Comment | I-AGE.
General principles for the management of the
horse in the stable.............................. 1
Proem—Ventilation—Atmospheric Air— Respiration—
Cleanliness—Light.
CHAPTER II.
General rules for obtaining condition ............ 13
Order and Regularity—Exercise—Physicking—Functions
of the Skin—Clipping and Singeing—Exercise ought to he
made agreeable—Good temper necessary—Grooming—
Ill-tempered men about horses—Lord Erskine's opinion—
Errors in grooming—Value of good-tempered grooms.
CHAPTER III.
Diet, and the objects and laws of nutrition........ 30
Errors of trainers—Horse's stomach—Over-feeding, &c.
—Waste of particles in nature—Organs of nutrition—
Hunger and thirst modified by certain conditions, as Age,
Exercise, Clothing—Gastric juice, in proportion to the
quantity of food required—Error of a change of diet sud-
denly—Digestion—Results of digestion—Articles of food.Necessity for drink................................ 43
Loss of fluids by secretions and excretions—Thirst the
most intolerable of all miseries—Water, a strong digestive
and a prolonger of life—Solid and dry food require plentiful
dilution—Water before meals—Want of water productive of
diseases—Hard and soft water—Circulating fluids of the
body large and require dilution—Fluids absorbed, and not
subject to digestion.
CHAPTER V.
Diseases .......................................... 48
Necessity for a knowledge of them—Costiveness—Di-
rections for physicking, and best forms for aperient medi-
cine—Mode of administering a ball. Inflammation, local
and general—The type of most diseases. Strangles—
Treatment—Plaister for the throat—Embrocation for the
throat—Medicines, &c.
CHAPTER VI.
Diseases arising from, or affecting the brain and
its immediate neighbourhood .................... 60
Megrims—Nature and treatment—Form for a diuretic
ball. Apoplexy, like Megrims, but attended with more
danger—Treatment Stomach staggers arise from bad
management. Inflammation of the brain, or mad
staggers, of two kinds, generally terminates in death.
Epilepsy, or Fits, proceeding from two distinct sources.
Madness—treatment. Diseases of the eye—Inflamma-
tion of the haw—Lotions. Simple inflammation of
the eye—Cure. Diseases of the mouth—Lampas.
Diseases of the throat—Roaring.
Diseases affecting the body........................ 66
Catarrh, or common cold—Forms for cough balls.
Chronic cough — Treatment — Cough balls—Drench.
Broken wind and thick wind—Treatment. Wheez-
ing, Piping, Whistling, High-blowers, varieties of
diseased organs of respiration. Influenza, or dis-
temper— An epidemic — Different forms — Treatment.
Inflammation of the lungs — Causes—Symptoms—
Treatment. Pleurisy—Treatment. Bronchitis—Treat-
ment, &e. Diseases of the Intestines—Colic—Symp-
toms—Treatment—Antispasmodic draught. Inflammation
of the bowels—Causes. Inflammation from superpurgation—
Treatment. Diseases of the kidneys—Inflammation of
the kidneys—-Treatment. Profuse staling—Causes. In-
flammation of the bladder—Treatment—Sedative ball.
CHAPTER VIII.
Diseases of the lymphatics........................ 76
Farcy—Symptoms. Glanders—Symptoms.
CHAPTER IX.
Diseases, Accidents, &c, affecting the fore quarters .... 78
The Shoulder—Lameness how detected there. Lame-
ness in the leg—Splints—Treatment—Blister—Stimulant
and absorbing ointment. Windgalls—Liniment. Broken
knees—Treatment—Lotion for a poultice—stimulant oint-
ment—stimulant lotion to increase the growth of hair.
Sprains—Treatment—Forms of cold lotions—mode of
employing them—Stimulant lotions—Ointment—Opodel-
doc. Thrush—Ointment. Stopping for the feet—Pointing
the foot in the stable—Poultice. Bruised feet, Overreach—
Tincture of arnica—Hoof ointment—Friar's balsam—
Tincture for wounds. Brittle hoofs, Sand-crack—Treatment. Corns—Cure. Pricked or gravelled—Treatment.
Shoeing—Faults of the smith—The Life-guard shoe to
nrevent slipping on wood pavement.
CHAPTER X.
Diseases, Accidents, &c., affecting the hind quarters.... 94
Curbs—Treatment. Capped hocks—Causes. Thorough-
pins—Causes. Sprains of back sinews—Treatment. Bog
spavin — Nature — Treatment. Bone spavin — Blister.
Cracked heels—Cure. Swelled legs—Causes—Alterative
powder—Alterative balls—Tonic ball.
CHAPTER XI.
Diseases of the skin................................ 102
Hidebound—Causes. Surfeit—Treatment. Warbles—
Lotion. Sitfasts—Cure.
CHAPTER XII.
Remarks on hunters .............................. 104
Bad effects of bandaging the legs—Used joints—their
treatment—Sprains—Thickening—Ointment for its remo-
val. Exhaustion from hunting—Blood-letting. Throwing
a shoe—Management of the foot. Management of the
hunter at the close of the season—Turning out—The feet—
Saw-dust to stand in—Blistering—Mode of applying it—
Ointments—Healing ointments. Concluding remarks—
The arrangement of the work—Arguments based on prin-
ciples— Danger of using unknown remedies—Mistakes
made in the management of horses.- | Translate
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