¶ 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 eodem | 21 |
| [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 eodem | 37 |
| [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. eodem | 39 |
| [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. eodem | 46 |
| [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. eodem | 48 |
| [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. eodem | 101 |
| [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. eodem | 105 |
| [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. eodem | 110 |
| [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.