Part
1 1 | sorts of ulcers except with wine, unless the ulcer be situated
2 4 | the mallow pounded with wine, and the leaves of rue,
3 4 | lentil is to be boiled in wine and finely triturated, and,
4 4 | piece of cloth wetted in wine and oil; and when you wish
5 4 | the lentil, and the cress; wine and finely-powdered linseed
6 5 | the fresh honey and sweet wine, in which turpentine resin
7 5 | boiled, boil the resin in the wine until it become hard like
8 5 | the resin and pour off the wine: there should be the greatest
9 5 | unripe grape, next of the wine, and third of the honey
10 5 | small quantity of the same wine poured on it; and then the
11 5 | itself, stirring it in the wine; and when it appears to
12 5 | the finest honey, white wine, in which the shavings of
13 5 | the greatest proportion of wine, next of honey, and least
14 5 | least of the gall. Another:-Wine, a little cedar honey, of
15 5 | quantity, to be boiled with wine. Another:-Of frankincense
16 5 | dark-colored, fragrant wine, which is gradually poured
17 5 | the holmoak in sweet white wine; and when it appears to
18 5 | poured off two parts of the wine, and of the lees of wine
19 5 | wine, and of the lees of wine as free of water as possible
20 5 | withstanding, instead of the wine, use the strongest white
21 5 | having added a third part of wine, boil until it attain the
22 6 | do this with or without wine, and along with honey. Another:-
23 6 | vinegar, or for sponging with wine.~
24 7 | equal proportions, with wine like the former. And there
25 9 | this herb is applied with wine, or the substance which
26 9 | ilex, when pounded with wine, is to be applied. Another:-
27 13| and having poured in white wine, boil upon a gentle fire,
28 13| leaves of the wakerobin in wine and oil, apply a bandage.
29 13| of asphodel be pounded in wine and triturated, and rubbed
30 14| on, having wetted it with wine and oil. And let the scarified
31 16| compress, and wetted it with wine, apply above it clean wool
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