¶ The table.

PAGE
[1.]First wherby husbande-men do lyue. fo. i.[19]9
[2.]Of dyuers maner of plowes. fol. eod.9
[3.]To knowe the names of all the partes of the ploughe. fol. ii.10
[4.]The temprynge of plowes. fo. iii.12
[5.]¶ The necessary thynges that belonge to a plowe, carte, or wayne. fol. iiii.14
[6.]¶ Whether is better, a plowe of oxen or a plowe of horses. fol. v.15
[7.]¶ The dylygence and the attendaunce that a husbande shulde gyue to his warke, in maner of an other prologue, and a specyall grounde of all this treatyse. fol. vi.16
[8.]¶ Howe a manne shulde plowe all maner of landes all tymes of the yere. fo. vii.17
[9.]To plowe for pees and beanes. fol. viii.18
[10.]Howe to sowe bothe pees and beanes. fol. viii.18
[11.]Sede of Discrecyon. fol. ix.20
[12.]Howe all maner of corne shulde be sowen. folio eodem21
[13.]To sowe barley. fol. x.22
[14.]To sowe otes. fol. xi.23
[15.]To harowe all maner of cornes. fol. xii.24
[16.]To falowe. fol. xiii.25
[17.]To carry out donge or mucke, and to sprede it. fol. xiiii.27
[18.]To set out the shepe-folde. fol. xv.28
[19.]To cary wode and other necessaries. fol. xvi.29
[20.]To knowe dyuers maner of wedes. fol. eod.29
[21.]To wede corne. fol. xvii.31
[22.]The fyrste sturrynge: and (23) to mowe grasse. foli. xviii.32
[24.]How forkes and rakes shuld be made. fo. xix.33
[25.]To tedde and make hey. fol. eod.33
[26.]Howe rye shulde be shorne. fol. xx.35
[27.]Howe to shere whete. fol. xxi.35
[28.]To mowe or shere barley and otes. fol. eod.36
[29.]To repe or mowe pees and beanes. fol. xxii.36
[30.]Howe all maner of corne shoulde be tythed. folio eodem37
[31.]Howe all maner of corne shoulde be couered. fol. xxiii.38
[32.]To lode corne and mowe it. fol. eod.38
[33.]The seconde sturrynge. fo. xxiiii.39
[34.]To sowe whete and rye. fol. eodem39
[35.]To thresshe and wynowe corne. fol. xxv.41
[36.]To seuer beanes, pees, and fetches. fol. eod.41
[37.]Of shepe, and what tyme of the yere the rammes shulde be put to the ewes. fol. xxvi.42
[38.]To make a ewe to loue her lambe. fol. xxvii.43
[39.]What tyme lambes shulde be wayned. fo. eod.44
[40.]To drawe shepe and seuer them in dyuerse partes. fol. xxviii.44
[41.]To belte shepe. fol. xxix.45
[42.]To grece shepe. fol. eod.46
[43.]To medle terre. fol. eodem46
[44.]To make brome salue. fol. eod.46
[45.]If a shepe haue mathes. fol. xxx.47
[46.]Blyndenes of shepe and other dyseases, and remedyes therfore. fo. eod.47
[47.]The worme in a shepes fote, and helpe therfore. fol. xxxi.48
[48.]The bloudde, and remedye if he comme betyme. fol. eodem48
[49.]The pockes, and remedy therfore. fol. eod.49
[50.]The wode euyl, and remedy therfore. fol. xxxii.49
[51.]To washe shepe. fol. eod.49
[52.]To shere shepe. fol. eod.50
[53.]To drawe and seuer the bad shepe frome the good. fol. eod.50
[54.]What thynge rotteth shepe. fol. xxxiii.50
[55.]To knowe a rotten shepe dyuerse maner ways, wherof some of them wyll not fayle. fol. xxxiiii.51
[56.]To by leane cattell. fol. eod.52
[57.]To bye fatte cattell. fol. xxxv.53
[58.]Dyuerse sickenesses of cattell, and remedies therfore, and fyrste of murren. fol. eod.53
[59.]Long sought, and remedy therfore. fo. xxxvi.54
[60.]Dewbolue,[20] and the harde remedye therfore. fol. eod.55
[61.]Ryson vppon, and the remedye therfore. fol. xxxvii.55
[62.]The turne, and remedy therfore. fol. eod.56
[63.]The warribred, & remedy therfore. fol. xxxviii.56
[64.]The foule, and remedy therfore. fol. eod.57
[65.]The goute without remedy. fol. eod.57
[66.]To rere calues. fol. eod.57
[67.]To gelde calues. fol. xxxix.58
[68.]Horses and mares to drawe. fol. xl.59
[69.]¶ The losse of a lambe, a calfe, or a foole. fol. xli.61
[70.]What cattell shulde go together in oone pasture. fol. xlii.62
[71.]The properties of horses. fol. xliii.63
[72.]The two propertyes that a horse hath of a man. fol. eod.63
[73.]The ii. propertyes of a bauson. fol. eod.64
[74.]The iiii. properties of a lyon. fol. eod.64
[75.]The ix. properties of an oxe. fol. xliiii.64
[76.]The ix. properties of an hare. fol. eod.64
[77.]The ix. properties of a foxe. fol. eod.64
[78.]The ix. properties of an asse. fol. eod.65
[79.]The x. properties of a woman. fol. eod.65
[80.]The diseases and soraunce of horses. fol. xlv.65
[81.]The lampas. fol. eod.65
[82.]The barbes. fo. eod.66
[83.]Mournynge on the tonge. fol. eod.66
[84.]Pursye. fo. eod.66
[85.]Broken wynded. fol. eod.66
[86.]Glaunders. fo. eod.66
[87.]Mournynge on the chynne. fol. eod.66
[88.]Stranguelyon. fol. eod.67
[89.]The hawe. fol. eod.67
[90.]Blyndnesse. fol. xlvi.67
[91.]Uyues. fol. eod.67
[92.]The cordes. fol. eod.67
[93.]¶ The farcyon. fol. eod.67
[94.]¶ A malander. fol. eod.68
[95.]¶ A salander. fol. eod.68
[96.]¶ A serewe. fol. eod.68
[97.]¶ A splent. fo. eod.68
[98.]¶ A ryngebone. fol. xlvii.69
[99.]¶ Wyndgall. fol. eod.69
[100.]¶ Morfounde. fol. eod.69
[101.]¶ The coltes euyll. fol. eod.69
[102.]¶ The bottes. fo. eod.70
[103.]¶ The wormes. fol. eod.70
[104.]¶ Affrayd. fo. eod.70
[105.]¶ Nauylgall. fo. eod.70
[106.]¶ A spauen. fol. eod.70
[107.]¶ A curbe. fol. eod.71
[108.]¶ The strynge-halte. fol. eod.71
[109.]¶ Enterfyre. fo. eod.71
[110.]¶ Myllettes. fol. eod.71
[111.]¶ The paynes. fol. eod.71
[112.]¶ Cratches. fol. eod.72
[113.]¶ Attaynt. fol. xlix.72
[114.]¶ Grauelynge. fol. eod.72
[115.]¶ Acloyd. fol. eod.72
[116.]¶ The scabbe. fol. eod.72
[117.]¶ Lowsy. fol. eod.72
[118.]¶ Wartes. fol. eod.73
[119.]¶ The sayenge of the frenche man. fo. eod.73
[120.]¶ The dyuersitie bytwene a horse mayster, a corser, and a horse leche. fol. l.74
[121.]¶ Of swyne. fo. eod.74
[122.]¶ Of bees. fol. li.75
[123.]¶ How to kepe beastes & other catel. fol. lii.76
[124.]¶ To get settes and set them. fol. liii.78
[125.]¶ To make a dyche. fol. liiii.79
[126.]¶ To make a hedge. fol. eod.79
[127.]¶ To plasshe and pleche a hedge. fol. eod.80
[128.]¶ To mende a hye waye. fo. lv.81
[129.]¶ To remoue and sette trees. fo. lvi.82
[130.]¶ Trees to be sette without rootes and growe. fol. lvii.83
[131.]¶ To fell woode for houssholde or to sell. fol. eodem.83
[132.]¶ To shrede, lop, or crop trees. fol. lviii.84
[133.]Howe a man shoulde shrede loppe or croppe trees. fol. eod.85
[134.]To sell woode or tymbre. fol. lix.85
[135.]To kepe sprynge woode. fo. lx.86
[136.]Necessary thynges belongynge to graffynge. fol. eod.87
[137.]What fruyte shulde be first graffed. fol. lxi.88
[138.]Howe to graffe. fol. eod.88
[139.]To graffe bytwene the barke and the tree. fol. lxii.89
[140.]To nourysshe all maner of stone fruyte and nuttes. fol. lxiii.90
[141.]A shorte information for a yonge gentyllman that entendeth to thryue. fol. eod.90
[142.]A lesson made in Englysshe verses, that a gentylmans seruaunte shall forget none of his gere in his inne behynde hym. fo. lxv.93
[143.]A prologe for the wyues occupation. fo. eod.93
[144.]A lesson for the wyfe. fol. eod.94
[145.]What thynges the wyfe of ryghte is bounde to do. fol. lxvi.94
[146.]What warkes the wyfe oughte to doo generally. fo. eod.95
[147.]To kepe measure in spendynge. fo. lxvii.98
[148.]To eate within thy tedure. fo. lxviii.99
[149.]A shorte lesson vnto the husbande. fol. lxix.101
[150.]Howe menne of hye degree do kepe measure. fol. eodem101
[151.]Prodygalytie in outragyous and costelye araye. fol. lxx.102
[152.]Of delycyous meates and drynkes. fol. eod.103
[153.]Of outragious playe and game. fo. lxxi.104
[154.]A prologue of the thyrde sayinge of the philosopher. fo. lxxii.105
[155.]A dyuersytie bytwene predycation and doctryne. fol. eodem105
[156.]What is rychesse. fo. lxxiii.106
[157.]What is the propertie of a rych man. fo. lxxiiii.108
[158.]What ioyes & pleasures are in heuen. fo. lxxv.109
[159.]What thynge pleaseth god most. fol. lxxvi.109
[160.]What be goddes commaundementes. fo. eod.110
[161.]Howe a man shulde loue god and please hym. fol. eodem110
[162.]Howe a man shoulde loue his neyghbour. fol. lxxvii.111
[163.]Of prayer that pleaseth god verye moche. folio lxxviii.112
[164.]What thynge letteth prayer. fol. eod.112
[165.]Howe a man shulde praye. fo. lxxix.113
[166.]A mean to put away ydle thoughtes in prayenge. fol. lxxx.115
[167.]A meane to auoyde temptation. fol. lxxxi.116
[168.]Almes-dedes pleaseth god moche. fo. lxxxii.118
[169.]The fyrst maner of almes dede. fo. lxxxiii.119
[170.]The ii. maner of almes dede. fo. lxxxiiii.120
[171.]The iii. maner of almes dede. fol. lxxxv.121
[172.]What is the greattest offence that a man maye doo and offende god in. fo. lxxxvi.122

Thus endeth the table.



The Book of Husbandry

[Fol. 1.]

1. ¶ Here begynneth the boke of husbandry, and fyrste where-by husbande-men do lyue.

Husbandmen live by the plough and by cattle.