Today’s puzzle pictured above for the Paleographical Challenge.
[Suggested solution to yesterday’s challenge:
To make a good Red rulin Inke
Take fyne Brasill scrapid to pouder and
seethe it in stronge standinge leye and then
put a small quantitie of Alom therto &
use it
For wormes in doggs
Take mylke warme & put brimston
in powder ^therto & so gyue it
Recipes for red ink, worms in dogs, and other necessities, on the inside rear cover of this manuscript copy of The Fawkner’s Glasse. England, late 16th c. Beinecke MS 100.
Red ink was often used to “rule,” or mark the boundaries or sections of a page. A red pigment sample from “Brasill,” or Brazilwood, was published by Marie-France Lemay on The Traveling Scriptorium, a teaching collection on medieval and early modern inks, pigments, paper, and binding techniques by my colleagues in the Yale University Library Special Collections Conservation department.