Take sandalwood, areca palm seeds, new white bricks or shards of baked clay and smear them with black nightshade juice and rose water, or prepare a plaster of egg yolks with rose oil. Also useful are chicory, washed barley flour, egg yolks, rose oil or lentils boiled with rose oil, or Armenian clay with vinegar, or rose oil with wax, prepared as it should be, into which they then put well-washed nura, lead white, opium , egg whites and a little milk. Or they take mallow leaves, boil them once in fresh water, grind them, clear them of the thread-like particles contained in them and add more processed lead litharge and tin white - two and a half parts of each, four parts of rose oil, black nightshade juice and coriander juice - one part of both.
The best thing for this is a nura plaster, and its recipe is as follows: take nura, wash it seven times so that all the sharpness is removed from it, and then beat it with rose oil, olive oil and a little wax, if required. Sometimes Kimolos clay, egg whites and a little wine vinegar are added to this.
Nura patch according to a different recipe. They wash the nura as you already know, and prepare a plaster from it with the juice of beet leaves and cabbage leaves, rose oil and wax; one of the suitable remedies in this case, when you are not afraid of pimples and blisters, is to sprinkle the burn with burnt tamarisk leaves and burnt horns .
A good plaster, suitable for less hot burns, takes a long time to put together, but has been tested and found excellent.
They take dried feces of a grazing cow, pine tree bark and dictamn - ten dirhams each, lead oxide - three, silver scale - two, tin scale - four, nura washed many times in cold water - five, Kimolos clay - five, Cypriot, Rumian or Armenian clay and tin white - seven each, crushed shepherd's staff - ten dirhams, Persian or Chinese carcass - six, green tutia - seven, sheep feces - ten, seeds and leaves of bindweed - fifteen each, iron dross, squeezed juice of marshmallow leaves, squeezed juice of mallow leaves - ten each, white iris root and its bulbs, blue iris and saffron - five each, camphor - four dirhams, wax, rose oil, deer bone marrow and lard - in sufficient quantities.
One of the most powerful medicines, suitable for less hot burns, is to take copper and iron filings, mix them with pure clay or red clay, then bake them in a bread or sauna oven, turn them into flat cakes and store them. They are used as a powder when drying is required, or anointed with rose oil.
The next medicine of the same kind is to take pigeon feces, burn it in a linen cloth until it turns to ashes, and then smear it with some oil. This is a wonderful tool
When treating burnt and ulcerated areas, boiled leek or purslane with oatmeal and grated myrtle leaves helps, in the form of a powder; if the ulcer does not respond, burnt myrtle leaves or burnt leaves of wild carob are used, and for even more recalcitrant burns, use medicines that heal malignant ulcers.