Part
1 1 | sponge some slender leaves. Oil, and all things of an emollient
2 1 | nearly well. Neither does oil agree with wounds which
3 1 | do medicines formed with oil or suet, more especially
4 1 | that we are to smear with oil these sores that require
5 4 | being mixed with a little oil, it is to be applied as
6 4 | cloth wetted in wine and oil; and when you wish to produce
7 5 | moistening it with the lees of oil, boil, and pour in the juice
8 6 | white); then mix the lees of oil and raw tar-water, and use
9 8 | leaf of horehound, with oil. Another:-The internal fatty
10 9 | it is to be diluted with oil of juniper. When enough
11 11| sifted, and mixed with oil the roots of the wild myrtle,
12 11| having pounded this herb in oil bind it on the part, and
13 12| swine’s seam, and a little oil, and a little resin, and
14 12| and squill, and a little oil. The whitest wax, fresh
15 12| grease, or squill and white oil, and a little resin. Wax,
16 12| seam (old and fresh), and oil, and verdigris, and squill
17 12| and stir, and mix a little oil of juniper, and what has
18 12| Old swine’s seam, wax, and oil, the dried shavings of the
19 12| pounded it smooth, pour in oil, and sprinkle the lead with
20 12| spodium, blue chalcitis, oil.~
21 13| wax, and mixed with them oil, frankincense, and the shavings
22 13| the wakerobin in wine and oil, apply a bandage. Another:-
23 13| fresh swine’s seam, spodium, oil, and frankincense are to
24 14| wetted it with wine and oil. And let the scarified part
25 16| which has been smeared with oil. For, although the flow
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