit to sustaine and
-maintaine it, as to some Mines, to some Timber, and to some fertility
-of grasse and corne, and where any one of these are, there commonly
-some of the other is euer wanting, as we sée daily in our experience;
-and for as much as in the fruitfull and fertill soyles of this
-land, of which wée estéeme the wealthie vales, as that of _Essam_,
-_White-horse_, _Beluoire_, and many others the best, there is euer
-great scarsitie of Wood, the very wealthinesse of the soyle it selfe
-almost denying to beare such burden, because for the most part the
-stifnesse of those clayes is contrary to their growth, yet for as much
-as the necessitie and vse of Wood is so great and valuable, I would
-perswade euery good and worthy Husbandman, to endeauour himselfe with
-all his vtmost power and strength, to plant wood in euery conuenient
-place round about him, and not to take the rules of the ignorant for
-his lesson, that sith neuer any did grow there, therefore neuer any
-will grow there: for it is absurd and foolish: nor to say because my
-auncestors haue neuer done it why should I attempt it? These arguments
-are made from a false figure, and the Husbandman must remember that
-his dutie is industrie, and encrease not altogether imitation and
-president, and he must as seriously finde out new and néerer profits,
-as hold those he hath learned: and therefore he shall endeauour by all
-commendable labour to haue euer about him whatsoeuer is necessarie for
-his vse: but you will peraduenture aunswere me, that to plant Woods
-in these rich soyles, were very much losse, because the fertilitie
-thereof will yéeld a much better profit. To this I reply, that I
-would not haue you plant any spacious piece of ground with wood, but
-onely your ditches, hedges, and such wast earthes, as almost denie
-any other profit, and that the want of wood in those places may not
-discourage you, to imagine that wood will not grow there. Doe but
-view the cytes of euery Towne in those rich Countries, the seates
-of Noblemen & Gentlemens houses, and the Parks which commonly are
-adioyning there-vnto, and you shall hardly sée any of them without the
-fellowship & acquaintance of some wood, which in times past hath béene
-planted either for defence or pleasure, and from thence collect that if
-wood will grow with my next neighbour, then why not with me, so long
-as the soyle doth not alter. But _Labor vincit omnia improbus_, True
-industrie was neuer fruitlesse. Then for the generall good both of your
-selfe & your neighbours, looke that you replenish all your ditches &
-ring fences, with good store of Quick-set, that is to say, all that lye
-high, & out of the danger of water, with White-thorne, Black-thorne,
-and Bryer, and those which are low & subiect to washing, with Willowes,
-Sallowes, and Ozyers.
-
-[Sidenote: How to set all sorts of Quick-set.]
-
-Now for as much as it is not enough to say vnto the Husbandman do
-this, but that I must also shew the manner of doing thereof: I will
-shew you briefly how to set all manner of Quick-sets, and first
-for the white-thorne, black-thorne, bryer or such like, which must
-stand frée from inundation, you shal when you enclose any piece of
-ground, after you haue markt out the true breadth of your dyke vpon
-the in-side thereof, and close by the verdge of the dyke, cut with
-your spade a little trough, halfe a foote or there-abouts in breadth
-& depth, in which trough or small gutter, you shall lay the rootes
-of the first rowe of your Quick-sets, so as the top ends may looke
-vpward, & a little bend in towards the ditch, & these quick-sets you
-shall place within lesse then a foot one of another: then with your
-spade beginning to make your ditch, you shall with the first cleane
-mould, couer all the rootes close and fast, so as they will not shake
-nor stirre with your hand, then hauing raised the banke of your Dyke,
-and couered the lowest rowe of Quick-set more then halfe a foote, and
-broken the earth so, as it may lye close and handsome together & you
-shall then after the same manner lay another rowe of Quick-set ouer the
-first, I meane not one Quick-set directly ouer another, but the second
-rowe placed as it were in the midst betwéene two of the first, though
-at least halfe a foote higher: then you shall couer that row like the
-former, and ouer it place a third, which shall stand directly opposite,
-and ouer the first, so that in their growth the middle rowe shall as
-it were grow betwéene two of the lowest, and two of the highest: and
-then vpon this vppermost rowe lay the remainder of your earth, and
-make your banke perfect, and in this sort finishing one yard of the
-Ditch after another, you shall at length bring your labour to the end
-of your desire. Now in this labour you are to obserue some speciall
-things, as first to looke well vpon your Sets before you put them into
-the ground, and be sure that they be gréene, young and vntainted, then
-that the rootes be cleane, and no small thréeds or iagges hanging about
-them. And lastly, that they stand vpright, and not aboue foure or fiue
-inches without the earth at the most, then shall you looke well to the
-making of your banke, and lay the earth so as it may not slip or fall
-backe into the Dyke, so as the raine may wash away the mould, and leaue
-the rootes bare: but let all things be done strongly and artificially.
-The best seasons for this worke is the moneths of February, March,
-and Aprill, or September, October, and some part of Nouember: if the
-weather be dry aboue head, when you haue set your Quick-set, you
-shall make a dead hedge vpon the top of the new banke, to kéepe those
-Cattell which are within your ground, from breaking forth or hurting
-the Quick-set: and another small fence on the lowe verdge of the Dyke
-which is outward, to kéepe those cattell which graze without from
-running into the dyke, and hurting the quick-set. Now after a spring
-and fall is past, you shall suruay all your quick-set and wéede it
-cleane from all manner of filthinesse that doth choake or stifle it,
-and scratching the fresh mould about it giue comfort to the roote: then
-if you perceiue that any of your Sets be dead, you shall plucke them
-vp, and place new in the roome, and if any be blasted in part, and not
-clean killed, you shall cut away so much as is blasted, and let the
-rest remaine, you shall looke well to the Caterpiller and other wormes,
-which mightily deuoure Quick-sets, especially in these fat Countries,
-and if you finde any taint of them, destroy them as is shewed you in a
-former Chapter.
-
-[Sidenote: Planting of greater Trees.]
-
-After your Quick-set is come to the age of thrée yéeres, and that the
-banke is setled and swarth growne thereon, you shall then within the
-body of your hedges plant all manner of great Trées, as Ash, Béech,
-Maple, and such like, and also all manner of fruit Trées, as Aples,
-Peares, Plums, Wardens, and such like, and in the first thrée yéeres
-be very carefull to preserue each in his true proper nature, and doe
-to them all the rights which is due to their growth, and in that time
-obserue which kinde of Trées in the generality prospereth best, and
-agréeth most naturally with the soyle. And of those Trées sée that
-you flourish your grounds most plentifully, the particular manner of
-planting whereof is already formerly declared. And hence doth _Kent_
-and _Worcester_ shire boast of their fruit, _Windsor_, _Sherwood_
-and _Hollam_ shire their Oakes, and other particular Countries their
-particular commodities.
-
-[Sidenote: Of the setting of Willowes, &c.]
-
-Now for the setting of Willow, Sallow and Oziers, it is a thing so
-vsuall and common, that it néedeth no great Art in the relation,
-yet because I would be loath that any omission should be taken for
-negligence, you shall vnderstand that in setting them you must first
-respect the place, which would euer be lowe and moyst, the water
-sometimes washing them, sometimes cooling them, and euer giuing them
-comfort. Now to speake first of the Willow it would be euer planted
-vpon bankes, where it may stand more dry then wet, for such prosper
-best, and endure longest, as for proofe some will continue, twelue,
-fiftéene nay one and twentie yéeres, where as those which are set close
-by the water, will hardly endure seueral, but not aboue nine yéeres at
-the most. Touching their planting, they be set two manner of wayes,
-but which is the best, is not yet agréed on amongst Husbandmen. The
-first is to take an Augure full as large in compasse (although much
-shorter) as that where-with you boare Pumps and with it boare a hole
-in the earth two-foote, and a halfe déepe, then hauing headed some of
-the choysest Willowes you haue, take the fairest and straightest of
-those lops, and then cutting the sloape-wise at both ends and leauing
-no superfluous twigs cleauing there-vnto, put the bigger end downe very
-hard into the earth, and then with the mould which came forth, with the
-Augure ram the earth close and hard about the Set, so as no reasonable
-strength may shake it. Now there be other Husbandmen which in stéed
-of the Augure take onely an Oaken or Ash stake, of the bignesse of an
-vsuall set, and with a Béetell driue it into the ground two foot and a
-halfe, and then by shaking and opening the earth, pull it out againe &
-then put in the Set as is before shewed, and beate and tread the earth
-close there-vnto, and there is no doubt of the well prospering thereof.
-Now for the defects which Husbandmen finde in these two seuerall
-plantings. Some say, that the Augure taketh out so much earth, that the
-Set cannot but stand loose at the roote, and so wanting full hold of
-the earth, either takes not at all, or continues but a little space.
-Others say that the driuing in of the stake beates the earth so hard
-together, that it withstandeth the passage of the tender sprouts, & so
-killeth the set, but both are deceiued: for these are but suppositions,
-and experience daily shewes vs, that these are the best and spéediest
-wayes of setting of all sorts of Willowes that euer any time brought
-forth, and I haue knowne one man set this way two hundreth Sets in a
-day, of which not one hath failed, but all prospered. Now for your
-Sallowes, you shall set them, and chuse the Sets in all poynts as you
-doe the Willow, onely they would be placed a little néerer the water,
-for they delight some-what more in moysture, as for the Ozier it would
-be set like other Quick-set in the side of bankes, so as it may almost
-touch the water, and as your Willowes or Sallowes would be set a little
-remote one from another, as namely tenne foote asunder: so these must
-be set close together, and in thicke rowes one against another: and
-these Ozier Plants you must cut from their head, being the principall
-spiers which grow thereon, and then cut off their tops, leauing them
-not aboue two foote long at the most, and of all other they are the
-quickest in growing.
-
-[Sidenote: The vse of Willowes, Sallowes, and Oziers.]
-
-And although Willow, Sallow, and Ozyer, are in our lawes estéemed but
-as wéedes and no Woods, yet they be so profitable, that the Husbandman
-can hardly misse them, the Willow and Sallow seruing for fence and
-fewell, to make Harrowes, Cart-saddles, & horse Hames, and the Ozyers,
-for fish Leapes, or Wéeles for Baskets, Scuttels, Fans to winnow with,
-and many other things full as necessary: therefore if you haue any
-marish grounds that are vselesse, bogge-myers, or Ilands in great
-riuers, let them be imployed to the nourishing of these profitable
-wéedes, and by making draynes through them to giue the water passage,
-you shall in small time bring them to earthes of great profit, which
-consideration were it rightly wayed, there would not be halfe so much
-wast ground as is in this Kingdome.
-
-[Sidenote: Ordering of the Willow.]
-
-But to my purpose, when you haue planted these Willowes, you shall
-after euery floud, sée if the water haue driuen any of them away, or
-displease them, and immediately mend them, and set them vp straight
-againe. If any Cattell shall pyll or barke them, you shall pull vp
-such Settes, and place new in their roome. Your Willow set would by
-no meanes be too long at the first setting, for then will neuer beare
-a good head, and too short is likewise as vnprofitable, therefore it
-is held to be fiue foote aboue the earth, is a length sufficient: you
-may head your Willowes once in thrée yéeres, or fiue at the furthest,
-and when you sée the bodies waxe hollow, you may cut them downe for the
-fire, and fixe new Sets in their places.
-
-[Sidenote: Ordering of Ozier.]
-
-The Ozier to come to his true profit and season asketh much pruning
-and trimming, as namely you must kéepe the stocke lowe, and neuer
-aboue halfe a foote aboue the earth, you must picke them cleane from
-Mosse, and from the slime and filth, which the ouer-flow of the water
-will leaue vpon them: you shall prune the small spiers, and make them
-grow single one by another, and if any shoote out a double stalke, you
-shall cut it away, you may head them euery second yéere at the fall
-onely, and though some head them once a yéere, yet it is not so good
-husbandry, nor will the Ozier be so tough or long lasting. The best
-seasons for the setting of the Willow, Sallow, or Ozier is, either
-any part of the Spring or Fall, and the best time to loppe the Willow
-or Sallow, is in the Spring for fence, and in the Fall for timber or
-fewell; but the Ozier would be cut at the fall of the leafe onely. And
-thus much for the bréeding of Wood in the rich champaine Countries.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. VI.
-
-_Of Plashing of Hedges, and Lopping of Timber._
-
-
-[Sidenote: What plashing is.]
-
-Hauing alreadie sufficiently in the former Chapter spoken of the
-planting of all sorts of quick-sets, it is méete now that I shew you
-how to order the hedges being growne and come to perfection. Know then
-that if after your hedge is come to sixe or seauen yéeres of age, you
-shall let it grow on without cutting or pruning, that then although it
-grow thicke at the top, yet it will decay and grow so thinne at the
-bottome, that not onely beasts but men may runne through it, and in
-the end it will dye and come to nothing, which to preuent, it shall
-be good once in seauen or eight yéeres to plash and lay all your
-Quick-set hedges, in which there is much fine Art and cunning to be
-vsed. For this plashing is a halfe cutting or deuiding of the quicke
-growth, almost to the outward barke, and then laying it orderly in a
-sloape manner, as you sée a cunning hedger lay a dead hedge, and then
-with the smaller and more plyant branches, to wreathe and binde in
-the tops, making a fence as strong as a wall, for the roote which is
-more then halfe cut in sunder, putting forth new branches, which runne
-and entangle themselues amongst the olde stockes, doe so thicken and
-fortifie the hedge, that it is against the force of beasts impregnable.
-
-[Sidenote: How to plash:]
-
-[Sidenote: The time of yeare.]
-
-Now to giue you some light how you shall plash a hedge, though diuers
-Countries differ diuersly in these workes, yet as néere as I can I will
-shew you that which of the best Husbandmen is the best estéemed. First,
-for the time of yéere either February or October, is passing good, and
-the encrease of the Moone would likewise be obserued.
-
-[Sidenote: The Tooles.]
-
-For the tooles which you shall imploy, they would be a very sharpe
-nimble Hatchet, a good Bill, and a fine pruning knife. Now for the
-worke you shall enter into it, first with your Bill you shall cut
-away all the superfluous boughes and branches which are of no vse, or
-hinder your worke, and then finding the principall stemmes which issue
-from the maine roote, you shall within a foote or lesse of the ground
-with your Hatchet, cut the same more then thrée quarters through, so
-as they may hang together by nothing but the outward barke, and some
-part of the outward sap, and this stroke must euer be sloape-wise and
-downeward: then take those mayne bodies of the quick-set, so cut, and
-lay them sloape-wise from you, as you would lay a dead hedge, and
-all the branches which extend from those bodies, and would spread
-outwardly, you shall likewise cut as before said, and fould them
-artificially into your head, and euer within a yard or two distance,
-where a pretie Plant growes straight vp, you shall onely cut off the
-top equall with the height of your hedge, and so let it stand as a
-stake, about which you shall folde and twind all your other branches.
-Now when you come to the top of the hedge, which would commonly not be
-aboue fiue foote high, you shall take the longest, youngest, and most
-plyant boughes, and cutting them as afore-said, gently binde in the
-tops of all the rest, and so make your hedge strong and perfect: and
-herein is to be noted, that the closer and thicker you lay your hedge
-(so there be nothing in it superfluous) the stronger and better lasting
-it will be. Many vse not to binde in the tops of their plasht hedges,
-but onely to lay the Quick-set and no more: but it is not so husbandly,
-neither is the hedge of any indurance: many other curiosities there be
-in the plashing of hedges, but this which I haue alreadie shewed, is
-sufficient both for the Husbandmans benefit and vnderstanding.
-
-[Sidenote: The profit of Plashing.]
-
-The profit which ariseth from this labour, is the maintenance and
-defence of fencing, the preseruing and encrease of Quick-set, and a
-continuance of amitie amongst neighbours, when one liues frée from
-offending another. It yéeldeth a good Mast for Swine, and with the
-ouer-plus thereof at these times of plashings, repaireth all a mans
-dead hedges, and brings good store of fewell both to the Brewhouse,
-Kitchin, and Backhouse.
-
-[Sidenote: The lopping of Timber.]
-
-Next to the plashing, is the lopping of Timber-Trées, which in those
-Countries which are bare and naked of wood, is of much vse, and though
-I cannot much commend it, because it oft marreth the bodies of Trées,
-yet I must allow it for necessary, because it is a néedfull rate, which
-the Trées pay to their Planters.
-
-[Sidenote: What Lopping is.]
-
-[Sidenote: The season for Lopping.]
-
-This lopping or heading of Trées, is the cutting off of the armes and
-vppermost branches of Trées, and suffering the body to grow still, and
-it may very well be done once in eight or tenne yéeres, either at the
-beginning of the Spring, or at the end of the Fall, as you shall haue
-occasion to vse the wood, and immediately after the Moone hath new
-changed.
-
-[Sidenote: How you shall lop Timber.]
-
-Now for the manner of the worke, there is small curiositie to be vsed
-therein, if your Axe be good and sharpe, for you shall but cut off the
-armes and boughes, smooth and cleane without nickes, rifts, or gutters,
-or any thing which may receiue wet, whereby the Trée may be cankred
-and spoyled. Also in cutting away of the armes, you shall haue a great
-care rather to cut them away (if it be possible) vpward then downeward,
-least when you cut them downeward, the waight of the arme sodainly
-falling downe, riue and teare the barke of the body of the Trée, which
-is dangerous, and hath béene the spoyle of much Timber: which to
-preuent, you shall euer before you strike any blowe aboue, make a good
-large nicke vnderneath, and then after cut it downe from aboue, and so
-the Trée shall receiue no hurt. Also you shall obserue to cut the armes
-close by the body of the Trée, and neuer to desist till you haue made
-the place as playne and smooth as may be, for to doe the contrarie,
-is neyther workmanly, nor the part of any good husband. And thus much
-touching the plashing of Hedges, and lopping of Trées.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. VII.
-
-_Of Pasture grounds, their order, profit, and generall vse._
-
-
-[Sidenote: Diuersities and vse of Pastures.]
-
-Hauing alreadie sufficiently entreated of errable Grounds, Gardens,
-Orchards, and Woods of all kindes, I thinke it most méete (as falling
-in his due place) here to write of Pasture grounds, which are of two
-kindes: the first, such Pastures as lye in wood land, mountainous,
-or colde climes, and are enclined to hardnesse and barrennesse, and
-therefore onely imployed to the bréeding and bringing forth of Cattell:
-the other such as lye in lowe, warme, and fruitfull soyles, and are
-most fertile and aboundant in encrease, onely imployed to the fatting
-and féeding of Cattell.
-
-[Sidenote: Of barraine Pastures.]
-
-[Sidenote: Signes of barrainnesse.]
-
-And now to speake of the first sort of Pasture, which being somewhat
-barraine, is preserued for bréeding, you shall vnderstand that it is
-generally dispierced ouer all this Kingdome, and particularly into
-euery Countrey, for according to the veanes and mixture of the earth,
-such is either the richnesse or pouerty of the same, and of those
-seuerall mixtures I haue spoken sufficiently before in that part of
-this Booke, which entreateth of errable ground. Then to procéede to
-my purpose, it is the first office of the Husbandman when he séeth
-and knoweth the true nature of his earth, and perceiueth from perfect
-iudgement that it is of very hard encrease, which as the temper and
-mixture of the soyle assures him, so also he shall better confirme by
-these fewe signes and Charracters, which I will deliuer: as first, if
-he sée grasse slow of growth, and that no Spring will appeare before
-May. If in stead of Clouer-grasse, Dandylion, and Honisuckle, you sée
-your ground furnished with Penigrasse, Bents, and Burnet. If you sée
-much Knot-grasse or Speare-grasse, or if you perceiue the scorching of
-the Sunne burne away the grasse as fast as the raine had brought it
-forth: or if you finde quarries of stone néere vnto the vpper swarth of
-grasse; or if your ground bring forth Lyng, Bracken, Gorse, Whynnes,
-Broome, Bilburie, or Strawburie: or if your ground be morish, full of
-quick-myers, mossie or full of blacke Flint, any of these signes make
-it to be most apparant that the soyle is barraine and of hard encrease.
-
-[Sidenote: Bettering of soyles.]
-
-[Sidenote: Sowing of good seedes.]
-
-[Sidenote: For abundance of grasse.]
-
-And then as before I said it is the Husbandmans first office to prouide
-for the bettering and perfecting of his earth, which he shall doe in
-this sort. First, if he perceiue that the barrainnesse of his ground
-procéedes from want of good Plants, as from want of Clouer-grasse,
-Dandylion, Honisuckle, Cowslop, and other swéet flowers, then he shall
-repaire into the fruitfull Countries, and there buy the hay séedes
-and swéepings of hay-barne-flowers, which he shall euery Spring and
-fall of the leafe sowe, as thin as may be, vpon such Pastures, as he
-shall either lay for meddow, or preserue for the latter Spring after
-Michaelmas. But if he respect not the goodnesse of grasse, but the
-abundance of grasse, as those husbands doe which liue in or about
-great Cities, then he shall dung those grounds which he will lay for
-meddow at Candlemasse; or those which he will graze or eate in the
-first beginning of the Spring, at Michaelmasse before, with the oldest
-and rottennest meanure he can get, of which the best is the rotten
-staddell or bottomes of Hay-stackes, or for want of it the meanure of
-horse-stables, swéepings, and scowrings of yards and barnes, the mudde
-of olde ditches, or else good Oxe or Cow meanure, any of which will
-bring forth abundance of grasse.
-
-[Sidenote: The imperfection of meanure.]
-
-Yet thus much I must aduertise the Husbandman, that this meanuring of
-Pasture grounds carries with it diuers imperfections, for though it
-occasion abundance of grasse to growe, yet the meddow or hay which
-comes thereof, is so ranke, loggie, and fulsome in tast, that a beast
-taketh no ioy to eate thereof, more then to holde very life and soule
-together. Also the grasse thus meanured which you intend to graze or
-eate with your Cattell, is by meanes of the meanure so loose at the
-roote, that Cattell as they bite plucke vp both the grasse, roote, and
-all, which being of strong & ranke sent in the mouth of a beast, maketh
-him loathe and cast it out againe, and so not striue to eate to be fat,
-but onely to maintaine life.
-
-[Sidenote: To helpe a slow Spring.]
-
-Now if your Spring be slow, and late in the yéere before your grasse
-will appeare aboue ground, it is méete then that you enclose your
-ground, and not only maintaine the fences with high and thicke
-Quick-sets, but also with tall Timber-trées, whose shade and strength
-may defend many colde blasts from the earth, and adde vnto it a more
-naturall warmenesse then it had before, for it is onely the coldnesse
-of the soyle which makes the grasse long before it grow. Also in this
-case it is méete that you lay (as the husbandman tearmes it) all such
-Pasture as you intend to graze at the spring following, in Nouember
-before, & so not being bitten from that time till Aprill following, no
-doubt but your spring will be both good and forward. There be others
-which helpe their slow springing grounds by stocking them in the latter
-end of the yéere with great abundance of shéepe, who although they bite
-néere to the ground, and leaue little grasse behinde them, yet they
-so tread and meanure it with their hot meanure, that it will spring
-after it commeth to rest, much more early and faster then it was wont.
-So that to conclude in a word, to make a barren ground spring earely,
-is to kéepe it warme, let it haue long rest, and meanure it well with
-Shéepe.
-
-[Sidenote: To help Knot-grasse and Speare-grasse.]
-
-If your ground be troubled with Knot-grasse or Speare-grasse, it is a
-signe of too much colde moysture in the earth, and in this case you
-shall with a great common Plough, made for such a purpose, turne vp
-great furrowes through your ground, and make them so descend and fall
-one into another, that not onely the moysture bred in the earth, but
-that which falls vpon the earth, may haue a swift passage from the
-same, and so your soyle being drayned and kept dry, all those wéedy
-kindes of grasse will soone perish.
-
-[Sidenote: To helpe Sun-burning.]
-
-[Sidenote: To helpe quarries of stone.]
-
-If your ground be subiect to the scorching or burning of the Sunne,
-then you shall vnderstand that it is directly contrary to the last
-soyle we spake of: for as that by too much moysture is made barraine
-by colde, so this by too much want of moysture is made barraine with
-heate: wherefore the Husbandman shall in this case draw all his
-draynes, to bring moysture into his ground, which sometimes watring
-and sometimes ouer-flowing the same, will in the end bring it to a
-reasonable fertility, for it is a rule, that where there may be
-ouerflowes, there can seldome be any hurt by Sunne-burning, vnlesse
-that such soyles be vpon Limestone ground, or néere vnto other
-quarries of hard stone, which lying néere vnto the vpper swarth of
-the grasse, doth so burne the roote, that the vpper branches cannot
-prosper. In this case the bringing in of water doth rather hurt then
-good, wherefore your best course is partly by your owne industry, and
-partly by the labours of others, who are traded in such commodities,
-to let forth your ground to Stone-diggers or Lime-makers, who digging
-the quarries out of the earth, and then filling vp the emptie places
-with rubbish and other earth, the soyle will in short space become as
-fruitfull as any other, for it is onely the want of taking roote; or
-the burning vp of the roote, which makes this kinde of earth barraine.
-
-[Sidenote: To help Ling, Braken, &c.]
-
-Now if your ground bring forth Ling, Braken, Gorse, Whinnes, or such
-like: you shall pare off the vpper swarth of the earth, and lay it in
-the Sunne to dry, in the height or heate of Sommer, and being throughly
-dried, you shall lay them in round hollow heapes one sod ouer another,
-then putting fire vnto them, burne them into ashes, which done, spread
-the ashes, like a meanure, ouer all the ground, and you shall sée those
-wéedes will no more spring or grow in that ground.
-
-[Sidenote: To helpe morishnesse or quick-myers.]
-
-If your ground be morish or full of quicke myers, you shall then by
-small draynes or trenches draw away the water, and turne it into some
-lower ditch or current, and so bringing the ground to a stability or
-firmenesse, there is no doubt but fruitfulnesse, will presently follow
-after.
-
-[Sidenote: To helpe mossinesse.]
-
-Lastly, if your ground be mossie, and bring forth in stead of grasse
-onely a soft fussie and vnwholsome mosse, your onely best way to cure
-the fault, is in the Winter time to tread it much with the féete of
-Cattell, as by making of Hay-stacks in diuers parts of such ground, and
-so fodring your Cattell about the same, and so yéerely altering the
-places of your Stackes or Réekes to goe ouer all your ground, & without
-doubt the treading of the ground will kill the mosse, and the meanuring
-of the Cattell, and the expence of Hay-séeds vpon the ground, will
-soone bring the earth to much fruitfulnesse and goodnesse.
-
-[Sidenote: The generall vse of barraine grounds.]
-
-Now for the generall vse of these barraine grounds, it is to be
-vnderstood, that albe by the meanes before shewed, they may be helpt
-or bettered, yet they are but onely for bréede or encrease of Cattell.
-Whether the grounds be seuerall and enclosed, or vniuersall and
-common: whether they be Woods, Parkes, or Pastures, or Heathes, Mores,
-Downes, or other wilde and vnlimitted places, and these grounds shall
-be deuided into thrée parts, the first and most fruitfullest lying
-lowest, lying néerest to the riuer or some running streame, you shall
-preserue for meddow, and not suffer any beast to bite vpon the same
-from Candlemasse, vntill the hay be taken from the ground. The second
-part, you shall graze or eate from Candlemasse till Lammas, which would
-be that which lieth most plaine and bleake, and most subiect to all
-weathers. And the third part, which is the warmest and safest, you
-shall graze from all-Hollantide till Candlemasse, and betwixt Lammas
-and all-Hollantide you shall eate vp your eddish or after-crop of your
-meddowes.
-
-[Sidenote: What Cattell are to be bred.]
-
-Now whereas I speake generally, that these barraine grounds are for
-the bréede of Cattell, yet you shall vnderstand me particularly, as
-namely, what Cattell for what soyle, for euery barraine earth will not
-bring forth Cattell alike, as some will beare a faire Cowe or Oxe, yet
-but a little Horse: and some will bring forth a very goodly Horse, yet
-but a very little horned beast, therefore you shall obserue that if
-your ground lye any thing lowe, or be subiect to much moysture, and so
-not extreamely barraine, but although the Spring be late, yet after
-it springeth, it yéeldeth a reasonable bit, this ground is fittest to
-bréede Cattell vpon, as Cowe, Oxe, and such like: but if it lye high
-and dry, if it be stonie or mountainous, haue much reflection of the
-Sunne: or though it be some-what more barraine then the former earth,
-and in the best part of the Spring yéeld but a short, yet swéet bit,
-this ground is fittest to bréede a faire and large horse vpon: but if
-it be extreamely barraine colde and moyst, stonie or mossie, so it
-be replenished with any good store of Vnderwood, then it is fit to
-bréede small hard Nags vpon, or Geldings of a meaner size, Goates,
-wilde-Swine, or such like. And lastly, if it be extreame barraine,
-colde, and dry, and altogether without any kinde of shelter, but
-subiect to euery blast whatsoeuer, this ground is fit onely to bréede
-Shéepe vpon, as we sée by daily experience in the seuerall parts of
-this Kingdome: so that to conclude, you shall beare in your memorie,
-that where you bréede your beast, would be reasonable bit: where you
-bréede your Horse good ayre and warmth, and where you bréede your
-Shéepe, there much spaciousnesse of ground. And thus much briefly for
-the nature and vse of your barraine grounds.
-
-[Sidenote: Of fertill grounds.]
-
-Now to procéede to your fruitfull and rich grounds, whose very encrease
-and abundance of grasse, without any other curious relation shewes
-their fertility, there is little obseruation to be held in the ordering
-& disposing of them, for being naturally good of themselues, there
-néedeth little Art to the maintainance of the same, onely to haue an
-especiall care to the fencing and safe kéeping of them, to the due time
-of eating them with your Cattell, and to obserue a fit proportion
-of rest for them, in which they may grow and gather head for the
-maintainance of such beasts as shall féede vpon them. And to these, as
-an especiall rule aboue the rest, must be added a carefull diligence
-not to ouer-stocke or loade your ground with more Cattell then it may
-conueniently beare, for if your ground be neuer so fruitfull, if it be
-ouer-prest with multitudes of Cattell, it cannot by any meanes yéeld
-you the profit of your expectation, but returne you losse and dammage.
-
-[Sidenote: The deuision of rich grounds.]
-
-These fruitfull and rich grounds would be deuided into two parts,
-the one pastures, or grounds for continuall féeding or nourishing of
-Cattell all the yéere, the other meddowes, from whence you shall gather
-your Winters prouision of Hay, for the preseruation of your Cattell,
-which are either for labour or sale in the Market, and of these two
-parts I will speake seuerally.
-
-[Sidenote: The generall vse of rich grounds.]
-
-Yet before I begin to speake largely of them, it is méete you know the
-generall vse of these rich and fruitfull grounds, which is indéede
-the féeding or fatting vp of Cattell, either for foode in your owne
-house, or for sale in the Market, to the Butcher, Drouer, or men
-of such like place or profession. For indéede to bréede much vpon
-these rich grounds, is neither profitable to the Husbandman, nor is
-the beaste so bred, either so comely or Market-able, as those bred
-in the harder soyles, as wée may note in our experience, if we will
-suruay the bréedes of Cattell in _Gloster_-shire, _Sommerset_-shire,
-and _Lincoln_-shire, which for the most part are bred vpon excéeding
-rich and fertile ground: yet if we take view of them, we shall finde
-that albe they are tall and large, yet they are of slender shape,
-leane-thighed, crumple-horned, and oft tender and dry skinned, which
-is a fault very note-worthie amongst Graziers, and indéede are nothing
-so eyely and Market-able, as those beasts are which are bred in
-_Yorke_-shire, _Darby_-shire, _Lancashire_, and such like, all which
-are bred vpon hard and barraine grounds, yet haue goodly, large, and
-round bodies, close trust, thicke, and well coupled together, faire
-heads, veluet skinnes, and as the Prouerbe is, are so beautifull in
-horne and haire, that they are euery mans money, in euery Market. So
-that I conclude, that albe vpon the rich ground you may bréede good
-Cattell, and it is necessary also so to doe for the maintaynance of
-stocke, yet the generall vse, and that which is the greatest profit to
-the English husbandman, is to graze and féede the same.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Pastures and ordering them.]
-
-Now to procéede to my former purpose, touching that part of rich ground
-which I call Pasture, because it is onely for féeding, you shall first
-prouide that they be very well fenced, according to the nature of the
-Country, either with ditch, pale, rayle, dead hedge, or quicke-growth:
-you shall also sée that they be well stored with water, that is swéet
-and wholesome, for putrified water bréedeth many mortall and infectious
-diseases amongst Cattell. These Pastures must euer be your highest
-ground, and such as lye safest from inundations. Those Pastures which
-you lay or giue rest to from the beginning of Nouember, you may féede
-at Candlemasse following with heilding beasts, or such as are but
-beginning to féede, but with your fat beasts not till our Ladies day
-after: those Pastures which you lay or giue rest to at Candlemasse, you
-may very well féede at May following: those which you giue rest to at
-May-day, you may féede at Midsommer, for then the spring is swift and
-plentifull: those you lay at Midsommer, you may féede at Lammas, those
-you lay at Lammas, you may féede in October, and generally all the
-Winter following: onely you shall obserue, that those Pastures which
-lye most in danger of water, or any other casualtie, be first eaten,
-least by too long delaying an vnseasonable time come, and so you be
-both preuented of your hope and profit.
-
-[Sidenote: Manner of feeding of cattell.]
-
-In the eating of your Pasture grounds, are many things to be obserued,
-as first for the féeding of your fat Cattell, you must by all meanes
-be sure that they haue full bite, which is to say, length of grasse:
-for cattell, whose tongues are the principall gatherers vp of their
-foode, neither can nor will bite néere vnto the ground, except it be
-extreame hunger which compels them, and then they take little ioy in
-their foode. Next you shall oft (as any fit occasion will giue you
-leaue) remoue and shift them into fresh grounds, and not expect that
-they should eate your grasse downe to the bottome, but onely as it were
-scumme and take the vppermost and choisest part thereof, and so they
-will féede both swiftly and throughly: and for that grasse which they
-shall leaue behinde them, you shall eate it vp after them with your
-labouring or worke-cattell, and lastly with your shéepe. It is very
-good also amongst your fat beasts euer to haue a leane horse or two:
-for your fat beasts taketh delight to féede with them, and sometimes
-to bite after them, there being as it were a kinde of sympathie or
-liking of each others tastes. After your grasse is fully knit, and
-hath receiued his whole strength, which wil be at Midsommer, then you
-may suffer your fat beast to eate a little néerer vnto the ground
-till after Lammas, because there is an extraordinarie swéetnesse
-therein, springing from the heate of the Sunnes beames onely. These few
-obseruations well kept, there is no doubt but your Cattell will féede
-well to your contentment, then when you sée that they are sufficiently
-fed, according to the ayme of your purpose, whether it be for the vse
-of your houshold, or the vse of the Market, you shall forth-with imploy
-them accordingly, for it is both the losse of time and money, not to
-put them off by sale or otherwise, so soone as they are come to the
-end of your desire. For those rich grounds will sometimes make two
-returnes in the yéere, sometimes thrée, which is a great profit. And I
-haue heard sometimes of foure, but it is very rare, and the Cattell so
-returned must be very well stricken with flesh before they be put vnto
-féeding, but if your ground will returne leane beasts fat twice through
-the yéere, it is commodity sufficient.
-
-[Sidenote: How to know a fat Beast.]
-
-Now because it is not sufficient to say sell or kill your Cattell
-when they are fat, except you haue the Art and skill to know the
-same, you shall obserue these few rules following, and they will
-sufficiently instruct you in the same. First, when you sée your beast
-in the generall shape and composure of his body shew most faire and
-beautifull, each member being comely, and each bone couered, in such
-sort as a perfect shape requireth, as no eye is so stupid as cannot
-tell when a beast looketh well or ill-fauouredly, you shall then guesse
-the beast to be well fed, especially when you sée his huckle-bones
-round and not sharpe, his ribs smooth, not rough, his flankes full, his
-natch thick, and his cod round. This when you shall perceiue, you shall
-handle him, and griping him vpon the neathermost ribs, if you féele
-the skinne loose, and the substance soft vnder your hand, you may be
-well assured that the beast is very well fed outwardly, that is vpon
-the bones. You shall then lay your hand vpon his round huckle-bones,
-and if that féele, vnder your hand, soft, round and plumpe, you shall
-be assured that the beast is well fed both outwardly and inwardly,
-that is, both in flesh and tallow: then you shall handle him at the
-setting on of his taile, and if that handle bigge, thicke, full, and
-soft, it is a true signe that the beast is very well fed outwardly:
-then handle his natch-bones which are on both sides the setting on of
-his taile, and if they féele soft and loose, it is a signe that he is
-well fed, both outwardly and inwardly. Lastly, you shall handle his cod
-and nauell, if it be of an Oxe, and the nauell onely if it be a Cowe,
-and if they handle thicke, round, soft, great, and plumpe, it is a most
-assured signe that the beast is very well tallowed within. And thus
-when any of these parts or members shall handle in contrary manner,
-you shall iudge of the contrary effects. And thus much touching the
-knowledge of a fat beast.
-
-[Sidenote: Of Meddowes and their ordering.]
-
-Now for the second part of these rich grounds, which are meddowes,
-they ought to be the most fruitfullest and richest of all other, lying
-low and leuell, and being now and then in the Winter season washt with
-inundations, yet not too too much drencht or washt with the same: for
-as the moderate ouerflowing of waters enricheth and fertiles the soyle,
-to the too much soking or long resting of the water rotteth the earth,
-& bringeth it to barrainnesse, neither is it altogether necessary that
-euery meddowe should lye so low that it might be ouerflowed, for there
-be some high grounds which are frée from those floods which will beare
-meddow in very sufficient manner, & although the lower meddowes doe
-abound in the plenty of grasse, yet the higher grounds euer beareth
-the swéeter grasse, and it is a rule amongst Husbandmen, that the low
-meddowes do fill, but the high meddowes do féede, the low are for the
-Stable, but the high are for the Cratch, and that which is long will
-maintaine life, but that which is short will bréede milke.
-
-[Sidenote: Preseruation of Meddowes.]
-
-The chiefest respect you shall haue to your meddowes, is to defend and
-preserue them from Moales, and such like vermine, which roote vp the
-earth, and destroy the swéet and tender roots of the grasse. Next, that
-you note in what places of the meddow the water standeth longest, &
-from thence, by small furrowes or draynes, to giue it a frée passage,
-so that the meddow may as it were cleanse & be dry in one instant.
-Lastly, you shall maintaine the banks of all such ditches & other
-fences bordring about your meddowes in good and sufficient manner, both
-for kéeping out of water after your meddowes begin to grow, as also for
-kéeping Cattell from eating them in the night or other times, which is
-a great depriuation and losse of the profit you expect to come from
-them: for you shall vnderstand, that if any ouerflow shall come vnto
-your meddowes after May, it will leaue such a sandy filthinesse in the
-grasse, that except very moderate showers fall swiftly, and sodainly,
-to wash it out againe, the Hay which shall be got of that crop, will
-both be vnsauorie and vnwholsome, and bréed in your Cattell many
-dangerous and mortall sicknesses.
-
-[Sidenote: When to lay Meddowes.]
-
-The best times for laying of meddowes to rest, is, if the meddow
-lye high, as in vp-land Countries, or if the soyle be cold, or the
-springing thereof slow, at Candlemasse: but if the ground be more
-warme, temperate, & of some more fertility, then you may lay it at
-our Ladies day in March: but if the ground be most fruitfull, then if
-you lay it at May-day, it will be early enough. Also in the laying of
-your meddowes to rest, you shall consider the state of the ground, as
-whether it be eaten néere and bare, and with what Cattell, as Horse,
-Oxen, or Shéepe: if it haue béene eaten bare with Oxen or Horse, then
-you shall lay it earlier in the yéere, for it will aske a longer time
-to grow againe: but if it haue béene eaten with Shéepe (although they
-bite néerest to the ground) yet you may lay it so much later, because
-the meanure which they bestow vpon such good ground, will quickly
-hasten on the Spring: but if your meddowes haue not béene eaten bare,
-but haue a good déepe fogge vpon them still, then you may lay them the
-latest. Also in the laying of meddowes, you shall consider whether
-they be common or priuate, if they be common meddowes, and that no
-olde custome binde you to the contrary, you shall lay them to rest
-earely in the yéere, that recouering a forward Spring, you may cut
-them so much the sooner, and so haue the better after-crop, and the
-longer time to eate it: but if your meddow be priuate, and at your owne
-particular disposing, then you shall lay it according to your owne
-necessitie, and the goodnes of the soyle, obseruing euer to giue it
-full time of growth, and not to cut it till the grasse be full ripe,
-for it is better to let it grow a wéeke too long (so the weather be
-seasonable for the withering of it) then to cut it two dayes too soone,
-because when it is too earely cut, it not onely looseth the strength
-and goodnesse, but also the substance and waight, and in the drying
-shrinketh and wasteth to nothing.
-
-[Sidenote: When to mow Meddowes.]
-
-Touching the fittest time to cut or mowe your meddowes: If they be
-laid in a due season, it is held of all the best English husbandmen
-generally to be a wéeke or a fortnight after Midsommer day, as namely
-about the translation of Thomas, which is euer the seauentéenth day of
-Iuly, and without question it is a very good time for all men to begin
-that labour, if their grounds be fruitfull and of earely growth: but
-in as much as diuers grounds are diuers in their growth, some being
-much more hastie then other some: and for as much as some meddow may
-as well grow too long as too little a time, as in high land Countries,
-where the heate and reflection of the Sunne will burne and consume away
-the grasse, if it be not gathered in a due season, I would therefore
-wish euery good Husbandman about a wéeke before Midsommer, and a wéeke
-after, to view his meddowes well, and if he sée them turne browne, if
-the Cock-heads turne downeward and stand not vpright, if the Bels and
-other vessels of séede open and shed their séedes, if your Honisuckles
-haue lost their flowers, and the Penigrasse be hard, dry, and withered,
-then you shall truly vnderstand that your meddow is ripe and ready
-to be mowne, and the longer it standeth, the more it will loose of
-the substance, and when any of the contrary signes appeare, as when
-the meddow lookes gréene and fresh, the Cock-heads looke vpright, the
-Bels are close and hard, the Honisuckles flowing and purple, and the
-Penigrasse soft and moyst, then is your meddow not readie to cut, nor
-will the Hay that is so gotten be other then soft, fuzzie, and most
-vnwholsome, no beast taking delight to eate of the same.
-
-[Sidenote: The inclination of the weather.]
-
-Now to these considerations, you shall adde a carefull obseruation
-of the state and inclination of the weather, and if you finde that
-the weather is disposed to much wet or incertaintie, then you shall
-forbeare to mowe, because that moysture will still maintaine and hold
-the grasse in his perfect strength so long as it groweth: but if it be
-once cut downe, then the wet will soone rot and spoile it: but if you
-find the weather enclined to drought and fairenesse, then you shall
-with all spéede cut downe your Hay, for one loade got and brought into
-the barne without raine, is worth two that hath béene washt, though
-but with the smallest shower. There be some Husbandmen that in the
-mowing of their meddowes, will obserue the state of the Moone, and
-other planetarie coniectures, but they are fitter for those which
-séeke curiosities more then profit, for mine owne part I would wish
-euery good husband but to know truly when his crop is ripe, and then
-to gather it in the most constant and fairest seasons, which the rules
-already set downe will most amply shew him.
-
-[Sidenote: The manner how to mowe Meddowes.]
-
-Now for the manner of mowing your meddowes, although the generall act
-resteth in the hands of the mower, and that it is hard and impossible,
-in words, to expresse the Art of the action, nor is it néedfull that
-euery Husbandman be a mower, yet for those rules which the English
-Husbandman should know and obserue, I will in no sort omit them. You
-shall then know that in the mowing of your meddowes you shall mowe them
-smooth, plaine, and leuell, and as the Husbandman tearmes it, with such
-an euen board, that a man may no more but discerne the going in and
-comming forth of the Sythe: and this shall be done so close and néere
-vnto the ground, as is possible for the worke-man to get, especially if
-it be in publique and common meddowes, because the swap and first crop
-is all the maine profit you can challenge your owne: nay, you shall
-doe it also in your owne priuate and seuerall meddowes: for although
-an ignorant custome haue drawne some of our Husbandmen, to say and
-beléeue that there is no losse in the sleight and insufficient mowing
-of priuate meddowes, because say they, what I loose in the Barne,
-my Cattell findes on the ground, yet they are much deceiued in that
-opinion, for what they so leaue on the ground halfe cut halfe vncut, is
-no good foode, neither pleasant nor sauorie, but dry, hard, and bitter,
-and indéede no better then sower fogge, which may fill, but cannot
-nourish, and who then will be so simple, as not to preferre swéet Hay
-before such vnsauorie grasse? therefore be carefull to mowe your grasse
-euen, and close by the ground, for it will make the fresh grasse spring
-vp with more ease, and be much pleasanter in taste.
-
-[Sidenote: How to make Hay.]
-
-Next after the mowing of your meddowes, followeth the making of your
-Hay, which is a labour that must be followed with great care and
-diligence, for it is an old saying, that dearth beginneth at the
-Hay-barne dore, and he that is negligent in that, can hardly be good
-husband in any thing else, then to shew you how you shall make your
-hay, you shall first vnderstand that no one particular forme can stand
-for a generall rule, because Hay must be made according to the nature
-of the grasse, and the soyle where it groweth, some being apt to wither
-and make soone, as that grasse which is finest, and hath in it least
-wéedes, others will be long in making, as that which is full of thicke,
-strong, and sower grasses, many wéedes, bunnes, and such like hard
-stalkes, which are not easily dried, therefore it is the part of euery
-good Husbandman, either by his eye and knowledge to iudge of the nature
-of his grasse, or else to follow the customes of the Country and soyle
-wherein he liueth, but the first, Knowledge, is the better Science.
-But to procéede to my purpose, I will in the natures of two sorts of
-grasse, the one fine, the other course, shew you the generall making of
-all sorts of Hay.
-
-[Sidenote: To make fine Hay.]
-
-First, then for the making of your fine rich grass into Hay, if it grow
-in great abundance, thicke and close, and so lieth in the swathe, you
-shall haue one with a Pitch-forke to follow the Mowers, and to spread
-and throw the grasse thinne abroad, that the ayre and sunne-beames may
-passe through it: and this is called in most Countries tedding of Hay.
-The next day, after the Sunne hath taken the dewe from the ground, you
-shall turne that which the day before you tedded, and then if you haue
-any more new mowen, you shall ted it also. The next day following,
-as before, when the dewe is from the earth, you shall turne your Hay
-againe, and so letting it lye till the Sunne be at his height, begin
-to stir it againe, at which time if you finde it is reasonably well
-withered, you shal then draw it into windrowes, that is, you shall
-marke which way the winde standeth, and the same way that it bloweth,
-the same way with Forks & Rakes one after another, gather in the Hay
-into long, great, thicke rowes: then you shall make those windrowes
-into large Cockes, of which the biggest is euer the best, for they will
-defend themselues from raine, if happily any shall fall, whereas the
-little small Cocke lying light together, taketh in the raine like a
-spunge, and so makes the Hay a great deale much worse then otherwise
-it would be; when your Hay is thus set in safe Cocke, you shall let
-it rest a day or two, that it may take a little sweat therein, which
-will make the Hay wondrous pleasant and swéet, then when the Sunne is
-got vp to a pretie height, you shall open those Cockes, and after the
-sunne and winde hath passed through them, you may if the grasse be
-clean & fine of it selfe, without ranke grasse, load it, and carrie
-it either into the Barne, or such other place, as you haue appointed
-for the receit thereof: but if it haue any ranke grasse, which you
-sée vnwithered amongst it, then you shall make it vp againe into safe
-cockes, and so let it rest a day or two more before you leade it away.
-And thus much for the making vp of fine Hay.
-
-[Sidenote: To make course Hay.]
-
-Now for the making of course grasse into Hay, which you must suppose to
-be grasse growing, in colde, moyst, woodie, and barraine grounds, full
-of wéedie, rough, and stumpie hearbage, long in growing, late ere it
-can be gathered, and therefore depriued of much of the Sunnes strength,
-to swéeten and wither it. This grasse as soone as it hath béene mowne
-and tedded, as is before said: the next day you shall make it into
-little grasse Cockes, as bigge as little Moale-hilles, and so hauing
-layne a day or better, then breake them open, and let them receiue the
-sunne and winde, for they will heat and sweat a little in the grasse,
-which make it Hay the sooner & better: then after the Sunne hath spent
-all his power vpon it, you shall make it vp into little Cockes againe,
-putting two of the first Cockes into one, then hauing so layne another
-day, breake them open againe, and giue them the Sunne: then make them
-vp againe, and put thrée or foure of those Cockes into one, and so let
-them lye another day, then breake them open as before, if the Sunne
-shine faire, and at euening make them vp againe, putting thrée or foure
-of those Cockes into one, and so euery morning after the Sunne is vp
-breake them open, and at euening make them vp againe, till you finde
-that the Hay is sufficiently well dried, and sweateth no more in the
-Cocke: but in the morning when you breake it open it is dry, without
-stemme, smoake, or vapour arising from it, which both your hand and
-eye may perceiue in the first stirring or mouing, and then you may at
-your pleasure leade it home, and house or stacke it as you shall haue
-occasion.
-
-[Sidenote: Vse of Hay for cattell to breed or labour with.]
-
-Now for the vse of Hay, it is two-folde, that is, either for the
-maintainance of bréeding Cattell, or Cattell for labour, or else for
-the féeding of Cattell for the Market, or for slaughter: for the
-maintainance of bréeding Cattell, or the Cattell which are imployed in
-your Plough or other labours, whether it be draught or trauell, you
-shall make choise of the swéet, and well-dried Hay, which is of fresh
-and gréene colour, well withered, sound, and perfect Hay, though it be
-long, loggie, and not excéeding much swéet, it matters not; for being
-well Inned and dried, it will serue sufficiently for those purposes:
-and with this Hay to mingle sometimes Wheat-straw, Rye-straw, Barly,
-or Oate-straw will not be amisse for heilding, or bréede Cattell: but
-for worke-beasts, except necessitie constraine, let them haue Hay
-simple of it selfe, during the busie time of their worke, but when
-they rest, you may vse your discretion. For the times of giuing Hay
-or foddering to such Cattell as are in the house, the best is in the
-morning before they goe to labour, in the euening when they come from
-labour, presently after their drinke, and at night when you goe to bed.
-But for those Cattell which goe abroad, as Shéepe, heilding Beasts, and
-such like, to fodder them morning and euening, is out and out fully
-sufficient.
-
-Now for the vse of Hay for fat cattell, you shall make choyse of the
-fruitfullest, swéetest, finest, and shortest Hay you haue, being full
-of flowers, pleasant and odoriferous to smell on: and although this
-Hay be mixt with some roughnesse, yet it is not the worse, for though
-your fat beast make thereof great orts, yet is the losse not great,
-for those orts may be giuen to other heilding and hungrie cattell,
-which will eate them with great eagernesse. This Hay would in the first
-gathering not be withered too sore but so stackt-vp with a little
-hartie gréennesse that it may a little mow-burne, and alter the colour
-to a Redish brounnesse, but by no meanes so moyst that it may mould,
-rot, or putrifie, for that is fulsome and bade, but onely alter the
-colour, and therby make the smell swéeter and stronger. This Hay will
-entice a beast to eate, and will strengthen and inable his stomacke,
-and withall will bréed in him such a drought or thirst, that hardly any
-water will quench him, and the Grazier takes it euer for an infallible
-signe, that when his beast drinkes much he féeds fast and his tallow
-wonderfully increaseth. For the ordinarie times of foddring your fat
-cattell, if they be in the stall, and as we say, tyed vp by the head,
-the best is in the morning before and after water, at noone; in the
-euening before & after water, and late in the night, when you goe
-to bed, but if they féede abroad, and take the benefit of Fogge and
-after-grasse, then to fodder them Morning, Euening, and high-noone is
-fully sufficient.
-
-Here I could speake of Pease-féeding of Shéep, Swine, and other cattel,
-eyther at the Trough, Reeke, Stacke, or such like, the seuerall
-manner of cratches, fashions of stals, and many other necessary rules
-appertaining to this mysterie; but I am against my will confined,
-and therefore must referre it to some other occasion, being loath to
-spoyle an excellent discourse, with a tale halfe tould, and imperfectly
-spoken: And thus much therefore of Meddowes, and these seuerall vses.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. VIII.
-
-_A new method for the husbandly curing of all manner of Cattels
-diseases._
-
-
-[Sidenote: The reason for this Chapter.]
-
-Of this Theame I haue written a whole (or as some will suppose many)
-Histories, yet doubtlesse nothing too much, the cause is so necessary
-and commodious: yet this I must let euery Reader vnderstand, that what
-I haue herein formerly done, I did for a general and vncontrollable
-satisfaction to the whole Kingdome, both the learned and vnlearned, and
-as well to satisfie the nicest and most curious opinion, as the simple
-and playne dealing creature: whence it came that I waded Artfully
-and profoundly into the vttermost secrets of this knowledge, leauing
-nothing vnsearcht, or vnset downe, that might any way tend to the
-satisfaction of any iudiciall Reader, and therefore tooke liberty to
-make a large progresse, without sparing any paynes, to make my worke
-absolutely most perfect. But now, hauing onely to doe with our honest
-playne English Husbandman, who eyther cannot much read, or else hath
-little leasure to read, at most but a little memorie to bestow vpon
-his readings; I haue here for his ease both of memory, readings, and
-other verations, drawne him such a method for the curing of all the
-diseases in cattell, as was neuer yet found out by any man or Authour
-whatsoeuer: and is worthy to be preserued to all posterities for euer
-and euer.
-
-[Sidenote: Horses diseases to be cured with twelue Medicines.]
-
-To beginne then first with the Horse, which is the Husbandmans
-principallest creature, you shal vnderstand that he hath, of my
-knowledge, one hundred and odde diseases or infirmities, besides other
-hurts and blemishes, for all which, I haue seuerally shewed seuerall
-cures, as may appeare by the volumes which are much too great for any
-Husbandman to carry in his braynes, and therefore for his ease I haue
-drawne all those hundred and odde sicknesses or sorrances, into twelue,
-and will assure euery Husbandman that with these twelue medicines
-following, hée shall perfectly cure all the diseases in a Horse,
-whatsoeuer.
-
-[Sidenote: Of inward sicknesse.]
-
-[Sidenote: The first Medicine.]
-
-To procéede then in an orderly manner to the cures: Euery husbandman
-must know that all diseases in a horse are inward or outward: inward
-as offending the vitall parts, or outward as troubling the members:
-to speake then first of inward sicknesse, I will diuide so into two
-branches, that is, eyther it offends the heart, or the brayne: If
-it offend the heart, we call them, Feauers, Yellowes, _Anticor_,
-consumption of lungs, Liuer, Splene, Gall or other intrals, Wormes,
-Fluxes, Belly-bound, and diuers other of like nature: For any or all
-which, you shall first let your Horse bloud in the neck-veine, and
-then giue him, during his sicknesse, to drinke, eyther in swéete Wine
-or strong Ale or Béere, if Wine a pinte, if Ale or Béere a quart, two
-spoonefull of the powder called _Diapente_, made of _Aristolochia_
-root, _Gentiana_, _Myrrhe_, _Eboni_ and _Bachi lauri_, of each equall
-quantitie, and let it be well brewed together, and doe thus euery
-Morning fasting, and let the Horse fast two houres after it.
-
-[Sidenote: The second Medicine.]
-
-If it offend the brayne we call them Appoplexies, Palsies, Staggers,
-Colds, Glaunder, Coughes, mourning of the chyne, Migrims, dizzinesse,
-and a world of such like: and the cure is to take _Assafeteda_, and
-dissoluing it in Vinegar dip hurds therein, and stop it hard into his
-eares for two Mornings together after you haue taken from him great
-store of bloud at his necke-veine, and then giue him to drinke, during
-his sicknesse, euery Morning a quart of Milke, wherein the white and
-rough cankerrous Mosse of an old Oake pale hath béene sodden till
-the Milke grow thicke, then strayned & so giuen luke warme, and if
-you finde that no heauinesse or dizzinesse appeare in his head, then
-you may forbeare the bloud-letting, and the _Assafeteda_, but not
-otherwise, in any case; and thus assuredly these two medicines alreadie
-declared will cure all the inward diseases in a Horse, whatsoeuer.
-
-[Sidenote: Of outward diseases.]
-
-[Sidenote: The third medicine.]
-
-Now for outward diseases, they are eyther naturall or accidentall: If
-they be naturall, they eyther grow from the generation, or bréede, from
-whence a Horse is descended, or else from corruption of foode, or other
-vnwholesome kéeping; If they grow from the bréede and generation of
-the Horse, we call them the Viues, Wens, Knots, or Swellings about the
-throat: and for the cure thereof, take a peny-worth of Pepper, beaten
-into powder; a spoonefull of swines-grease, the iuyce of one handfull
-of Rew, two spoonefuls of Vineger, and mixe them together, and put this
-equally into both the Horses eares, and so tye them vp and shake the
-eares, that the medicine may sinke downe, and take good store of bloud
-from the Horses neck-veine, and temple veines, and vse this medicine
-two or thrée mornings together.
-
-[Sidenote: The fourth Medicine.]
-
-If they procéede from corruption of foode, or any other vnwholesome
-kéeping which corrupteth the bloud, then we call them Impostumations,
-Byles, Botches, Fistulaes, Polemill, and such like: and the cure is, to
-take the loame of an old mudde wall, strawes and all, but let there be
-no Lime amongst it, and boyle this loame with strong Vineger, till it
-be like a Pultus, and as hot as the Horse can abide it, apply it to the
-sore place, and it will not onely draw it to a head, and breake it, but
-also draw it, search it, and heale it.
-
-[Sidenote: The fift Medicine.]
-
-There be also other diseases which procéed from naughtie foode, and
-the corruption of blood, and we call them Farcies, Scabs, Mangie,
-Scratches, Paynes, Mallanders, Sellanders, and all of such like nature,
-and the cure is first to slit the hard knots, or rubbe off the scurfe,
-and make the sore places raw: then take yellow _Arsnicke_ beaten to
-powder, and mixe it well with fresh grease, and then therewith annoynt
-the sore places all ouer, which done, tye vp the Horses head, so as he
-may not knappe or bite himselfe, and so let him stand an houre or two:
-then take strong old Pisse warmde, and therewith bathe and wash the
-Horse all ouer, and so put him to his meat: and in this manner dresse
-the Horse or beast thrée or foure mornings, and it will be sufficient;
-onely you must not fayle to take from him good store of bloud at his
-necke vaine.
-
-[Sidenote: The sixt Medicine.]
-
-Now if his diseases procéed from accidentall causes, as from wounds,
-Bruises, Straynes, Galles, hurts in the Eyes, excretions, or broken
-bones, then you shall to euery one of these take these seueral
-medicines which follow: as first, if they be wounds, in what sort
-soeuer taken or receiued, you shall take _Turpentine_, Waxe, and
-hogs-grease, of each a like quantity, and melting them together into a
-salue, dresse the wound therewith, and it will heale it, how great or
-little soeuer.
-
-[Sidenote: The seuenth Medicine.]
-
-If they be bruises, whether gotten by stroake, naughtie Saddles, or
-other rushes, from whence procéedeth many times old, putrified & most
-ranckorous vlcers, you shall first if the tumor be onely swelled and
-not broken, apply vnto it the fourth medicine of Loame and Vingar, but
-if it be an open old ranckorous vlcer, you shall take Hogs-grease,
-Turpentine, Waxe, and Verdigrease, of each a like quantitie, and being
-well mixt, and incorporated together, dresse the sore therewith, till
-it be whole, for this medicine will abate and kéepe downe any spungie
-or naughtie dead flesh which arises and kéepes the sore from healing,
-and may therefore alwayes be vsed in such like cases, whether the sore
-be new or old.
-
-[Sidenote: The eight Medicines.]
-
-If they be straynes eyther of ioynts or sinewes in what part or member
-soeuer it be, old or new, take strong Vinegar, Patch-grease, and
-Wheat-branne, and boyle them together till they be thick like a Pultus,
-and then apply it very hot to the strayne, Morning and Euening, and it
-is a most certayne cure, and will kéepe the member from growing foule,
-knotted, or gourded, and will also take away all swellings or paynes of
-the limbes whatsoeuer.
-
-[Sidenote: The ninth Medicine.]
-
-If they be Galles, of what kinde or nature soeuer, whether on the
-backe, limbes, or any other outward part of the bodie, you shal take
-first fresh Butter scalding hot, and with it first bathe and wash the
-sore, then take thicke Creame, & mixing it with the Soote of a Chimney
-till it be thicke, like a salue, with the same annoynt the sore place
-Morning and Euening, and it will cure it without any feare of dead
-flesh: if you doe strow vpon the sore the powder of Rossen it will be
-good also.
-
-[Sidenote: The tenth Medicine.]
-
-If they be any hurts in the eyes, as strokes, inflamations,
-Pinne-webbe, Canker, or any other mischiefe whatsoeuer, you shall then
-take true ground-Iuie, which otherwise is called of some Ale-hoofe, and
-beating a good handfull thereof in a morter, with a spoonefull or two
-of white Rosewater, or the water of Eye-bright, then strain it through
-a cleane wet cloath, and with that water dresse the sore eye Morning
-and Euening: or if you can conueniently thrée or foure times a day,
-for the oftner is the better, and it will without all fayle cure any
-sore eye in the world whatsoeuer, eyther of man or beast, or any other
-creature.
-
-[Sidenote: The eleuenth Medicine.]
-
-If they be excretions of bones, as Splents, Spauens, Curbs, Ringbones,
-or such like, in what part or member soeuer they be, you shall then
-take white _Arsnicke_, beaten or ground to fine powder, and making
-a little slit vpon the head of the excretion, the length of a Barly
-corne, or very little more, yet in any waies downe déepe to the
-excretion, & then with the poynt of your knife put the _Arsnicke_ vpon
-the excretion, and so let the Horse stand with his head tied vp for two
-houres at least, for in that time the greatest anguish will be gone,
-and then put him vnto his meate, and in thrée or foure dayes after the
-excretion will fall away of it selfe; and then with a little swéet
-Butter you may cure the sore, which will not be great.
-
-[Sidenote: The twelfth Medicine.]
-
-If they be broken bones, or bones out of ioynt, you shall after you
-haue placed them in their due place, first annoynt them with the Oyle
-of Mallowes, or for want of it with warme Patch-grease, and then clap
-about them a plaster made of Pitch, Rossen, and Masticke, and so with
-soft and flat splents, so splent the member, as it may not moue, and
-so let it rest nine dayes ere you dresse it againe, and in any case
-so sling the Horse or Beast that he may not during that time, put his
-member to the ground, which a little diligence and payne will easily
-doe.
-
-[Sidenote: Diseases in the feete.]
-
-If your Horse haue any infirmitie in his hooues as quitter-bone,
-ouer-reach, pricke, crowne scabbe, rotten frush, or any such vlcerous
-disease, you shall first lay it open, and then heale it with the
-seuenth Medicine. But if it be foundring, fretteshing, or such like,
-then you shall first pare all his hooues cleane ouer, so thinne that
-you may discerne the quicke all ouer, then let him bloud at the toes,
-and take great store of bloud from him, but in any case cut not the
-veine in sunder: then take the sixt medicine and, being boyling hot
-(after hollow shoes haue béene tackt on his féete) with Flaxe hurds
-dipt therein, stoppe all the soales of his féete vp hard, and thus
-doe twice in sixe dayes, and it will bring his féete to their full
-perfection againe, without any great losse or trouble.
-
-[Sidenote: Diseases in the priuie parts, or for stifling.]
-
-As for the common infirmities in a Horses priuy parts, which are
-swellings, inflammations, incording, & such like, you shall but only
-swimme your horse in cold water Morning and Euening, and it is a
-present helpe, both for them, or the stifling of a horse in his hinder
-ioynt: Thus you sée these twelue medicines will sufficiently cure all
-the diseases in Horse or Beast whatsoeuer, which who so will not carry
-in his memory, he is worthy now and then to be punisht for his sloath,
-and sometimes to suffer losse, which may make him more industrious to
-studie for his owne good and profit. And thus much for the cure of
-diseases.
-
-_FINIS._
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The English Husbandman (The Second Booke), by G M</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The English Husbandman (The Second Booke)</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em;'>Contayning the Ordering of the Kitchin-Garden, and the Planting of strange flowers: the breeding of all manner of Cattell.</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: G M</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: February 7, 2023 [eBook #69970]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Jonathan Ingram, Krista Zaleski and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ENGLISH HUSBANDMAN (THE SECOND BOOKE) ***</div>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="transnote">
-Transcriber’s Note
-
-<p>Spellings are inconsistent, especially the use of ée and ee.
-Words remain as presented in the original, including the use of
-u/v and i/j.</p>
-
-<p>Note that while the title page and contents reference a “Tretise, called Goodmens Recreation”
-regarding angling and the fighting cocke [sic]
-this content was not in the original scan and thus is not included here.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1_1">[Pg 1]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="front">
-<h1> THE<br>
- Second Booke of the<br>
- English Husbandman.</h1>
-
- <hr class="tb">
-
-<p class="center"> CONTAYNING <br>
- the Ordering of the Kitchin-Garden,
- and the Planting of strange Flowers:<br>
- the breeding of all manner of <span class="smcap"><span class="gesperrt">Cattell</span></span>.
- Together with the Cures, the feeding of
- <i>Cattell, the Ordering both of Pastures and</i>
- Meddow-ground: with the vse both
- of high-wood and vnder-wood.</p>
-
-<p class="center"> <i>WHEREVNTO IS ADDED</i><br>
- a <span class="smcap">Treatise</span>, called <i>Goodmens Recreation</i>:<br>
- Contayning a Discourse of the generall Art
- of Fishing, with the Angle, and otherwise;
- and of all the hidden secrets belonging
- thereunto.</p>
-
-<p class="center"> <i>TOGETHER</i><br>
- With the Choyce, Ordering, Breeding, and Dyeting
- of the fighting Cocke.</p>
-
-<p class="center"> A worke neuer written before by any Author.</p>
-
- <hr class="tb">
-
-<p class="center"> By G. M.</p>
-
- <hr class="tb">
-
-<p class="center"> LONDON:
- Printed by <i>T.S.</i> for <i>Iohn Browne</i>, and are to be sould at his
- shop in <i>S. Dunstanes</i> Church-yard in Fleetstreet. 1614.
-</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1_3">[Pg 3]</span></p>
-
-<figure class="figcenter illowp85" id="i003a" style="max-width: 62.5em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i003a.png" alt="">
-</figure>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" >A Table of all the principall matters contayned in this Booke.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-
-<p class="center h3"><span class="smcap">Chap. I.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">How the Husbandman shall iudge and fore-know all kinde of weather, and
-other seasons of the yeere.</p>
-
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap" src="images/i003b.png" alt="">
-</div>
-<ul>
-<li class="drop-cap"> <a href="#Of_Rayne"><i>Of Raine.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Signes_from_Clouds"><i>Signes from clouds.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Signes_from_the_Moone"><i>Signes from the Moone.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Signes_from_the_Sunne"><i>Signes from the Sun.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Signes_from_the_Lightning"><i>Signes from Lightning.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Signes_from_Fowle"><i>Signes from Fowle.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Signes_from_Beasts"><i>Signes from Beasts.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Signes_from_things_without_motion"><i>Signes from things without Motion.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Signes_of_much_Raine"><i>Signes of much Raine.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Signes_of_Snow_or_Haile"><i>Signes of Snow or Hayle.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Signes_of_winde"><i>Signes of Winde.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Signes_of_tempests"><i>Signes of Tempests.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Signes_of_faire_weather"><i>Signes of faire weather.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Signes_of_Winter"><i>Signes of Winter.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Signes_of_the_Spring"><i>Signes of the Spring.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Signes_of_a_hot_Sommer"><i>Signes of a hot summer.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Signes_of_a_long_Winter"><i>Signes of a long winter.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Signes_of_a_forward_yeer"><i>Signes of a forward or backward yeere.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Signes_of_a_good_yeere"><i>Signes of a good or bad yeere.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Signes_from_Christmas_day"><i>Signes from Christmas day.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Signes_from_the_Sunne_rising"><i>Signes from the sunne rising.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Signes_from_the_twelue_dayes"><i>Signes from the twelue dayes in Christmas.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Signes_from_Saint_Pauls_day"><i>Signes from </i>S. Paules<i> day.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Signes_from_Maudlin"><i>Signes from </i>Maudlin<i> and </i>S. Switthens<i> day, if Corne shall be cheap or deere.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Signes_from_Thunder"><i>Signes from Thunder.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Signes_of_sicknes_or_health"><i>Signes of sickenesse or health.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_preseruation_of_health"><i>The preseruation of health.</i></a></li>
-</ul>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb">
-
-
-<p class="center h3"><span class="smcap">Chap. II.</span><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1_4">[Pg 4]</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">The choyse of Grounds for the Kitchin-Garden, and the ordering thereof.</p>
-
-<p>The Contents.</p>
-<div class="blockquot">
-<ul>
-<li> <a href="#The_choyce_of_Ground"><i><span class="dropcap">T</span>he choyce of Ground.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_bettering_of_Grounds"><i>The bettering of Grounds.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_trenching_of_Grounds"><i>The trenching of Grounds.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_breaking_the_Garden_moulde"><i>Of breaking the Garden-mould.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Ordering_of_Garden-beds"><i>Ordering of Garden-beds.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_the_fruitfull_Soyle"><i>Of the fruitfull soyle.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_necessariest_Ornament"><i>The necessariest ornament in a Garden.</i></a></li>
-</ul>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb">
-
-
-<p class="center h3"><span class="smcap">Chap. III.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">Of the Sowing and Ordering of all manner Pot Hearbes.</p>
-
-<p>The Contents.</p>
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<ul>
-<li> <a href="#Of_all_sorts_of_Pot_hearbs"><i><span class="dropcap">O</span>f all sorts of Pot-hearbs.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_all_sorts_of_Pot_hearbs"><i>Of Endiue and Succory.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Beets"><i>Of Beets.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Land-Cresses"><i>Of Land-Cresses.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Parcely"><i>Of Parcely.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Sauory"><i>Of Sauory.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Time"><i>Of Time.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#French_Mallowes"><i>Of French Mallowes, and Cheruil.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Dill"><i>Of Dill.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Isop"><i>Of Issop.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Mints"><i>Of Mints.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Violets"><i>Of Violets.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Basill"><i>Of Basill.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Sweet_Marioram"><i>Of Sweet Marioram and Marigolds.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Strawberries"><i>Of Strawburyes.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Borage_and_Buglosse"><i>Of Borrage and Buglosse.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Rosemary"><i>Of Rosemary.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Penyroyal"><i>Of Pennyroyall.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Leekes"><i>Of Leekes.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Onions"><i>Of Onyons.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_gathering_Onion_seede"><i>Of gathering Onyon-seeds, or the Onyon.</i></a></li>
-</ul>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb">
-
-
-<p class="center h3"><span class="smcap">Chap. IIII.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">Of sowing of certaine Hearbes which are to be eaten, but especially are
-medicinall, yet euer in the Husbandmans Garden.</p>
-
-<p>The Contents.</p>
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<ul>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Arage"><i><span class="dropcap">O</span>f Arage.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Lumbardy_Loueage"><i>Of Lumbardy Louage.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Fennell"><i>Of Fennell.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Anise"><i>Of Anyse.</i></a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1_5">[Pg 5]</span></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Comin"><i>Of Comyn.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Coliander"><i>Of Colyander.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Rue"><i>Of Rue.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Organie"><i>Of Organy.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_white_Poppy"><i>Of white Poppye.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Germander"><i>Of Germander.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Cardus_Benedictus"><i>Of Cardus Benedictus.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Angelica"><i>Of Angelica.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Valerian"><i>Of Valerian.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Elecampana"><i>Of Elecampana.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Pepperwort"><i>Of Pepper-wort.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Philipendula"><i>Of Phylipendula.</i></a></li>
-</ul>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-
-<p class="center h3"><span class="smcap">Chap. V.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">Of diuer sorts of Sallet-Hearbes, their manner of Sowing and Ordering.</p>
-
-<p>The Contents.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<ul>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Lettuce"><i><span class="dropcap">O</span>f Lettuce.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Spynage"><i>Of Spinage.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Sparagus"><i>Of Sparagus.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Colworts"><i>Of Colworts.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Sage"><i>Of Sage.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Purslane"><i>Of Purslaine.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Artichokes"><i>Of Artichocks.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Garlicke"><i>Of Garlicke.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Raddish"><i>Of Raddish.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Nauew"><i>Of Nauewe.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Parsneps_and_Carrets"><i>Of Parsenips and Carrets.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Pompyons"><i>Of Pompions or Mellons.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_the_Cowcumber"><i>Of Cowcumbers.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_the_Beane_of_Egipt"><i>Of the Beanes of Ægipt.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Skerrets"><i>Of Skerrets.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#A_most_necessary_obseruation"><i>A most necessary obseruation.</i></a></li>
-</ul>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-
-<p class="center h3"><span class="smcap">Chap. VI.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">Of Flowers of all sorts, both forraine and home-bred, their sowing,
-planting, and preseruing.</p>
-
-<p>The Contents.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<ul>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Roses"><i><span class="dropcap">O</span>f Roses.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_the_Damaske_Rose"><i>Of the Damaske Rose.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_the_red_Rose"><i>Of the redde Rose.</i></a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1_6">[Pg 6]</span></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_the_white_Rose"><i>Of the white Rose.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_the_Cinamon_Rose"><i>Of the Cynamon Rose.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#To_make_the_Cinamon_Rose"><i>To make the Cynamon Rose grow double.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_the_Prouince_Rose"><i>Of the Prouence Rose.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#To_make_Roses_smell_well"><i>To make Roses smell well.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Generall_notes_touching_Roses"><i>Generall notes touching Roses.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Lauender"><i>Of Lauender.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_the_white_Lilly"><i>Of the white Lilly.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#To_make_Lillyes_of_any_colour"><i>To make Lillies of any colour.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#To_make_Lillyes_flourish"><i>To make Lillies flourish all the yere.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_the_wood_Lilly"><i>Of the wood Lilly.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_the_flower_de_Lice"><i>Of the Flowre de Lice.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Pyonie"><i>Of Pyonye.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Petillius"><i>Of Petiluis.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Veluet_flower"><i>Of veluet Flowers.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Gylliflowers"><i>Of Gilly-Flowers.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_grafting_of_Gylliflowers"><i>Of grafting of Gilly-Flowers.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_the_smels_of_Gylliflowers"><i>Of the smels of Gilly-Flowers.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_the_Wall_Gylliflower"><i>Of the wall Gilly-Flower.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_the_Helytropian"><i>Of the Hellytropian.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_the_Crowne_Emperiall"><i>Of the Crowne Emperiall.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_the_Dulippo"><i>Of the Dulippo.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_the_Hyacinth"><i>Of the Hyacinth.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_the_Narcissus"><i>Of the Narcissus.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_the_Daffadill_Colombin_and_Chesbole"><i>Of the Daffadill, Columbine, and Chesbole.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#An_excellent_Caution"><i>An excellent Caution.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#A_new_manner_of_planting_flowers"><i>A new manner of planting Flowers and Fruits.</i></a></li>
-</ul>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-
-<p class="center h3"><span class="smcap">Chap. VII.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">How to preserue all manner of Seeds, Hearbs, Flowers, and Fruits, from
-all manner of noysome and pestilent things, which deuoure and hurt them.</p>
-
-<p>The Contents.</p>
-<div class="blockquot">
-<ul>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Thunder_and_Lightning"><i><span class="dropcap">O</span>f Thunder and Lightning.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Caterpillers"><i>Of Caterpillers.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Toades_and_Frogges"><i>Of Toads and Frogs.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_the_field_Myce"><i>Of the field Mice.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Flyes"><i>Of Flies.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_the_greene_Fly"><i>Of the greene Flie.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Gnats"><i>Of Gnats.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Pismyers"><i>Of Pissemires.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Moales"><i>Of Moales.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Snailes"><i>Of Snayles.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Moathes"><i>Of Moathes.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Cankers"><i>Of Canckers.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Garden_Wormes"><i>Of Garden wormes.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#An_excellent_experiment"><i>An excellent experiment.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_conclusion_of_the_Kitchen_Garden"><i>The Conclusion of the Kitchin-Garden.</i></a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1_7">[Pg 7]</span>
-</li>
-</ul>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<figure class="figcenter illowp85" id="i007a" style="max-width: 62.5em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i007a.png" alt="">
-</figure>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">The Table of the second part of the second Booke. Contayning the
-Ordering of all sorts of VVoods, and the breeding of Cattell.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-
-<p class="center h3"><span class="smcap">Chap. I.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">Of the beginning of VVoods, first sowing, and necessary vse.</p>
-
-<p>The Contents.</p>
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap" src="images/i007b.png" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<ul>
-<li class="drop-cap"> <a href="#Wood_better_then_Gold"><i>Wood better then Gold.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_excellent_vses_of_Wood"><i>The excellent vses of Wood.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_plantation_of_Wood"><i>The plantation of Wood.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_fencing_of_young_woods"><i>The fencing of young Woods.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#When_cattell_may_graze"><i>When Cattel may graze in springs.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_vse_of_the_clay"><i>The vse of the Clay-ground for Woods.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#A_speciall_note"><i>A speciall note.</i></a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-
-<p class="center h3"><span class="smcap">Chap. II.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">The deuision of vnder-Woods, their sale and profit.</p>
-
-<p>The Contents.</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li> <a href="#The_deuision_of_Woods"><i><span class="dropcap">T</span>he deuision of Woods.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_valew_of_vnder-vvood"><i>The value of vnderwood.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_the_sale_of_vnder-vvoods"><i>Of the sale of vnderwoods.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#How_to_cut_vnder-vvoods"><i>How to cut vnderwoods.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_fencing_of_salles"><i>The fencing of sales.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_Woodwards_duty"><i>The Woodwards duty.</i></a></li>
-</ul>
-
-
-<p class="center h3"><span class="smcap">Chap. III.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">Of High woods, and their plantation.</p>
-
-<p>The Contents.</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li> <a href="#What_high_Woods_are"><i><span class="dropcap">W</span>hat High-woods are.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_beginning_of_high_Woods"><i>The beginning of highwoods.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_Plantation_of_high_Woods"><i>The plantation of your highwoods.</i></a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1_8">[Pg 8]</span></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Planting_the_Elme"><i>Of planting the Elme.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Planting_the_Ash"><i>Of planting the Ash.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Obiection"><i>Obiection.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Answere"><i>Answere.</i></a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-
-<p class="center h3"><span class="smcap">Chap. IIII.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">The preseruation and sale of High woods.</p>
-
-<p>The Contents.</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Trees_which_take_wet"><i><span class="dropcap">O</span>f Trees which take wet inwardly.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Barke-bound"><i>Of Barke-bound.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Hornets_and_Dores"><i>Of Hornets and Dores.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_the_Canker"><i>Of the Canker.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Pismyers_2"><i>Of Pissemires.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Iuy_Woodbine_and_Misseltoe"><i>Of Iuye, Woodbine, and Mysselto.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Thunder_and_Lightning_2"><i>Of Thunder and Lightning.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_the_sale_of_tall_Woods"><i>Of the sale of tall Woods.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#How_to_chuse_Timbers"><i>How to chuse Timbers.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Mill_Timber"><i>Of Mill Timber.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Timber_to_beare_burthen"><i>Of Timber to beare burthen.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Timber_for_Pales_Wainscote"><i>Timber for Poales, Wainescot, &amp;c.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Timber_for_Pyles_or_Water-workes"><i>Timber for Piles or water workes.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Vse_of_the_Elme"><i>The vse of the Elme.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Vse_of_the_Ash"><i>The vse of the Ashe.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Vse_of_the_Wall-nut_tree"><i>The vse of the Walnut tree.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Vse_of_the_Peare-tree"><i>The vse of the Peare-tree.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Vse_of_the_Maple"><i>The vse of the Maple, Beech, or Poplar.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Char-coale"><i>Of Char-coale.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#How_to_value_Timber"><i>How to valew Tymber.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#How_to_measure_Timber"><i>How to measure Timber by guesse.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Best_seasons_for_the_sale"><i>Best seasons for the sale.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_time_for_Chap-men"><i>The time for Chapmen.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#When_to_cut_downe_Timber"><i>When to cut downe Tymber.</i></a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-
-<p class="center h3"><span class="smcap">Chap. V.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">Of the breeding of Wood in rich Champaine Soyles.</p>
-
-<p>The Contents.</p>
-
-
-<ul>
-<li> <a href="#How_to_set_all_sorts"><i><span class="dropcap">H</span>ow to set all sorts of Quick-sets.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Planting_of_greater_Trees"><i>Planting of greater Trees.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_the_setting_of_Willowes"><i>Of the setting of Willowes, &amp;c.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_vse_of_Willowes"><i>The vse of Willowes, Sallowes, and Oziers.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Ordering_of_the_Willow"><i>The ordering of Willowes.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Ordering_of_Ozier"><i>The ordering of the Ozier.</i></a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1_9">[Pg 9]</span></li>
-</ul>
-
-
-<p class="center h3"><span class="smcap">Chap. VI.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">Of plashing of Hedges, and lopping or heading of Timber.</p>
-
-<p>The Contents.</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li> <a href="#What_plashing_is"><i><span class="dropcap">VV</span>hat plashing is.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#How_to_plash"><i>How to plash.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_time_of_yeare"><i>The time of yeere.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_Tooles"><i>The tooles to plash with.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_profit_of_Plashing"><i>The profit of plashing.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_lopping_of_Timber"><i>The lopping of Timber.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#What_Lopping_is"><i>What lopping is.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_season_for_Lopping"><i>The season for lopping.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#How_you_shall_lop_Timber"><i>How you shall loppe Timber.</i></a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-
-<p class="center h3"><span class="smcap">Chap. VII.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">Of Pasture grounds, their order, profit, and generall vse.</p>
-
-<p>The Contents.</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li> <a href="#Diuersities_and_vse_of_Pastures"><i><span class="dropcap">D</span>iuersitie and vse of Pastures.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_barraine_Pastures"><i>Of barraine Pastures.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Signes_of_barrainnesse"><i>Signes of barrainnesse.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Bettering_of_soyles"><i>Bettering of Soyles.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Sowing_of_good_seedes"><i>Sowing of good seeds.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#For_abundance_of_grasse"><i>For abundance of grasse.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_imperfection_of_meanure"><i>The imperfection of meanure.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#To_helpe_a_slow_Spring"><i>To helpe a slow Spring.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#To_help_Knot-grasse_and_Speare-grasse"><i>To helpe naughty grasse.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#To_helpe_Sun-burning"><i>To helpe Sunne-burning.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#To_help_Ling_Braken"><i>To helpe ling or braken.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#To_helpe_morishnesse_or_quick-myers"><i>To helpe marrishes.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#To_helpe_mossinesse"><i>To helpe mossinesse.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_generall_vse_of_barraine_grounds"><i>The generall vse of barraine grounds.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#What_Cattell_are_to_be_bred"><i>What Cattell to be bred.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_fertill_grounds"><i>Of fertile grounds.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_deuision_of_rich_grounds"><i>Deuision of rich grounds.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_generall_vse_of_rich_grounds"><i>Vse of rich grounds.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Pastures_and_ordering_them"><i>Ordering of Pastures.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Manner_of_feeding_of_cattell"><i>Feeding of Cattell.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#How_to_know_a_fat_Beast"><i>How to know a fat beast.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_Meddowes_and_their_ordering"><i>Of Meddowes, and their ordering.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Preseruation_of_Meddowes"><i>Preseruation of Meddowes.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#When_to_lay_Meddowes"><i>VVhen to lay Meddowes.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#When_to_mow_Meddowes"><i>VVhen to mowe Meddowes.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_inclination_of_the_weather"><i>Inclination of weather.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_manner_how_to_mowe_Meddowes"><i>The manner to mow Meddowes.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#How_to_make_Hay"><i>How to make Hay.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#To_make_fine_Hay"><i>To make fine Hay.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#To_make_course_Hay"><i>To make course Hay.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Vse_of_Hay_for_cattell"><i>Vse of Hay for Cattell of all sorts.</i></a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1_10">[Pg 10]</span></li>
-</ul>
-<hr class="tb">
-
-
-<p class="center h3"><span class="smcap">Chap. VIII.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">A new method of the Husbandly curing of all manner of Cattell.</p>
-
-<p>The Contents.</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li> <a href="#The_reason_for_this_Chapter"><i><span class="dropcap">T</span>he reason of this Chapter.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Horses_diseases_to_be_cured"><i>All diseases to be cured with twelue medicines.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_inward_sicknesse">Of inward sicknesses.</a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_first_Medicine"><i>The first medicine.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_second_Medicine"><i>The second medicine.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Of_outward_diseases">Of outward diseases.</a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_third_medicine"><i>The third medicine.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_fourth_Medicine"><i>The fourth medicine.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_fift_Medicine"><i>The fift medicine.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_sixt_Medicine"><i>The sixt medicine.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_seuenth_Medicine"><i>The seauenth medicine.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_eight_Medicines"><i>The eyght medicine.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_ninth_Medicine"><i>The ninth medicine.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_tenth_Medicine"><i>The tenth medicine.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_eleuenth_Medicine"><i>The eleauenth medicine.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#The_twelfth_Medicine"><i>The twelfth medicine.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Diseases_in_the_feete"><i>Diseases in the feet.</i></a></li>
-<li> <a href="#Diseases_in_the_priuie_parts"><i>Diseases in the priuie parts, or for stifling.</i></a></li>
-</ul>
-
-
-<p>The end of the Table for Husbandry.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1_11">[Pg 11]</span></p>
-
-<figure class="figcenter illowp85" id="i011a" style="max-width: 62.5em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i011a.png" alt="">
-</figure>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Of Angling.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="center h3"><span class="smcap">Chap. I.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">Of Angling: the Vertue, Vse, and Antiquitie.</p>
-
-<p>The Contents.</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li> <i><span class="dropcap">T</span>he Vse of Angling.</i></li>
-<li> <i>The Antiquitie of Angling.</i></li>
-</ul>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-
-<p class="center h3"><span class="smcap">Chap. II.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">Of the Tooles, and Implements for Angling.</p>
-
-<p>The Contents.</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li> <i><span class="dropcap">O</span>f the Angle-rodde.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Of the toppe of the Angle-rodde.</i></li>
-<li> <i>The Angle-rodde of one piece.</i></li>
-<li> <i>The Angle-rodde of many pieces.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Of Lines.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Of colouring of Lines.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Of the Corke.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Of Angle Hookes.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Of other Implements for Anglers.</i></li>
-</ul>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-
-<p class="center h3"><span class="smcap">Chap. III.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">Of the Anglers cloathes, and inward qualities.</p>
-
-<p>The Contents.</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li> <i><span class="dropcap">O</span>f the ANGLERS Apparell.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Anglers Vertues.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Certaine Cautions.</i><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1_12">[Pg 12]</span></li>
-</ul>
-
-
-<p class="center h3"><span class="smcap">Chap. IIII.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">Of the seasons to Angle in.</p>
-
-<p>The Contents.</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li> <i><span class="dropcap">T</span>he Anglers manner of standing.</i></li>
-<li> <i>The best seasons to Angle in.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Seasons ill to Angle in.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Of Fishes haunts.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Obiection.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Answere.</i></li>
-</ul>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-
-<p class="center h3"><span class="smcap">Chap. V.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">Of Baits in generall, and of euery particular kinde, their seasons and
-vse.</p>
-
-<p>The Contents.</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li> <i><span class="dropcap">S</span>easons for bayts.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Of Flyes.</i></li>
-<li> <i>The making of Flyes.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Preseruation of Bayts.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Of making Pastes.</i></li>
-</ul>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-
-<p class="center h3"><span class="smcap">Chap. VI.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">Of Angling for euery seuerall kinde of Fish, according to their natures.</p>
-
-<p>The Contents.</p>
-
-
-<ul>
-<li> <i><span class="dropcap">O</span>f the Goodgin, Roche, and Dace.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Of the Carpe.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Of the Chub, Cheuin, or Trout.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Of the Eele.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Of the Flounder or Sewant.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Of the Grayling or Barbell.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Of the Breame.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Of the Tench.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Of the Bleke, Ruffe, or Perch.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Of the Pyke.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Of Snyckling of the Pyke.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Of the Salmon.</i><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1_13">[Pg 13]</span></li>
-</ul>
-
-
-<p class="center h3"><span class="smcap">Chap. VII.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">Of taking Fish without Angles, and of laying Hookes.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-
-<p class="center h3"><span class="smcap">Chap. VIII.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">Of preseruing Fish from all sorts of deuourers.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-
-<p class="center h3"><span class="smcap">Chap. IX.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">Of ordering of Ponds for the preseruation of Fish.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-
-<p class="center h3"><span class="smcap">Chap. X.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">Of the best Water-Lime.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1_14">[Pg 14]</span></p>
-
-<figure class="figcenter illowp85" id="i014a" style="max-width: 62.5em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i014a.png" alt="">
-</figure>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Of the fighting Cocke.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-
-<p class="center h3"><span class="smcap">Chap. I.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">Of the Choyce, Ordering, Breeding, and Dyeting of the fighting Cocke.</p>
-
-<p>The Contents.</p>
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap" src="images/i014b.png" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<ul>
-<li class="drop-cap"> <i>The choyce of the Cocke for battell.</i></li>
-<li> <i>The breeding of the battell Cocke.</i></li>
-<li> <i>The dyeting of Cockes for battell.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Of taking vp Cockes.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Of the Cocke-penne.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Of his dyet.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Of sparring of Cockes.</i></li>
-<li> <i>The stouing of Cockes.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Of the best dyet-bread.</i></li>
-<li> <i>Of the best scowring.</i></li>
-<li> <i>The matching of Cockes.</i></li>
-<li> <i>The preparing Cockes to the fight.</i></li>
-<li> <i>The ordering of Cockes after the battell, and the curing them.</i></li>
-</ul>
-
-
-<p class="center">FINIS.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</span></p>
-
-<figure class="figcenter illowp85" id="i015a" style="max-width: 62.5em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i015a.png" alt="">
-</figure>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_FIRST_PART">THE FIRST PART of the second <span class="smcap">Booke</span> of the English Husbandman:
-Contayning the Ordering of the Kitchin-garden, and the planting of
-strange <span class="smcap">Flovvers</span>.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Chap_1_I"><span class="smcap">Chap.</span> I.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2">How the Husbandman shall iudge and fore-know all kinde of Weathers, and
-other seasons of the yeere.</p>
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap2" src="images/i015b.png" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent drop-cap2">Although GOD out of his infinite prouidence, is the onely
-directer and ruler of all things, gouerning the yéeres, dayes, minutes
-and seasons of the yeere according to the power of his Will: yet for
-as much as hee hath giuen vs his Creatures, and placed the Celestiall
-bodies to holde their influences in vs, and all things else which haue
-increasement, reuealing vnto vs from their motions, the alteration
-and qualities of euery season, it shall be very behouefull for euery
-Husbandman to know the signes and tokens of euery particular season,
-as when it is likely to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</span> Raine, when Snow, when Thunder, when the
-Winds will rise, when the Winter will rage, &amp; when the Frosts will
-haue the longest continuance, that fashioning his labours, according
-to the temperature or distemperature of the weather, hee may with
-good iudgement and aduise, eschew many euils which succéede rash and
-vnfore-looking actions.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Rayne">Of Rayne.</span>
-
-<p>To speake then first of the generall signes of Raine, you shall
-vnderstand that the olde Husbandmen did obserue rules generall, and
-rules speciall: the generall rules were such as concerned eyther all,
-most, or a great part of the whole yéere: the rules speciall, those
-which concerned dayes, houres, and times present: of which I will first
-speake in this place.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Signes_from_Clouds">Signes from Clouds.</span>
-
-<p>If therefore you shall at any time perceiue a Cloud rising from the
-lowest part of the Horizon, and that the maine body be blacke and
-thicke, and his beames (as it were) Curtaine-wise, extending vpward,
-and driuen before the windes: it is a certaine and infallible signe of
-a present showre of Raine, yet but momentary and soone spent, or passed
-ouer: but if the Cloud shall arise against the Winde, and as it were
-spread it selfe against the violence of the same, then shall the Raine
-be of much longer continuance.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Signes_from_the_Moone">Signes from the Moone.</span>
-
-<p>If when you sée the new Moone appeare, you perceiue that some part
-of her Hornes are obscured, or if it be black, or discoulored in the
-middest: if it hang much to the West, if it be compast or girdled
-about, eyther with thicke, or waterish transparent vapours: if it
-looke more then ordinarily pale, or if it shall beginne to raine small
-and mist-like on the fourth or fift day of her age, all these are
-infallible signes of Raine, and the last an assured signe that the
-Raine will continue all that quarter of the Moone following.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Signes_from_the_Sunne">Signes from the Sunne.</span>
-
-<p>If you shall sée the Sunne rise earely in the Morning, and spread forth
-his Beames violently, yet with a very moyst and waterish complexion,
-and there-withall in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</span> West you doe sée a bedde of thicke vapours
-to arise, increase and ascend vpward, then shall you bee assured that
-at high noone, when those vapours and the Sunne shall méet, there will
-be raine, and that raine of no short continuance: If you shall sée the
-Sunne rise red, and turne sodainely blacke, if it haue many red clouds
-about it mixt with blackenesse, if it haue a spacious Circle about it,
-or if when it setteth you sée it fall behinde a banke of darke and
-blacke Cloudes, they be all most certaine and infallible signes of
-raine, which will presently follow.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Signes_from_the_Lightning">Signes from the Lightning.</span>
-
-<p>If it lighten at noone, or any time whilest the Sunne shineth, eyther
-with Thunder or without thunder, or if it lighten in fayre weather, or
-if it lighten more then it thundereth, all are most certaine signes of
-raine which will follow.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Signes_from_Fowle">Signes from Fowle.</span>
-
-<p>If you shall perceiue water-Fowle to bathe much: if the Crow wet her
-head at the water brimme, or if shée wade into the water, or if she
-shall cry and call much: if the Rauen shall croake with a hollow or
-sounding voyce: if the house-Cocke shall crow at all houres: if Pigions
-shall come home late to the Doue-house: if Sparrowes shall chyrpe and
-cry earely in the morning: if Bées flye not farre from their Hyues:
-if Flies and small Gnats bite sharpe and sore, all are most certaine
-signes of raine, which will presently follow.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Signes_from_Beasts">Signes from Beasts.</span>
-
-<p>If you shall perceiue your Oxen to eate more gréedily, and with a more
-earnest stomacke then their vsuall custome: if your Kine gaze and looke
-much vpward: if Swine shall play and gambole vp and downe: if Horses
-being at grasse shall scope, course, and chase one another: or if the
-Cat shall wash behinde her eare, all are certaine signes of raine to
-follow.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Signes_from_things_without_motion">Signes from things without motion.</span>
-
-<p>If Salt turne moyst standing in dry places, if Channels, Vaults, and
-common Sewers stincke more then vsuall: if Bels seeme to sound louder
-then they were wont: if the Tazell at any time close vp his pricks: if<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</span>
-Soote fall much from the Chimney: If oyle shall sparkle much when it
-burneth, or if Marble, Pauing-stone, or other wals shall sweat, or be
-much moyst, all are most ineuitable signes of rayne which will follow.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Signes_of_much_Raine">Signes of much Raine.</span>
-
-<p>If Raine, when it falleth, make great bubbles, or such a noyse as is
-not ordinary: or if raine fall mildely, small, and mist-like: or if
-rayne fall in a calme when no winde stirreth: or if when it rayneth you
-cannot perceiue the Racke or Clouds to moue: if Pullen flye to their
-roust assoone as the raine begins: if the Raine-bow stretch towards
-the South, or if it doe reflect and shéedoole: if you shall sée one or
-more Weather-gals which are like Raine-bowes, onely they arise from the
-Horison but a small way vpward, all these are most certaine signes of
-much raine that will follow.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Signes_of_Snow_or_Haile">Signes of Snow or Haile.</span>
-
-<p>If blacke Clouds shall turne sodainely white: if about eyther the Sunne
-or Moone be pale, and waterish Circles, or that they séeme to shine
-as through a miste: if the Ayre be thicke and extreame cold without
-frosts: if with the signes of raine be mixt signes of cold also, or if
-windes be nipping and extreame sharp, all are most certaine tokens that
-Snow or Hayle will follow presently after.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Signes_of_winde">Signes of winde.</span>
-
-<p>If when the Sunne setteth it looketh red and fiery, and that all that
-part of the Horizon looke red also, or if it looke blewish, or séeme
-greater then his ordinary proportion: If the Moone doe blush or looke
-high colloured, if the Racke ride high, and the Firmament be much
-vaulted: if Woods and Hils séeme to make a noyse: if the Stars séeme
-to shine brighter then vsuall: if it shall thunder in Winter, or if it
-thunder without lightning: if Bels be heard farre off with more ease
-then accustomed, and presently in the same instant be not heard at all:
-If Cobwebs flye much in the ayre: If Hernes or Heronshoes cry much in
-their flying: If fire sparkle much, or if wood or Wainscot cracke much,
-all these are most certaine signes of much winde that will follow after.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Signes_of_tempests">Signes of tempests.</span>
-
-<p>If you shall perceiue the Morning or Euening Sunne,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</span> eyther in the
-Sommer or in the Autumne, to shine hotter or to scortch more then
-accustomed, when the ayre is prest with an extreame blacke cloude,
-or with many clouds, if you perceiue whirlewindes to blow oft and
-violently: if you sée the Raine-bow shall appeare in the West without
-raine: if you sée flames and meteors flashing in the ayre, or if the
-Porpus shall be séene in the fresh Riuer, all are most certaine signes
-of thunder, lightnings and tempests, which will follow.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Signes_of_faire_weather">Signes of faire weather.</span>
-
-<p>If the Sun rise gray and cléere in the morning, and likewise setteth
-without darkenesse, not loosing a minute in the declination: if the
-euening skye be ruddy and not fierie, more purple then skarlet: if the
-Moone be cléere when it is foure or fiue dayes olde: if it lighten
-after Sunne-set without thunder: if the dewe fall in great abundance
-and in the rising ascend vp to the mountaines: if the North winde blow
-strong: if the Owle doe whup much and not scrytch: if flyes at night
-play much in the Suns beames: if Crowes flocke much together, and
-cakell and talke: if Bats flye busily vp and downe after Sunne-set,
-if you sée Cranes flye high, and water-Fowle make their haunts farre
-off from the water, all these are most certaine signes of very faire
-weather which will follow after.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Signes_of_Winter">Signes of Winter.</span>
-
-<p>If water-Fowle forsake the Water: if the Nightingale sing more then
-other Birds, if Cranes flocke together, if Géese fight for their
-féeding place, or if Sparrowes call very earely in the Morning, any of
-these are certaine signes that winter is néere at hand.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Signes_of_the_Spring">Signes of the Spring.</span>
-
-<p>If the West winde blowe freshly Morning and Euening: if the colde abate
-and loose much of his vigor, if Swallowes begin to come in and flye
-busily about, if the brest-bone of the Mallard or Woodcocke looke white
-and cléere, any of these are certaine signes that the Spring is at hand.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Signes_of_a_hot_Sommer">Signes of a hot Sommer.</span>
-
-<p>If the Ramme ride in the Spring, and shew more then an vsuall lust: if
-the Spring haue beene very extraordinarily<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</span> colde, or if Mildewes fall
-not in the Woodland-Countryes, any of these are certaine signes of a
-hot Summer to follow after.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Signes_of_a_long_Winter">Signes of a long Winter.</span>
-
-<p>If you shall sée the Oake leaden with Akornes: if the brest-bone of the
-Mallard when he is kild looke red: if Hornets be séene after the end
-October, or if Cattell doe trample and tread the earth much, making
-it myrie, or like a new plowde field: any of these are most certaine
-signes that the Winter will be sharpe, long, and cruell.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Signes_of_a_forward_yeer">Signes of a forward or backward yeer.</span>
-
-<p>If there fall much Raine before October, by meanes whereof many
-inundations doe follow, and that such wet lye long aboue ground: it
-is a most infallible token that the yéere will be very forward: but
-if the wet doe fall after October then it is a signe that the yéere
-will be indifferent, but and if the wet fall after Nouember, then it
-is held for most certaine that the yéere will fall out very slacke and
-backeward.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Signes_of_a_good_yeere">Signes of a good or bad yeere.</span>
-
-<p>If the Oke Apples, when they are opened, bréed flyes, or if Haruest be
-seasonable, and the Spring warme: if Snow fall in February: if Broome
-put forth great store of Flowers: if the Walnut-trée haue more blossoms
-then leaues: if the flower of the Sea-Onion wither not quickly, or if
-the Spring be preserued from frosts and blasting, then any of these are
-certaine signes that the yéere will proue passing good and fruitfull:
-but if the Oake Apple bréede instéed of a Flye a Spyder: if Comets or
-Meteors oppresse the Ayre: if the Sommer fall out vnnaturally moyst:
-if the dewes when they fall at the rising of the Sunne descend to the
-Riuers: if frosts come in vnseasonable times: if wood-Birds flye to the
-plaines, and refuse couert: if the Sunne haue his whole body, or at
-least thrée parts Ecclipsed: when Corne beginneth to bloome, and is not
-fully Kirneld, then any of these be most certaine signes that the yéere
-will proue bad, barrayne, &amp; fruitlesse.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Signes_from_Christmas_day">Signes from Christmas day.</span>
-
-<p>Againe, if Christmas day shall fall vpon the Sunday, the yéere shall be
-good, seasonable and abounding with all store and plenty: if it fall
-vpon Munday the yéere shall<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</span> be reasonable temperate and fruitfull,
-onely something subiect to inundation of waters, losse by shipwracke,
-and some mortality of people, especially women in childbearing: if it
-fall vpon Tuesday, the yéere will proue very barraine and vnfruitfull,
-much dearth will raigne, and amongst people great plague and
-mortallitie: if it fall vpon Wednesday, the yéere shall be reasonably
-seasonable, though a little inconstant: there shall be plenty of all
-things, onely much sickenesse, and great likelyhood of warres: if it
-fall vpon the Thursday, the yéere shall be generally very temperate
-and wholesome, onely the Sommer subiect to moistnesse, much deuision
-is like to fall amongst the Clergie, and women shall be giuen to more
-laciuiousnesse then at other seasons: if it fall on the Friday, the
-yéere shall be barraine and vnwholesome, for sickenesse shall rage with
-great violence, much mortallitie shall fall amongst yong Children,
-and both Corne and Cattell shall be scarce, and of a déere reckoning:
-if it fall on the Saturday, the yéere shall be reasonably good and
-plentifull, onely the people of the world shall be excéeding peruerse,
-&amp; much giuen to mutinie &amp; dissention one against another.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Signes_from_the_Sunne_rising">Signes from the Sunne rising.</span>
-
-<p>Againe, if the Sunne rise without impediment, and shine bright and
-cléere vpon Christmas day, the yéere will be very plentifull: if it
-rise likewise cléere the second day in Christmas, then Corne will fall
-in price: if it rise cléere the third day in Christmas, there will
-onely be dissention in the Church: if on the fourth day, it foreshewes
-trouble vnto yong persons: if on the fift day, it shewes that many
-good things will increase: if on the sixt, doubtlesse euery Garden
-will bring forth great plenty: if on the seauenth, then is much dearth
-and scarcitie to be feared: if it shine cléere on the eyght day in
-Christmas, then there is likely to be great store of Fish: if on the
-ninth, it will doubtles proue a good yéere for all manner of Cattell:
-if on the tenth, the yéere is likely to yéeld much cause of mourning:
-if on the eleauenth, there will fall much fogges, thicke mistes,
-and great infection will follow after.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</span> Lastly, if the Sunne shine
-cléere the twelfth day after Christmas, it fore-shewes much warre and
-troubles, with great losse and bloudshed.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Signes_from_the_twelue_dayes">Signes from the twelue dayes in Christmas.</span>
-
-<p>Againe, according to these former obseruations, you shall vnderstand,
-that what weather shall fall or be on the sixe and twentieth day of
-December, the like weather shall be all the moneth of Ianuary after,
-what shall be on the seauen and twentieth of December, the like shall
-be all the moneth of February following: what weather shall be on the
-eight and twentieth day of December, the like weather shall be all
-March following: what weather shall be the nine and twentieth day of
-December, the same shall be all Aprill after: what on the thirtieth,
-the same all May: what on the one and thirtieth the like all Iune
-following: what weather shall fall on the first of Ianuary, the same
-shall be all Iuly after: what on the second of Ianuary, the same all
-August after: what on the third, the same all September after: what on
-the fourth, the same all October following: what on the fift, the same
-all Nouember after, and what weather shall fall on the sixt of Ianuary,
-which is Twelft-day, the same weather shall fall all December following.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Signes_from_Saint_Pauls_day">Signes from Saint <i>Pauls</i> day.</span>
-
-<p>Againe, if Saint <i>Pauls</i> day proue fayre, dry and bright, it
-foresheweth plenty of all things the yéere following: but if it be
-misty then it shewes great dearth of Cattell. If there fall vpon that
-day Snow or Raine, then it shewes Famine and Want of Corne, but if it
-be windy, tempestuous, or if it thunder, then it sheweth that great
-warres will follow.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Signes_from_Maudlin">Signes from <i>Maudlin</i>, and Saint <i>Swythens</i> day.</span>
-
-<p>Againe, looke what quantitie of raine falleth eyther on <i>Mary
-Maudlins</i> day, or on Saint <i>Swithens</i> day, be it more or lesse,
-the same proportion will fall for the space of forty dayes after: but
-if these two dayes be fayre and dry all the time of Haruest will be so
-also.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="If_Corne_shall_be_cheape">If Corne shall be cheape or deare.</span>
-
-<p>Now if you will know whether Corne shall be cheape or déere, take
-twelue principall graynes of Wheate out of the strength of the eare,
-vpon the first day of Ianuary,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</span> and when the harth of your Chimney
-is most hot, swéepe it cleane, then make a stranger lay one of those
-Graynes on the hot hearth, then marke it well, and if it leape a
-little, Corne shall be reasonably cheape, but if it leape much then
-Corne shall be excéeding cheape, but if it lye still and moue not, then
-the price of Corne shall stand, and continue still for that Moneth: and
-thus you shall vse your twelue Graines, the first day of euery Moneth
-one after another, that is to say, euery Moneth one Graine, and you
-shall know the rising and falling of Corne in euery Moneth, all the
-yéere following.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Signes_from_Thunder">Signes from Thunder.</span>
-
-<p>If it shall thunder much the first Sunday of the New-yéere, it shewes
-great death and mortallitie amongst learned men: if it thunder the
-first Munday, it shewes great death of women, and many Eclipses of the
-Sunne: if it thunder on the first Tuesday, it shewes plenty of Corne,
-but much Warre and dissention: if it thunder on the first Wednesday,
-it shewes mortallitie and death amongst the worst sort of people, both
-Male and Female, besides much Warre and bloudshed: if it thunder on the
-first Thursday in the New-yéere, it sheweth much plenty of Corne that
-will follow: if it thunder on the first Friday, it betokeneth the losse
-of great personages, and men of authoritie, many affrayes and murthers,
-with much perill and danger. Lastly, if it thunder vpon the first
-Saturday in the New-yéere, it foresheweth onely a generall plague and
-infection, which shall raigne with strong violence.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Signes_of_sicknes_or_health">Signes of sicknes or health.</span>
-
-<p>If you shall perceiue the Summer and Spring time to fall out very
-moyst and rainy, without winde, yet in their owne natures very hot &amp;
-scortching, or if the Southerne or Southwest-winde blow much without
-raine: if many fogs and mists fall in the Morning, and ouercome the
-Sunnes beames at noone also: if the Sunne suffer any large Eclipse:
-if Autumne and Winter be more foggy then moyst or cold: if the Dowe
-or Leauen, of which you mould your bread, doe quickely mould and
-cleaue together without labour: if Dogs runne madde, if Birds<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</span> forsake
-their nests: if Shéepe rot: if Fennes, Marrish-grounds, and muddy
-places abound with Frogges: if Mud-wals bréede Swine lice or Sowes:
-if Moales forsake the earth: if the small Pocks or Meazels be rife
-and abound in the Spring time, or if women generally doe miscarry in
-childe-bedde, any of these are most certaine signes of much sickenesse
-and mortallitie that will follow the yéere after: and all such signes
-as are directly contrarie to any of these, as if the Summer and Spring
-doe fall out drye and windy: if the South or Southwest-winde bring with
-it euer rayne: if no fogs or mists oppresse the ayre, and so forth of
-all the rest which are before shewed, are most certaine and infallible
-tokens of a very wholesome and healthfull yéere, which will euer follow
-after.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_preseruation_of_health">The preseruation of health.</span>
-
-<p>Now for the preseruation of your health, and to preuent all such
-sickenesses as are incident to follow in these casuall and daungerous
-yéeres: through euery seuerall moneth in the yéere you shall obserue
-these few precepts.</p>
-
-<p>First, in the month of Ianuary you shall forbeare to let bloud, vnlesse
-vpon violent extreamitie, &amp; that the signes be excéeding good for the
-same, you shall drinke white wine in the morning fasting, &amp; rub your
-head with a course Towell very hard, but yet cleane, for it is a most
-wholesom friction.</p>
-
-<p>In the month of February, you shall not let bloud for wantonnesse, but
-néede: you shall forbeare Hearbe-pottage, for at that time onely they
-are least wholesome: you shall kéepe the soles of your féete from wet,
-and vse euery morning your former friction.</p>
-
-<p>In the moneth of March, the signe being good, you may let bloud
-according to your youth, strength, and necessitie: you may take hot and
-swéet meats and drinkes, especially Almonds, Figs &amp; Reyzins, &amp; vse also
-your former friction.</p>
-
-<p>In the month of Aprill, you may bléed as in the month of March: in it
-also you may purge, by the order of a learned directer: let your dyet
-be hot and fresh meats, and your drinke temperate: also in this moneth
-your former friction is excéeding wholesome.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</span></p>
-
-<p>In the month of May be no sluggard, for the bed is vnwholesome,
-cléerified Way is this moneth a most soueraigne drinke, and Sage
-with swéet Butter is a most excellent breakefast: yong Lettuce is an
-approued good Sallet, and the inthrals or offall of Beasts would by all
-meanes be refused, it is also good to let bloud in this month onely for
-necessitie, and not for pleasure, and beware by all means, not to go
-wetshooed in the dew of the morning.</p>
-
-<p>In the month of Iune obserue the dyet of May, or if you be of youthfull
-bloud it is not amisse if it be a little cooler, and for bléeding let
-it be for vrgent necessitie.</p>
-
-<p>In the month of Iuly eschew all wanton bed-sport: and if each morning
-you take of draught of clarified Butter-Milke it is very wholesome: vse
-coole Iulyps, and meats that are fresh, and not stirring: now forbeare
-Lettice, and bléede not, except it be in cause of great extreamitie.</p>
-
-<p>In the month of August forbeare all manner of Worts, and Cabadges, and
-generally all meats and Spices which are hot and inflaming: but by
-any meanes bléed not at all, except by the direction of most approued
-learning.</p>
-
-<p>In the month of September you may eate any sort of ripe Fruits: you
-may bathe in hot bathes, for colde causes, at your pleasure, and you
-may let bloud according to your necessitie: those foods are best which
-are of lightest disgestion, and those drinkes most wholesome which are
-rather strong then scouring.</p>
-
-<p>In the moneth of October, spare not any bloud, except great extreamitie
-compell you, and for your dyet, let it be of such foods as are most
-strong and nourishing, and your drinke Béere or Ale, of indifferent
-strength, and now and then at the midst, and end of meales, a
-draught or two of such Wines as are pleasant, strong, and wholesome:
-Sallets of Flowers, preserued in Vinegar &amp; Sugar, as either Violets,
-Broome-flowers, or Gelly-flowers of all kindes, or Sampyre, Purslan, or
-Beane-rods, preserued in pickell, are of excellent vse, both in this
-moneth, and the other two which follow.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</span></p>
-
-<p>In the Moneth of Nouember open also no vaine, but for great néed,
-because the blood is then gathered together into the principall
-vessels: Bathing in this Moneth is vtterly to be refused, onely let
-your body be kept warme, and euery colde humour or obstruction, rather
-dissolued by moderate frictions, as is shewed in the moneth of Ianuary
-and February, then by the violence of any other inward medicine.
-Shell-Fish in this moneth is very wholesome, and so are all other sorts
-of Fish, which are not too rawe or slymie.</p>
-
-<p>In the Moneth of December blood-letting should be also forborne, except
-vpon some especiall dayes, as after the fiue and twentieth day at the
-soonest: and for your diet let it be meate which is hot and nourishing,
-but by no meanes that which bréedeth melancholie bloud. Vse strong
-Wine and sharpe Sauces: as for the warmth of your body, next vnto good
-cloathing, let it euer procéed from exercise that is moderate, then
-from toasting, or broiling your selfe against the fire, for in this
-Month that body can hardly be sound whose shinnes are made pyde and
-motley with the fiers scortching.</p>
-
-<p>And thus much touching the experience of the English Husbandman in
-these fore-knowledges, and ayming after the times to come, being
-drawne from the obseruations and rules left vs by succession of times
-of those learned Fathers, and other best knowne and approued in
-these knowledges: yet I doe not binde euery Husbandman to make as it
-were new Créeds of these Principles, but onely to giue them to his
-memory, as things that will neither oppresse nor hurt it, and if in
-any seldome-séene particularitie, any shall vary from the purpose of
-the relation, to remember that there is aboue vs a God of all Truth
-and Knowledge, who will dispose and gouerne all things, according to
-his good Will and Pleasure: to which let euery Creature submit, in
-as much as hee onely knoweth what is for mankinde most best and most
-conuenient.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAP_1_II"><span class="smcap">Chap.</span> II.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2">The choyce of ground for the Kitchin-garden, and the ordering thereof.</p>
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap2" src="images/i027.png" alt="">
-</div>
-<p class="noindent drop-cap2">A Promise honest and profitable, being seriously made,
-I holde a sinne capitall to neglect, especially where the goodnesse
-stretcheth it selfe ouer a whole Kingdome: and hence I haue assumed
-to perfect both my promise and my labour in building vp that weake
-foundation which I formerly laid, of the English Husbandman: wherein,
-contrary to all other Authors, I am neither beholden to <i>Pliny,
-Virgil, Columella, Varo, Rutillius, Libault</i>, nor any other
-Forrainer, but onely to our owne best experienst Countreymen, whose
-daily knowledge hath made them most perfect in their professions: and
-what better instruction can be had then that which we receiue from the
-professors, being men of our owne neighbourhood, acquainted with our
-Climate and Soile, and the necessary things agréeing with the bettering
-of the same: and not resort, as our Translators haue done, to strangers
-helpe, who tels you that you must meanure your ground with Asses dung,
-when our Kingdome hath not so many foure-footed Asses as wil meanure
-one Acre, and many such like things which our Kingdome affordeth not:
-therefore according to the plaine true English fashion, thus I pursue
-my purpose.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_choyce_of_Ground">The choyce of Ground.</span>
-
-<p>Touching the choyse of Ground, I haue in the former part of this Booke
-shewed you the true nature and goodnesse of euery seuerall Soyle: and
-you are to vnderstand that the best Soyle is best for this purpose,
-because it is least laborsome, and most profitable: yet notwithstanding
-that some of our translated Authors doth vtterly disalow for Gardens
-many Soyles, as namely, all Sands, all Chawkie earths, all Grauell, all
-Earths like dust, and any Earth which chappeth or openeth in the heat
-of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</span> Summer, by that meanes depriuing almost halfe our kingdome of the
-benefit of Gardens, yet I assure you there is no Soyle whatsoeuer (if
-it lye from the inundation of water, or be not absolutely boggy) but
-with industry will beare any Fruit, Hearbe, or Flower, plentifully,
-and without any casualtie procéeding from the barraines therof: witnes
-a most worthy Garden in the barren Peake of <i>Darbyshire</i>, where
-there is no curious Trée or Plant wanting, nor doe they flourish in any
-place more brauely.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_bettering_of_Grounds">The bettering of Grounds.</span>
-
-
-<p>Now for mine owne part, I write generally to all Husbandmen, not to
-those onely which liue in fertile and fat Soyles, and therefore I would
-haue no man say, the Soyle where I liue is so barraine, that I cannot
-haue a Garden: for if the Soyle wherein you liue, be barraine, then
-shall you in the latter end of September breake vp your earth more then
-a Spade-graft déepe, and be well assured that at euery Spade-graft you
-breake the mould well, and leaue not the rootes of any wéeds within it,
-then let it rest till the midst of October, at which time if any wéeds
-appeare vpon it, by all meanes let them be pluckt vp by the roots,
-which done, <span class="sidenote" id="The_trenching_of_Grounds">The trenching of Grounds.</span>
-you shall trench your ground at least a yarde and a halfe
-déepe, and then bury in those trenches, if it be a Sand or grauell
-earth, great store of Oxe or Cow meanure, if it be a colde Chalkie
-Clay, or a moyst ground, then great store of Horse meanure, of both
-which meanures the oldest and rottenest is the best: but if you liue in
-such a Soyle as there is neyther of these meanures bred therein, then
-take straw of any kinde whatsoeuer, and spread it in the high-way where
-there is much trauell, &amp; when it is rotten with the beating of Horse
-féet, then cause it to be shoueld vp, &amp; with it fill your trenches,
-but if Straw be wanting, then if you haue any muddy ditches or ponds,
-scowre the mud out of them, &amp; with it fill vp your trenches: &amp; although
-these are not so long lasting as the two first sorts of meanures,
-yet they are sufficient to bring forth increase, &amp; must supply where
-necessity inforceth, alwayes hauing discretion when you sée your
-ground<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</span> abate in fruitfulnes, to replenish it with fresh meanure.</p>
-
-<p>Now as you fill your trenches with meanure, let one mixe the earth
-therewithall, and as it were blend and incorporate them together: thus
-hauing gone ouer so much ground as you intend to plant or sowe vpon,
-you shall let it rest till the midst of Ianuary, at which time you
-shall breake it vp in trenches againe, but not aboue thrée quarters
-of a yarde déepe, and then fill vp those trenches with meanure as
-before, and lay your earth as leuell as is possible, &amp; so let it rest
-till the beginning of March (if the weather be seasonable for sowing
-or planting) otherwise let it stay till mid-March, and as soone as the
-Moone is changed you shall then dig it vp the fourth time, and make it
-fit to receyue your séede, but in this fourth time of turning ouer your
-earth, you shall dig it but a little better then a Spade-graft depth,
-and euer as you dig it, mixe it with fresh meanure: if your ground be
-subiect to much chapping or rining, then you shall at this last digging
-mixe the earth with ashes and Horse meanure mixt together, which will
-binde and holde the earth from chapping.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_breaking_the_Garden_moulde">Of breaking the Garden moulde.</span>
-
-
-<p>After you haue digd your ground in this order, and made it leuell,
-you shal with an Iron Rake breake the great clods of earth, and bring
-it to as fine a mould as is possible, euer obseruing that if in the
-breaking of the clods or otherwise, you perceiue the roots or stalks of
-any wéeds to arise, you shall presently with your hand pull them out,
-and cast them on heaps, that they may serue eyther for the fire or the
-dunghill: <span class="sidenote" id="Ordering_of_Garden-beds">Ordering of Garden-beds.</span>
-which done, you shall tread out your beds in such orderly
-sort, that you may passe from one to the other without eyther treading
-vpon the beds, or striding ouer them: &amp; thus much for the barraine &amp;
-sterrill ground, which although all ancient &amp; late writers reiect, as
-not worthy to be imployed to this vse, yet beléeue it, being husbanded
-as is said before, it will equall in fruitfulnes the best ground.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_the_fruitfull_Soyle">Of the fruitfull Soyle.</span>
-
-<p>Touching your rich and perfect grounds, which of themselues are apt
-to put forth with little labour, you shall onely at the latter end
-of September breake vp the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</span> Earth, and making greater Trenches, fill
-them well with Oxe meanure, and then turning the Earth vpon the
-meanure, leuell your ground very carefully, breake the clots and
-rake it very painefully, and then treade out your beds, as is before
-sayd, artificially; but if the ground which you breake vp, be eyther
-gréene-swarth, or much ouergrowne with wéeds (as these rich soyles
-must euer be the one or the other) (for they will not be idle, but
-continually bringing forth) then at this first digging and dunging you
-shall haue diuers which shall follow the Spade, who shall take away
-all manner of roots, gréenes, grasse-tufts, stones, or whatsoeuer may
-bréede anoyance to the ground: which worke being perfected, you shall
-let the ground rest all winter till the beginning of March, that the
-frost may mellow and ripen the mould, and also kill the roots of such
-wéeds as the Spade hath turned vp, and haue béene omitted to be pulled
-away.</p>
-
-<p>Now so soone as March is come, vpon the first change of the Moone, you
-shall digge vp this Earth againe, leuell it, and order it in all points
-as was sayd of the barraine Earth, onely there will néede no more vse
-of meanure, but as soone as it is digged, raked, leuelled, and brought
-into a fine mould, you may then tread out your Beds, as aforesayd, euer
-proportioning the quantitie of them according to the quantitie of your
-séedes, hauing the most of that which is most in vse, and the least of
-the contrary.</p>
-
-<p>Now as touching the fencing and inclosing of your Garden, I haue in
-the former Booke shewed you the same at large, and giuen seuerall
-instructions, according to mens seuerall abilities, with this caution,
-that whether your fence be wall, pale, dead-hedge, ditch, or quickset,
-yet it must be so high that it may with assurance kéepe all manner of
-Pullen from flying ouer the same, who are the greatest enemies to a
-Garden that may be.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_necessariest_Ornament">The necessariest Ornament in a Garden.</span>
-
-<p>There would be also in this Kitchin-Garden, if with conueniency it may
-be brought to passe, eyther a Pumpe, Well, or Cesterne, which might
-flow continually with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</span> water all the Summer time, for the watering of
-Hearbs, as shall be héereafter declared. And thus much touching the
-choyce of ground for a Kitchin-garden, and the ordering of the same.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAP_1_III"><span class="smcap">Chap.</span> III.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2"><i>Of the sowing and ordering of all manner of Pot-hearbs.</i></p>
-
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap2" src="images/i031.png" alt="">
-</div>
-<p class="noindent drop-cap2">When you haue prepared your ground, and cast your beds
-in an orderly fashion, as is before spoken, you shall then take your
-Séeds which Séeds would by no meanes be aboue a yéere olde: and hauing
-sorted them seuerally, euery one by it selfe, and appointed the beds
-which shall seuerally receiue them: you shall in this manner sowe your
-Pot-hearbs, which craue not much roote, because their onely benefit is
-in the leafe: take your séeds and put them into a wooden Tray, then
-take your Garden moulde, the finest that may be, being made almost as
-fine as ashes, and mixe your Séeds, and that mould very well together,
-then goe to the bedde where you meane to bestow them, and hauing newly
-rackt it (to stirre vp the fresh mould) with your hand sprinkle and
-sowe them all ouer the bed, so thicke as may be: which done, with a
-fine Rake, rake the bed gently ouer, then taking spare fine mould,
-put it into a ridling Siue, and sift it ouer the bed better then two
-fingers thickenesse, and so let it rest: thus you shall doe seuerally
-with euery séede one after another, bestowing euery one vpon a seuerall
-bed.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_all_sorts_of_Pot_hearbs">Of all sorts of Pot-hearbs.<br>Of <i>Endiue</i> and <i>Succorie</i>.</span>
-
-
-<p>Now for your Pot-hearbs, which are most generally in vse, they be
-these:
-<i>Endiue</i> and <i>Succorie</i>, which delight in moyst
-ground, and will endure the winter. <i>Bleete</i> of which there be two
-kindes, Red and White: this Hearbe neuer néedeth wéeding, and if he
-be suffered to shed his séed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</span> it will hardly euer to be got out of a
-Garden.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Beets">Of Beets.</span>
-
-<p>Then <i>Beets</i>, which must be much wéeded, for they loue to liue by
-themselues, and if they grow too thicke you may take them vp when they
-are a finger long in their owne earth, and set them in another bed, and
-they will prosper much better.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Land-Cresses">Land-Cresses.</span>
-
-<p>Then land <i>Cresses</i>, which is both a good Pot-hearbe and a good
-Sallet-Hearbe: it loueth shadowie places, where the Sunne shineth
-least, and standeth in néed of little dung.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Parcely">Parcely.</span>
-
-<p>Then <i>Parcely</i>, which of all Hearbs is of most vse, it is longest
-in appearing aboue ground, and the elder séed is the quicker in growth,
-but not the surer; but eyther being once come vp increase naturally,
-and doe hardly euer decay: it cannot grow too thicke, but as you vse it
-you must cut off the toppes with your knife, and by no meanes pull vp
-the rootes: if it be put into a little pursse, and beaten against the
-ground, to bruise it a little before it be sowne, it will make it haue
-a large crisped leafe.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Sauory">Of Sauory.</span>
-
-<p>Then <i>Sauory</i>, of which are two kindes, the Winter-<i>Sauory</i>,
-and Summer, both delight in leane ground, and are quicke of growth, and
-long lasting.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Time">Of Time.</span>
-
-<p>Then <i>Time</i>, of which are also two kindes, the running
-<i>Time</i>, and the Garden <i>Time</i>: they delight in fertile
-ground, and from the séede are very slow of growth, therefore it is
-best euer to set them from the slip. The running <i>Time</i> doth
-delight in the shadow, but the Garden <i>Time</i> in the Sunne.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="French_Mallowes">French Mallowes.</span>
-
-<p>Then French-<i>Mallowes</i>, which will ioy in any ground, and are
-quicke of growth.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Cheruill">Cheruill.</span>
-
-<p>Then <i>Cheruill</i>, which will not by any meanes grow with any other
-Hearbe.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Dill">Of Dill.</span>
-
-<p>Then <i>Dill</i>, which may be sowne almost in any moneth of the yéere
-as well as March: it endureth all weathers, but loueth the warmth best.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Isop">Of Isop.</span>
-
-<p>Then <i>Isop</i>, which in like manner as <i>Time</i> is, slow of
-growth from the séed, and therefore fitter to be set from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</span> the slips,
-after it hath once taken roote it encreaseth wonderfully, and will
-hardly be destroyed.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Mints">Of Mints.</span>
-
-<p>Then <i>Mints</i>, which flourish onely in the Summer time, but dye in
-the Winter, it delighteth most in the moyst ground.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Violets">Violets.</span>
-
-<p>Then <i>Violets</i>, the leaues whereof are a good Pot-hearb, and the
-Flowers preserued in close glasse pots, with strong Wine-vinegar and
-Sugar, a most excellent Sallet: it doth delight to grow high, and will
-grow spéedely eyther from the plant or from the séed.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Basill">Of Basill.</span>
-
-<p>Then <i>Basill</i>, which would be sowne in the warme weather, as at
-the beginning of May, for the séed is tender, and when you haue sowne
-it, you shall presse the earth downe vpon it with your féet, for the
-séede can endure no hollownesse: if you sowe it at the fall of the
-Leafe, you shall sprinkle the séede with Vinegar, and when you water it
-let the Sunne be at his height.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Sweet_Marioram">Sweet Marioram.</span>
-
-<p>Then swéet <i>Marioram</i>, which would be sowne on rich ground, and
-farre from Sunneshine, for it taketh no delight in his beames.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Marigolds">Marigolds.</span>
-
-<p>Then <i>Marigolds</i>, which renew euery moneth, and endure the Winter
-as well as the Summer: this Hearbe the oftner you remoue it, the bigger
-it groweth.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Strawberries">Of Strawberries.</span>
-
-<p>Then <i>Strawberries</i>, whose leaues are a good Pot-hearbe, and the
-fruit the wholesommest berry: this Hearbe of all other, would be set
-of the plant, and not sowne from the séed, for the oft changing and
-remouing of it causeth it to grow bigger and bigger: it groweth best
-vnder the shadowes of other Hearbes, but very sufficiently in beds, or
-else where.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Borage_and_Buglosse">Of Borage and Buglosse.</span>
-
-<p>Then <i>Borage</i> and <i>Buglosse</i>, both which are of one nature:
-they would be sowne in small quantity, for where they take they will
-runne ouer a whole Garden: the séed must be gathered when it is halfe
-ripe it is so apt to shed, and when you gather it you must plucke vp
-the stalkes, leaues &amp; all, and so laying them one vpon another thrée or
-foure dayes, their own heat will bring the séed to ripenes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</span></p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Rosemary">Of Rosemary.</span>
-
-<p>Then <i>Rosemary</i>, which is an Hearbe tender and curious, yet of
-singular vertue: it is soone slaine with frost or lightening: it
-will grow plentifully from the séede, but much better from the slip,
-it delighteth to be planted against some Wall where it may haue the
-reflection of the Sunne, for to stand vnpropped of himselfe, the very
-shaking of the winde will kill it.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Penyroyal">Of Penyroyal.</span>
-
-<p>Then <i>Penyroyall</i>, which most properly is vsed to be mixt with
-Puddings, made of the bloud of Beasts, &amp; Oatmeale: of it there be two
-kindes, Male and Female: the Male beareth a white flower, and the
-Female a purple: it must be sowne in small quantity, for it will runne
-and spread ouer-much ground: it delighteth most in moyst earth.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Leekes">Of Leekes.</span>
-
-<p>Then <i>Leekes</i>, which would haue a fertile ground, and as soone as
-they be shot vp a good length you shall cut the blades to the polt,
-and then remoue the heads, and set them borderwise about your other
-beds: this remouing after the cutting off the blades, wil make them
-grow bigger, and prosper better, as for thrusting Oyster-shels or
-Tyle-shreads vnder them, to make the heads bigger, it is a toy, for if
-the mould be loose and good, the Léeke will come to his perfect growth:
-they may be sowne both in March, Aprill, May, and Iune, and they may be
-remoued all Iuly, August, September and October.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Onions">Of Onions.</span>
-
-<p>Then <i>Onions</i>, which differ not much from the nature of Léekes,
-they loue a fertile Soyle, and would be sowne with the séeds of Sauory:
-when they come vp if they grow too thicke, as is often séene, you
-shall plucke vp some and spend them in the Pot and in Sallets, to giue
-the rest more roome, and some you shall take vp and replant in other
-beds, which you may preserue for séede: those <i>Onions</i> which you
-would not haue to séede, you shall cut off the blades in the midst,
-that the iuyce may descend downeward, and when you sée the heads of
-the <i>Onions</i> appearing aboue the earth, you shall with your
-féet tread them into the ground: there be some very well experienst<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</span>
-Husbands, which will take the fayrest, goodliest and soundest Onions
-they can get, and in this moneth of March set them thrée fingers
-déepe in the earth, and these of all other bring forth the purest and
-best séede, for which purpose onely they are preserued: as soone as
-your séed-Onions are knotted, you shall vnderproppe them with square
-cradles, made of stickes, least the waight of the boules which carry
-the séede, should breake the blades.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_gathering_Onion_seede">Of gathering Onion-seede, or the Onion.</span>
-
-<p>The time of gathering your séede is, when it is all turned purely
-blacke, and the time of gathering the Onions is, when the heads doe
-forsake the earth, after they be gathered you shall lay them on a dry
-floore for a fortnight, or more, and then binde them vp in ropes, and
-hang them where they may haue the ayre of the fire, onely note that
-shall gather your Onions in the increase of the Moone, as they were
-sowne, and not otherwise.</p>
-
-<p>Many other Pot-hearbs there be, which for as much as they differ
-nothing, eyther in sowing, planting, or ordering, from these which I
-haue rehearsed, I will héere omit them, and thinke this sufficient,
-touching the sowing and ordering of all manner of Pot-hearbs.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAP_1_IIII"><span class="smcap">Chap.</span> IIII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2"><i>Of the sowing of certaine Hearbs, which are to be eaten, but
-especially are medicinall, yet euer in the Husbandmans Garden.</i></p>
-
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Arage">Of Arage.</span>
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap2" src="images/i035.png" alt="">
-</div>
-<p class="noindent drop-cap2">Of Hearbes which are medicinall, I will begin with <i>Arage</i> or
-<i>Orache</i>, which being colde and moyst is very excellent against
-the hot Gout: it is to be sowne in any moneth, from February till
-December: it loueth much moisture, and therefore must be oft watered:
-it must be sowne excéeding thinne, and quickly couered, for the ayre is
-offensiue.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</span></p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Lumbardy_Loueage">Of Lumbardy Loueage.</span>
-
-<p>Next it is <i>Lumbardy</i>, <i>Loueage</i>, which being hot and dry,
-is very purgatiue, it desireth a very fruitfull ground, but if it be
-sowne where it may haue much shadow and some shelter accompanied with
-moysture, it will grow in any ground, the moneths for sowing thereof,
-is, from the midst of February till Haruest.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Fennell">Of Fennell.</span>
-
-<p><i>Fennell</i> is also hot and dry, and it comforteth the stomacke,
-openeth the inward vessels, and helpeth disgestion; it may be sowne
-in any moneth, and vpon any indifferent ground, especially if it be a
-little stony, the séede would not be very old, though of all other it
-be the longest laster.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Anise">Of Anise.</span>
-
-<p><i>Anise</i> is hot and dry, it dissolueth humors and obstructions,
-and is very comfortable to weake stomacks, it delighteth in a good and
-loose mould, and is to be sowne in the height of the Spring onely.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Comin">Of Comin.</span>
-
-<p><i>Comin</i> is of the nature of <i>Anise</i> and <i>Fennell</i>, and
-mixt with either, is very soueraine against all inward sicknesses
-procéeding from cold, it loueth a fruitfull rich earth &amp; much warmth,
-and therfore the later it is sowne in the Spring, it is so much the
-better, and aboue all things it would be sowne in the hottest time of
-the day, &amp; if it be mixed with other séeds, it is so much the better,
-and appeareth the sooner.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Coliander">Of Coliander.</span>
-
-<p><i>Coliander</i> is of the nature of the earth, cold &amp; dry, it helps
-disgestion, &amp; suppresseth vapours which offend the braine, it may be
-sowne vpon any indifferent ground, &amp; in any month except December and
-Ianuary, the elder the séedes are the better so they be sound, and they
-desire much watering.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Rue">Of Rue.</span>
-
-<p><i>Rue</i> or <i>Hearb-grace</i> is hot and dry, &amp; is very soueraigne
-against all inward infection, putrifactions, and impostumations, it
-ioyeth in any reasonable ground so it grow warme and dry, the moneths
-fittest for the sowing thereof, is March, Aprill or May, and the mould
-would be firme and not subiect to ryuing, whence it procéedes that no
-meanure is so good for the encrease thereof as horse-dung and ashes
-mixt together: the beds would be made high &amp; discending, that no
-moysture may stay thereon, they must be carefully wéeded, for in their
-first growth otherwise they are soone choaked.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</span></p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Organie">Of Organie.</span>
-
-<p><i>Organie</i> is hot and dry, and excellent against any sicknesse of
-the liuer, the ground in which it most ioyeth would be a little stonie,
-and full of rubbish, yet by no meanes vndunged, the moneth fittest
-for the sowing thereof is March and September, the Moone being in
-<i>Libra</i> or any other moist signe, it must be continually watred
-till it appears aboue the earth, but after forborne, for being once
-well bred, it is euer certaine.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_white_Poppy">Of white Poppy.</span>
-
-<p>White <i>Poppy</i> is cold and moyst, and much prouoketh sléepe: it
-delights to be sowne in a rich, warme, dry ground, in the moneths of
-March, September or Nouember.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Germander">Of Germander.</span>
-
-<p><i>Germander</i> is hot and dry, and excellent against the Kings
-euill; obstructions of the Spléene and hardnesse of Vrine; it is a
-hard hearbe, and will prosper in any ground, it is to be sowne, either
-in the spring or fall of the leafe, and is most comly for the setting
-forth of knots in Gardens.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Cardus_Benedictus">Of Cardus Benedictus.</span>
-
-<p><i>Cardus Benedictus</i>, or the blessed Thistell, is hot and dry, it
-is very soueraine against most inward sicknesses, stancheth blood, and
-is a great comforter of the braine, it delighteth in a rich ground and
-a loose well tempered mould, it must be sowne very shallow, and not
-couered aboue two inches déepe, the first quarter of the Moone is best
-to sowe it in, and in the moneths of March, May or September, if you
-sowe a little fine flaxen Wheat with it, no doubt but it will prosper
-the better.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Angelica">Of Angellica.</span>
-
-<p><i>Angellica</i> is hot and dry, it openeth and dissolueth
-obstructions, is an excellent cordiall against poyson, and all
-infections, it helpeth the collicke, and cureth the biting of madde
-dogges or venemous beasts, it loueth a fruitfull dry mould, but may not
-indure the trouble of wéedes, it is to be sowne in March or Aprill, &amp;
-it flourisheth in Iuly &amp; August, it hath a swéet odour, and helpeth all
-euill &amp; infected ayres.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Valerian">Of Valerian.</span>
-
-<p><i>Valerian</i> is hot &amp; dry and preuenteth infection, it helpeth
-stitches and other griefes procéeding from windy causes, it loueth to
-grow in moist and low places, the ground being well meanured, and till
-it be shot at least a handfull high,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</span> it must be kept with continuall
-watring, the moystest time of the yéere is the best to sowe it in.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Elecampana">Of Elecampana.</span>
-
-<p><i>Elecampana</i>, is hot and moyst, and good for offences in the
-lungs, or any outward ioynt, being troubled with paine procéeding from
-colde: it is better much to be set then sowne, yet notwithstanding it
-may safely enough be sowne at any time after mid-March, the ground
-being rich, soft, and loose, and the séede strowed very thinne, and at
-least two fingers distance one from another.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Pepperwort">Of Pepperwort.</span>
-
-<p><i>Pepperwort</i> is hot and drye, yet of the two much more hot, it
-is good against all kinde of aches, and other paine in the ioynts, or
-sinewes: it delighteth in a rich blacke Soyle, fat and loose: it would
-be sowne in February, and remoued in September.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Philipendula">Of Philipendula.</span>
-
-<p><i>Philipendula</i> is very hot and dry, and is good against abortiue
-births, Stone, Strangury, or any griefe procéeding from colde causes:
-it may be sowne in any barraine, stony, or grauelly Soyle, in the
-months of May, Aprill, or September: it neither desireth much wéeding,
-nor much watering, but being once committed to the ground appeareth
-sodainely: and thus much of those Hearbes which are fit for Medicine,
-of which though there be many others, yet they differ not in their
-ordering from these already declared.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAP_1_V"><span class="smcap">Chap.</span> V.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2"><i>Of diuers sorts of Sallet-Hearbes, their manner of sowing and
-ordering.</i></p>
-
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Lettuce">Of Lettuce.</span>
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap2" src="images/i038.png" alt="">
-</div>
-<p class="noindent drop-cap2">Amongst the many numbers of Sallet-Hearbes I thinke it not amisse to
-beginne first with <i>Lettuce</i>, which of all other whose vertue
-is helde in the leafe, is most delicate, tender, and pleasant: the
-ground then in which it most delighteth, is that which is most fertile,
-best laboured, and of the finest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</span> mould, being soft, loose, and more
-enclining to moysture then drinesse: it may be sowne in any moneth of
-the yeare, from February to Nouember; it is very quick of growth, and
-will appeare aboue the earth in foure dayes after the sowing: it would
-at first be sowne thicke, and carefully kept with morning and euening
-watrings, if the season be dry, but not otherwise: after it is growne
-and faire spread aboue the earth, which will be in a moneths space or
-there-abouts, you shall chuse out the fairest and goodliest plants,
-and taking them vp with the earth and all, about their rootes, replant
-or remoue them to a new bed of fresh mould, and there set them a foote
-distance one from another, and fixe their rootes fast and hard into
-the ground: then couer or presse them downe with Tyle or Slate stones,
-to make them spread and not spring vpward, by which meanes the leaues
-will gather together, and cabbadge, in a thicke and good order, for it
-is to be vnderstood, that the oftner you remoue your <i>Lettuce</i>,
-the fairer and closer they wil cabbage. There be diuers which obserue
-to remoue <i>Lettuce</i> as soone as sixe leaues are sprung aboue the
-ground; but I like better to remoue them when they begin to spindle:
-they are most estéemed in the moneths of Aprill, May, and Iune, for in
-Iuly they are supposed to carrie in them a poysonous substance.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Spynage">Of Spynage.</span>
-
-<p>Next the <i>Lettuce</i> I preferre the hearbe <i>Spynage</i>, which
-delighteth in a well-dunged earth, and may be sowne in Aprill, March,
-September, or October: it would not be mixed with other séedes, because
-it prospereth best alone.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Sparagus">Of Sparagus.</span>
-
-<p><i>Sparagus</i> ioyeth in a fertill moist ground, the mould being made
-light which couers it, and the ground well dunged, the Spring is the
-best time to sowe it, and it must be sowne in long furrowes or trenches
-made with your finger, and not vniuersally spread ouer the bed as other
-séeds are: it loueth moysture, but may not endure the wet to lye long
-vpon it, and therefore the beds would a little descend it: must not be
-remoued till the rootes be so feltred<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</span> together, that they hinder the
-new branches from springing vp, which commonly is two yeares.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Colworts">Of Colworts.</span>
-
-<p><i>Colworts</i> or <i>Cabbadge</i> séede delighteth in any well
-husbanded ground, and may be sowen in all sorts and seasons as
-<i>Lettuce</i> is, and must also in the like manner be remoued, after
-the principall leaues are come forth, which will make them to gather
-together, and cabbadge the better: and as they may be sowen in any
-season of the yeare, so likewise they may be remoued at all seasons
-likewise, except the frost or other vnseasonable weather hinder you:
-and although some men will not allow it to be sowen in clay grounds,
-grauell, chalke, or sand, yet they are deceiued; for if the earth be
-well ordred, they will grow plentifully, onely you must obserue when
-you remoue them to let them haue earth roome enough.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Sage">Of Sage.</span>
-
-<p><i>Sage</i> is in Gardens most common, because it is most wholesome,
-and though it may be better set from the slip then sowen in the séede,
-yet both will prosper, it loueth any well drest ground, and may be
-sowen either in February, March, September, or October: it loueth also
-to grow thick and close together, and will of it selfe ouercome most
-wéedes: it asketh not much dung, neither too great care in watring,
-onely it would be oft searched, for Toades and other venemous things
-will delight to lye vnder it, the more Sunne and ayre it hath, the
-better it is.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Purslane">Of Purslane.</span>
-
-<p><i>Purslane</i> is a most excellent Sallet-hearbe, and loueth a fertile
-soile, and though it may be sowen almost in any moneth, yet the warmest
-is the best, as Aprill, May, Iune, or Septemb. Buck ashes are an
-excellent meanure for them, and for most Sallet-hearbs else, but aboue
-all they loue dry dust and house-swéepings, they are apt to shed their
-séede, whence it comes that a ground once possest of them will seldome
-want them, they may also be remoued, and will prosper much the better.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Artichokes">Of Artichokes.</span>
-
-<p><i>Artychokes</i> loue a fat earth, and may be sowen in February or
-March, the Moone encreasing, the séedes must not be sowen together, but
-set one by one a good distance<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</span> asunder; they must lye somewhat déepe,
-and be firmely couered; yet if you can procure them, I rather wish you
-rather to set them from Slips or young Plants, then sowe them from the
-séedes, for they doe so naturally loue the earth, that you can hardly
-slip so wast a leafe from an <i>Artychoke</i> as will not take roote;
-if you sowe the séede, you must be carefull to wéede and water them
-well, for the first leaues are very tender: also if you remoue them
-after their first springing, the fruit will be bigger and better.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Garlicke">Of Garlicke.</span>
-
-<p><i>Garlicke</i> is best in September and Nouember, to be set from the
-cloue, in &amp; about the borders of beds, or other séedes, halfe a foote
-one from another, and in February, March, and Aprill, to be sowen from
-the séede: it must be ordered as you order <i>Onyon</i> séede, it loues
-not much wet nor extreame drought, onely it desires a good mould which
-is rich and firme, yet not too much dunged.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Raddish">Of Raddish.</span>
-
-<p><i>Raddish</i> loueth a fertile ground, that is well dunged, chiefly
-with mans ordure, that is déepe trencht, and hath an easie and light
-mould, and the séedes would be placed either in rowes, or about the
-borders of beds, as you doe <i>Garlicke</i>: the manner of sowing it is
-with a dibble or round sticke, to make a hole into the ground almost
-a foote déepe, and then into that hole to put not aboue two séedes at
-the most, and then close the hole vp againe, and let the holes be foure
-fingers one from another, it may be sowen in most months of the yéere
-if the frost hinder not, and to make the roote large &amp; tender, and to
-kéepe the branch from séeding; you shall as it springs crop off the
-principall leaues which grow against the heart of the root: to tread
-them downe into the earth after they haue fast roote is good also.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Nauew">Of Nauew.</span>
-
-<p><i>Nauew</i>, if the earth haue any small goodnesse in it will grow
-plentifully, neither is offended with any ayre, onely the mould would
-be loose and rough, for otherwise it many times turneth to Rape: the
-séede naturally commeth vp very thicke, therefore it is expedient to
-remoue them and plant them thinner, for that best preserueth their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</span>
-natures, they may be sowne in February, March, Aprill, September, or
-October.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Parsneps_and_Carrets">Of Parsneps and Carrets.</span>
-
-<p><i>Parsneps</i> or <i>Carrets</i> are of one and the selfe nature, they
-delight in a good fat earth, and would be sowne reasonably thicke, in
-long déepe trenches like furrowes, hauing a gentle and easie mould
-either in the moneth of Ianuary, February, or March, or in September,
-October, or December, they must be carefully well wéeded, and if the
-earth be fat, they néede not much watring or other attendance.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Pompyons">Of Pompyons.</span>
-
-<p><i>Pompyons</i>, <i>Gourds</i>, or <i>Mellons</i>, desire a very good
-ground, or by Nature or Art, the séedes must be sowne very thinne, as
-at least halfe a foote one from another, they would lye reasonably
-déepe, yet the mould very gentle which couers them, they are subiect
-to spread and runne ouer much ground, therefore as they grow you must
-direct their stemmes so as they may not annoy one another, and when
-they flower you shall lay broad Tiles or Slate stones vnder them,
-that the fruit nor flower may not touch the earth; if you plash them
-vp against trées or walles where they may haue the reflection of the
-Sunne, the fruit will be larger, pleasanter, and sooner ripe: they
-néede no wéeding nor watring after you sée them appeare aboue the
-earth, and the best seasons to sowe them in, is February, March, or
-Aprill, those are the best <i>Pompyons</i> which haue the smallest
-séedes, and are of the most yellowest complexion.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_the_Cowcumber">Of the Cowcumber.</span>
-
-<p><i>Cowcumber</i>, is a delicate, pleasant, yet very tender fruit,
-and delighteth in an extraordinarie fat earth, especially during
-the opening or sprouting of the séede, therefore the best and most
-vndoubted safest way for sowing them is, first in some corner of your
-Kitchin garden to make a bed of two or thrée yards square of olde Oxe
-dung, and Horse dung mixt together, and at least a yard or better high
-from the earth, then couer this bed of dung with the richest garden
-mould you haue, better then halfe a foote thicke: then thereon place
-your séedes halfe a foote likewise<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</span> one from another, and be most
-sure that your séedes be hard and sound (for any softnesse in them
-sheweth rottennesse) then couer them foure fingers thicke with the
-like mould: then within seauen or eight dayes, after you shall sée
-them appeare aboue the earth, but in any wise let them continue still
-till the principall leaues be come forth, and they begin to créepe out
-in length, then with your hand griping the whole plant, take it vp by
-the rootes with the earth and all, and plant it in a bed new digged &amp;
-trimmed for the purpose with a rich loose mould, and so replant and
-remoue each roote seuerally one after another, and they will grow and
-bring forth in great plenty. Now by the way you must obserue, that as
-soone as you haue sowne your séedes you shall prouide a Mat, Canuasse,
-or other couering, which being placed vpon stakes ouer the dung bed,
-shall euery night after Sunne-set be spread ouer the same, and not
-taken away till the Sunne be risen in the morning, for this will defend
-the séedes from frosts and other cold dewes which are very dangerous.
-Now if any demand why these séedes are thus sowne first on the bed
-of dung, they shall vnderstand that besides the warmth and fertility
-thereof, that the séedes are so pleasant and tender, that wormes and
-other créeping things in the earth will destroy them before they can
-sprout, which this bed of dung preuenteth. The months most fit for
-sowing these séedes, are Aprill, May and Iune onely, for other are much
-too colde, and in this manner you may sowe any tender séede whatsoeuer.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_the_Beane_of_Egipt">Of the Beane of Egipt.</span>
-
-<p><i>Beanes</i> of <i>Egipt</i> delight in a moyst watrish ground, rather
-fertile then any way giuen to barrainnesse, yet will plentifully enough
-prosper in any indifferent earth: they are rather to set then sowe,
-because they must take strong roote, and be fixed somewhat déepe into
-the earth, and the moneth which is most proper for them, is the latter
-end of Ianuary, all February and the beginning of March onely.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Skerrets">Of Skerrets.</span>
-
-<p><i>Skerrets</i> are a delicate roote, white, tender, and pleasant,
-little differing in tast or excellencie from the <i>Eringo</i>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</span> They
-delight in a rich mould, moyst and well broken, and must be set déepe
-in the earth: after they be a finger length aboue the ground they
-would be remoued, and planted in a fresh mould, which will preserue
-them from spéedie séeding, for when they runne to séede, they loose
-the vertue of their roote. The moneths fittest for the sowing of them
-is March, Aprill, and May, and if you desire to haue them all Winter,
-you may then sowe them in September and October. And thus much for
-Sallet-hearbs, and rootes of all natures, of which kindes though there
-be diuers other, yet you shall vnderstand, all are to be ordered in the
-manner of these before rehearsed, that is to say, such as haue their
-vertues in the stalke or leaues, like <i>Spynage</i>, <i>Sparagus</i>,
-<i>Purslayn</i>, and such like, those which cabbadge or knit together
-in hard lumps, like <i>Lettuce</i>, <i>Colworts</i>, and such like,
-and those whose goodnesse liues in their rootes, like <i>Raddish</i>,
-<i>Carrets</i>, <i>Skerrets</i>, and such like.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="A_most_necessary_obseruation">A most necessary obseruation.</span>
-
-<p>Now for a most necessarie obseruation, euery Gardner ought to beare
-this rule in his memorie, that all Pot-hearbs must be sowne thicke, and
-but thinly couered, as namely not aboue thrée fingers: all hearbs which
-cabbadge must be sowne thicke, and déeper couered, as a full handfull
-at least, and in their remouing planted thinne, and well fixt into
-the earth: and all rootes must be sowen thinne and déepe, as almost a
-foote either let into the ground, or strewed in déepe furrowes, digged
-and laide vp for the purpose, in which the quantity of your séede must
-onely direct you: for if you haue occasion to sow hardly a handfull,
-then you may set them one by one into the ground at your leasure, but
-if you haue occasion to sowe many Pecks or halfe Pecks, then you shall
-turne vp your earth into déepe furrowes, and in the bottome thereof
-scatter your séeds, and after rake it into a leuell, and you shall not
-onely saue much labour, but gaine your purpose.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAP_1_VI"><span class="smcap">Chap.</span> VI.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2"><i>Of Flowers of all sorts both forraigne and home-bred, their sowing,
-planting, and preseruing.</i></p>
-
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap2" src="images/i045.png" alt="">
-</div>
-<p class="noindent drop-cap2">Hauing written sufficiently of Pot-hearbs and Sallet-hearbs, which
-are the ornaments of the Husbandmans Kitchin or Table, I will here
-speake of flowers, which either for their smels, beauties, or both,
-are the graces of his Chamber. And first, because my maine ayme and
-scope is English Husbandrie, I will begin with those flowers which are
-most proper and naturall for our climate, of which because I holde
-<i>Roses</i> both for their smell, beauties, and wholesomnesse to
-excéede all other, I thinke it not amisse to giue them the first place
-and precedencie before all other.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Roses">Of Roses.</span>
-
-<p>You shall vnderstand then that <i>Roses</i> are generally and
-aunciently but of thrée kindes, the Damaske, the red, and the white,
-and what are different from these are but deriuations from them, being
-by grafting, replanting, and phisicking, somewhat altered either in
-colour, smell, or doublenesse of leafe.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_the_Damaske_Rose">Of the Damaske Rose.</span>
-
-<p>To speake then first of the Damaske <i>Rose</i>, it is fit that all
-husbandmen know, that <i>Roses</i> may as well be sowne from the
-séede, as planted from the roote, Syen, or branch onely, they are
-the slower in comming vp, more tender to nourish, and much longer in
-yéelding forth their flowers, yet for satisfaction sake and where
-necessitie vrgeth, if of force or pleasure you must sowe it from the
-séede, you shall chuse a ruffish earth loose and well dunged, and
-you shall cast vp your beds high and narrow: the moneth which is fit
-for their sowing is September, and they must be couered not aboue
-four fingers déepe, they must be defended well all the Winter from
-frosts and stormes, and then they will beare their flowers plentifully
-all the next<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</span> Spring following: yet this is to be noted, that all
-<i>Roses</i> which rise from the séede simply, their flowers will be
-single like the <i>Eglantine</i>, or <i>Cyphanie</i>, therefore after
-your plants are two yéeres olde, you must graft one into another, as
-you doe other fruit, and that will make them double and thicke: also
-you must remember that those yellow small séedes which are in the
-midst of the <i>Rose</i>, are not true <i>Rose</i> séedes, but those
-which lye hid in the round peare knob vnder the <i>Rose</i>, which as
-soone as the leaues are fallen away, will open and shew the séede.
-And thus much touching the sowing of all sorts of <i>Roses</i>, which
-is for experience and knowledge sake onely, for indéede the true vse
-and property of the <i>Rose</i> is to be planted in short slips about
-fourtéene inches long, and the small tassels of the roote cut away,
-they would be set halfe a foote into the ground, in the same manner as
-you set ordinary Quick-set, and of like thicknesse, rather a little
-slope-wise then vpright: and though some thinke March the best season,
-yet doubtlesse September is much better for hauing the roote confirmed
-all the Winter, they will beare the sooner and better all the Sommer
-following; you must be carefull to plant them in faire weather, and
-as néere as you can vnder shelter as by the sides of walls, and such
-like couert where the Sunne may reflect against them, and if they be
-planted on open beds or borders, then you must with Poales and other
-necessaries support them and hold them vp, least the winde shake their
-rootes and hinder their growing.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_the_red_Rose">Of the red Rose.</span>
-
-<p>The red <i>Rose</i> is not fully so tender as the Damaske, neither
-is it so pleasant in smell, nor doubleth his leaues so often; yet it
-is much more Phisicall, and oftner vsed in medicine, it is likewise
-fitter to be planted then sowen, and the earth in which it most ioyeth
-would be a little rough or grauelly, and the best compasse you can lay
-vnto it, is rubbish or the sweeping of houses, the moneths to sowe or
-plant it in is March or September, &amp; the time to prune and cut away the
-superfluous branches is euer the midst of October.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</span></p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_the_white_Rose">Of the white Rose.</span>
-
-<p>The white <i>Rose</i> is of lesse smell then the red, and will grow in
-a harder ground, his vse is altogether in Phisicke as for sore eyes and
-such like: it will grow into a Trée of some bigge substance, and is
-seldome hurt with frosts, stormes, or blastings: it would likewise be
-planted from the roote against some high wall, either in the moneth of
-February or March, and the oftner you plant and replant it, the doubler
-and larger the flower will be: for the earth it much skilleth not,
-because it will grow almost in euery ground, onely it delights most in
-the shadow, and would be seldome pruned, except you finde many dead
-branches.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_the_Cinamon_Rose">Of the Cinamon Rose.</span>
-
-<p>The <i>Cinamon Rose</i>, is for the most part sowen, and not planted,
-whence it comes that you shall euer sée the leaues single and little,
-the delicacie thereof being onely in the smell, which that you may
-haue most fragrant and strong, you shall take a vessell of earth,
-being full of small holes in the bottome and sides, and fill it with
-the richest earth you can get, being made fine and loose, then take
-Damaske <i>Rose</i> séedes which are hard, and sound, and stéepe them
-foure and twenty houres in <i>Cinamon</i> water, I doe not meane the
-distilled water, but faire Conduit water, in which good store of
-<i>Cinamon</i> hath bin stéeped, or boyled, or milk, wherin good store
-of <i>Cinamon</i> hath bin dissolued, and then sow those séedes into
-the Pot, and couer them almost thrée fingers déepe, then morning and
-euening till they appeare aboue the earth, water them with that water
-or milke in which the seedes were stéeped, then when they are sprung vp
-a handfull or more aboue the ground, you shall take them vp mould and
-all, and hauing drest a border or bed for the purpose, plant them so as
-they may grow vp against some warme wall or pale, and haue the Sunne
-most part of the day shining vpon them, and you shall be sure to haue
-<i>Roses</i> growing on them, whose smell will be wonderfull pleasant,
-as if they had béene spiced with <i>Cinamon</i>, and the best season of
-sowing these is euer in March, at high noone day, the weather shining
-faire, and the winde most calme.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</span></p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="To_make_the_Cinamon_Rose">To make the Cinamon Rose grow double.</span>
-
-<p>Now if you would haue these <i>Roses</i> to grow double, which is an
-Art yet hid from most Gardners, you shall at Michaelmasse take the
-vppermost parts of the Plante from the first knot, and as you graft
-either Plumme or Apple, so graft one into another, and couer the heads
-with earth or clay tempered with <i>Cinamon</i>-water, and they will
-not onely grow double, but the smell will be much swéeter, and looke
-how oft you will graft and re-graft them, so much more double and
-double they will proue.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_the_Prouince_Rose">Of the Prouince Rose.</span>
-
-<p>The <i>Prouince Rose</i> is a delicate flower for the eye more then the
-nose, for his oft grafting abateth his smell, but doubleth his leafe so
-oft that it is wonderfull, therefore if you will haue them large and
-faire, you shall take the fairest Damaske <i>Roses</i> you can get,
-and graft them into the red <i>Rose</i>, and when they haue shot out
-many branches, then you shall graft each seuerall branch againe with
-new grafts of another grafted Damaske <i>Rose</i>: and thus by grafting
-graft vpon graft, you shall haue as faire and well coloured <i>Prouince
-Roses</i>, as you can wish or desire: and thus you may doe either in
-the Spring or fall at your pleasure, but the fall of the leafe is euer
-helde the best season.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="To_make_Roses_smell_well">To make Roses smell well.</span>
-
-<p>Now if your <i>Roses</i> chaunce to loose their smels, as it oft
-happeneth through these double graftings: you shall then plant
-<i>Garlicke</i> heads at the rootes of your <i>Roses</i>, and that
-will bring the pleasantnesse of their sent vnto them againe.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Generall_notes_touching_Roses">Generall notes touching Roses.</span>
-
-<p>Now for your generall obseruations; you shall remember that it is good
-to water your <i>Roses</i> morning and euening till they be gathered;
-you shall rather couet to plant your <i>Roses</i> in a dry ground then
-a wette, you shall giue them much shelter, strong support, and fresh
-dung twise at the least euery yeare, when the leafe is fallen, you
-shall cutte and prune the branches, and when the buds appeare you, then
-begin your first watring.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</span></p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Lauender">Of Lauender.</span>
-
-<p><i>Lauender</i> is a flower of a hot smell, and is more estéemed of the
-plaine Country housewife then the dainty Citizen: it is very wholesome
-amongst linnen cloathes, and would be sowen in a good rich mould, in
-the moneths of March or Aprill.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_the_white_Lilly">Of the white Lilly.</span>
-
-<p>The white <i>Lilly</i> would be sowen in a fat earth, in the moneths
-of October and Nouember, or in March or April, and the séedes must be
-sowen excéeding thinne, not one by any meanes touching another, and the
-mould which couereth them must be sifted gently vpon them.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="To_make_Lillyes_of_any_colour">To make Lillyes of any colour.</span>
-
-<p>If you would haue your <i>Lillyes</i> of a purple colour, you shall
-stéepe your séedes in the Lées of red wine, and that will change
-their complexion, and also you shall water the Plants with the same
-Lées likewise: if you will haue them scarlet red, you shall put
-<i>Vermillion</i> or <i>Cynaber</i> betwéene the rinde and the small
-heads growing about the roote: if you would haue them blew, you shall
-dissolue <i>Azure</i> or <i>Byse</i> betwéene the rinde and the heads,
-if yellow <i>Orpment</i>, if gréene <i>Verdigreace</i>, and thus of any
-other colour.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="To_make_Lillyes_flourish">To make Lillyes flourish all the yeere.</span>
-
-<p>Now to make them flourish euery moneth in the yéere, you shall sowe
-your séedes some a foote déepe, some halfe a foote, and some not two
-inches, so they will spring one after another, and flourish one after
-another.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_the_wood_Lilly">Of the wood Lilly.</span>
-
-<p>The wood <i>Lilly</i> or <i>Lilly</i> of the vale, delighteth most in
-a moyst ground, and may be sowen either in March or September, it is
-very faire to looke on, and not so suffocating in smell as the other
-<i>Lillyes</i> are.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_the_flower_de_Lice">Of the flower de Lice.</span>
-
-<p>The <i>flower de Lice</i> is of excellent beauty, but not very pleasant
-to smell to, it loueth a dry ground &amp; an easie mould, and is fittest to
-be sowen in the moneth of March.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Pyonie">Of Pyonie.</span>
-
-<p><i>Pyonie</i> or the blessed <i>Rose</i>, loueth a good fat earth
-being somewhat loose, and may be sowen either in March or September,
-it asketh not much watring, onely some support because the stalkes be
-weake.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Petillius">Of Petillius.</span>
-
-<p><i>Petillius</i> or <i>Indian eye</i>, may be sowen in any ground, for
-it desireth neither much water, nor much dung, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</span> the best season for
-sowing, it is Iune or September, for it will beare flowers commonly all
-the Winter.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Veluet_flower">Of Veluet flower.</span>
-
-<p><i>Veluet flower</i> loueth a rich fertile ground, and must be much
-watred: the season best for the sowing is August, for commonly it will
-beare flowers all the Winter.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Gylliflowers">Of Gylliflowers.</span>
-
-
-<p><i>Gilliflowers</i> are of diuers kindes, as <i>Pynks</i>,
-<i>Wall-flowers</i>, <i>Carnations</i>, <i>Cloue Gilliflowers</i>,
-and a world of others, which are of all other flowers most swéet and
-delicate: all but the <i>Wall-gilliflower</i> loue good fertile earths,
-and may be sowen either in March, Iuly, or August. They are better to
-be planted of Slips then sowen, yet both will prosper. They are very
-tender, and therfore the best planting of them is in earthen Pots, or
-halfe Tubs, which at your pleasure you may remoue from the shade to the
-Sunne, and from the roughnesse of stormes to places of shelter, they
-grow vp high on long slender stalkes, which you must defend and support
-with square cradles made of stickes, least the winde and the waight
-of the flowers breake them: these <i>Gilliflowers</i> you may make of
-any colour you please, in such sort as is shewed you for the colouring
-of <i>Lillyes</i>, <span class="sidenote" id="Of_grafting_of_Gylliflowers">Of grafting of Gylliflowers.</span>
-and if you please to haue them of mixt colours
-you may also, by grafting of contrary colours one into another: and
-you may with as great ease graft the <i>Gylliflower</i> as any fruit
-whatsoeuer, by the ioyning of the knots one into another, and then
-wrapping them about with a little soft sleau’d silke, and couering the
-place close with soft red Waxe well tempered. And you shall vnderstand
-that the grafting of <i>Gylliflowers</i> maketh them excéeding great,
-double, and most orient of colour.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_the_smels_of_Gylliflowers">Of the smels of Gylliflowers.</span>
-
-<p>Now if you will haue your <i>Gylliflowers</i> of diuers smels or
-odours, you may also with great ease, as thus for example: if you will
-take two or thrée great cloues, &amp; stéepe them foure and twenty houres
-in Damaske <i>Rose</i> water, then take them out and bruise them, and
-put them into a fine Cambricke ragge, and so binde them about the heart
-roote of the <i>Gylliflower</i>, néere to the setting on of the stalke,
-and so plant it in a fine, soft, and fertile mould, and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</span> flower
-which springeth from the same, will haue so delicate a mixt smell of
-the Cloue and the Rose-water, that it will bréede both delight and
-wonder. If in the same manner you take a sticke of <i>Cinamon</i>,
-and stéepe it in <i>Rose</i> water, and then bruise it, and binde it
-as afore-said, all the flowers will smell strongly of <i>Cinamon</i>:
-if you take two graines of fat Muske, and mixe it with two drops of
-Damaske <i>Rose</i> water, and binde it as afore-said, the flowers will
-smell strongly of Muske, yet not too hot nor offensiue, by reason of
-the correction of the <i>Rose</i> water: and in this sort you may doe
-either with <i>Amber-greece</i>, <i>Storax</i>, <i>Beniamin</i>, or
-any other swéet drugge whatsoeuer; and if in any of these confections
-before named, you stéepe the séedes of your <i>Gylliflowers</i> foure
-and twenty houres before you sowe them, they will take the same smels
-in which you stéepe them, onely they will not be so large or double, as
-those which are replanted or grafted.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_the_Wall_Gylliflower">Of the Wall Gylliflower.</span>
-
-<p>Now for your <i>Wall Gylliflower</i>, it delighteth in hard rubbish,
-limy, and stonie grounds, whence it commeth that they couet most to
-grow vpon walles, pauements, and such like barraine places. It may be
-sowen in any moneth or season, for it is a séede of that hardnesse,
-that it makes no difference betwixt Winter and Sommer, but will
-flourish in both equally, and beareth his flowers all the yéere, whence
-it comes that the Husbandman preserues it most in his Bée-garden; for
-it is wondrous swéet, and affordeth much honey. It would be sowen
-in very small quantity, for after it haue once taken roote, it will
-naturally of it selfe ouer-spread much ground, and hardly euer after be
-rooted out. It is of it selfe of so exéeding a strong and swéet smell,
-that it cannot be forced to take any other, and therefore is euer
-preserued in its owne nature.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_the_Helytropian">Of the Helytropian.</span>
-
-<p>The <i>Helytropian</i> or flower of the Sunne, is in nature and colour
-like our English <i>Marigold</i>, onely it is excéeding huge in
-compasse, for many of them will be twenty, and foure and twenty inches
-in compasse, according to the fertilenesse of the soyle in which they
-grow, and the oft replanting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</span> of their rootes, they are excéeding
-goodly to looke on, and pleasant to smell, they open their flowers at
-the rising of the Sunne, and close them againe at the Sunne setting,
-it delighteth in any soyle which is fertile either by Art or Nature,
-and may be sowen in any moneth from February till September, the oft
-planting and replanting of the roote after it is sprung a handfull
-from the earth, maketh it grow to the vttermost bignesse, it would haue
-the East and West open vpon it, onely some small Pent-house to kéepe
-the sharpnesse of the winde from it.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_the_Crowne_Emperiall">Of the Crowne Emperiall.</span>
-
-<p>The <i>Crowne-Emperiall</i>, is of all flowers both forraigne and
-home-bred, the delicatest and strangest: it hath the true shape of an
-Emperiall Crowne, and will be of diuers colours, according to the Art
-of the Gardner. In the middest of the flower you shall sée a round
-Pearle stand, in proportion, colour, and orientnesse, like a true
-naturall Pearle, onely it is of a soft liquid substance: This Pearle if
-you shake the flower neuer so violently will not fall off, neither if
-you let it continue neuer so long, will it either encrease or diminish
-in the bignesse, but remayneth all one: yet if with your finger you
-take and wipe it away, in lesse then an houre after you shall haue
-another arise in the same place, and of the same bignesse. This Pearle
-if you taste it vpon your tongue, is pleasant and swéet like honey:
-this flower when the Sunne ariseth, you shall sée it looke directly
-to the East, with the stalke bent lowe there-vnto, and as the Sunne
-ariseth higher and higher, so the flower will likewise ascend, and
-when the Sunne is come into the <i>Meridian</i> or noone poynt, which
-is directly ouer it, then will it stand vpright vpon the stalke, and
-looke directly vpward, and as the Sunne declineth, so will it likewise
-decline, and at the Sunne setting looke directly to the West onely. The
-séedes of this flower are very tender, and therefore would be carefully
-sowen in a very rich and fertile earth well broken and manured. The
-seasons<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</span> most méete for the same, is the latter end of March, Aprill,
-or May, for the flowers flourish most in May, Iune, and Iuly. As soone
-as it is sprung a handfull aboue the earth; you shall remoue it into a
-fresh mould, and that will make it flourish the brauer: the roote of
-this flower is like an Apple, or great flat Onion, and therefore in the
-replanting of it, you must be carefull to make a hole large and fitte
-for the same, and to fixe the mould gently and close about the same.
-In the Winter it shrinketh into the earth, and is hardly or not at all
-discerned, by meanes whereof I haue séene diuers supposing it to be
-dead, to digge vp the earth, and negligently spoyle the roote, but be
-not you of that opinion, and in the Spring you shall sée it arise and
-flourish brauely.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_the_Dulippo">Of the Dulippo.</span>
-
-<p>The <i>Dulippo</i> is but a little short of the <i>Crowne Emperiall</i>
-in pleasantnesse and rarenesse, for you may haue them of all colours
-whatsoeuer, in such sort as was shewed you for the <i>Lillyes</i>,
-<i>Gylliflowers</i>, and other rootes: they are tender at their first
-springing from the séede, and therefore must be sowen in a fine rich
-mould, in the warmth of the Sunne, either in March, Aprill, or May:
-but after they are once sprung aboue the ground, they are reasonable
-hard, and will defend themselues against most weathers: the roote of
-this flower is shaped like a Peare, with the biggest end downeward, and
-many small thréeds at the bottome; therefore you must be sure when you
-remoue or replant it, to couer all the roote in fresh mould, and let
-not any part of the white thereof be vncouered: this flower by monethly
-replanting, you may haue to flourish in all the Summer moneths of the
-yeare, for in the dead of Winter it shrinketh into the ground, and is
-hardly or not at all perceiued, the stalkes of these flowers are weake,
-therefore to support them, and defend them from the shakings of the
-windes with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</span> little square frames of stickes, will be very good and
-necessary, it must be oft watred.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_the_Hyacinth">Of the Hyacinth.</span>
-
-<p>The <i>Hyacinth</i> is a flower more delicate to the eye then nose,
-and is of a good strong nature, for it will endure any reasonable
-earth, and may be sowne in any moneth of the Spring, from the beginning
-of February till midde-Iune: it onely hateth tempests and stormes,
-and therefore is commonly sowen or planted néere vnto walls or other
-shelter. You may haue them of any colour you please, as is shewed
-before of other flowers, and in this alteration or mixture of colours
-their greatest glorie appeareth, they will flourish all the Summer
-long, and if they stand warme, appeare very early in the Spring.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_the_Narcissus">Of the Narcissus.</span>
-
-<p>The <i>Narcissus</i> is a very curious and dainty flower, and through
-his much variety and alteration in growing, they are supposed to be of
-diuers kindes, but it is not so, for in as much as they are séene to
-be of diuers colours, that is but the Art of the Gardner, as is before
-exprest in other flowers, and whereas some of them grow single, some
-double, and some double vpon double, you shall vnderstand that such as
-grow single, grow simply from the séede onely, those which are double
-and no more, are such as haue béene planted and replanted, the small
-thréeds of the rootes being clipt away, and nothing left about it that
-is superfluous, and those which are double vpon double, are the double
-plants grafted one into another. This <i>Narcissus</i> loueth a rich
-warme soyle, the mould being easie and light, it may be sowne in any
-moneth of the Spring, and will flourish all the Summer after. Before it
-appeare aboue ground it would be oft watred, but after it skils not how
-little, for it will defend it selfe sufficiently.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_the_Daffadill_Colombin_and_Chesbole">Of the Daffadill, Colombine, and Chesbole.</span>
-
-
-<p>Not vnlike vnto this is your <i>Daffadill</i> of all kindes and
-colours, and in the same earths and seasons delighteth either to be
-sowen or planted, and will in the same manner as your <i>Narcissus</i>
-double and redouble his leaues; so will your <i>Colombine</i>, your
-<i>Chesbole</i>, and almost any hollow flower whatsoeuer. Many other
-forraigne flowers there<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</span> are which grow plentifully in our Kingdome:
-but the order of their planting and sowing differeth nothing from these
-which I haue already declared, being the most tender and curious of all
-other, <span class="sidenote" id="An_excellent_Caution">An excellent Caution.</span>
-therefore I will end this Chapter with this one <i>caution</i>
-onely, that when you shall receiue any séede from any forraine
-Nation, you shall learne as néere as you can the nature of the soyle
-from whence it commeth, as hot, moyst, colde, or dry it is, and then
-comparing it with ours, sowe it as néere as you can in the earth, and
-in the seasons that are néerest to the soyle from whence it came, as
-thus for example: if it came from a clime much hotter then ours, then
-shall you sowe it in sandie mould or other mould made warme by strength
-of meanure, in the warmest time of the day, and in those moneths of the
-Spring, which are warmest, as Aprill or May, you shall let it haue the
-Sunne fréely all the day and at night, with Mats, Penthouse, or other
-defence shield it from sharpe windes, frosts, or colde dewes.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="A_new_manner_of_planting_flowers">A new manner of planting flowers and fruits.</span>
-
-<p>I haue séene diuers Noblemen and Gentlemen, which haue béene very
-curious in these dainty flowers, which haue made large frames of wood
-with boards of twenty inches déepe, standing vpon little round whéeles
-of wood, which being made square or round according to the Masters
-fancie, they haue filled with choyse earth, such as is most proper to
-the flower they would haue grow, and then in them sowe their séedes,
-or fixe their Plants in such sort, as hath béene before described,
-and so placing them in such open places of the Garden, where they may
-haue the strength and violence of the Sunnes heate all the day, and
-the comfort of such moderate showers, as fall without violence or
-extraordinarie beating, and at night draw them by mans strength into
-some low vaulted gallery ioyning vpon the Garden, where they may stand
-warme and safe from stormes, windes, frosts, dewes, blastings, and
-other mischiefes which euer happen in the Sunnes absence, and in this
-manner you may not onely haue all manner of dainty outlandish flowers,
-but also all sorts of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</span> the most delicatest fruits that may be, as the
-<i>Orenge</i>, <i>Limond</i>, <i>Pomgranate</i>, <i>Poncythron</i>,
-<i>Cynamon-tree</i>, <i>Oliue</i>, <i>Almond</i>, or any other, from
-what clime so euer it be deriued, obseruing onely but to make your
-frames of wood, which containes your earth, but déeper and larger,
-according to the fruit you plant in it, and that your Alleys through
-which you draw your Trées when you house them be smooth and leuell,
-least being rough and vneuen, you iogge and shake the rootes with the
-waight of the Trées, which is dangerous. And least any man may imagine
-this but an imaginary supposition, I can assure him that within seauen
-miles of London, the experiment is to be séene, where all these fruits
-and flowers with a world of others grow in two Gardens most abundantly.
-Now for such flowers or fruits as shall be brought from a colder or
-more barraine ground then our owne, there néedeth not much curiosity
-in the plantation of them, because a better euer bringeth forth a
-better encrease, onely I would wish you to obserue, to giue all such
-fruits or flowers the vttermost liberty of the weather, &amp; rather to
-adde coolenes by shaddow, then encrease any warmth by reflection, as
-also to augment showers by artificiall watrings, rather then to let
-the roote dry for want of continuall moysture; many other notes and
-obseruations there are, which to discouer, would aske a volume larger
-then I intend, and yet not be more in true substance, then this which
-is already writ, if the Reader haue but so much mother-wit, as by
-comparing things together, to draw the vses from the true reasons, and
-to shunne contrary by contraries, which what Husbandman is so simple,
-but he can easily performe, and hauing the true grounds of experience,
-frame his descant according to his owne fancie, which is a Musicke best
-pleasing to all men, since it is not in any one mans power to giue a
-generall contentment. And thus much for flowers, and their generall and
-particular ordering.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAP_1_VII"><span class="smcap">Chap.</span> VII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2"><i>How to preserue all manner of seedes, hearbs, flowers, and fruits,
-from all manner of noysome and pestilent things which deuoure and hurt
-them.</i></p>
-
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Thunder_and_Lightning">Of Thunder and Lightning.</span>
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap2" src="images/i057.png" alt="">
-</div>
-<p class="noindent drop-cap2">It is not enough to bequeath and giue your séedes vnto the
-ground, and then immediatly to expect (without any further industrie)
-the fruit of your labours, no goodnesse seldome commeth with such ease:
-you must therefore know that when you lay your séedes in the ground,
-they are like so many good men amongst a world of wicked ones, and
-as it were inuironed and begirt with maine Armies of enemies, from
-which if your care and diligence doe not defend them the most, if not
-all, will doubtlesse perish, and of these enemies the worst and most
-violentest is <i>Thunder</i> and <i>Lightning</i>, which in a moment
-killeth all sorts of flowers, plants, and trées, euen in the height
-and pride of their flourishing, which to preuent, it hath béene the
-practise of all the auncient Gardners, to plant against the walles
-of their Gardens, or in the middest of their quarters, where their
-choysest flowers grow, the <i>Lawrell</i> or <i>Bay</i> Trée, which is
-euer helde a defence against those strikings.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Caterpillers">Of Caterpillers.</span>
-
-<p>Next vnto <i>Thunder</i> and <i>Lightning</i> are <i>Caterpillers</i>,
-which are a kinde of filthy little wormes, which lye in Cobwebs about
-the leaues, deuouring them, and poysoning the sap, in such sort, that
-the Plant dieth spéedily after: the way to kill these, is to take
-strong Vrine and Ashes mixt together, and with it to dash and sprinkle
-all the Plants cleane ouer, and it will both preuent their bréeding, or
-being bred will kill them: the smoake of Brimstone will doe the like,
-yet if they be excéeding much abundant, the surest way to destroy them,
-is to take olde, rotten,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</span> mouldy Hay, and setting it on fire, with the
-blaze thereof burne the Cob-webs, and then with the smoake smother and
-kill the wormes, and they will hardly euer bréede in that place againe.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Toades_and_Frogges">Of Toades and Frogges.</span>
-
-<p>Next these are <i>Toades</i> and <i>Frogges</i>, which are very
-poysonous and great destroyers of young Plants, chiefly in their
-first appearing aboue the ground, and the auncient Gardners haue vsed
-to destroy them by burning the fat of a Stagge in some part of the
-Garden beds, from which earth all creatures that haue poyson in them,
-will flye with all violence: other Gardners will watch where the Kite
-pearcheth on nights, and gathering vp her dung, scatter it vpon the
-beds either simply, or mixt with the shauings of an olde Harts horne,
-and no venemous thing will come néere it.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_the_field_Myce">Of the field Myce.</span>
-
-<p>Next these are field <i>Myce</i>, which will roote séedes out of the
-earth, and deuoure them aboundantly, which to kill you shall take
-<i>Henbane seede</i>, and beate it to pouder, and then mixing it with
-swéete Oyle, fresh Butter, or Grease, make thereof a bayte; and when
-you finde where they scratch or roote, lay some part of the bayte in
-that place, and they will gréedily eate it, and it will kill them:
-there be other Gardners which will take a Wéesell, and burning it to
-ashes, scatter the ashes on the beds, and then no field <i>Mouse</i>
-will come néere them.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Flyes">Of Flyes.</span>
-
-<p>Next these are <i>Flyes</i>, as flesh-<i>Flyes</i>, <i>Scarabs</i>,
-<i>Hornets</i>, <i>Dores</i>, and such like, which are great destroyers
-of Séeds and Plants, when they appeare in their first leafe, and are
-soft and tender, which to destroy, you shall either take <i>Orpment</i>
-mixt with milke, or the pouder of <i>Allome</i>, or the ashes of any
-of these <i>Flyes</i> burnt, and with it sprinkle your beds and young
-plants all ouer, and it will kéepe <i>Flyes</i> that they will not dare
-to come néere them.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_the_greene_Fly">Of the greene Fly.</span>
-
-<p>If the gréene <i>Fly</i>, which of all other <i>Flyes</i> is most
-gréedie to hurt Séedes and Plants, doe offend your Garden, you shall
-take <i>Henbane</i> leaues, <i>Houseleeke</i>, and <i>Minte</i>, and
-beat them in a Morter, then straine forth the iuyce,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</span> and then adde
-thereto as much Vinegar as was of all the rest, and there-with sprinkle
-your beds all ouer, and the gréene <i>Fly</i> will neuer come néere
-them. Some hold opinion, that if you plant the hearbe <i>Rocket</i>
-in your Garden, that it is a safe preseruatiue against these gréene
-<i>Flyes</i>, for it is most certaine that the very smell thereof will
-kill these, and most sorts of all other <i>Flyes</i> whatsoeuer, as
-hath béene found by approued experience, and the sylts of olde auncient
-Abby Gardens, which a man shall seldome finde without this hearbe
-planted in them.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Gnats">Of Gnats.</span>
-
-<p>Next these are <i>Gnats</i>, which although it be the smallest of all
-Flyes, yet it is the greatest, quickest, and sharpest deuourer of
-tender Plants of all other, for it biteth déeper and more venemously
-sharpe, then those which are of much bigger substance: the best way
-to destroy them is morning and euening, to smoake and perfume your
-beds either with wet Rosemary, or with mouldy Hay: some vse to burne
-<i>Calamint</i>, and some Oxe dung, and sure all are very good, for the
-smoakes are very sharpe, and styflle as soone as it is receiued.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Pismyers">Of Pismyers.</span>
-
-<p>Next these are <i>Pismyers</i>, which also are very noysome vnto
-Gardens, for they will digge vp, and carrie away the smaller séedes
-to their hills, and in short space spoyle and deface a bed of his
-encrease, and the best way to destroy them, is, if you finde their
-hill, to poure hot scalding water vpon them: or if vpon your Garden
-beds you strowe Ashes or Lyme, but especially that which is made of
-chalk, they will by no meanes come néere them, as you shall finde by
-experience.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Moales">Of Moales.</span>
-
-<p>Next these are <i>Moales</i>, which digging and vndermining the earth,
-turneth vp Séedes and Plants in a confused fashion, to the vtter
-destruction and ruine of the Husband-mans labour, the cure whereof is
-to take them in such sort, as shall be shewed in this Booke, where I
-speake of Pasture grounds; but if you finde that their encrease and
-continuance multiply with your labour, it shall be then good for you
-to plant in diuers places of your Garden<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</span> the hearbe called <i>Palma
-christi</i>, in other places <i>Garlickes</i> and in other places
-<i>Onyons</i>, and it is an assured rule that no <i>Moale</i> will come
-néere where they grow for the strength and violence of their smell, is
-poysonous and deadly to those blind vermines.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Snailes">Of Snailes.</span>
-
-<p>Next there are <i>Snailes</i> of both kindes, blacke and white, which
-are as much offensiue to Gardens, as any other crawling thing, for they
-féed of the tender leaues of plants, and of the outmost rindes of the
-daintiest hearbs or flowers, the way to destroy them, is to sprinkle
-vpon the beds and other places of their aboad good store of chimney
-soote, which by no meanes they can endure, because it is mortall and
-poysonous.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Moathes">Of Moathes.</span>
-
-<p>Next there are <i>Moathes</i> or <i>Moaghts</i>, which are very
-pernitious in a Garden, for they destroy both Séeds and Plants, and
-there is not better or more certaine way to kill them, then by taking
-olde horse hoofes, and burning them, with the smoake thereof to perfume
-all the places where they abide, and it will in an instant kill
-them; with this smoake onely you may kéepe Arras hanging, Tapistrie,
-Néedle-worke, Cushions, or Carpets, or any woollen cloath or garment
-whatsoeuer safe from <i>Moathes</i> as long as you please, neither
-néede you to vse it aboue once or twice a yéere at the most, as shall
-be more at large in another place declared.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Cankers">Of Cankers.</span>
-
-<p>Next these are <i>Cankers</i>, which are a kinde of filthie wormes,
-which deuoure both the great and small leaues of all sorts of swéet
-Plants, especially <i>Lettuce</i>, <i>Cabbadge</i>, <i>Colaflours,</i>
-and such like; and the way to destroy them, is to scatter amongst your
-Plants, Goose-dung, or to sprinkle the iuyce thereof with a wispe of
-<i>Rue</i>, or hearbe of <i>Grace</i> ouer all the beds, and though
-some with a rustie knife vse to scrape them from the leaues, and so
-kill them on a Tyle-shread, yet for my part I hold this the néerer way,
-and both more certaine and more easie, as experience will approue.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Garden_Wormes">Of Garden Wormes.</span>
-
-
-<p>Lastly, are your Garden <i>Wormes</i> which liuing in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</span> hollowes
-of the earth féede much vpon your tender Garden séedes, and the soft
-sprouts which first issue from them, especially from all sorts of
-kirnels, in which they delight more then in any other séede whatsoeuer,
-as you may finde by experience, if you please to obserue accidents
-as they happen, without which obseruation you shall hardly attaine
-to the perfection of an excellent Gardner: <span class="sidenote" id="An_excellent_experiment">An excellent experiment.</span>
-for if you please to make
-this triall, take the kirnels of a faire sound Pippin, and deuide them
-into two parts, then sowe the one halfe in a Garden bed well drest and
-trimmed for the purpose, where the worme hath liberty to come and goe
-at his pleasure, sowe the other halfe in some riuen boule, earthen
-pot, or halfe Tub, made for the purpose with the same earth or mould
-that the bed is, and then set the vessell so as no worme may come
-there-vnto, and you shall finde that all those Séedes will sprout and
-come forth, when hardly any one of those in the bed of earth will or
-can prosper, there being no other reason but the extreame gréedinesse
-of the deuouring worme, which to preuent, you shall take Oxe dung, and
-burn it to ashes, then mixe them with the earth where-with you couer
-your Séedes, and it will both kill the wormes, and make the Séedes
-sprout both sooner and safer. And thus much for the preseruation of
-Séeds and Plants, from all noysome and pestilent creatures, which being
-practised with care and diligence, will giue vnto euery honest minde
-the satisfaction he desireth.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_conclusion_of_the_Kitchen_Garden">The conclusion of the Kitchen Garden.</span>
-
-<p>Now to conclude this small tract or Treatise of the Husbandmans
-<i>Kitchen Garden</i>, I would haue euery honest Reader vnderstand,
-that I haue not taken vpon me to modell out any curious shape or
-proportion, but onely figured out a perfect nourcerie, shewing you
-how to bréed and bring vp all things fit for health or recreation
-which being once brought to mature and ripe age, you may dispose into
-those proper places which may become their worthinesse, in which worke
-I would haue your owne fancy your owne<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</span> directour, for I may giue
-preheminence to that you least like, and disestéeme that most which
-to you may séeme most worthy, therefore let your owne iudgement order
-your Garden, like your house, and your hearbs like your furniture,
-placing the best in the best places, &amp; such as are most conspicuous,
-and the rest according to their dignities in more inferiour roomes,
-remembring that your galleries, great chambers, and lodgings of state
-doe deserue Arras, your Hall Wainscote, and your meanest offices some
-<i>Boscadge</i>, or cleanly painting: from this alligorie if you can
-draw any wit, you may finde without my further instruction how to frame
-Gardens of all sorts to your owne contentment.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</span></p>
-<figure class="figcenter illowp85" id="i063a" style="max-width: 134.875em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i063a.png" alt="">
-</figure>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_SECOND_PART">THE SECOND PART
-OF THE SECOND BOOKE
-of the <i>English Husbandman</i>:</h2>
-<p class="h2">Contayning
-the ordering of all sorts of VVoods, and
-the breeding of Cattell.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Chap_2_I"><span class="smcap">Chap.</span> I.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2"><i>Of the beginning of Woods, first sowing, and necessarie vse.</i></p>
-
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Wood_better_then_Gold">Wood better then Gold.</span>
-
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap2" src="images/i063b.png" alt="">
-</div>
-<p class="noindent drop-cap2">It is a Maxime held in Plantations, that no land is
-habitable, which hath not Wood &amp; Water, they two being as it were
-the only nerues &amp; strength of a mans safe and wholesome liuing, and
-I haue heard many wise Gentlemen, exercised, and ingaged, in the
-most noble and euer laudable workes of our new Plantations, both of
-<i>Virgina</i> and the Summer-<i>Ilands</i> affirme, that they had
-rather, for a generall profit, haue a fertile wholesome land, with
-much wood, then (wanting wood) with a Mine of gold: so infinite great
-is the vse of Timber (whose particulars I néede not rehearse) and so
-insufferable is the want, when we are any way pinched with the same.
-And hence it springeth that our olde auncestors (whose vertues would
-God we would in some small measure<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</span> imitate) when they found any hard
-and barraine earth, such as was vnapt for grasse; or at least such as
-bare but grasse that would kéepe life, not comfort life, they presently
-plowed it vp, and sowed thereon Acornes, Ash-keyes, Maple knots, Béech
-apples, Hawes, Slowes, Nuts, Bullis, and all other séeds of trées in
-innumerable quantity, as may appeare by the Forrests of <i>Del la
-mere</i>, <i>Sherwood</i>, <i>Kings wood</i>, and many other within
-this kingdome of huge great spaciousnes and compasse, from whom when
-the wood is spoiled, the soyle serueth to little or no purpose, except
-it be the kéeping aliue of a few poore shéepe, which yéeld but little
-profit more then their carkasse. Thus euen from the first age of the
-world hath our forefathers béene euer most carefull to preserue and
-encrease wood, and for mine owne part I haue euer obserued in all those
-places where I haue séene Woods decayed and destroyed, that the charge
-of stubbing and other necessaries allowed; those lands haue neuer
-againe yéelded the former profit, for the greatest exhaustment that
-euer I saw of wood ground was to bring it to tenne shillings an Acre
-when it was conuerted to pasture, and being kept to wood, it was worth
-euery seauentéenth yéere one and twenty pound. A simple Auditor may
-cast the account of this profit, but such is our gréedinesse, that for
-our instant vse we little respect the good of ours, or our neighbours.
-But it is no part of my Bookes method to call offences to question, but
-onely to right the Husbandman in his iourney to ordinarie profit. <span class="sidenote" id="The_excellent_vses_of_Wood">The excellent vses of Wood.</span>
-Know
-then that there is nothing more profitable to the Husbandman, then the
-encreasing and nourishing of wood; from whence (as our common lawes
-termes it) springs these thrée bootes or necessary commodities, to wit
-House-boote, Plowe-boote, and Fire-boote, without the first we haue
-neither health, couert, ease, nor safety from sauage beasts: without
-the second we cannot haue the fruits of the earth, nor sustenance for
-our bodies, nor without the last can we defend off the sharp Winters,
-or maintaine life against the numbing colds which would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</span> confound vs.
-The consideration of these thrée things only, might enduce vs to the
-preseruation of this most excellent commodity: but the other infinite
-necessities &amp; vses which we make of wood, as shipping, by which we make
-our selues Lords of the Seas: fencing which is the bond of concord
-amongst neighbours: solution &amp; trial of Mines, from whence springs both
-our glory in peace, and our strength in warre, with a world of others
-sutable vnto them, should be motiues vnresistable to make vs with all
-diligence hast to the most praise-worthy labour of planting wood, in
-euery place and corner, where it may any way conueniently be receiued.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_plantation_of_Wood">The plantation of Wood.</span>
-
-<p>If then the Husbandman shall liue in a high barraine Countrey (for
-low-valleyes, marshes, or such grounds as are subiect to inundations,
-seldome nourish wood well) or in a soyle though not vtterly barraine,
-yet of so hard and sower encrease, that the hearbage doth in the profit
-but in small quantity, I would wish him after a generall triall of
-his earth, to deuide it into thrée equall parts, the first and the
-fruitfullest I would haue him preserue for pasture for his Cattell of
-all kindes: the second and next in fertility for corne, being no more
-then those cattell may till, and the last &amp; most barraine to imploy
-for wood: which though he stay long for the profit, yet will pay the
-interest double. And this ground thus chosen for wood, I would haue
-him plowe vp from the swarth about the latter end of Februarie, and
-if it be light earth, as either sand, grauell, or a mixt hazel earth,
-then immediatly to sow it with Acornes, Ash-keyes, Elme &amp; Maple knots,
-Béech-apples, Chesnuts, Ceruisses, Crabs, Peares, Nuts of all kindes,
-Hawes, Hips, Bullice, Slowes, and all manner of other wood séeds
-whatsoeuer, and as soone as they are sowne with strong Oxe harrowes of
-iron, to harrow and breake the earth, in such sort, that they may be
-close and safely couered. And in the plowing of this earth, you must
-diligently obserue to turne vp your furrowes as déepe as is possible,
-that the séede taking strong and déepe roote, may the better<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</span> and with
-more safety encrease, and defend it selfe against stormes and tempests,
-whereas if the roote be but weakely fixed, the smallest blasts will
-shake the Trées, and make them crooked, wrythen, and for small vse but
-fire onely.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_fencing_of_young_woods">The fencing of young woods.</span>
-
-
-<p>After you haue harrowed your earth, and laide your séede safe, you
-shall fence your ground about with a strong and large fence, and
-hedge, ditch, pale, or such like, which may kéepe out all manner of
-foure-footed beasts, for comming within the same, for the space of
-tenne yéeres after: for you shall vnderstand, that if any cattell
-shall come where young wood is péeping aboue the earth, or whilst it
-is young, tender, and soft, they will naturally crop and brouse vpon
-the same, and then be sure that the wood which is so bitten, will neuer
-prosper or spring vp to any height, but turne to bushie shrubs and
-ill-fauoured tufts, pestring the ground without any hope of profit,
-whereas if it be defended and kept safe the space of tenne yéeres at
-the least, it will after defend it selfe, and prosper in despight
-of any iniurie: <span class="sidenote" id="When_cattell_may_graze">When cattell may graze in Springs.</span>
-and then after that date you may safely turne your
-cattell into the same, and let them graze at pleasure, and surely you
-shall finde it a great reliefe for your young beast, as your yearling
-Haiffers, Bullocks, Colts, Fillies, and such like: for I would not wish
-you to let any elder cattell come within the same, because the grasse
-though it be long, yet it is sower and scowring, and by that meanes
-will make your cattell for labour weake and vnhealthie, whether it be
-Oxe or Horse, and for milch-Kine, it will instantly dry vp their milke,
-but for idle heilding beasts, whose profit is comming after, it will
-serue sufficiently.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_vse_of_the_clay">The vse of the clay ground for Wood.</span>
-
-<p>Now if the earth whereon you sowe your wood, be a stiffe clay ground,
-and onely barraine through the extreamitie of colde, wet, or such like,
-as is séene in daily experience: you shall then plowe vp the ground at
-the end of Ianuarie in déepe furrowes, as is before rehearsed; and then
-let it rest till it haue receiued two or thrée good Frosts, then after
-those Frosts some wet, as either snow or raine,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</span> and then the next
-faire season after sowe it, as afore-said, and harrow it, and you shall
-sée the mould breake and couer most kindely, which without this baite,
-and order, it would not doe, then fence it as afore-said, and preserue
-it from cattell for tenne yéeres after.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="A_speciall_note">A speciall note.</span>
-
-<p>And here is to be noted that one Oake growing vpon a clay ground, is
-worth any fiue which growes vpon the sand, for it is more hard, more
-tough, and of much longer indurance, not so apt to teare, ryue, or
-consume, either with Lyme, Rubbish, or any casuall moysture, whence
-it comes that euer your Ship-wrights or Mill-wrights desire the clay
-Oake for their vse, and the Ioyner the sand Oake for smoothnesse and
-waynscote. And thus much for the sowing of Wood, and his generall vses.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAP_2_II"><span class="smcap">Chap.</span> II.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2"><i>The deuision of vnder-Woods, their sale, and profit.</i></p>
-
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_deuision_of_Woods">The deuision of Woods.</span>
-
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap2" src="images/i067.png" alt="">
-</div>
-<p class="noindent drop-cap2">Whosoeuer be a Lord or Master of much vnder-wood, which
-is indéede young spring-wood of all kindes, growing thicke and close
-together, either from the séede, as is declared in the former Chapter,
-or from the rootes of former salles, the first being a profit begotten
-by him selfe, the other a right left by purchase or inheritance, and
-desire, as it is the dutie of euery vertuous husband, to make his
-best and most lawfullest profit thereof, hauing not left vnto him any
-president of former commodity. In this case you shall suruay the whole
-circuit of your wood, with euery corner and angle there vnto belonging,
-and then as your abilitie and the quantity of your ground shall afford,
-you shall deuide your whole wood either into twelue, seauentéene, or
-one and twenty parts of equall Acres, Roodes, or Rods, and euery yeare
-you shall sell or take to your owne vse one of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</span> those parts, so that
-one following yearely after another, our sales may continue time out
-of minde, and you shall imploy as you please so much wood euery yeare
-of either twelue, seauentéene, or one and twenty yeares growth. And in
-this you shal note that the sale of one and twenty, doth farre excéede
-that of seauentéene, and that of seauentéene as farre that of twelue:
-but in this it is quantity, and your necessity that must direct you,
-and not my demonstration: <span class="sidenote" id="The_valew_of_vnder-vvood">The valew of vnder-wood.</span>
-for there be fewe Husbands but know that an
-Acre of one and twenty yéeres growth, may be worth twenty, nay thirty
-pounds, that of seauentéene worth eight or ten pounds, and that of
-twelue, fiue and sixe pounds, according to the goodnesse of the wood,
-insomuch that the longer a man is able to stay, the greater sure is
-his profit: but fewell and fence must of necessity be had, and if a
-man haue but twelue acres of wood, I sée not but he must be forced to
-take euery yéere one acre for his owne reliefe, and if hée take more,
-hée must either necessarily spoyle all, or driue himselfe into extreame
-want in fewe yeares following: and therefore it is méete that euery
-good husband shape his garment according to his cloath, and onely take
-plenty where plenty is; yet with this husbandly caution that euer the
-elder your sale is, the richer it is, as you may perceiue by the well
-husbanded Woods of many Bishoprickes in this land, which are not cut
-but at thirtie yeares growth.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_the_sale_of_vnder-vvoods">Of the sale of vnder-woods.</span>
-
-<p>When you haue made your deuisions according to your quantity, you
-shall begin your sale at an out-side where cariages may enter without
-impeachment to the springs you intend not to cut, and a pole or halfe
-pole according to the quantity of ground, you shall preserue (being
-next of all to the outmost fence) to repaire the ring fences of your
-Wood, and to seperate the new sale from the standing Wood: and this
-amongst Woodwards is called Plash-pole. Then at the latter end of
-Ianuarie you may begin to cut downe your vnder-wood, and sell it either
-by acres, roodes, perches, poles, roddes, or dozens, according<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</span> to the
-quantitie of your earth, or the abilitie of your buyers. And in this
-sale I cannot set you downe any certaine price, because true iudgement,
-and the goodnesse of your wood must onely giue you direction, things
-being euer valewed according to their worth and substance, and this
-sale or the cutting downe of vnder-wood, you may continue from the
-latter end of Ianuarie, till midde Aprill, at which time the leafe
-begins to bud forth, or somewhat longer if necessitie vrge you: the
-like you may also doe from the beginning of September, at which time
-the leafe beginnes to shed till the middest of Nouember.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="How_to_cut_vnder-vvoods">How to cut vnder-woods.</span>
-
-<p>Now for the manner of cutting downe your vnder-woods, although the
-lawes of the Kingdome shew you what dutie you shall performe therein,
-what Timber you shall preserue, and how néere each Weauer shall stand
-one to another, yet I would wish you both for your owne and the
-Common-wealths sake, to performe somewhat more then that to which you
-are by law compelled, &amp; therefore you shall giue direction to your
-wood fallers, that when they shall méete with any faire and straight
-well growne sapling, Oake, Elme, Ash, or such like, to preserue them,
-and let them stand still, being of such fit distance one from another,
-that they may not hinder or trouble each other in their growing, and
-when you shall finde vpon a cluster many faire Plants or Saplings; you
-shall view which is the fairest of them all, and it preserue onely, and
-the rest cut away, that it may prosper the better: also if you finde
-any faire and well growne fruit Trées, as Peares, Chesnuts, Seruisses,
-and such like, you shall let them stand and cleare them from the
-droppings of the taller trées, and you shall finde the profit make you
-recompence. Now for the generall cutting vp of the wood, you shall cut
-it about sixe inches aboue the ground, and drawing your strokes vpward,
-cut the wood slope-wise, for that is best to hasten on the new Spring;
-and those Weauers or young which you preserue and suffer to growe
-still, you shall prune<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</span> and trimme as you passe by them, cutting away
-all superfluous branches, twigges, and young spyers, which shall grow
-either néere vnto the roote, or vpon any part of the boale, which is
-fit to be preserued for Timber, and if you shall finde that the earth
-haue by any casualty forsaken the root, and left it bare, which is
-hurtfull to the growth of the Trée, you shall lay fresh earth vnto it,
-and ram the same hard and fast about it.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_fencing_of_salles">The fencing of salles.</span>
-
-
-<p>Thus when you haue made an end of cutting downe your sale, and that
-the wood is cleansed and carried away, and all the loose and scattered
-stickes raked vp into seuerall heapes, and caried away also; for it is
-the part of euerie good husband and Woodward, not to sée any wood lye
-and rot vpon the ground; you shall then with the vnder-wood preserued
-in the Plash-pole, deuide by a strong hedge this new cut downe sale
-from the other elder growne wood, and for tenne yéeres, as before is
-spoken, not suffer any foure-footed beast to come within the same; <span class="sidenote" id="The_Woodwards_duty">The Woodwards duty.</span>
-from
-which rule you shall learne this lesson, that it is the Woodwards duty
-euery day to looke ouer all his young Springs, and if by any mischance
-or negligence cattell shall happen to breake into them (as many times
-they doe) then shall he not onely driue forth or impound such Cattell,
-but also suruay how farre and which Plants they haue cropt, and hauing
-spied them, with his wood Bill, presently cut the Plants so brouzed
-close by the bottomes of the last shuts, and then they will newly put
-forth againe, as well as if they had neuer béene hindred: which done,
-he shall finde out where the cattell brake in; and then mend the same,
-so well and sufficiently, that it may preuent the like mischiefe.
-Also if these young springs shall stand néere vnto Forrests or elder
-Woods, which are full of wilde Deare, and be no purlewes belonging vnto
-the same, the Woodward then shall neuer walke without a little dogge
-following him, with which he shall chase such Deare out of his young
-springs, because it is to be vnderstood, that the brouzing of Deare is
-as hurtfull to young wood, as that of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</span> any other cattell whatsoeuer.
-And thus much touching the ordering and gouernment of vnder-woods, with
-their sales, and the nourishing vp of greater Timber.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAP_2_III"><span class="smcap">Chap.</span> III.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2"><i>Of High Woods, and their Plantation.</i></p>
-
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="What_high_Woods_are">What high Woods are.</span>
-
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap2" src="images/i071.png" alt="">
-</div>
-<p class="noindent drop-cap2">High Woods are those which containe onely Trées for Timber, and are not
-pestred or imbraced with the vnder growth of small brush wood, such
-as Hazels, White-thorne, Sallowes and Poplar are; these for the most
-part consist of Oakes, Ash, Elme, Béech, Maple, and such like, growing
-so remote and seperate one from another, that although their tops and
-branches méete, and as it were infolde one within another, yet at
-the rootes a man may walke or ride about them without trouble. <span class="sidenote" id="The_beginning_of_high_Woods">The beginning of high Woods.</span>
-These
-high Woods had their first beginnings from the séeds, as was before
-declared, and nourisht from age to age amongst the vnder-woods, which,
-when men began to want foode for their bréede-Cattell, and that from
-the super-abundance of young Woods, they found some might conueniently
-be spared, they forth-with in stead of cutting downe their young wood
-aboue the earth, began to digge it vp by the rootes, and with stubbe
-Axes to teare the meane sinewes from the ground, so that it might not
-renew or encrease againe, and then leuelling the earth, and laying it
-smooth and plaine, to leaue nothing standing but the tall Timber trées,
-betwéene which the grasse had more libertie to growe, and Cattell more
-abundance to féede on, and all be not so long and well able to fill the
-mouth, as that which growes in the thicke springs, yet much more swéet
-and better able to nourish any thing that shall graze vpon the same, by
-reason that the Sunne and Frosts hauing more frée power to enter into
-the ground, the earth is so much<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</span> the better seasoned, and bringeth
-forth her encrease with more swéetnesse.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_Plantation_of_high_Woods">The Plantation of high Woods.</span>
-
-<p>Some are of opinion, that these high Woods may as well be planted as
-sowne, and that many of them from the first beginning haue béene so,
-to which opinion I consent in part: for doubtlesse I am perswaded,
-that many small Groues of Ash, Elme, Béech and Poplar haue béene
-planted, for we sée in our daily experience, and the new walkes in
-<i>More-fields</i> by <i>London</i>, are a perfect testimonie, that
-such Plantations may be without trouble or danger: but for the Oake
-to be taken vp and replanted, is very hard, and very seldome in vse,
-neither shall a man in an whole Age sée any Oake remoued come to
-perfection or goodnesse, but growe crooked, knottie, and at the best,
-but for the vse of fewell onely: but for the other before rehearsed,
-you may remoue them when they are a dozen yeares of age, and plant them
-where you please: and if the earth haue in it any goodnesse at all,
-they will take root and grow both spéedily, and plentifully. And since
-I am thus farre entred into the plantation of Woods, I will shew you
-how you shall plant and remoue euery Trée in his due manner and season.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Planting_the_Elme">Of Planting the Elme.</span>
-
-<p>And first for the planting of the Elme, which is an excellent Trée for
-shadow, and the adorning of walkes or dwelling houses, you shall make
-choise of those Plants which are straightest, soundest, the barke euen
-and vntwound, and at least eightéene or twenty inches in compasse:
-these you shall digge out of the ground, roote and all, then at the
-top of the head, about thrée fingers vnder the knot, where the maine
-armes seuerally issue forth, you shall a little slope-wise cut the head
-cleane off them, and mixing clay and a little horse-dung, or fine ashes
-together, couer the head round about there-with, then ouer the same
-wrap Mosse, or fine Hay, and binde it about with soft clouen Oziers,
-or some such like bands, then with a sharpe pruning Bill cut euery
-seuerall branch of the roote within a finger or two of the stocke;
-which done, and the roote<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</span> pickt cleane, you shall make a hole to be
-digged in the place, where you meane to plant the Elme iust of that
-depth, the hole was from whence you digged out the Elme, that so much
-and no more of the Elme may be hidden in the earth, then was formerly
-at his remouing; and this hole you shall make spacious and easie; and
-that the mould be soft and loose both vnderneath and round about the
-roote of the Elme, which done, you shall place your Elme in the same,
-straight and vpright, without either swaruing one way or other, which
-for your better certaintie, you may proue either with plumbe, leuell,
-or other instrument, which being perfected, you shall with rich fresh
-mould well mixt with olde meanure, couer and ram the same fast in the
-earth, in such sort, that no reasonable strength may moue or shake it:
-and all this worke must be done in the encrease of the Moone, either in
-the moneth of October, or at the latter end of Ianuary: but the latter
-end of Ianuarie is euer helde the best and safest, for there is no
-question but you shall sée flourishing Trées the next Summer after: and
-in this sort you may likewise remoue either Béech, Witcher, or Popler,
-bestowing them either in Groues, Walkes, Hedge-rowes, or other places
-of shadow, as shall séeme best to your contentment: for their natures
-being alike, their growthes and flourishings haue little difference.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Planting_the_Ash">Of Planting the Ash.</span>
-
-
-<p>Now for the replanting or remouing the Ash, though not much, yet there
-is some difference, for it is not at the first so spéedie a putter
-forth, and flourisher, as the others be: but for the first yeare
-laboureth more to bestow and fixe his roote in the earth, then to
-spread forth his vpper branches, and although some Woodwards are of
-opinion, that so much as the Ash is aboue the ground, so much hée will
-be vnder before he begin to flourish outwardly, yet experience doth
-find it erronious, for though it be for the first yéere a little slower
-then other Trées, yet when it beginneth to flourish, it will ouer-take
-the spéediest grower. Therefore when you do intend to plant Ashes for a
-spéedy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</span> profit, you shall not according to the olde custome chuse the
-smooth, small, long Plants, which are hardly thrée inches in compasse,
-and haue put out hardly any branches, and are such as grow from the
-rootes of elder Ashes cut downe before, which our auncient Woodwards
-haue vsed to slip or cleaue from those rootes, no, these are the
-worst sorts of Plants: but you shall take the true ground-Ash, which
-springeth from his owne proper roote, being smooth, euen, sound, and
-straight without bruise, canker, or other impediment. This you shall
-digge vp by the root, being as is before said almost twenty inches in
-compasse, and hauing cleansed the roote, you shall leaue each spray
-not aboue halfe a foote, or eight inches in length; but for the small
-thréeds or tassels of the roote, those you shall cut cleane away close
-by the wood, and so plant it in euery point, as was shewed you for the
-planting of the Elme, onely the top thereof you shall by no meanes cut
-off, because it is a trée of pith, which to deuide or lay bare, were
-very dangerous; and the best season for the planting of this Trée, is
-euer in the encrease of the Moone, at the fall of the leafe, which is
-from the beginning of October till midde Nouember, and at no other
-time, for it would euer haue a whole Winter to fasten his roote, and to
-gather strength, that it may bud forth his leafe the Summer following.
-Thus you sée how you may plant Groues or Copses at your pleasure, and
-make vnto your selfe high Woods according to your owne pleasure. <span class="sidenote" id="Obiection">Obiection.</span>
-
-But
-you will obiect vnto me, that you liue in such a champaine Countrey,
-that albe these Plantations might bréede vnto you infinite pleasure,
-yet the pouerty thereof in wood is such that these Plants are not
-there to be found for any money. <span class="sidenote" id="Answere">Answere.</span>
-To which I thus answere, That in this
-Kingdome there is not any Country so barraine, or farre off remote from
-wood, being a soyle fit to receiue wood: But his next neighbour-Country
-is able to furnish him, especially with these Plants at an easie
-reckoning: as for example, I hold <i>Northampton</i> shire one of the
-barrennest for Wood, yet<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</span> best able to beare wood, and hath not he his
-neighbour <i>Huntington</i> shire and <i>Leicester</i> shire about
-him, where nurceries of these Plants are bred and preserued for the
-sale onely: Nay, euen in <i>Holland</i>, in <i>Lincolne</i> shire,
-which is the lowest of all Countries, and most vnlikely to holde such a
-commodity, I haue séene as goodly Timber as in any Forrest or Chase of
-this Kingdome: and thus much for the planting of high Woods.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAP_2_IIII"><span class="smcap">Chap.</span> IIII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2"><i>Of the preseruation, and sale of high Woods.</i></p>
-
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Trees_which_take_wet">Of Trees which take wet inwardly.</span>
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap2" src="images/i075.png" alt="">
-</div>
-<p class="noindent drop-cap2">It is not sufficient for the Husbandman to sowe, plant, and encrease
-wood about his grounds, conuerting his earth to the vttermost and
-extreamest profit that may spring from the same: but he must also
-be diligent to preserue and nourish his timber trées from all
-inconueniences that may any way annoy or afflict them: and to this
-end hée shall daily walke into his Woods, and with a searching eye
-suruay euery Trée which is of any account, and sée if he can finde any
-fault or annoyance about the same, and if casting his eye vp to the
-top, where the maine armes shoote forth themselues, he perceiue that
-by the breaking off of some arme or other riuen boughes, the wet and
-droppings of the leaues is sunke and fretted into the Timber, which in
-time will corrupt the heart, and make the Trée hollow. In this case he
-shall presently mount the Trée, and with his Bill, either cut the place
-so smooth that the wet may not rest thereon, or else hauing smoothed
-it so much as he may with conuenience, mixe stiffe clay and fine hay
-together, and with the same couer the place, in such manner, that it
-may put off the wet till it haue recouered new barke.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Barke-bound">Of Barke-bound.</span>
-
-<p>If hée shall perceiue any of his younger Trées to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</span> Barke-bound, that
-is, so stiffe and straitly tied within their owne ryndes, that they
-cannot encrease or prosper: in this case he shall with a sharpe drawing
-knife, made in the proportion of a narrow <i>C</i> draw and open the
-barke euen from the top of the bole of the Trée downe to the roote, and
-then clap Oxe dung into those slits, let the Trée rest, and in short
-space you shall sée it mightily encrease.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Hornets_and_Dores">Of Hornets and Dores.</span>
-
-<p>If he shall perceiue that <i>Hornets</i>, and <i>Dores</i>, or such
-like, haue found some little hollownesse in one of his Trées, and
-séeketh there to shelter and hide themselues, which in little space
-they will soone make larger, he shall forth-with besmeare all the place
-with Tarre and Goose-dung, and it will driue them thence.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_the_Canker">Of the Canker.</span>
-
-<p>If he shall finde that by the droppings of other Trées, some of his
-Trées shall grow cankerous, and loose their barke, which is an accident
-very vsuall, and the Trées whose barkes are so lost, will with great
-difficulty after prosper. In this case he shall annoynt the place with
-Tarre and Oyle mixt together, and then couer the place with clay, where
-the barke is wanting.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Pismyers_2">Of Pismyers.</span>
-
-<p>If he shall perceiue any <i>Pismyer</i> hilles or beds to be made
-against any of his Trées, which is very noysome, for they are great
-destroyers of the barks of Trées: he shall then with hot scalding water
-kill them, and throw the hill downe leuell and plaine with the earth.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Iuy_Woodbine_and_Misseltoe">Of Iuy, Woodbine, and Misseltoe.</span>
-
-<p>If he shall find any <i>Iuy</i>, <i>Woodbine</i>, or <i>Mysteltoe</i>
-to grow in or about any of his principall Trées, which doe strangle,
-suffocate, and kéepe them from encreasing, he shall forth-with digge
-vp the roots thereof, and then cut it away or loosen it from about the
-barks of the Trées.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Thunder_and_Lightning_2">Of Thunder and Lightning.</span>
-
-<p>Lastly, if he shall perceiue that by <i>Thunder</i>, <i>Lightning</i>,
-or other plantarie stroakes, any of the armes of his well growne Trées
-be blasted or slaine, he shall forth-with cut them away, euen close to
-the quicke Wood, and make the place smooth and euen where they were
-ioyned: thus shall the carefull Husbandman with a vigilant eye, regard
-euery enormous and hurtfull thing that may offend<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</span> his Timber, and by
-that meanes possesse more benefit from a fewe Roodes, then others doe
-from many Acres.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_the_sale_of_tall_Woods">Of the sale of tall Woods.</span>
-
-<p>Now when either necessity or the vrgent occasions of any néedfull vse,
-enforceth the Husbandman to make sale of any part of his tall Wood,
-in which Marchandise there is many prety and obscure secrets, such as
-are hard to be shewed by any Verball demonstration, for truly there
-is not any trucking or marting whatsoeuer, in which a man may sooner
-deceiue, or be deceiued, men buying and selling in a manner hood-winkt:
-for it is most certaine that no man can certainely tell either what
-peny-woorth hée selleth, or the other buyeth, so long as the Trée is
-standing, there be in Trées so many secret faults, and likewise when
-they are downe, and come to the breaking or burkning (as the Wood-man
-tearmes it) so many vnexpected vertues, as for mine owne part I haue
-often séene a Trée whose out-side hath promised all good hope, the
-barke being smooth and euen, the body large and great, and the armes
-high set on, and spaciously extended; yet when this Trée hath béene
-felled, and came to burkning, there hath béene found a hole in the
-top, which hath runne cleane though the heart, and vtterly spoyled the
-whole Timber: so likewise on the contrary part I haue séene a Trée very
-foule at the top, which is suspitious for rottennesse, whose armes haue
-growne so close and narrow together, that they haue promised little
-burthen, yet being cut downe, I haue séene that Trée passing sound, the
-armes double the loades in valuation, and the price being lesse then
-any, the proofe and goodnesse to excéede all; so that I must conclude
-it all together impossible to set downe any fixed or certaine rules
-either for the buyer or seller: but for as much as there are diuers
-worthie obseruances for both parts, and that it is as necessary to buy
-well as sell well, I will runne through euery particular obseruation,
-which doth belong both to the one and the other partie, with which
-when a mans minde is perfectly acquainted,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</span> he may with much bolder
-confidence aduenture to buy or sell in the open Market.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="How_to_chuse_Timbers">How to chuse Timbers.</span>
-
-
-<p>The first thing therefore that either buyer or seller should be
-skilfull in, is the choyse of all sorts of Timbers, and to know which
-is fit for euery seuerall purpose, the crooked and vneyely being for
-some vses of much higher price and reckoning then that which is plaine,
-straight, and euen growne, as thus for example. <span class="sidenote" id="Of_Mill_Timber">Of Mill Timber.</span>
-
-If you would buy Timber
-for Mill-whéeles, the heads of round Turrets, or any kinde of any worke
-whatsoeuer, you shall chuse that which is crooked and some-what bent,
-being sound, firme, and vnshaken. <span class="sidenote" id="Timber_to_beare_burthen">Timber to beare burthen.</span>
-If you will chuse Timber for Summer
-Trées, Baulks, Iawnies, or Tracens, you shall chuse that which is most
-hartie, sound, and much twound, or as it were wrythen about, which you
-shall with great ease perceiue by the twinding or crooked going about
-of the barke, the graine whereof will as it were circle and lay round
-about the Trée. This Timber which is thus twound or wrythen, will by no
-meanes ryue or cleaue asunder, and therefore is estéemed the best to
-support and beare burthen, and the heart thereof will endure and last
-the longest.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Timber_for_Pales_Wainscote">Timber for Pales, Wainscote, &amp;c.</span>
-
-<p>If you will chuse Timber for Pales, Singles, Coopers-ware, Wainscote,
-or such like, then you shall euer chuse that which is smooth, euen, and
-straight growne, without any manner of twynding or shaking, which you
-shall perceiue by the straight and euen growing vp of the barke, whose
-crests will ascend straight and vpright, euen from the roote to the
-bottome, which is an assured token that all such Timber will shiuer and
-ryue into as thinne parts as a man would desire.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Timber_for_Pyles_or_Water-workes">Timber for Pyles or Water-workes.</span>
-
-<p>Lastly, if you would chuse Timber to make Pyles of, to driue into the
-earth, for the framing of Weares within the water, the heads of Ponds,
-or any other worke within the water then you shall chuse that which is
-most knottie (so it be sound) for that will driue without splitting,
-and continue in the earth the longest: and of all Timbers<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</span> the Elme
-is accounted the best for this purpose, for it will continue almost
-euerlastingly in the earth without rotting; yet notwithstanding, the
-Oake is excellent good also: and thus much for the generall choise of
-Oakes.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Vse_of_the_Elme">Vse of the Elme.</span>
-
-<p>Now if you would chuse Timber for weather-boards, or to be vsed in
-water-workes, or to make Planks for low moyst Vaults, then you shall
-chuse the biggest, soundest and smoothest growne <i>Elme</i>, it is
-also excellent good to make Kitchen tables of, or for boards, for the
-vse of Butchers. If you will chuse the most principallest Timber, for
-Cart or Waine Axel trées, for the naues of whéeles, or for any other
-vse of toughnesse, you shall chuse the <i>Elme</i> onely, for it
-excéedeth all other Timbers, and though some Husbandmen are of opinion,
-that the <i>Elme</i> Axel-trée when it is throughly heated, is then
-most apt to breake, they are much deceiued, for it will endure farre
-beyond Ash or any other Timber, except Yewgh, which for the scarsity is
-now of little vse in such a purpose. And herein you must obserue, that
-the <i>Elme</i> which you chuse for Axel-trées must be straite, smooth,
-and without knots, but that which you chuse for naues, must be most
-knotty, twound, and the hardest to be broken or hewed asunder.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Vse_of_the_Ash">Vse of the Ash.</span>
-
-<p>If you will chuse Timber for Ploughes, ordinary Axel-trées (for those
-of <i>Elme</i> are speciall) the rings of whéeles harrow bulls, and
-such like, then you shall chuse the fairest, straightest, biggest,
-and smoothest growne Ash that you can finde, and from the roote end
-vpward, you shall cut out a length of Axel-trées, aboue it a length of
-shelbordes, and aboue it (if the Trée be so large) a length for heads
-and Skeathes, the largest armes which are somewhat bending, you shall
-elect for rings for whéeles, and so according to the bignesse of the
-Ash, and as your eye can proportion out what will be made of the same,
-you shall make valuation thereof.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Vse_of_the_Wall-nut_tree">Vse of the Wall-nut tree.</span>
-
-<p>If you would chuse Timber for ioyned Tables, Cupbords, or Bedsteds,
-you shall then make choise of the fairest Walnut-trée you can finde,
-being olde, straight, vnknotted,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</span> and of a high boale: and although
-either Oake, or Ash will reasonably well serue for this purpose, yet
-the Walnut-trée is by many degrées the best of all other, for it is
-of smoothest graine, and to the eye most beautifull, prouided that by
-no meanes you put it into any worke, before it be excéedingly well
-seasoned.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Vse_of_the_Peare-tree">Vse of the Peare-tree.</span>
-
-<p>If you would chuse Timber for Ioynt-stooles, Chaires, or Chests, you
-shall then chuse the oldest Peare-trée so it be sound, for it is both
-smooth, swéet, and delicate, and though it be a very soft Wood, yet
-in any of these frames it is an excéeding long laster, and the heart
-thereof will neuer bréede worme, nor will it in any time loose the
-colour.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Vse_of_the_Maple">Vse of the Maple, Beech, and Poplar.</span>
-
-<p>If you would chuse Timber for Trenchers, Dishes, or any Tourners ware,
-or for any in-laying worke, you shall then make choise of the fairest
-and soundest Maple, being smooth and vnknotted, for it is the plainest
-graine, and the whitest Wood of all other: and although either the
-Béech or Poplar will reasonably well serue for these purposes, yet is
-neither the colours so good, nor the Timber so long lasting. Many other
-Trées there are which may serue for many other purposes: but these are
-of most vse for our English Husbandman, and will sufficiently serue to
-passe through all his businesses.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Char-coale">Of Char-coale.</span>
-
-<p>Touching Char-coale, you shall vnderstand, that Oake, Elme, and Ash,
-make your longest and best enduring Coale: the Birtch the finest and
-brightest Coale, and the Béech or Sallow the swiftest Coale. Now for
-your small Coale, the twigges of the Birtch makes that which kindles
-the soonest, and the White-thorne that which endures the longest.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="How_to_value_Timber">How to value Timber.</span>
-
-<p>Thus when you know how to chuse euery seuerall Trée, and the true vse
-and profit which can any way be made of the same, and by a practised
-experience can cast by the suruay and view of a standing Wood, the
-almost entire profit that may arise from the same, deuiding in your
-memory how many are for euery seuerall purpose, and to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</span> what reckoning
-they may amount one with the other, and blemishing (if you buy) the
-good with the bad, or making good (if you sell) the bad with those
-good ones which grow néere them, you may then boldly venture into any
-sale either as a buyer or seller at your pleasure, and sure if you
-know (as it is fit you should doe) the Market-able prices of all sorts
-of Timbers in those places, where you are either to buy or sell, as
-what a Mill-post is worth, what so many inches of well squared Timber,
-contayning so many foote in length, what a dozen of boards of such a
-size, what so many naues, spoakes, rings, sparres, or tracens, or what
-so much sound and good Plough-timber is worth, and then looking vpon a
-Trée, and computing what may euery way be made of the same, allowing
-the wast which will hardly sometimes defray the charge of breaking vp
-the Trée, you cannot but with great ease draw into your minde the true
-value of euery Trée, and the vttermost profit or losse may any way rise
-from the same.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="How_to_measure_Timber">How to measure Timber by gesse.</span>
-
-<p>And in this worke I would haue you to obserue this rule very carefully,
-that is, when you come to any great Timber-trée, to fathome or embrace
-it about with both your armes, and then knowing what quantity your
-fathome is, and how many fathome girdleth the Trée round about, you may
-from former experience giue a certaine gesse what inches of squared
-Timber that Trée will beare, for if you haue found in former trials
-that twice your fathome in the rough barke hath borne twenty, or two
-and twenty inches squared, and now finde that the present Trée on which
-you looke, is no lesse, but rather with the bigger, you may boldly
-presume, that being sound, this trée can carrie no lesse square of good
-Timber: and thus much for the knowledge and choise of tall Woods.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Best_seasons_for_the_sale">Best seasons for the sale.</span>
-
-
-<p>Now to come to the seasons &amp; fittest times for sale of these high
-Woods: you shall vnderstand that it is méete for euery good husband
-which intendeth to sell any of his high Woods, to walke into the same
-immediately after Christmas, &amp; whether they be in woods, Groues,
-hedge-rowes, or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</span> other places, to marke with a special marke all those
-Trées which he intendeth to sell, as well for the wéeding and cleansing
-out of all such as are decayed and wasted, as also to know the true
-number of both the good and bad, and thereby in some measure to compute
-the profit which will arise from the same, for to make sale of them
-otherwise confusedly, might bring much losse to a man happily, selling
-away those that would encrease their valewes, and kéepeing them which
-daily would decrease their goodnesse, or so vnorderly vnmixing his
-Wood, that where one faire and good Trée would draw a mans eye from
-beholding diuers which are doated, now that onely taken away, the rest
-will remaine, and neuer be sale-able, and therefore euer as néere as
-you can so suite and match your Trées together, that in your sales
-you may neuer passe away an absolute worthie Trée: but you may euer
-couple some which haue defects to goe with it, as in these dayes we sée
-Warriners and Poulters sell Rabbets, a fat and a leane euer coupled
-together. When you haue thus marked out what you meane to sell, and
-disposed your sale according to your best profit,<span class="sidenote" id="The_time_for_Chap-men">The time for Chap-men.</span>
- after notice giuen
-vnto the Country in the Market Townes néere adioyning, you shall begin
-your sale the Candlemasse following, which sale you may continue all
-the Spring, according to the greatnesse thereof, or the quicknesse of
-buyers. Now for any rules or orders to be obserued in these sales, I
-can prescribe you none certaine, because it is méete that euery one
-binde himselfe to the customes of the Country in which he liueth,
-whose variations are diuers, for almost euery one is seuerall, onely
-in the maine they holde together, which is that they seldome make
-publike sales for money downe vpon the head, but for a certaine payment
-some fewe moneths after, which makes the Marchandise more lookt to,
-and the sales goe away the faster; and in this the Sales-man must be
-circumspect in the choise of his Chap-men, and where hée findeth any
-doubt there to make one neighbour stand bound for another, as for
-the earnest penny it is euer ouer<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</span> and aboue the price, and must be
-laide downe at the binding vp of the bargaine, which earnest is in
-some Countries foure pence in the pound, in some eight pence, and in
-some twelue pence, according to the goodnesse of the Timber, and hath
-euer béene taken for a fée due to the Sales-man for his paines and
-attendance: and sure if he be carefully honest, it is a merrit well
-bestowed: if otherwise, it is much too much for falshood, for in him
-consists the owners losse or profit, and therefore it may become any
-man, of what place so euer, to take a strickt account from such an
-officer: or if he haue any doubt euer to ioyne with him in commission,
-another of contrary faction.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="When_to_cut_downe_Timber">When to cut downe Timber.</span>
-
-<p>When you haue made sale of your Timber, you shall by no meanes let it
-be cut downe till the end of Aprill, at which time the sap ascending
-vpward, will loosen the bark, and make it come from the body of the
-Trée easily. You shall cut your Timber downe close by the earth, not
-digge it vp by the rootes, vnlesse you meane vtterly to destroy it, for
-from the spurnes of the roote will arise new Spiers, which in processe
-of time, will come to another Trée. As soone as you haue felled your
-Oakes, you shall with your Axe immediatly whilst the sap is wet, take
-all the barke from the body and the armes, and setting it end-wayes
-as vp one by another, so place it, that the winde may passe through
-it, and dry it, and then sell it to the Tanners, which will giue you a
-good price therefore, according to the worth and scarsity thereof. When
-your Trées are barkt, you shall then sawe the body into such lengthes
-of Timber, as shall be méete for the purpose for which it is bought,
-or in such sort as it may be best portable: the armes also you shall
-hewe from the body, and so burken or breake them vp, as they may be fit
-to be loaded: all which done, and the Timber caried away, you shall,
-if you intend to haue the Wood renew, fence in the sale, and kéepe it
-safe from Cattell: and thus much for the preseruation and sale of high
-Woods.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Chap_2_V"><span class="smcap">Chap</span>. V.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2"><i>Of the breeding of Wood in rich champaine soyles.</i></p>
-
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap2" src="images/i084.png" alt="">
-</div>
-<p class="noindent drop-cap2">Nature which is the most perfect worke-mistresse of all things (as all
-the Philosophers say) but I say our good God out of his most diuine
-wisedome, hath allotted to euery soyle, if we will note it, through
-the whole course of this Kingdome, particular profit to sustaine and
-maintaine it, as to some Mines, to some Timber, and to some fertility
-of grasse and corne, and where any one of these are, there commonly
-some of the other is euer wanting, as we sée daily in our experience;
-and for as much as in the fruitfull and fertill soyles of this land,
-of which wée estéeme the wealthie vales, as that of <i>Essam</i>,
-<i>White-horse</i>, <i>Beluoire</i>, and many others the best, there
-is euer great scarsitie of Wood, the very wealthinesse of the soyle it
-selfe almost denying to beare such burden, because for the most part
-the stifnesse of those clayes is contrary to their growth, yet for
-as much as the necessitie and vse of Wood is so great and valuable,
-I would perswade euery good and worthy Husbandman, to endeauour
-himselfe with all his vtmost power and strength, to plant wood in
-euery conuenient place round about him, and not to take the rules
-of the ignorant for his lesson, that sith neuer any did grow there,
-therefore neuer any will grow there: for it is absurd and foolish: nor
-to say because my auncestors haue neuer done it why should I attempt
-it? These arguments are made from a false figure, and the Husbandman
-must remember that his dutie is industrie, and encrease not altogether
-imitation and president, and he must as seriously finde out new and
-néerer profits, as hold those he hath learned: and therefore he shall
-endeauour by all commendable labour to haue euer about him whatsoeuer
-is necessarie for his vse: but you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</span> will peraduenture aunswere me, that
-to plant Woods in these rich soyles, were very much losse, because the
-fertilitie thereof will yéeld a much better profit. To this I reply,
-that I would not haue you plant any spacious piece of ground with
-wood, but onely your ditches, hedges, and such wast earthes, as almost
-denie any other profit, and that the want of wood in those places may
-not discourage you, to imagine that wood will not grow there. Doe but
-view the cytes of euery Towne in those rich Countries, the seates
-of Noblemen &amp; Gentlemens houses, and the Parks which commonly are
-adioyning there-vnto, and you shall hardly sée any of them without the
-fellowship &amp; acquaintance of some wood, which in times past hath béene
-planted either for defence or pleasure, and from thence collect that if
-wood will grow with my next neighbour, then why not with me, so long as
-the soyle doth not alter. But <i>Labor vincit omnia improbus</i>, True
-industrie was neuer fruitlesse. Then for the generall good both of your
-selfe &amp; your neighbours, looke that you replenish all your ditches &amp;
-ring fences, with good store of Quick-set, that is to say, all that lye
-high, &amp; out of the danger of water, with White-thorne, Black-thorne,
-and Bryer, and those which are low &amp; subiect to washing, with Willowes,
-Sallowes, and Ozyers.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="How_to_set_all_sorts">How to set all sorts of Quick-set.</span>
-
-<p>Now for as much as it is not enough to say vnto the Husbandman do
-this, but that I must also shew the manner of doing thereof: I will
-shew you briefly how to set all manner of Quick-sets, and first
-for the white-thorne, black-thorne, bryer or such like, which must
-stand frée from inundation, you shal when you enclose any piece of
-ground, after you haue markt out the true breadth of your dyke vpon
-the in-side thereof, and close by the verdge of the dyke, cut with
-your spade a little trough, halfe a foote or there-abouts in breadth
-&amp; depth, in which trough or small gutter, you shall lay the rootes
-of the first rowe of your Quick-sets, so as the top ends may looke
-vpward, &amp; a little bend in towards the ditch, &amp; these quick-sets you
-shall place within lesse then a foot one of another: then with your
-spade<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</span> beginning to make your ditch, you shall with the first cleane
-mould, couer all the rootes close and fast, so as they will not shake
-nor stirre with your hand, then hauing raised the banke of your Dyke,
-and couered the lowest rowe of Quick-set more then halfe a foote, and
-broken the earth so, as it may lye close and handsome together &amp; you
-shall then after the same manner lay another rowe of Quick-set ouer the
-first, I meane not one Quick-set directly ouer another, but the second
-rowe placed as it were in the midst betwéene two of the first, though
-at least halfe a foote higher: then you shall couer that row like the
-former, and ouer it place a third, which shall stand directly opposite,
-and ouer the first, so that in their growth the middle rowe shall as
-it were grow betwéene two of the lowest, and two of the highest: and
-then vpon this vppermost rowe lay the remainder of your earth, and
-make your banke perfect, and in this sort finishing one yard of the
-Ditch after another, you shall at length bring your labour to the end
-of your desire. Now in this labour you are to obserue some speciall
-things, as first to looke well vpon your Sets before you put them into
-the ground, and be sure that they be gréene, young and vntainted, then
-that the rootes be cleane, and no small thréeds or iagges hanging about
-them. And lastly, that they stand vpright, and not aboue foure or fiue
-inches without the earth at the most, then shall you looke well to the
-making of your banke, and lay the earth so as it may not slip or fall
-backe into the Dyke, so as the raine may wash away the mould, and leaue
-the rootes bare: but let all things be done strongly and artificially.
-The best seasons for this worke is the moneths of February, March,
-and Aprill, or September, October, and some part of Nouember: if the
-weather be dry aboue head, when you haue set your Quick-set, you
-shall make a dead hedge vpon the top of the new banke, to kéepe those
-Cattell which are within your ground, from breaking forth or hurting
-the Quick-set: and another small fence on the lowe verdge of the Dyke
-which is outward, to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</span> kéepe those cattell which graze without from
-running into the dyke, and hurting the quick-set. Now after a spring
-and fall is past, you shall suruay all your quick-set and wéede it
-cleane from all manner of filthinesse that doth choake or stifle it,
-and scratching the fresh mould about it giue comfort to the roote: then
-if you perceiue that any of your Sets be dead, you shall plucke them
-vp, and place new in the roome, and if any be blasted in part, and not
-clean killed, you shall cut away so much as is blasted, and let the
-rest remaine, you shall looke well to the Caterpiller and other wormes,
-which mightily deuoure Quick-sets, especially in these fat Countries,
-and if you finde any taint of them, destroy them as is shewed you in a
-former Chapter.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Planting_of_greater_Trees">Planting of greater Trees.</span>
-
-<p>After your Quick-set is come to the age of thrée yéeres, and that
-the banke is setled and swarth growne thereon, you shall then within
-the body of your hedges plant all manner of great Trées, as Ash,
-Béech, Maple, and such like, and also all manner of fruit Trées, as
-Aples, Peares, Plums, Wardens, and such like, and in the first thrée
-yéeres be very carefull to preserue each in his true proper nature,
-and doe to them all the rights which is due to their growth, and in
-that time obserue which kinde of Trées in the generality prospereth
-best, and agréeth most naturally with the soyle. And of those Trées
-sée that you flourish your grounds most plentifully, the particular
-manner of planting whereof is already formerly declared. And hence
-doth <i>Kent</i> and <i>Worcester</i> shire boast of their fruit,
-<i>Windsor</i>, <i>Sherwood</i> and <i>Hollam</i> shire their Oakes,
-and other particular Countries their particular commodities.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_the_setting_of_Willowes">Of the setting of Willowes, &amp;c.</span>
-
-<p>Now for the setting of Willow, Sallow and Oziers, it is a thing so
-vsuall and common, that it néedeth no great Art in the relation,
-yet because I would be loath that any omission should be taken for
-negligence, you shall vnderstand that in setting them you must first
-respect the place, which would euer be lowe and moyst, the water
-sometimes washing them, sometimes cooling them, and euer<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</span> giuing them
-comfort. Now to speake first of the Willow it would be euer planted
-vpon bankes, where it may stand more dry then wet, for such prosper
-best, and endure longest, as for proofe some will continue, twelue,
-fiftéene nay one and twentie yéeres, where as those which are set close
-by the water, will hardly endure seueral, but not aboue nine yéeres at
-the most. Touching their planting, they be set two manner of wayes,
-but which is the best, is not yet agréed on amongst Husbandmen. The
-first is to take an Augure full as large in compasse (although much
-shorter) as that where-with you boare Pumps and with it boare a hole
-in the earth two-foote, and a halfe déepe, then hauing headed some of
-the choysest Willowes you haue, take the fairest and straightest of
-those lops, and then cutting the sloape-wise at both ends and leauing
-no superfluous twigs cleauing there-vnto, put the bigger end downe very
-hard into the earth, and then with the mould which came forth, with the
-Augure ram the earth close and hard about the Set, so as no reasonable
-strength may shake it. Now there be other Husbandmen which in stéed
-of the Augure take onely an Oaken or Ash stake, of the bignesse of an
-vsuall set, and with a Béetell driue it into the ground two foot and a
-halfe, and then by shaking and opening the earth, pull it out againe &amp;
-then put in the Set as is before shewed, and beate and tread the earth
-close there-vnto, and there is no doubt of the well prospering thereof.
-Now for the defects which Husbandmen finde in these two seuerall
-plantings. Some say, that the Augure taketh out so much earth, that the
-Set cannot but stand loose at the roote, and so wanting full hold of
-the earth, either takes not at all, or continues but a little space.
-Others say that the driuing in of the stake beates the earth so hard
-together, that it withstandeth the passage of the tender sprouts, &amp; so
-killeth the set, but both are deceiued: for these are but suppositions,
-and experience daily shewes vs, that these are the best and spéediest
-wayes of setting of all sorts of Willowes that euer any<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</span> time brought
-forth, and I haue knowne one man set this way two hundreth Sets in a
-day, of which not one hath failed, but all prospered. Now for your
-Sallowes, you shall set them, and chuse the Sets in all poynts as you
-doe the Willow, onely they would be placed a little néerer the water,
-for they delight some-what more in moysture, as for the Ozier it would
-be set like other Quick-set in the side of bankes, so as it may almost
-touch the water, and as your Willowes or Sallowes would be set a little
-remote one from another, as namely tenne foote asunder: so these must
-be set close together, and in thicke rowes one against another: and
-these Ozier Plants you must cut from their head, being the principall
-spiers which grow thereon, and then cut off their tops, leauing them
-not aboue two foote long at the most, and of all other they are the
-quickest in growing.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_vse_of_Willowes">The vse of Willowes, Sallowes, and Oziers.</span>
-
-<p>And although Willow, Sallow, and Ozyer, are in our lawes estéemed but
-as wéedes and no Woods, yet they be so profitable, that the Husbandman
-can hardly misse them, the Willow and Sallow seruing for fence and
-fewell, to make Harrowes, Cart-saddles, &amp; horse Hames, and the Ozyers,
-for fish Leapes, or Wéeles for Baskets, Scuttels, Fans to winnow with,
-and many other things full as necessary: therefore if you haue any
-marish grounds that are vselesse, bogge-myers, or Ilands in great
-riuers, let them be imployed to the nourishing of these profitable
-wéedes, and by making draynes through them to giue the water passage,
-you shall in small time bring them to earthes of great profit, which
-consideration were it rightly wayed, there would not be halfe so much
-wast ground as is in this Kingdome.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Ordering_of_the_Willow">Ordering of the Willow.</span>
-
-<p>But to my purpose, when you haue planted these Willowes, you shall
-after euery floud, sée if the water haue driuen any of them away, or
-displease them, and immediately mend them, and set them vp straight
-againe. If any Cattell shall pyll or barke them, you shall pull vp
-such Settes, and place new in their roome.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</span> Your Willow set would by
-no meanes be too long at the first setting, for then will neuer beare
-a good head, and too short is likewise as vnprofitable, therefore it
-is held to be fiue foote aboue the earth, is a length sufficient: you
-may head your Willowes once in thrée yéeres, or fiue at the furthest,
-and when you sée the bodies waxe hollow, you may cut them downe for the
-fire, and fixe new Sets in their places.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Ordering_of_Ozier">Ordering of Ozier.</span>
-
-<p>The Ozier to come to his true profit and season asketh much pruning
-and trimming, as namely you must kéepe the stocke lowe, and neuer
-aboue halfe a foote aboue the earth, you must picke them cleane from
-Mosse, and from the slime and filth, which the ouer-flow of the water
-will leaue vpon them: you shall prune the small spiers, and make them
-grow single one by another, and if any shoote out a double stalke, you
-shall cut it away, you may head them euery second yéere at the fall
-onely, and though some head them once a yéere, yet it is not so good
-husbandry, nor will the Ozier be so tough or long lasting. The best
-seasons for the setting of the Willow, Sallow, or Ozier is, either
-any part of the Spring or Fall, and the best time to loppe the Willow
-or Sallow, is in the Spring for fence, and in the Fall for timber or
-fewell; but the Ozier would be cut at the fall of the leafe onely. And
-thus much for the bréeding of Wood in the rich champaine Countries.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAP_2_VI"><span class="smcap">Chap.</span> VI.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2"><i>Of Plashing of Hedges, and Lopping of Timber.</i></p>
-
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="What_plashing_is">What plashing is.</span>
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap2" src="images/i090.png" alt="">
-</div>
-<p class="noindent drop-cap2">Hauing alreadie sufficiently in the former Chapter spoken of the
-planting of all sorts of quick-sets, it is méete now that I shew you
-how to order the hedges being growne and come to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</span> perfection. Know then
-that if after your hedge is come to sixe or seauen yéeres of age, you
-shall let it grow on without cutting or pruning, that then although it
-grow thicke at the top, yet it will decay and grow so thinne at the
-bottome, that not onely beasts but men may runne through it, and in
-the end it will dye and come to nothing, which to preuent, it shall
-be good once in seauen or eight yéeres to plash and lay all your
-Quick-set hedges, in which there is much fine Art and cunning to be
-vsed. For this plashing is a halfe cutting or deuiding of the quicke
-growth, almost to the outward barke, and then laying it orderly in a
-sloape manner, as you sée a cunning hedger lay a dead hedge, and then
-with the smaller and more plyant branches, to wreathe and binde in
-the tops, making a fence as strong as a wall, for the roote which is
-more then halfe cut in sunder, putting forth new branches, which runne
-and entangle themselues amongst the olde stockes, doe so thicken and
-fortifie the hedge, that it is against the force of beasts impregnable.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="How_to_plash">How to plash.</span>
-
-
-<p>Now to giue you some light how you shall plash a hedge, though diuers
-Countries differ diuersly in these workes, yet as néere as I can I will
-shew you that which of the best Husbandmen is the best estéemed. <span class="sidenote" id="The_time_of_yeare">The time of yeare.</span>
-First,
-for the time of yéere either February or October, is passing good, and
-the encrease of the Moone would likewise be obserued.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_Tooles">The Tooles.</span>
-
-<p>For the tooles which you shall imploy, they would be a very sharpe
-nimble Hatchet, a good Bill, and a fine pruning knife. Now for the
-worke you shall enter into it, first with your Bill you shall cut
-away all the superfluous boughes and branches which are of no vse, or
-hinder your worke, and then finding the principall stemmes which issue
-from the maine roote, you shall within a foote or lesse of the ground
-with your Hatchet, cut the same more then thrée quarters through, so
-as they may hang together by nothing but the outward barke, and some
-part of the outward sap, and this stroke must euer be sloape-wise and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</span>
-downeward: then take those mayne bodies of the quick-set, so cut, and
-lay them sloape-wise from you, as you would lay a dead hedge, and
-all the branches which extend from those bodies, and would spread
-outwardly, you shall likewise cut as before said, and fould them
-artificially into your head, and euer within a yard or two distance,
-where a pretie Plant growes straight vp, you shall onely cut off the
-top equall with the height of your hedge, and so let it stand as a
-stake, about which you shall folde and twind all your other branches.
-Now when you come to the top of the hedge, which would commonly not be
-aboue fiue foote high, you shall take the longest, youngest, and most
-plyant boughes, and cutting them as afore-said, gently binde in the
-tops of all the rest, and so make your hedge strong and perfect: and
-herein is to be noted, that the closer and thicker you lay your hedge
-(so there be nothing in it superfluous) the stronger and better lasting
-it will be. Many vse not to binde in the tops of their plasht hedges,
-but onely to lay the Quick-set and no more: but it is not so husbandly,
-neither is the hedge of any indurance: many other curiosities there be
-in the plashing of hedges, but this which I haue alreadie shewed, is
-sufficient both for the Husbandmans benefit and vnderstanding.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_profit_of_Plashing">The profit of Plashing.</span>
-
-<p>The profit which ariseth from this labour, is the maintenance and
-defence of fencing, the preseruing and encrease of Quick-set, and a
-continuance of amitie amongst neighbours, when one liues frée from
-offending another. It yéeldeth a good Mast for Swine, and with the
-ouer-plus thereof at these times of plashings, repaireth all a mans
-dead hedges, and brings good store of fewell both to the Brewhouse,
-Kitchin, and Backhouse.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_lopping_of_Timber">The lopping of Timber.</span>
-
-<p>Next to the plashing, is the lopping of Timber-Trées, which in those
-Countries which are bare and naked of wood, is of much vse, and though
-I cannot much commend it, because it oft marreth the bodies of Trées,
-yet I must allow it for necessary, because it is a néedfull rate, which
-the Trées pay to their Planters.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</span></p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="What_Lopping_is">What Lopping is.</span>
-
-
-<p>This lopping or heading of Trées, is the cutting off of the armes and
-vppermost branches of Trées, and suffering the body to grow still, and
-it may very well be done once in eight or tenne yéeres, <span class="sidenote" id="The_season_for_Lopping">The season for Lopping.</span>
-either at the
-beginning of the Spring, or at the end of the Fall, as you shall haue
-occasion to vse the wood, and immediately after the Moone hath new
-changed.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="How_you_shall_lop_Timber">How you shall lop Timber.</span>
-
-<p>Now for the manner of the worke, there is small curiositie to be vsed
-therein, if your Axe be good and sharpe, for you shall but cut off the
-armes and boughes, smooth and cleane without nickes, rifts, or gutters,
-or any thing which may receiue wet, whereby the Trée may be cankred
-and spoyled. Also in cutting away of the armes, you shall haue a great
-care rather to cut them away (if it be possible) vpward then downeward,
-least when you cut them downeward, the waight of the arme sodainly
-falling downe, riue and teare the barke of the body of the Trée, which
-is dangerous, and hath béene the spoyle of much Timber: which to
-preuent, you shall euer before you strike any blowe aboue, make a good
-large nicke vnderneath, and then after cut it downe from aboue, and so
-the Trée shall receiue no hurt. Also you shall obserue to cut the armes
-close by the body of the Trée, and neuer to desist till you haue made
-the place as playne and smooth as may be, for to doe the contrarie,
-is neyther workmanly, nor the part of any good husband. And thus much
-touching the plashing of Hedges, and lopping of Trées.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Chap_2_VII"><span class="smcap">Chap.</span> VII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2"><i>Of Pasture grounds, their order, profit, and generall vse.</i></p>
-
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Diuersities_and_vse_of_Pastures">Diuersities and vse of Pastures.</span>
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap2" src="images/i094.png" alt="">
-</div>
-<p class="noindent drop-cap2">Hauing alreadie sufficiently entreated of errable Grounds,
-Gardens, Orchards, and Woods of all kindes, I thinke it most méete
-(as falling in his due place) here to write of Pasture grounds, which
-are of two kindes: the first, such Pastures as lye in wood land,
-mountainous, or colde climes, and are enclined to hardnesse and
-barrennesse, and therefore onely imployed to the bréeding and bringing
-forth of Cattell: the other such as lye in lowe, warme, and fruitfull
-soyles, and are most fertile and aboundant in encrease, onely imployed
-to the fatting and féeding of Cattell.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_barraine_Pastures">Of barraine Pastures.</span>
-
-
-<p>And now to speake of the first sort of Pasture, which being somewhat
-barraine, is preserued for bréeding, you shall vnderstand that it is
-generally dispierced ouer all this Kingdome, and particularly into
-euery Countrey, for according to the veanes and mixture of the earth,
-such is either the richnesse or pouerty of the same, and of those
-seuerall mixtures I haue spoken sufficiently before in that part of
-this Booke, which entreateth of errable ground. Then to procéede to
-my purpose, it is the first office of the Husbandman when he séeth
-and knoweth the true nature of his earth, and perceiueth from perfect
-iudgement that it is of very hard encrease, <span class="sidenote" id="Signes_of_barrainnesse">Signes of barrainnesse.</span>
-which as the temper and
-mixture of the soyle assures him, so also he shall better confirme by
-these fewe signes and Charracters, which I will deliuer: as first, if
-he sée grasse slow of growth, and that no Spring will appeare before
-May. If in stead of Clouer-grasse, Dandylion, and Honisuckle, you sée
-your ground furnished with Penigrasse, Bents, and Burnet. If you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</span> sée
-much Knot-grasse or Speare-grasse, or if you perceiue the scorching of
-the Sunne burne away the grasse as fast as the raine had brought it
-forth: or if you finde quarries of stone néere vnto the vpper swarth of
-grasse; or if your ground bring forth Lyng, Bracken, Gorse, Whynnes,
-Broome, Bilburie, or Strawburie: or if your ground be morish, full of
-quick-myers, mossie or full of blacke Flint, any of these signes make
-it to be most apparant that the soyle is barraine and of hard encrease.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Bettering_of_soyles">Bettering of soyles.</span>
-
-
-<p>And then as before I said it is the Husbandmans first office to prouide
-for the bettering and perfecting of his earth, which he shall doe in
-this sort. First, if he perceiue that the barrainnesse of his ground
-procéedes from want of good Plants, <span class="sidenote" id="Sowing_of_good_seedes">Sowing of good seedes.</span>
-
-as from want of Clouer-grasse,
-Dandylion, Honisuckle, Cowslop, and other swéet flowers, then he shall
-repaire into the fruitfull Countries, and there buy the hay séedes
-and swéepings of hay-barne-flowers, which he shall euery Spring and
-fall of the leafe sowe, as thin as may be, vpon such Pastures, as he
-shall either lay for meddow, or preserue for the latter Spring after
-Michaelmas. <span class="sidenote" id="For_abundance_of_grasse">For abundance of grasse.</span>
-But if he respect not the goodnesse of grasse, but the
-abundance of grasse, as those husbands doe which liue in or about
-great Cities, then he shall dung those grounds which he will lay for
-meddow at Candlemasse; or those which he will graze or eate in the
-first beginning of the Spring, at Michaelmasse before, with the oldest
-and rottennest meanure he can get, of which the best is the rotten
-staddell or bottomes of Hay-stackes, or for want of it the meanure of
-horse-stables, swéepings, and scowrings of yards and barnes, the mudde
-of olde ditches, or else good Oxe or Cow meanure, any of which will
-bring forth abundance of grasse.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_imperfection_of_meanure">The imperfection of meanure.</span>
-
-<p>Yet thus much I must aduertise the Husbandman, that this meanuring of
-Pasture grounds carries with it diuers imperfections, for though it
-occasion abundance of grasse to growe, yet the meddow or hay which
-comes thereof, is so ranke, loggie, and fulsome in tast, that a beast<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</span>
-taketh no ioy to eate thereof, more then to holde very life and soule
-together. Also the grasse thus meanured which you intend to graze or
-eate with your Cattell, is by meanes of the meanure so loose at the
-roote, that Cattell as they bite plucke vp both the grasse, roote, and
-all, which being of strong &amp; ranke sent in the mouth of a beast, maketh
-him loathe and cast it out againe, and so not striue to eate to be fat,
-but onely to maintaine life.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="To_helpe_a_slow_Spring">To helpe a slow Spring.</span>
-
-<p>Now if your Spring be slow, and late in the yéere before your grasse
-will appeare aboue ground, it is méete then that you enclose your
-ground, and not only maintaine the fences with high and thicke
-Quick-sets, but also with tall Timber-trées, whose shade and strength
-may defend many colde blasts from the earth, and adde vnto it a more
-naturall warmenesse then it had before, for it is onely the coldnesse
-of the soyle which makes the grasse long before it grow. Also in this
-case it is méete that you lay (as the husbandman tearmes it) all such
-Pasture as you intend to graze at the spring following, in Nouember
-before, &amp; so not being bitten from that time till Aprill following, no
-doubt but your spring will be both good and forward. There be others
-which helpe their slow springing grounds by stocking them in the latter
-end of the yéere with great abundance of shéepe, who although they bite
-néere to the ground, and leaue little grasse behinde them, yet they
-so tread and meanure it with their hot meanure, that it will spring
-after it commeth to rest, much more early and faster then it was wont.
-So that to conclude in a word, to make a barren ground spring earely,
-is to kéepe it warme, let it haue long rest, and meanure it well with
-Shéepe.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="To_help_Knot-grasse_and_Speare-grasse">To help Knot-grasse and Speare-grasse.</span>
-
-<p>If your ground be troubled with Knot-grasse or Speare-grasse, it is a
-signe of too much colde moysture in the earth, and in this case you
-shall with a great common Plough, made for such a purpose, turne vp
-great furrowes through your ground, and make them so descend and fall
-one into another, that not onely the moysture bred in the earth, but
-that which falls vpon the earth, may haue a swift passage<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</span> from the
-same, and so your soyle being drayned and kept dry, all those wéedy
-kindes of grasse will soone perish.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="To_helpe_Sun-burning">To helpe Sun-burning.</span>
-
-
-<p>If your ground be subiect to the scorching or burning of the Sunne,
-then you shall vnderstand that it is directly contrary to the last
-soyle we spake of: for as that by too much moysture is made barraine
-by colde, so this by too much want of moysture is made barraine with
-heate: wherefore the Husbandman shall in this case draw all his
-draynes, to bring moysture into his ground, which sometimes watring
-and sometimes ouer-flowing the same, will in the end bring it to
-a reasonable fertility, for it is a rule, that where there may be
-ouerflowes, <span class="sidenote" id="To_helpe_quarries_of_stone">To helpe quarries of stone.</span>
-there can seldome be any hurt by Sunne-burning, vnlesse
-that such soyles be vpon Limestone ground, or néere vnto other
-quarries of hard stone, which lying néere vnto the vpper swarth of
-the grasse, doth so burne the roote, that the vpper branches cannot
-prosper. In this case the bringing in of water doth rather hurt then
-good, wherefore your best course is partly by your owne industry, and
-partly by the labours of others, who are traded in such commodities,
-to let forth your ground to Stone-diggers or Lime-makers, who digging
-the quarries out of the earth, and then filling vp the emptie places
-with rubbish and other earth, the soyle will in short space become as
-fruitfull as any other, for it is onely the want of taking roote; or
-the burning vp of the roote, which makes this kinde of earth barraine.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="To_help_Ling_Braken">To help Ling, Braken, &amp;c.</span>
-
-<p>Now if your ground bring forth Ling, Braken, Gorse, Whinnes, or such
-like: you shall pare off the vpper swarth of the earth, and lay it in
-the Sunne to dry, in the height or heate of Sommer, and being throughly
-dried, you shall lay them in round hollow heapes one sod ouer another,
-then putting fire vnto them, burne them into ashes, which done, spread
-the ashes, like a meanure, ouer all the ground, and you shall sée those
-wéedes will no more spring or grow in that ground.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="To_helpe_morishnesse_or_quick-myers">To helpe morishnesse or quick-myers.</span>
-
-<p>If your ground be morish or full of quicke myers,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</span> you shall then by
-small draynes or trenches draw away the water, and turne it into some
-lower ditch or current, and so bringing the ground to a stability or
-firmenesse, there is no doubt but fruitfulnesse, will presently follow
-after.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="To_helpe_mossinesse">To helpe mossinesse.</span>
-
-<p>Lastly, if your ground be mossie, and bring forth in stead of grasse
-onely a soft fussie and vnwholsome mosse, your onely best way to cure
-the fault, is in the Winter time to tread it much with the féete of
-Cattell, as by making of Hay-stacks in diuers parts of such ground, and
-so fodring your Cattell about the same, and so yéerely altering the
-places of your Stackes or Réekes to goe ouer all your ground, &amp; without
-doubt the treading of the ground will kill the mosse, and the meanuring
-of the Cattell, and the expence of Hay-séeds vpon the ground, will
-soone bring the earth to much fruitfulnesse and goodnesse.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_generall_vse_of_barraine_grounds">The generall vse of barraine grounds.</span>
-
-<p>Now for the generall vse of these barraine grounds, it is to be
-vnderstood, that albe by the meanes before shewed, they may be helpt
-or bettered, yet they are but onely for bréede or encrease of Cattell.
-Whether the grounds be seuerall and enclosed, or vniuersall and
-common: whether they be Woods, Parkes, or Pastures, or Heathes, Mores,
-Downes, or other wilde and vnlimitted places, and these grounds shall
-be deuided into thrée parts, the first and most fruitfullest lying
-lowest, lying néerest to the riuer or some running streame, you shall
-preserue for meddow, and not suffer any beast to bite vpon the same
-from Candlemasse, vntill the hay be taken from the ground. The second
-part, you shall graze or eate from Candlemasse till Lammas, which would
-be that which lieth most plaine and bleake, and most subiect to all
-weathers. And the third part, which is the warmest and safest, you
-shall graze from all-Hollantide till Candlemasse, and betwixt Lammas
-and all-Hollantide you shall eate vp your eddish or after-crop of your
-meddowes.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="What_Cattell_are_to_be_bred">What Cattell are to be bred.</span>
-
-<p>Now whereas I speake generally, that these barraine grounds are for
-the bréede of Cattell, yet you shall vnderstand<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</span> me particularly, as
-namely, what Cattell for what soyle, for euery barraine earth will not
-bring forth Cattell alike, as some will beare a faire Cowe or Oxe, yet
-but a little Horse: and some will bring forth a very goodly Horse, yet
-but a very little horned beast, therefore you shall obserue that if
-your ground lye any thing lowe, or be subiect to much moysture, and so
-not extreamely barraine, but although the Spring be late, yet after
-it springeth, it yéeldeth a reasonable bit, this ground is fittest to
-bréede Cattell vpon, as Cowe, Oxe, and such like: but if it lye high
-and dry, if it be stonie or mountainous, haue much reflection of the
-Sunne: or though it be some-what more barraine then the former earth,
-and in the best part of the Spring yéeld but a short, yet swéet bit,
-this ground is fittest to bréede a faire and large horse vpon: but if
-it be extreamely barraine colde and moyst, stonie or mossie, so it
-be replenished with any good store of Vnderwood, then it is fit to
-bréede small hard Nags vpon, or Geldings of a meaner size, Goates,
-wilde-Swine, or such like. And lastly, if it be extreame barraine,
-colde, and dry, and altogether without any kinde of shelter, but
-subiect to euery blast whatsoeuer, this ground is fit onely to bréede
-Shéepe vpon, as we sée by daily experience in the seuerall parts of
-this Kingdome: so that to conclude, you shall beare in your memorie,
-that where you bréede your beast, would be reasonable bit: where you
-bréede your Horse good ayre and warmth, and where you bréede your
-Shéepe, there much spaciousnesse of ground. And thus much briefly for
-the nature and vse of your barraine grounds.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_fertill_grounds">Of fertill grounds.</span>
-
-<p>Now to procéede to your fruitfull and rich grounds, whose very encrease
-and abundance of grasse, without any other curious relation shewes
-their fertility, there is little obseruation to be held in the ordering
-&amp; disposing of them, for being naturally good of themselues, there
-néedeth little Art to the maintainance of the same, onely to haue an
-especiall care to the fencing and safe kéeping of them, to the due time
-of eating them with your Cattell, and to obserue<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</span> a fit proportion
-of rest for them, in which they may grow and gather head for the
-maintainance of such beasts as shall féede vpon them. And to these, as
-an especiall rule aboue the rest, must be added a carefull diligence
-not to ouer-stocke or loade your ground with more Cattell then it may
-conueniently beare, for if your ground be neuer so fruitfull, if it be
-ouer-prest with multitudes of Cattell, it cannot by any meanes yéeld
-you the profit of your expectation, but returne you losse and dammage.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_deuision_of_rich_grounds">The deuision of rich grounds.</span>
-
-<p>These fruitfull and rich grounds would be deuided into two parts,
-the one pastures, or grounds for continuall féeding or nourishing of
-Cattell all the yéere, the other meddowes, from whence you shall gather
-your Winters prouision of Hay, for the preseruation of your Cattell,
-which are either for labour or sale in the Market, and of these two
-parts I will speake seuerally.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_generall_vse_of_rich_grounds">The generall vse of rich grounds.</span>
-
-<p>Yet before I begin to speake largely of them, it is méete you know the
-generall vse of these rich and fruitfull grounds, which is indéede
-the féeding or fatting vp of Cattell, either for foode in your owne
-house, or for sale in the Market, to the Butcher, Drouer, or men of
-such like place or profession. For indéede to bréede much vpon these
-rich grounds, is neither profitable to the Husbandman, nor is the
-beaste so bred, either so comely or Market-able, as those bred in the
-harder soyles, as wée may note in our experience, if we will suruay the
-bréedes of Cattell in <i>Gloster</i>-shire, <i>Sommerset</i>-shire,
-and <i>Lincoln</i>-shire, which for the most part are bred vpon
-excéeding rich and fertile ground: yet if we take view of them, we
-shall finde that albe they are tall and large, yet they are of slender
-shape, leane-thighed, crumple-horned, and oft tender and dry skinned,
-which is a fault very note-worthie amongst Graziers, and indéede are
-nothing so eyely and Market-able, as those beasts are which are bred
-in <i>Yorke</i>-shire, <i>Darby</i>-shire, <i>Lancashire</i>, and such
-like, all which are bred vpon hard and barraine grounds, yet haue
-goodly, large, and round bodies, close trust, thicke, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</span> well coupled
-together, faire heads, veluet skinnes, and as the Prouerbe is, are
-so beautifull in horne and haire, that they are euery mans money, in
-euery Market. So that I conclude, that albe vpon the rich ground you
-may bréede good Cattell, and it is necessary also so to doe for the
-maintaynance of stocke, yet the generall vse, and that which is the
-greatest profit to the English husbandman, is to graze and féede the
-same.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Pastures_and_ordering_them">Of Pastures and ordering them.</span>
-
-<p>Now to procéede to my former purpose, touching that part of rich ground
-which I call Pasture, because it is onely for féeding, you shall first
-prouide that they be very well fenced, according to the nature of the
-Country, either with ditch, pale, rayle, dead hedge, or quicke-growth:
-you shall also sée that they be well stored with water, that is swéet
-and wholesome, for putrified water bréedeth many mortall and infectious
-diseases amongst Cattell. These Pastures must euer be your highest
-ground, and such as lye safest from inundations. Those Pastures which
-you lay or giue rest to from the beginning of Nouember, you may féede
-at Candlemasse following with heilding beasts, or such as are but
-beginning to féede, but with your fat beasts not till our Ladies day
-after: those Pastures which you lay or giue rest to at Candlemasse, you
-may very well féede at May following: those which you giue rest to at
-May-day, you may féede at Midsommer, for then the spring is swift and
-plentifull: those you lay at Midsommer, you may féede at Lammas, those
-you lay at Lammas, you may féede in October, and generally all the
-Winter following: onely you shall obserue, that those Pastures which
-lye most in danger of water, or any other casualtie, be first eaten,
-least by too long delaying an vnseasonable time come, and so you be
-both preuented of your hope and profit.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Manner_of_feeding_of_cattell">Manner of feeding of cattell.</span>
-
-<p>In the eating of your Pasture grounds, are many things to be obserued,
-as first for the féeding of your fat Cattell, you must by all meanes
-be sure that they haue full bite, which is to say, length of grasse:
-for cattell, whose<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</span> tongues are the principall gatherers vp of their
-foode, neither can nor will bite néere vnto the ground, except it be
-extreame hunger which compels them, and then they take little ioy in
-their foode. Next you shall oft (as any fit occasion will giue you
-leaue) remoue and shift them into fresh grounds, and not expect that
-they should eate your grasse downe to the bottome, but onely as it were
-scumme and take the vppermost and choisest part thereof, and so they
-will féede both swiftly and throughly: and for that grasse which they
-shall leaue behinde them, you shall eate it vp after them with your
-labouring or worke-cattell, and lastly with your shéepe. It is very
-good also amongst your fat beasts euer to haue a leane horse or two:
-for your fat beasts taketh delight to féede with them, and sometimes
-to bite after them, there being as it were a kinde of sympathie or
-liking of each others tastes. After your grasse is fully knit, and
-hath receiued his whole strength, which wil be at Midsommer, then you
-may suffer your fat beast to eate a little néerer vnto the ground
-till after Lammas, because there is an extraordinarie swéetnesse
-therein, springing from the heate of the Sunnes beames onely. These few
-obseruations well kept, there is no doubt but your Cattell will féede
-well to your contentment, then when you sée that they are sufficiently
-fed, according to the ayme of your purpose, whether it be for the vse
-of your houshold, or the vse of the Market, you shall forth-with imploy
-them accordingly, for it is both the losse of time and money, not to
-put them off by sale or otherwise, so soone as they are come to the
-end of your desire. For those rich grounds will sometimes make two
-returnes in the yéere, sometimes thrée, which is a great profit. And I
-haue heard sometimes of foure, but it is very rare, and the Cattell so
-returned must be very well stricken with flesh before they be put vnto
-féeding, but if your ground will returne leane beasts fat twice through
-the yéere, it is commodity sufficient.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="How_to_know_a_fat_Beast">How to know a fat Beast.</span>
-
-<p>Now because it is not sufficient to say sell or kill your<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</span> Cattell
-when they are fat, except you haue the Art and skill to know the
-same, you shall obserue these few rules following, and they will
-sufficiently instruct you in the same. First, when you sée your beast
-in the generall shape and composure of his body shew most faire and
-beautifull, each member being comely, and each bone couered, in such
-sort as a perfect shape requireth, as no eye is so stupid as cannot
-tell when a beast looketh well or ill-fauouredly, you shall then guesse
-the beast to be well fed, especially when you sée his huckle-bones
-round and not sharpe, his ribs smooth, not rough, his flankes full, his
-natch thick, and his cod round. This when you shall perceiue, you shall
-handle him, and griping him vpon the neathermost ribs, if you féele
-the skinne loose, and the substance soft vnder your hand, you may be
-well assured that the beast is very well fed outwardly, that is vpon
-the bones. You shall then lay your hand vpon his round huckle-bones,
-and if that féele, vnder your hand, soft, round and plumpe, you shall
-be assured that the beast is well fed both outwardly and inwardly,
-that is, both in flesh and tallow: then you shall handle him at the
-setting on of his taile, and if that handle bigge, thicke, full, and
-soft, it is a true signe that the beast is very well fed outwardly:
-then handle his natch-bones which are on both sides the setting on of
-his taile, and if they féele soft and loose, it is a signe that he is
-well fed, both outwardly and inwardly. Lastly, you shall handle his cod
-and nauell, if it be of an Oxe, and the nauell onely if it be a Cowe,
-and if they handle thicke, round, soft, great, and plumpe, it is a most
-assured signe that the beast is very well tallowed within. And thus
-when any of these parts or members shall handle in contrary manner,
-you shall iudge of the contrary effects. And thus much touching the
-knowledge of a fat beast.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_Meddowes_and_their_ordering">Of Meddowes and their ordering.</span>
-
-<p>Now for the second part of these rich grounds, which are meddowes,
-they ought to be the most fruitfullest and richest of all other, lying
-low and leuell, and being now and then in the Winter season washt with
-inundations,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</span> yet not too too much drencht or washt with the same: for
-as the moderate ouerflowing of waters enricheth and fertiles the soyle,
-to the too much soking or long resting of the water rotteth the earth,
-&amp; bringeth it to barrainnesse, neither is it altogether necessary that
-euery meddowe should lye so low that it might be ouerflowed, for there
-be some high grounds which are frée from those floods which will beare
-meddow in very sufficient manner, &amp; although the lower meddowes doe
-abound in the plenty of grasse, yet the higher grounds euer beareth
-the swéeter grasse, and it is a rule amongst Husbandmen, that the low
-meddowes do fill, but the high meddowes do féede, the low are for the
-Stable, but the high are for the Cratch, and that which is long will
-maintaine life, but that which is short will bréede milke.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Preseruation_of_Meddowes">Preseruation of Meddowes.</span>
-
-<p>The chiefest respect you shall haue to your meddowes, is to defend and
-preserue them from Moales, and such like vermine, which roote vp the
-earth, and destroy the swéet and tender roots of the grasse. Next, that
-you note in what places of the meddow the water standeth longest, &amp;
-from thence, by small furrowes or draynes, to giue it a frée passage,
-so that the meddow may as it were cleanse &amp; be dry in one instant.
-Lastly, you shall maintaine the banks of all such ditches &amp; other
-fences bordring about your meddowes in good and sufficient manner, both
-for kéeping out of water after your meddowes begin to grow, as also for
-kéeping Cattell from eating them in the night or other times, which is
-a great depriuation and losse of the profit you expect to come from
-them: for you shall vnderstand, that if any ouerflow shall come vnto
-your meddowes after May, it will leaue such a sandy filthinesse in the
-grasse, that except very moderate showers fall swiftly, and sodainly,
-to wash it out againe, the Hay which shall be got of that crop, will
-both be vnsauorie and vnwholsome, and bréed in your Cattell many
-dangerous and mortall sicknesses.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="When_to_lay_Meddowes">When to lay Meddowes.</span>
-
-<p>The best times for laying of meddowes to rest, is, if the meddow
-lye high, as in vp-land Countries, or if the soyle<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</span> be cold, or the
-springing thereof slow, at Candlemasse: but if the ground be more
-warme, temperate, &amp; of some more fertility, then you may lay it at
-our Ladies day in March: but if the ground be most fruitfull, then if
-you lay it at May-day, it will be early enough. Also in the laying of
-your meddowes to rest, you shall consider the state of the ground, as
-whether it be eaten néere and bare, and with what Cattell, as Horse,
-Oxen, or Shéepe: if it haue béene eaten bare with Oxen or Horse, then
-you shall lay it earlier in the yéere, for it will aske a longer time
-to grow againe: but if it haue béene eaten with Shéepe (although they
-bite néerest to the ground) yet you may lay it so much later, because
-the meanure which they bestow vpon such good ground, will quickly
-hasten on the Spring: but if your meddowes haue not béene eaten bare,
-but haue a good déepe fogge vpon them still, then you may lay them the
-latest. Also in the laying of meddowes, you shall consider whether
-they be common or priuate, if they be common meddowes, and that no
-olde custome binde you to the contrary, you shall lay them to rest
-earely in the yéere, that recouering a forward Spring, you may cut
-them so much the sooner, and so haue the better after-crop, and the
-longer time to eate it: but if your meddow be priuate, and at your owne
-particular disposing, then you shall lay it according to your owne
-necessitie, and the goodnes of the soyle, obseruing euer to giue it
-full time of growth, and not to cut it till the grasse be full ripe,
-for it is better to let it grow a wéeke too long (so the weather be
-seasonable for the withering of it) then to cut it two dayes too soone,
-because when it is too earely cut, it not onely looseth the strength
-and goodnesse, but also the substance and waight, and in the drying
-shrinketh and wasteth to nothing.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="When_to_mow_Meddowes">When to mow Meddowes.</span>
-
-<p>Touching the fittest time to cut or mowe your meddowes: If they be
-laid in a due season, it is held of all the best English husbandmen
-generally to be a wéeke or a fortnight after Midsommer day, as namely
-about the translation of Thomas, which is euer the seauentéenth day of
-Iuly,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</span> and without question it is a very good time for all men to begin
-that labour, if their grounds be fruitfull and of earely growth: but
-in as much as diuers grounds are diuers in their growth, some being
-much more hastie then other some: and for as much as some meddow may
-as well grow too long as too little a time, as in high land Countries,
-where the heate and reflection of the Sunne will burne and consume away
-the grasse, if it be not gathered in a due season, I would therefore
-wish euery good Husbandman about a wéeke before Midsommer, and a wéeke
-after, to view his meddowes well, and if he sée them turne browne, if
-the Cock-heads turne downeward and stand not vpright, if the Bels and
-other vessels of séede open and shed their séedes, if your Honisuckles
-haue lost their flowers, and the Penigrasse be hard, dry, and withered,
-then you shall truly vnderstand that your meddow is ripe and ready
-to be mowne, and the longer it standeth, the more it will loose of
-the substance, and when any of the contrary signes appeare, as when
-the meddow lookes gréene and fresh, the Cock-heads looke vpright, the
-Bels are close and hard, the Honisuckles flowing and purple, and the
-Penigrasse soft and moyst, then is your meddow not readie to cut, nor
-will the Hay that is so gotten be other then soft, fuzzie, and most
-vnwholsome, no beast taking delight to eate of the same.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_inclination_of_the_weather">The inclination of the weather.</span>
-
-<p>Now to these considerations, you shall adde a carefull obseruation
-of the state and inclination of the weather, and if you finde that
-the weather is disposed to much wet or incertaintie, then you shall
-forbeare to mowe, because that moysture will still maintaine and hold
-the grasse in his perfect strength so long as it groweth: but if it be
-once cut downe, then the wet will soone rot and spoile it: but if you
-find the weather enclined to drought and fairenesse, then you shall
-with all spéede cut downe your Hay, for one loade got and brought into
-the barne without raine, is worth two that hath béene washt, though
-but with the smallest shower. There be some Husbandmen that in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</span> the
-mowing of their meddowes, will obserue the state of the Moone, and
-other planetarie coniectures, but they are fitter for those which
-séeke curiosities more then profit, for mine owne part I would wish
-euery good husband but to know truly when his crop is ripe, and then
-to gather it in the most constant and fairest seasons, which the rules
-already set downe will most amply shew him.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_manner_how_to_mowe_Meddowes">The manner how to mowe Meddowes.</span>
-
-<p>Now for the manner of mowing your meddowes, although the generall act
-resteth in the hands of the mower, and that it is hard and impossible,
-in words, to expresse the Art of the action, nor is it néedfull that
-euery Husbandman be a mower, yet for those rules which the English
-Husbandman should know and obserue, I will in no sort omit them. You
-shall then know that in the mowing of your meddowes you shall mowe them
-smooth, plaine, and leuell, and as the Husbandman tearmes it, with such
-an euen board, that a man may no more but discerne the going in and
-comming forth of the Sythe: and this shall be done so close and néere
-vnto the ground, as is possible for the worke-man to get, especially if
-it be in publique and common meddowes, because the swap and first crop
-is all the maine profit you can challenge your owne: nay, you shall
-doe it also in your owne priuate and seuerall meddowes: for although
-an ignorant custome haue drawne some of our Husbandmen, to say and
-beléeue that there is no losse in the sleight and insufficient mowing
-of priuate meddowes, because say they, what I loose in the Barne,
-my Cattell findes on the ground, yet they are much deceiued in that
-opinion, for what they so leaue on the ground halfe cut halfe vncut, is
-no good foode, neither pleasant nor sauorie, but dry, hard, and bitter,
-and indéede no better then sower fogge, which may fill, but cannot
-nourish, and who then will be so simple, as not to preferre swéet Hay
-before such vnsauorie grasse? therefore be carefull to mowe your grasse
-euen, and close by the ground, for it will make the fresh grasse spring
-vp<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</span> with more ease, and be much pleasanter in taste.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="How_to_make_Hay">How to make Hay.</span>
-
-<p>Next after the mowing of your meddowes, followeth the making of your
-Hay, which is a labour that must be followed with great care and
-diligence, for it is an old saying, that dearth beginneth at the
-Hay-barne dore, and he that is negligent in that, can hardly be good
-husband in any thing else, then to shew you how you shall make your
-hay, you shall first vnderstand that no one particular forme can stand
-for a generall rule, because Hay must be made according to the nature
-of the grasse, and the soyle where it groweth, some being apt to wither
-and make soone, as that grasse which is finest, and hath in it least
-wéedes, others will be long in making, as that which is full of thicke,
-strong, and sower grasses, many wéedes, bunnes, and such like hard
-stalkes, which are not easily dried, therefore it is the part of euery
-good Husbandman, either by his eye and knowledge to iudge of the nature
-of his grasse, or else to follow the customes of the Country and soyle
-wherein he liueth, but the first, Knowledge, is the better Science.
-But to procéede to my purpose, I will in the natures of two sorts of
-grasse, the one fine, the other course, shew you the generall making of
-all sorts of Hay.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="To_make_fine_Hay">To make fine Hay.</span>
-
-<p>First, then for the making of your fine rich grass into Hay, if it grow
-in great abundance, thicke and close, and so lieth in the swathe, you
-shall haue one with a Pitch-forke to follow the Mowers, and to spread
-and throw the grasse thinne abroad, that the ayre and sunne-beames may
-passe through it: and this is called in most Countries tedding of Hay.
-The next day, after the Sunne hath taken the dewe from the ground, you
-shall turne that which the day before you tedded, and then if you haue
-any more new mowen, you shall ted it also. The next day following,
-as before, when the dewe is from the earth, you shall turne your Hay
-againe, and so letting it lye till the Sunne be at his height, begin
-to stir it againe, at which time if you finde it is reasonably well
-withered, you shal then draw it into windrowes, that is, you shall
-marke which way the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</span> winde standeth, and the same way that it bloweth,
-the same way with Forks &amp; Rakes one after another, gather in the Hay
-into long, great, thicke rowes: then you shall make those windrowes
-into large Cockes, of which the biggest is euer the best, for they will
-defend themselues from raine, if happily any shall fall, whereas the
-little small Cocke lying light together, taketh in the raine like a
-spunge, and so makes the Hay a great deale much worse then otherwise
-it would be; when your Hay is thus set in safe Cocke, you shall let
-it rest a day or two, that it may take a little sweat therein, which
-will make the Hay wondrous pleasant and swéet, then when the Sunne is
-got vp to a pretie height, you shall open those Cockes, and after the
-sunne and winde hath passed through them, you may if the grasse be
-clean &amp; fine of it selfe, without ranke grasse, load it, and carrie
-it either into the Barne, or such other place, as you haue appointed
-for the receit thereof: but if it haue any ranke grasse, which you
-sée vnwithered amongst it, then you shall make it vp againe into safe
-cockes, and so let it rest a day or two more before you leade it away.
-And thus much for the making vp of fine Hay.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="To_make_course_Hay">To make course Hay.</span>
-
-<p>Now for the making of course grasse into Hay, which you must suppose to
-be grasse growing, in colde, moyst, woodie, and barraine grounds, full
-of wéedie, rough, and stumpie hearbage, long in growing, late ere it
-can be gathered, and therefore depriued of much of the Sunnes strength,
-to swéeten and wither it. This grasse as soone as it hath béene mowne
-and tedded, as is before said: the next day you shall make it into
-little grasse Cockes, as bigge as little Moale-hilles, and so hauing
-layne a day or better, then breake them open, and let them receiue the
-sunne and winde, for they will heat and sweat a little in the grasse,
-which make it Hay the sooner &amp; better: then after the Sunne hath spent
-all his power vpon it, you shall make it vp into little Cockes againe,
-putting two of the first Cockes into one, then hauing so layne another
-day, breake them open againe, and giue them the Sunne:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</span> then make them
-vp againe, and put thrée or foure of those Cockes into one, and so let
-them lye another day, then breake them open as before, if the Sunne
-shine faire, and at euening make them vp againe, putting thrée or foure
-of those Cockes into one, and so euery morning after the Sunne is vp
-breake them open, and at euening make them vp againe, till you finde
-that the Hay is sufficiently well dried, and sweateth no more in the
-Cocke: but in the morning when you breake it open it is dry, without
-stemme, smoake, or vapour arising from it, which both your hand and
-eye may perceiue in the first stirring or mouing, and then you may at
-your pleasure leade it home, and house or stacke it as you shall haue
-occasion.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Vse_of_Hay_for_cattell">Vse of Hay for cattell to breed or labour with.</span>
-
-<p>Now for the vse of Hay, it is two-folde, that is, either for the
-maintainance of bréeding Cattell, or Cattell for labour, or else for
-the féeding of Cattell for the Market, or for slaughter: for the
-maintainance of bréeding Cattell, or the Cattell which are imployed in
-your Plough or other labours, whether it be draught or trauell, you
-shall make choise of the swéet, and well-dried Hay, which is of fresh
-and gréene colour, well withered, sound, and perfect Hay, though it be
-long, loggie, and not excéeding much swéet, it matters not; for being
-well Inned and dried, it will serue sufficiently for those purposes:
-and with this Hay to mingle sometimes Wheat-straw, Rye-straw, Barly,
-or Oate-straw will not be amisse for heilding, or bréede Cattell: but
-for worke-beasts, except necessitie constraine, let them haue Hay
-simple of it selfe, during the busie time of their worke, but when
-they rest, you may vse your discretion. For the times of giuing Hay
-or foddering to such Cattell as are in the house, the best is in the
-morning before they goe to labour, in the euening when they come from
-labour, presently after their drinke, and at night when you goe to bed.
-But for those Cattell which goe abroad, as Shéepe, heilding Beasts, and
-such like, to fodder them morning and euening, is out and out fully
-sufficient.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</span></p>
-
-<p>Now for the vse of Hay for fat cattell, you shall make choyse of the
-fruitfullest, swéetest, finest, and shortest Hay you haue, being full
-of flowers, pleasant and odoriferous to smell on: and although this
-Hay be mixt with some roughnesse, yet it is not the worse, for though
-your fat beast make thereof great orts, yet is the losse not great,
-for those orts may be giuen to other heilding and hungrie cattell,
-which will eate them with great eagernesse. This Hay would in the first
-gathering not be withered too sore but so stackt-vp with a little
-hartie gréennesse that it may a little mow-burne, and alter the colour
-to a Redish brounnesse, but by no meanes so moyst that it may mould,
-rot, or putrifie, for that is fulsome and bade, but onely alter the
-colour, and therby make the smell swéeter and stronger. This Hay will
-entice a beast to eate, and will strengthen and inable his stomacke,
-and withall will bréed in him such a drought or thirst, that hardly any
-water will quench him, and the Grazier takes it euer for an infallible
-signe, that when his beast drinkes much he féeds fast and his tallow
-wonderfully increaseth. For the ordinarie times of foddring your fat
-cattell, if they be in the stall, and as we say, tyed vp by the head,
-the best is in the morning before and after water, at noone; in the
-euening before &amp; after water, and late in the night, when you goe
-to bed, but if they féede abroad, and take the benefit of Fogge and
-after-grasse, then to fodder them Morning, Euening, and high-noone is
-fully sufficient.</p>
-
-<p>Here I could speake of Pease-féeding of Shéep, Swine, and other cattel,
-eyther at the Trough, Reeke, Stacke, or such like, the seuerall
-manner of cratches, fashions of stals, and many other necessary rules
-appertaining to this mysterie; but I am against my will confined,
-and therefore must referre it to some other occasion, being loath to
-spoyle an excellent discourse, with a tale halfe tould, and imperfectly
-spoken: And thus much therefore of Meddowes, and these seuerall vses.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Chap_2_VIII"><span class="smcap">Chap.</span> VIII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2"><i>A new method for the husbandly curing of all manner of Cattels
-diseases.</i></p>
-
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_reason_for_this_Chapter">The reason for this Chapter.</span>
-
-<div>
-<img class="drop-cap2" src="images/i112.png" alt="">
-</div>
-<p class="noindent drop-cap2">Of this Theame I haue written a whole (or as some will
-suppose many) Histories, yet doubtlesse nothing too much, the cause
-is so necessary and commodious: yet this I must let euery Reader
-vnderstand, that what I haue herein formerly done, I did for a general
-and vncontrollable satisfaction to the whole Kingdome, both the learned
-and vnlearned, and as well to satisfie the nicest and most curious
-opinion, as the simple and playne dealing creature: whence it came that
-I waded Artfully and profoundly into the vttermost secrets of this
-knowledge, leauing nothing vnsearcht, or vnset downe, that might any
-way tend to the satisfaction of any iudiciall Reader, and therefore
-tooke liberty to make a large progresse, without sparing any paynes,
-to make my worke absolutely most perfect. But now, hauing onely to
-doe with our honest playne English Husbandman, who eyther cannot much
-read, or else hath little leasure to read, at most but a little memorie
-to bestow vpon his readings; I haue here for his ease both of memory,
-readings, and other verations, drawne him such a method for the curing
-of all the diseases in cattell, as was neuer yet found out by any man
-or Authour whatsoeuer: and is worthy to be preserued to all posterities
-for euer and euer.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Horses_diseases_to_be_cured">Horses diseases to be cured with twelue Medicines.</span>
-
-<p>To beginne then first with the Horse, which is the Husbandmans
-principallest creature, you shal vnderstand that he hath, of my
-knowledge, one hundred and odde diseases or infirmities, besides other
-hurts and blemishes, for all which, I haue seuerally shewed seuerall
-cures, as may appeare by the volumes which are much too great for any<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</span>
-Husbandman to carry in his braynes, and therefore for his ease I haue
-drawne all those hundred and odde sicknesses or sorrances, into twelue,
-and will assure euery Husbandman that with these twelue medicines
-following, hée shall perfectly cure all the diseases in a Horse,
-whatsoeuer.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_inward_sicknesse">Of inward sicknesse.</span>
-
-
-<p>To procéede then in an orderly manner to the cures: Euery husbandman
-must know that all diseases in a horse are inward or outward: inward
-as offending the vitall parts, or outward as troubling the members:
-to speake then first of inward sicknesse, I will diuide so into two
-branches, that is, eyther it offends the heart, or the brayne: If it
-offend the heart, we call them, Feauers, Yellowes, <i>Anticor</i>,
-consumption of lungs, Liuer, Splene, Gall or other intrals, Wormes,
-Fluxes, Belly-bound, and diuers other of like nature: <span class="sidenote" id="The_first_Medicine">The first Medicine.</span>
-For any or all
-which, you shall first let your Horse bloud in the neck-veine, and
-then giue him, during his sicknesse, to drinke, eyther in swéete
-Wine or strong Ale or Béere, if Wine a pinte, if Ale or Béere a
-quart, two spoonefull of the powder called <i>Diapente</i>, made of
-<i>Aristolochia</i> root, <i>Gentiana</i>, <i>Myrrhe</i>, <i>Eboni</i>
-and <i>Bachi lauri</i>, of each equall quantitie, and let it be well
-brewed together, and doe thus euery Morning fasting, and let the Horse
-fast two houres after it.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_second_Medicine">The second Medicine.</span>
-
-<p>If it offend the brayne we call them Appoplexies, Palsies, Staggers,
-Colds, Glaunder, Coughes, mourning of the chyne, Migrims, dizzinesse,
-and a world of such like: and the cure is to take <i>Assafeteda</i>,
-and dissoluing it in Vinegar dip hurds therein, and stop it hard into
-his eares for two Mornings together after you haue taken from him great
-store of bloud at his necke-veine, and then giue him to drinke, during
-his sicknesse, euery Morning a quart of Milke, wherein the white and
-rough cankerrous Mosse of an old Oake pale hath béene sodden till the
-Milke grow thicke, then strayned &amp; so giuen luke warme, and if you
-finde that no heauinesse or dizzinesse appeare in his head, then you
-may forbeare the bloud-letting, and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</span> <i>Assafeteda</i>, but not
-otherwise, in any case; and thus assuredly these two medicines alreadie
-declared will cure all the inward diseases in a Horse, whatsoeuer.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Of_outward_diseases">Of outward diseases.</span>
-
-
-<p>Now for outward diseases, they are eyther naturall or accidentall: If
-they be naturall, they eyther grow from the generation, or bréede, from
-whence a Horse is descended, or else from corruption of foode, or other
-vnwholesome kéeping; If they grow from the bréede and generation of
-the Horse, we call them the Viues, Wens, Knots, or Swellings about the
-throat: <span class="sidenote" id="The_third_medicine">The third medicine.</span>
-and for the cure thereof, take a peny-worth of Pepper, beaten
-into powder; a spoonefull of swines-grease, the iuyce of one handfull
-of Rew, two spoonefuls of Vineger, and mixe them together, and put this
-equally into both the Horses eares, and so tye them vp and shake the
-eares, that the medicine may sinke downe, and take good store of bloud
-from the Horses neck-veine, and temple veines, and vse this medicine
-two or thrée mornings together.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_fourth_Medicine">The fourth Medicine.</span>
-
-<p>If they procéede from corruption of foode, or any other vnwholesome
-kéeping which corrupteth the bloud, then we call them Impostumations,
-Byles, Botches, Fistulaes, Polemill, and such like: and the cure is, to
-take the loame of an old mudde wall, strawes and all, but let there be
-no Lime amongst it, and boyle this loame with strong Vineger, till it
-be like a Pultus, and as hot as the Horse can abide it, apply it to the
-sore place, and it will not onely draw it to a head, and breake it, but
-also draw it, search it, and heale it.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_fift_Medicine">The fift Medicine.</span>
-
-<p>There be also other diseases which procéed from naughtie foode, and
-the corruption of blood, and we call them Farcies, Scabs, Mangie,
-Scratches, Paynes, Mallanders, Sellanders, and all of such like nature,
-and the cure is first to slit the hard knots, or rubbe off the scurfe,
-and make the sore places raw: then take yellow <i>Arsnicke</i> beaten
-to powder, and mixe it well with fresh grease, and then therewith
-annoynt the sore places all ouer, which done, tye vp the Horses head,
-so as he may not knappe or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</span> bite himselfe, and so let him stand an
-houre or two: then take strong old Pisse warmde, and therewith bathe
-and wash the Horse all ouer, and so put him to his meat: and in this
-manner dresse the Horse or beast thrée or foure mornings, and it will
-be sufficient; onely you must not fayle to take from him good store of
-bloud at his necke vaine.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_sixt_Medicine">The sixt Medicine.</span>
-
-<p>Now if his diseases procéed from accidentall causes, as from wounds,
-Bruises, Straynes, Galles, hurts in the Eyes, excretions, or broken
-bones, then you shall to euery one of these take these seueral
-medicines which follow: as first, if they be wounds, in what sort
-soeuer taken or receiued, you shall take <i>Turpentine</i>, Waxe, and
-hogs-grease, of each a like quantity, and melting them together into a
-salue, dresse the wound therewith, and it will heale it, how great or
-little soeuer.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_seuenth_Medicine">The seuenth Medicine.</span>
-
-<p>If they be bruises, whether gotten by stroake, naughtie Saddles, or
-other rushes, from whence procéedeth many times old, putrified &amp; most
-ranckorous vlcers, you shall first if the tumor be onely swelled and
-not broken, apply vnto it the fourth medicine of Loame and Vingar, but
-if it be an open old ranckorous vlcer, you shall take Hogs-grease,
-Turpentine, Waxe, and Verdigrease, of each a like quantitie, and being
-well mixt, and incorporated together, dresse the sore therewith, till
-it be whole, for this medicine will abate and kéepe downe any spungie
-or naughtie dead flesh which arises and kéepes the sore from healing,
-and may therefore alwayes be vsed in such like cases, whether the sore
-be new or old.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_eight_Medicines">The eight Medicines.</span>
-
-<p>If they be straynes eyther of ioynts or sinewes in what part or member
-soeuer it be, old or new, take strong Vinegar, Patch-grease, and
-Wheat-branne, and boyle them together till they be thick like a Pultus,
-and then apply it very hot to the strayne, Morning and Euening, and it
-is a most certayne cure, and will kéepe the member from growing foule,
-knotted, or gourded, and will also take away all swellings or paynes of
-the limbes whatsoeuer.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</span></p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_ninth_Medicine">The ninth Medicine.</span>
-
-<p>If they be Galles, of what kinde or nature soeuer, whether on the
-backe, limbes, or any other outward part of the bodie, you shal take
-first fresh Butter scalding hot, and with it first bathe and wash the
-sore, then take thicke Creame, &amp; mixing it with the Soote of a Chimney
-till it be thicke, like a salue, with the same annoynt the sore place
-Morning and Euening, and it will cure it without any feare of dead
-flesh: if you doe strow vpon the sore the powder of Rossen it will be
-good also.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_tenth_Medicine">The tenth Medicine.</span>
-
-<p>If they be any hurts in the eyes, as strokes, inflamations,
-Pinne-webbe, Canker, or any other mischiefe whatsoeuer, you shall then
-take true ground-Iuie, which otherwise is called of some Ale-hoofe, and
-beating a good handfull thereof in a morter, with a spoonefull or two
-of white Rosewater, or the water of Eye-bright, then strain it through
-a cleane wet cloath, and with that water dresse the sore eye Morning
-and Euening: or if you can conueniently thrée or foure times a day,
-for the oftner is the better, and it will without all fayle cure any
-sore eye in the world whatsoeuer, eyther of man or beast, or any other
-creature.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_eleuenth_Medicine">The eleuenth Medicine.</span>
-
-<p>If they be excretions of bones, as Splents, Spauens, Curbs, Ringbones,
-or such like, in what part or member soeuer they be, you shall then
-take white <i>Arsnicke</i>, beaten or ground to fine powder, and
-making a little slit vpon the head of the excretion, the length of a
-Barly corne, or very little more, yet in any waies downe déepe to the
-excretion, &amp; then with the poynt of your knife put the <i>Arsnicke</i>
-vpon the excretion, and so let the Horse stand with his head tied vp
-for two houres at least, for in that time the greatest anguish will
-be gone, and then put him vnto his meate, and in thrée or foure dayes
-after the excretion will fall away of it selfe; and then with a little
-swéet Butter you may cure the sore, which will not be great.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="The_twelfth_Medicine">The twelfth Medicine.</span>
-
-<p>If they be broken bones, or bones out of ioynt, you shall after you
-haue placed them in their due place, first annoynt them with the Oyle
-of Mallowes, or for want of it with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</span> warme Patch-grease, and then clap
-about them a plaster made of Pitch, Rossen, and Masticke, and so with
-soft and flat splents, so splent the member, as it may not moue, and
-so let it rest nine dayes ere you dresse it againe, and in any case
-so sling the Horse or Beast that he may not during that time, put his
-member to the ground, which a little diligence and payne will easily
-doe.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Diseases_in_the_feete">Diseases in the feete.</span>
-
-<p>If your Horse haue any infirmitie in his hooues as quitter-bone,
-ouer-reach, pricke, crowne scabbe, rotten frush, or any such vlcerous
-disease, you shall first lay it open, and then heale it with the
-seuenth Medicine. But if it be foundring, fretteshing, or such like,
-then you shall first pare all his hooues cleane ouer, so thinne that
-you may discerne the quicke all ouer, then let him bloud at the toes,
-and take great store of bloud from him, but in any case cut not the
-veine in sunder: then take the sixt medicine and, being boyling hot
-(after hollow shoes haue béene tackt on his féete) with Flaxe hurds
-dipt therein, stoppe all the soales of his féete vp hard, and thus
-doe twice in sixe dayes, and it will bring his féete to their full
-perfection againe, without any great losse or trouble.</p>
-
-<span class="sidenote" id="Diseases_in_the_priuie_parts">Diseases in the priuie parts, or for stifling.</span>
-
-<p>As for the common infirmities in a Horses priuy parts, which are
-swellings, inflammations, incording, &amp; such like, you shall but only
-swimme your horse in cold water Morning and Euening, and it is a
-present helpe, both for them, or the stifling of a horse in his hinder
-ioynt: Thus you sée these twelue medicines will sufficiently cure all
-the diseases in Horse or Beast whatsoeuer, which who so will not carry
-in his memory, he is worthy now and then to be punisht for his sloath,
-and sometimes to suffer losse, which may make him more industrious to
-studie for his owne good and profit. And thus much for the cure of
-diseases.</p>
-
-<p class="center p2"><i>FINIS.</i></p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ENGLISH HUSBANDMAN (THE SECOND BOOKE) ***</div>
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