Seabrookes caveat: or his warning piece to all his loving country-men, to beware how they meddle with the eyes / [Richard Seabrooke].
- Seabrooke, Richard.
- Date:
- [1620]
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Seabrookes caveat: or his warning piece to all his loving country-men, to beware how they meddle with the eyes / [Richard Seabrooke]. Source: Wellcome Collection.
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![an Englifh fhilling ; apply it to the | wounded eye,and renue itas itdrieth, wg * corrupt or brufed blood, but ali | cleanfeand coole the eye in fuch man- ner, that the cure will be made more fafe and quickly ; or if this cannotbe had, take Parfly and {weetbutter, and | beate and mixe them well together, and fo apply.them to the eye , and it * will worke the fame effeét as the for. mer,whereas to apply any {harper me. dicine, whether water or powder, it ig great ods that you not onely loofe that which is already wounded , but alfo perifh the found one alfo., and{o loofe the benefit, of the moftcomfor. | tableft fence which man enioyeth, If | thisaffwage not the paine, and giue | €afe according to your..expectation, it) then takewhite-bread crummes fine] | idee of the beft new milke, and | Doyle them together till they be thick, then apply it to the eye luke-warme, fo renue it once in fixe or eight ‘ects houres](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b30325638_0029.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


