Fiue hundred pointes of good Husbandrie as well for the Champion, or open countrie, as also for the woodland, or Seuerall, mixed in euerie Month with Huswiferie, ouer and besides the booke of Huswiferie, corrected, better ordered, and newly augmented to a fourth part more, with diuers other lessons, as a diet for the fermer, of the properties of winds, planets, hops, herbes, bees, and approoued remedies for sheepe and cattle, with many other matters both profitable and not vnpleasant for the Reader. Also a table of husbandrie at the beginning of this booke: and another of huswiferie at the end: for the better and easier finding of any matter conteined in the same. Newly set foorth by Thomas Tusser |
1. |
2. |
3. |
4. |
5. |
6. |
7. |
8. |
9. |
10. |
11. |
12. |
13. |
14. |
14. |
39. |
15. |
16. |
42. |
17. |
18. |
25. |
19. |
20. |
24. |
21. |
22. |
23. |
24. |
25. |
26. |
27. |
28. |
29. |
30. |
31. |
52. |
32. |
33. |
22. |
34. |
35. |
28. |
36. |
37. |
38. |
39. |
35. |
40. |
41. |
42. |
43. |
44. |
45. |
46. |
47. |
48. |
49. |
50. |
51. |
52. |
53. |
54. |
55. |
56. |
Fiue hundred pointes of good Husbandrie | ||
9
Thresh seed, and to fanning, September doth crie,get plough to the field, and be sowing of rie:
To harrow the rydgis, er euer ye strike,
is one peece of husbandrie, Suffolk doth like.
10
Sowe tunely thy whitewheat, sowe rie in the dust,let seede haue his longing, let soile haue hir lust:
Let rie be partaker of Mihelmas spring,
to beare out the hardnes that winter doth bring.
11
Some mixeth to miller, the rie with the wheat,Temmes lofe, on his table, to haue for to eate:
But sowe it not mixed, to growe so on land,
least rie tarie wheat, till it shed as it stand.
12
If soile doe desire, to haue rie with the wheat,by growing togither, for safetie more great:
Let white wheat be ton, be it deere, be it cheape,
the sooner to ripe, for the sickle to reape.
13
Though beanes be in sowing, but scattered in,yet wheat, rie, and peason, I loue not too thin:
Sowe barlie and dredge, with a plentifull hand,
least weede, steed of seede, ouer groweth thy land.
14
No sooner a sowing, but out by and by,with mother or boy, that Alarum can cry:
{Now} let them be armed, with sling or with bowe,
to skare away piggen, the rooke and the crowe.
15
Seede sowen, draw a forrough, the water to draine,and dike vp such ends, as in harmes doe remaine:
[illeg.] driuing of cattell, or rouing that waie,
which being preuented, ye hinder their praie.
[17]
16
Saint Mihel doth bid thee, amend the marsh wal,the brecke and the crab hole, the foreland and al:
One noble in season, bestowed theron,
may saue thee a hundred, er winter be gon.
17
Now geld with the gelder, the ram and the bul,sew ponds amend dammes, and sel webster thy wul:
Out fruit go and gather, but not in the deaw,
with crab and the wal nut, for feare of a shreaw.
18
The Moone in the wane, gather fruit for to last,but winter fruit gather, when Mihel is past:
Though michers that loue not to buy nor to craue,
make some gather sooner, else few for to haue.
19
Fruit gathred too timely, wil taste of the wood,wil shrink and be bitter, and seldome prooue good:
So fruit that is shaken, or beat off a tree,
with brusing in falling, soone faultie wil bee.
20
Now burne vp the bees, that ye mind for to driue,at Midsomer driue them, and saue them aliue:
Place hiue in good ayer, set southly and warme,
and take in due season, wax, honie, and swarme.
21
Set hiue on a plank, (not too low by the ground)where herbe with the flowers, may compas it round
And boordes to defend it, from north and north east,
from showers and rubbish, from vermin and beast.
22
At Mihelmas safely, go stie vp thy Bore,least straying abrode, ye doo see him no more:
The sooner the better for Halontide nie,
and better he brawneth, if hard he doo lie.
23
Shift bore (for il aire) as best ye do thinke,and twise a day giue him, fresh vittle and drinke:
And diligent Cislye, my dayrie good wench,
make cleanly his cabben, for measling and stench.
18
24
Now pluck vp thy hempe, and go beat out the seed,and afterward water it, as ye see need:
But not in the riuer, where cattle should drinke,
for poisoning them, and the people with stinke.
25
Hempe huswifely vsed, lookes cleerely and bright,and selleth it selfe, by the colour so whight:
Some vseth to water it, some do it not,
be skilful in doing, for feare it do rot.
26
Wife into thy garden, and set me a plot,with strawbery rootes of the best to be got:
Such growing abroade, among thornes in the wood,
wel chosen and picked, prooue excellent good.
27
The Barbery, Respis and Goosebery too,looke now to be planted as other things doo:
The Goosebery, Respis, and Roses, al three,
with Strawberies vnder them, trimly agree.
28
To gather some mast, it shal stand thee vponwith seruant and children, er mast be al gon:
Some left among bushes, shal pleasure thy swine,
for feare of mischiefe, keepe acorns fro kine.
29
For rooting of pasture, ring hog ye had neede,which being wel ringled, the better do feede:
Though yong with their elders, wil lightly keepe best,
yet spare not to ringle, both great and the rest.
30
Yoke seldom thy swine, while the shacktime doth last,for diuers misfortunes, that happen too fast:
Or if ye do fancie, whole eare of the hog,
giue eie to il neighbour, and eare to his dog.
31
Keepe hog I aduise thee, from medow and corne,for out aloude crying, that ere he was borne:
Such lawles, so haunting, both often and long,
if dog set him chaunting, he doth thee no wrong.
[18]
32
Where loue among neighbors, do beare any stroke,whiles shacktime endureth, men vse not to yoke:
Yet surely ringling is needeful and good,
til frost do enuite them, to brakes in the wood.
33
Get home with thy brakes, er an sommer be gon,for teddered cattle, to sit there vpon:
To couer thy houel, to brewe and to bake,
to lie in the bottome, where houel ye make.
34
Now sawe out thy timber, for boord and for pale,to haue it vnshaken, and ready to sale:
Bestowe it and stick it, and lay it aright,
to find it in March, to be ready in plight.
35
Saue slab of thy timber, for stable and stie,for horse and for hog, the more clenly to lie:
Saue sawe dust, and brick dust and ashes so fine,
for alley to walke in, with neighbour of thine.
36
Keepe safely and warely, thine vttermost fence,with ope gap and breake hedge, do seldome dispence:
Such runabout prowlers, by night and by day,
see punished iustly, for prowling away.
37
At noone if it bloweth, at night if it shine,out trudgeth Hew make shift, with hooke & with line:
Whiles Gillet his blouse, is a milking thy cow,
sir Hew, is a rigging, thy gate or the plow.
38
Such walke with a black, or a red little cur,that open wil quickly, if any thing stur:
Then squatteth the master, or trudgeth away,
and after dog runneth, as fast as he may.
39
Some prowleth for fewel, and some away rig,fat goose and the capon, duck, hen and the pig:
Some prowleth for acornes, to fat vp their swine,
for corne and for apples, and al that is thine.
Thus endeth Septembers husbandrie.
Fiue hundred pointes of good Husbandrie | ||