‘yeait NN \"
Hap VAR |
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ti sn
able pets ita
ies,
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vak sate Ae nicole ; Sede SBEES ae ARM,ete
STE
te at
is: aed
—
.
—
oS e e S
Si
LORS
Sobhboos LL PLELLELSEL OSEie e
A LATE
is
“DISCOURSE : Made ina Solemne Affem:
= bly of Nobles and Lea. & Lied yliey
ed Men at Montp:lher in France,
= se
= By Sr. Kenelme Digby, Knight ec. a
IES Ane STUER ooet a
= Touchi ing the Cureof Wounns i
« by the Powder of Sympathy,Wich
LeLEbL SOMERS LEE laftructions
ex
%
Powder;
&s
how to make the frid
LE, Dr RE PPLIET FSlncaites pia PotMistvatah ;
whereby many ocher
GRA!
Secrets of Nature are unfolded.
ee
1
_ Felix qui paruit Rerum copasFer canfas.
Rendered faithfully out of French in 3 to English By R.
White, Gent,
Bethe (ican Ediricn correQed and auemieneek with the addition ofan In diX.
6Sige ase LON5 DON,Printed
Vas
forRi Lown! es ar th Bs
white Lion, andT, Davies at the B be in si S. Pauls Church-ya d, over againit the Ho little North Doo "5 1658, i Wh at at
Rg FEE SES
Ra aes
i wid
a
ee
ty) i
LOLS LESLE L ELSES LE SEPLEL LLLLE E OOLE LESEL LE: L PES BE eH Eek oF EEA OS
SSSD LIHSEFHSESHSSHTHDOTT IIGIGS SPE PSHSPLSSSSHTHSS
|
TO THE
| Moft Noble, and Heroick Gentleman, To an Dicgsye Efq,.
{ .
ae iy }
i Hb
eas.
|
te}
%
i:| aes
as | fe
be Rise
fee 9 +
Le
LS be
Re
ieee
iE
|
Gop, 1 making this Dea
dicatory
CE
unto. you, I. may
Addrelfe
@
truly fay tis done
Yi t0 the Renowned |
Anthor
| for befides the ordinary
Himfelf ;
relatio
| of Father ana Son betwixt you,
there was never, I dare boldly fay, 3
A 2
aeek
[wel
E
Re
Such a perfect exalt fimilitude
‘swixt any two fince the World began. For you refemble him, aot enely inthe outward Symmetry, in that: goodly: proportion , + and comportments of your body. Yon are
like him ,
not.
onely
tn
Phyfiognomy. of, face; having the fame [pactous front, the {ame perfpicactous eyes, with other vifible parts fo marvellonfly alike, but the tone°of your voice, the accent. of your words, yoarvery coreath , | ana
a.
founds
are
tne
fame with his, infomuchs that it being well obferved, this admirable fimilitude, or vather- Identity, may be called one of the greatest wonders bf théfe times.
Now, Sir,this Refemblance being fo exact,, through all the outward parts Capapee ;‘Tt way.be swell prefumed , that you are alfo likey
hime inthe Idea’s of your foul, a4 in ihe interpmoticns ef your mth, a, ><
ee
;
{
| slit
elie. “Sameer? ES scm
SES ie
ee
mind,and confequently in his [ublime [peculations,
Therefore I hope
that neither the World will accufe
i) | me ofImpertinence,or your felf' of prefumption,that I make this Deyams , | aécation, and thercby ftyle my felf,
on
he.
et it
th
uy
‘it |
Highly Honoured Sir, :
Your moft humble and ready fervant
Whe
ae
Olyg
:
poe
4D ee
a
> Et er ter
i
An Extraéof the Royall
priyiledge in France for printing the faid Difcourfe.
PD SOE. ¥ the Grace, and pri-
a B % viledge of the King 5. givenin Paris the one & ¢4 WoyN and twentieth of December one thoufand fix hun-dred fifty feven, It is permitted. to Sohn Aneccliv to caule to be
printed, fold, and uttered by’
what Bookfeller he fhall think:
fir, a Book intitled,..4 difcourfe: made in a famous Affembly by
Cavalier Digby, tonching the cure of wounds by the Powder of” Sympathy, &c. And this during the time, and {pace of ten yeares,.
A4&
with
ee
es
—
with prohibition to all BookfelJers and Printers to counterfeit, fell or uecer the faid Book wieh-
out the confent and permiffion of thefaid Anselins or of thofe who fhall derive a right from him, under the penalryeof one thoufand five hundred Zivers,and
5 EO eS py a
>X3 SI I 3S
a
of all expences, domages, and interelts, as ic is more amply contained -wichin, the~ Letters of the faid Priviledges. The faid: Axscelin hatch ‘trant-
mitted the right of the’ faid Priwiledgeto Auguftine Courbe and Peter Moet, Merchants of Books
in Parés, according to the Agreement. betwixt them.
Bs Mujefties Library is fur“pifhed with 130
cordingly, |
Coppies Ate
:
e o e e
,
eF ) PS Sgt eh LS SI BGLGLB HE LL ES ELEC LELSSGSPee a
&
rN
*
PIEPITIHTS SOP
.&
DRATLI
ia) CARASayT 'yFARIAVShal Pet CAP SY ye Sip te Says
An Information to the Knowing Reader. ORY His Exquifite Fhilo[oX, phicall Di(ceur(e Was ad £ made lately by that és Zz Renowned Knight. Sir
“Kenelme Digby, in one of the
moft famous Academies of France. It containsa: variety of many’ recndite and bigh myfteries of: Nature, which are all here unmasked. And as all that great Sci-
entifical Afembly, compofed of
the choiceft-wits.under that Clime, . flood then aftomifhed at the prom
found {peculations of the Author ,. |
ee
&
(which?
Gwhich were delivered by way of | (Oratson, and taken in port wri- | ting upon the place as ‘twas utter-
ed) fo I believe it will work the fame effet in any Ludicious Soul Ht
when he hath fersonflyperufedit.
: R.wHI T €,
-|
A
“DISCOURSE TOUCHING: The Cure of Woundss. By the Powder. of Sympathie,.
My Lords, EuBelieve you Will re-
. Main all in one: mind: “with me, that’to peYn. netrate, and know a: AOL Subject, itis neceffa-
Sees fhew whether it is fuppofed For weuld not
ry in the firlt place,to» the thing be fuch as. or imagined to bes: one unprofitably lofe :
both his time and labour, to bufie-
himfelfe in looking after che canfes« ofthat which peradvencure is but a-
of: Chimera, without any foundation
truth?
SE
RE
RNS GEE
i eer
ES
-i
2}
I remember to have fead in 2 place ie Plutrch, where he propofech this quetuon, Wherefo-e thofe Hories ‘ who, while they Wete Colts » hive been purfaed by rhe Wolf, arid faved
themlelves by force” of running, afe
more fleet .chen other .Horfes ? Whereunto he anfiers, Thor ic may.
bg: thatthe: fearing »and affrighie ment~ which che Wolf gives unto
the young “beat, makes hin try his utmolt {trength. to- deliver hinfelf
from the danger that follows hin ar
cne heels, therefore the-{aiq frish e doth yas.it were umsnicshis~joynts:s
and; firetch bis -Gnews: and takes
the. Jazamems, and orhar ‘pares ‘of his body, th2 more fu pK fotunne’; infomuch,;thie he refents it all his
life afterwards, /and. bee@aigs.2: good
Cou ter .Ow% iktmay, bz: fayes he,
thatthole).Colrs..which are, 1 uurally:
fife » ‘faye, themlelyes. by running; away; whereas’ others, wh are opoo: fo,.are, overtaken. bythe Wolf) and.
fo. bzeoine hig. prey. sand {oir is. nor. becautechsy hove.elcaed the Wolf;
that they arethe more Heer, bur ‘1S. Chew
]
| lily. ee eae age Se
ee
=
(3)
rbzit_natutall {Wifmeile which faves them. He affords alio othe: rea.on ¥ aud at lat concludes, chac it may be. the thing is noc crue... I. find ic
not toe (my Lords) to-rgply. here-
unto at a. jable-ducoune,..ivbere the chief deisen of convertation is to
paiie eway the tine ‘gency. and pieafancly, without medling: with the feverity of high ferche reafons, to
l* | Wind udi? the f.i irirs > and make. then
More attentive...
Bur in fo renown,
ed an Aulexbly as rhis, where there ate fuch judicious Perfons, and fo
profoundly learned, and who. u_os this. meeting. ex-eét. ‘fron..; me that |pay.th:m in folid-reafons; I
Mould be very. fory, -thac. haying done ny ucterno't ro make.i¢ clear,
| how the Powder,
which they com-
monly call the Powder of Sympathy: ,
} doch naturally, and -without any, | Magick, cu-ewounds withont- touch. ing thém,yea, wichour feeing of the /P.tiznt; I fay, I fhould be v2ry.forry i thicic fhould be doubred, Whether yi
fuch acute maycfeCually be perfors
medor no,
In
~ eo
a
DON orenis Ss
ip ie RIE
ee _crear
ft
—
he)
In matter of fac, the determina-tion of exiftence, and truth of a
thing, depends upon the report which our feafes make us, This bufneffe is of thac nacure ; for they
who have feen the effects, and had experience thereof , and have beett:
carefull ro examine all neceffary cit= cumftances, and fatisfied themfelves
afterwards, that there is no impofure jm the thinz, do nothing doubr but
But they riences,. | expe who-have not feenfuch to thre es felv them re refer eught to fuch , . | of y orit auth and ns, atio Narr who have feen fuch things ; I could produce divets, whereof 1 was an ecularwitneffe, nay, .Qwrum pars magna fui : But as a certain, andan- | accounted. example im che affirma--|
chat itis reall; and crue.
tive, is convincing to’ deretmine the.
potibilicy,, and truth of a mattet
- ‘whichis doubtfull ; I fhall content: ji
my felf, becaufe Iwould not trefpaffe roomuch upon your patience atthis time, tomake inftance in one onely 5 ofthe cleareft, the but it (hall be one moft perfpicuous, and the moft on
y:
re
| ji Ti | |
|lites ce
eT
ane
ES
~
-{5)
red that cam be, mot onely for the
remarkable
circumftances
‘thereof ,
but alfo for the hands, which were
above the Vulgar, through which
2 ; » , y ,| . , q n 4
| | | | |
the whole bufineffe paffed. For the cure of avery fore hurt was perfe@ed by this Power of Sympathy, upon aperfor chat is illufttious, as well for his many perfeGtions, as for his feverall imployments. All the circumftances were exammed , and founded to the bottom, by one of the -greateft, and moft knowing
| Kingsofhis time, oz. King Fames, | Of Eagland, who had a particular | talent, and: marvellous: fagacity, to | difcuffe naturali things, and pene| ttate them tothe very marrow ; as alfo by his Sonne, ‘the face Kine
| Charlesand the Duke of Backieghans,
their prime Minifter. And in fine, all was regiftred among the obfervations of great Chaacelor Bacon,
to
adde by way of Appendix, unto his ig} WNacurall Hiftory: And { believe,
ys) SiS,
when you. fhall have under-
jg Mood. this Hifory, you willvmot ac. |Sule me ofwvanicy, if] attribute unto my
06>)
|
thy felffnbe cintroducing into tits: @oarter of che “World this way-of rs
curing.
ee
Mr. James; Howel, ( well known in: France, for his publicks wosks,
aad. putiew wlyfor. his Dewd-alogia, craniiated:inro Frenclp by 4492 sear Fa @ aad é
Bards) coming by chance.as two of his bet:friends were sighting a Duels be did. his ‘endeavout co-pate -] ee,
chem, ‘andsputting: himfcl:-berweer chem, fetredowichb his defe-b und uyon°| ies, of the: iwerd. of cone rofothe therhile Gonbirants,
-while swith his: righe
hind! hedaid holdvof.che blade.of the
etheri: they: beihg-tranfpe:tedewith fury one againit th: opher, dtrugled ro tidsthemfelves-of: the cchttieance | choir friend»
not kill! one
made that ehty fnoild fe
andcher + iandvone of Jy
themroighly drawing theablade cof |), his-fwords|; cucsto thevery: bone the |,‘ Haweéls merves
More arid muscles of
| hihdssandithen rhseother dings w :blo | eing hij bilts j gaveca) crofteh glan s J) whie
onhisadvatfaries:
head,
ced towitds his friend, who heaving
worhis fode hand tofave theblow; he was, ¢4
gt ieAE RAPP Es ge CE
8 | was wounded
C7)
on’ ‘the back of his
hand, as he had been before within. Ic feems fome ftrange Conttellation | reigned then agaitit hin, ‘thae‘he
fhould lofe fo'muth blood by parting two fuchdear friends, who had they been cthemfelves , would: have ‘has garded borh’their lives to have pre+ (ferved his + but’ this unvoluntary
|-€ffufien of blood by them, prevented
that which they ffould ‘have’ drawn ‘one from the’ other: “For they feeiie Mr. ©Howels face befmeated \with blodd, by heaving up his’ wounded hand, they borhancoembrace: hin’;
and: having fearched his hurts, they | Bound ‘up his hand’ with one-of his
ei garters; to clofe the vemes which
Pwere’ cur’, and bled» abundantly, a) They brought him* homey and fent oof} for aSurgeon. But rhis being heard vat Court, the Kine fent one of his |Own Surgeons, for his Majefty much pafreted'the faid Mr. Héwel. Pe was my chince tobe: lodged ) bord by him’;
and*four or five dayes
after, as Iwas making my felfready, he came tomy Houfe, and prayed ¢ me
(Sy
|
me to view his wounds, for I under-
fiand, faid he, thar you have exera- }) ordinary remedies upon fuch occa- -| fions, and my Surgeons apprehend. | fome fear, that i may grow fora | Gangrene, andfo the hand muft be | cut off. In effect, his countenance | difcovered chat he wasin much pain, | which he faid. was unfupportable, ta regard of the extreame inflammati- © on:1 told him that I would willing-: |; tyferve him, bucif haply he knew: |» the. manner howJ would cure him, | without, touching or feeing him , it | may be he would. not expofe himfelf |); totmy mannerof curing, becaufe he |.
would think it peradventure. either
ineffeCtuall, or fuperftitious : he ree |
plyed, That the wonderfull things |
which-many have related unto me, | of your way of curing, makes me:|
nothing doubr at all of its efficacy; | and all that I have cofay unto yoty |
iscom>rehended.in che Spanifh Pto- werb, Hagafe el milagre, y hagalo Aahoma , Lec the miracle be done:
though: Mahomet do ic.
:
(9)
I asked him then for any ching.
thac had the blood i it, fo he tlyfor his Garter, whefeprefenfent
| it) ith his hand was firft bound >and 4} having called for a Bafon of water, 2s
¢}
-ifJ would wash my hands’; I took
‘¢} a handfull of Powder of Vicrol, | which I had in‘my ftudy, and pre-
fently diffolved ir. As foon as the | | bloody garter was brought me, I put ir within the Bafon, obferving inthe interim what Mr. Howe/ did, who
food talking witha Gentleman ina
tomer of my Chamber, not regard-
ing at all whar Twas doing : burhe ftateed faddenly, as if he had found
fome firange alteration in himfelf; Lasked him what he ailed ? I know fiot what ailes me, bueI find thacT
feel no more pain, methinks that a
pleafing kimd of frefhneffe, as it were awet cold Napkin did fpread over my hand, which hath taken away the inflamation rhat cormented me before = Ireplyed, fince
that’ you feel already fo good an
J advife:
effec of my medicament,
you to caft away alt your playftets; ~
onely
(10) onély keep the wourd clean,’ and in a'’moderate renper twixt heat and cold. This‘was 'prefently reported to.the Duke of ‘Buckingham,
anda
lictte afer vo.che King, who were both very cuifous- to’ know the cir~cumftante of the *buGinelle 5. which was , thar after dinner { took the garter out Of the water, and put.it
to dry before-a great. fire 5 1t was fearce dry; but: Mr. Howe/s-fervant
came, tinding, ‘thar his-Mafter felt.as much ‘burning’ as ever he had ‘done, | ,,’: ifnot more, for. the -heat was -fuch, as if his- hind were betwixt coales-of fire’: Tanfwered, chat alchough that
Had: happened’ at-~prefene, .yet he fhould find: eafe in-a ‘thor tine: for I knew the reafon of chis new. accident,
and I would provide. accordingly, for shis.Maftéer Should -be free from
that inlanmnaten, it-may-be,- before she could-potibly:return“unto him, : burin cif he found no eafe,.E withed
shim roscoe! prefenrly back again, rf hot, he mighe:forbeate comming. “YTherepmn. he -vvent, and “at ‘thé in-
tant I did: put :again the garter dato
the» w
(11) | the water; thereupon he found his —t
Mafter without any pain atall.
To
be brief, there was no fenle of pain afterward - but .within
-five or fix
dayes ‘the wounds wee cicatrized, _ and entirely healed, . Kingg James feo
quired a functuall informnation .of ‘ft whathad pafled touching this cure ; f and after ic was done and perfeed,
*} his Maiely would needs aie SE tn *} how it was doney having drolled “FE with me frt (vy‘bith he -could do with a -very eood grace } about a Ader ee anda Sor cerers Lanliveredy Thac.E fhould: be alviayes tf read
Neto what his’ Marefty dhoulc command + but mot! humbly dé4fed , before I fhould paile. further,-ro cell him white ithe Aurhor, of whom Tchid the Secrecy: fhid to the erehe Duke of Tufcany, weonthe hike -o¢eaGon. Ic wis. a felicious Catner lize, that came fron the Indies and Perfa to Florence, hz had alfo been at Chiza, who having done many matvelfous cures with his row-
det; after his arivillro Tufcany’, che Duke fiid be would be very cladto Sitinof hin |: Ic was the fatner of ’
the
Shs Doel
(12)
the Great Duke who governs now. The Carmelite anfwered him, That it was a fectet which he had Jearne
in the oriental parts, and he thought there was not any who knewirin &#-
repe but himfelf, and that ic deferved not to be divugled, which could not
Arathi Wher prloots | faisty
lth
{sis [ver Wh finda]
be done,ifhisHighnefs would meddle with the practile of ir, becaufe he, |Kym was not likely to do it with his own
hands, but muft trufta Surgeon, or fome other fervant, fothat in a fhot
time divers others would come to know it as well as himfelf. But a
few moneths after I had opportunity to do an important courrefie to the faid Fryer, which induced him to
1 HSaco]
} deotynd
| Mads(y
| theKin
With
| bebop
nto| | Liss
| las i fame year he returned to Perjfia ; 1 oud i hi infomuch, chatnow there is no other lcha | knows this fecret in Europe but my felf: The King replied, That he Filf9 needed not apprehend any ferr thar fe Dy aifcover unto me his fecret, and the
he would difcover, for he would nor
truftany-body inthe World ro make experience of his fecret , but he would do it with his own hands, therefore .he would have
fome of
the Powder; which I delivered, inRructing
B lite ¢
as je ERATE OE SEP
|
:
TES
(13)
Aracting him in all che circumftances, Whereupon his Majefty made fundry at | Proots, whence he received. fiagular jy, |fatisfaction.© Intheincerim, Do&or ALayerne,
hits firgt Phyfitian yyat@hed to difco-
ever what was done. by chis fecrer, _and at lafthe came to know that the 4, |King made ufe of Vitriol. Afterwards , | he accofted me, faying, he durt noc _} demand of mz my fecret, becaufe{
| made fome difficulty to.difcover it to
the King hinfelf. But having learnt
|wich whac matter ic wastobe done,
| he hoped that Iwould communicate -unto hin all the circumf@ances how it is to be ufed s I anfwered him, | That if he had asked. me before, I ~ | avould have frankly coldhim all, for ' | in his “hands there was no fearethae
| fucha fecret fhould be grofticuted, ‘| and foLtold him all. A little after the DoSor went to France, to fee * | fome fair Territories that he had
"| purchafed neat Gexeva, which was the Barony of Asboxne.
In-this
| Voyage he went to fee the Duke of | Mayernes who had been a long time his
~
i
(14)
au
—
his. friend ~and proreXor,~ and he | Wound taughe hin this fecret, whereof the he ar
a
ae
ie
:
i
j
;
¥
i
Sa)
| om
pei
pe
| 120 of
Duke made ~-many ~experiments , which if any other buta Prince*had dons, ic maybe they had ;afled for effe&ts oft agick and Enchant-
| Cutance
| edyitf ulation |
:
COncate Which 1 Produce hf uot bave b
ments,
After the Dukes death, who was +o
ata, ie
killed’at rhe fiese of Afouanban,
Surgeon ‘who
|
his
«waited upon him in
doing cures; fold this fecrer to divers Perfons of Qualicy,-whe gave hin con‘iderable fummes foric, fo chiche became* very~ ich thereby. “The thing” being’ fallen thus into many hands, rém.ained rot long in terms of.
a Secret, bur‘by désrees it cane to
be fo divulged j/thir now there is fearce any Country-Barber -bue
— =
knows ‘it.
Behold now, Sirs, the Genealogie of the Powder-of Synpathy in this parc of the World, with a’notable Eiftory of a cure performed by ir. Te is time nowcro comerothe difcuffi-
on, which is) to know how it is made. Ic muft be ‘avowed thit, iris a marvellous thing, that’ the’ hure of a wounded
D = —e
=a
=== == fee SSS fF ®
CAS)
| Wounded perfon fhould be cured by
4 the application of aremedy put to a uy
3, } tag of cloth, or a weapon, a: a great {4 diltance. And it is notto be doubt-
i |ed, if after along and profound fpe-
yr. (Culation
of all the aeconomy~
~'fjconcatenation
of naturall
and
caufes
fwhich may be adjudged capable to
- PHitherco they have been Wrapped: up gi
darkneffe, and adjudged fo inac-
,, peethble, chat they who have under‘qv (taken to {peak or write of them, (at pleat thofe whom! faw) have been » contented to {peak of fome ingenious “. Igencileneffe, without/diving into the ,., Pottom, endeavouring rather to fhew “he vivacicy of their fpiric, and the force of their eloquence, than «to Matisfe their Readers. and Auditors now the thing is really tobe done. plhey would have us take for ready ‘mony fome terms whichwe under. and not, not know what they figniié. They would pay us’ wich conye“Biiences, with
refemblances, B
:
with Syma
C16)
Sympathics, with Magnetical virtues, and {uch terms, without explicating | “Whatcthefe rerms mean. They think | they have done enough, ifthey feebly perfwade any body that the bufi-
there
=
-nefle may be performed bya naturalf way, without having any recourfe to the intervention of Daemons and fp1rics :but chey pretend notinany fo-t
to have found out the convincing
reafons, to demonftrate how the thing
is done. Sirs, if Idid not hope to gainotherwile upon your fpirits; I fay, that if Ididnot believe, rhacI fhould be
able to perfwade you otherwife than
Ingen
by words, Iwould not have underta-
Clore
ken this enterpife : I know coo welf - Duid valeant humert,gquid ferre «
x
recufent :
fuch a deGen requires a great fire, and. |
vivacity of conceptions , volubiliry | oftongue, aptneffe of ex re‘fions to infnuare asit wereby furprifall, that | which one cannot carry away by a) firme foot, and by cold reafons,} thotichfolid. A Difcourfe of this) tate0
nature eught not to attend a ftran= a Xths q
truss
gers |
\
| ees
Le
RT
mie
Oe
(17) ger, Who finds
himfelf obliged to
difplay his. fenfe’ ina language wherein he can hardly expreffe’ his ordinary conceptions. Neverthelefle; thefe confiderations fhall not. deterre me from engaging myfelf in an enterprifé, which may feem to fome
much more dificult than that which lam now toperforme, wz. to make good convincing proofs, that this Sympatheticall cure may be done naturally, and to fhew before your eyes, and make you touch’ wich your finger how it may be done. You 2} know that perfwafions are made by | Ingenious arguments , which being
| expreffed with a good grace, do ‘rathertickle the imagination, than fa| tisfie the underftanding : Bur Demox| frations are built upon’ certain and approved principles, and though ‘ig they be buc roughly pronounced, yer
‘he
gg they convince and draw afcer cheng
neceflary conclufions..
They.’ pro-
ceed asa ftrone Engine faftned to
agate to barter it down, or as a
Lig)
place of metall to-imprine the mark
it Of the Money,-at every turn thac Ba2
truth
(18)
truth makes, theapproches but firtle, and asit were infenfbly, and makes not much noife, andthere is no fuch
steat force required, to turn her;
but’ her firengch, though icbe flow, 1; foinvincible, that atthe end, fhe
breaks dewn the gate, and makes a
= they Er
deep impreffion on the riece of gold
or filver: whereas the ftrokes of hammets, ot bars, (whereunto may be compared the witty difcourfes, and flourithed conceptions of Ingenious Wits) require che armes of a Giant, makes a great noife, andat the end
produces but litle effed,
To enter then into the matter ;f will, accotding to the method of Geometricall Demonftrations, |ay fix
ot feven. Principles, as foundation. ftones, whereon I will ere@& my ftruéture. Bue Iwill lay‘them fo well, and fo firmly, that rhere will’ be no great difhculey to grant them; Thefe Principles fhall be like che wheels. of “Archimedes
-,. by
the
advantage
whereofa child might: be capable .to
hale--afore the biggeft Carack, of
King, Hieron, which.a hundred pat
/
:
0
Bea &*as
—eJ ay -- vw -~a
oFNgee Bees, aa.* e eee .
(79)
of Oxen, with all che Ropes ard Cables of his Arfenal, were not able to ftir: foby the ftrength of thefe Principles: I hope to waft my conclufions to a fafe Porr. The fir Principle fhall be, That the whole Orb or Schere of the Aire is filled with light. If it were needfull to prove inthis’ point, that the Eightis a materiall
and corporall
fubftance , and not an imaginary and. incomprehenfible quality, as
many Schoolmenaverre,
I could do
ehisin another Freatife;
which
it Is no: New ozinion;
‘for many of
jt evidently enough-but I have’ done
hath
been publifhed not long fince..-And
the mot efteened Philoforhets among the. Ancients hive: ‘advanced it; yea, the Great Saint _Aueu/ins in his Third Epiftle to: Volefan, doch alledge s~thic
it is his
Opinion
But touching our prefenr bufinefle,
whether the light be the one or th2 other, it matters nor, ‘tis enough to
exolicate her courfe, and th: jour: nies fhe makes, whereunto-our fenfes
bear witnefle, *Tis clear, chat iff B3 ing
| (20). mg continually our of her fource, which js the Sun,ard lancirig her felfe
bya marvellous celerity on all fides
.by fiteight lines, there where fhe meets any obftacles in her way, by the-oppofition of fome ‘hard, or opaque body; fhe refle&ts, and leap. ing thence to equall angles, fhe takes asain hercourfe bya fireight. line, untill fhe bandies. fome other fide upon another folid body, and fo fhe continueth to make new boundings here and there; untill ac the end,
being chafed en all fides by the bodies which oppofe her in her paf-
fage, fhe is ryred ,and fo extinguitheth. In the like manner we fee a Ballin a Tenis-Court, being ftruck by a {trong arme again the walls, leaps co the oppofite fide, that fometimes
fhe makes the circuit of the whole See acca!
AIS
Fi,
Court,.and fintfhech her motion n2ar
4
|
the place where fhe was firtt ruck, Our very eyes ate witnefles: of this progtefle of the light, when by way of reflexion fhe illuminates fome ob{cure place, whither fhe cannot direGtly atrive; Or when ifluing im- 75 mediatly
is tae
Ces SEE * RRC NE EES
as
atid
C21) mediarly from the Sun, and beating
upon the Moon, ot fome other of the Planers, the rayes which cannot find entrance there’, bound upon our earth, otherwife we fhould nor fee them; and there the is reflected, broken and bruifed by fo many bo-
dies, as fhe meets in her diveriity of reflexions.
The fecond
Principle fhall be,
that the light glancing fe upon fome
body, the rayes whiclr enter no futther, and which rebound upon the fuperficies of the body, loofen them-
felyes, and carry with
them
fome
{mall particles or atomes ; jut -as the ball, whereofwe havefpoken, sould catry withsic fome of the moulture
of the wall, -agamft which fheis .ban-
ded, if the plafter thereof were alfo moitt, and asin effe&, fhe carryed
away fome. tincture of the’ black , wherewith the walls are coloured. The ‘reafon whereof. is-, that’ the light, that fubtill; and rarified fire,
coming with fuch an imperceptible haft, for ber darts are within
our
eyes, as foon as her head 1s 'aiabove
B4
our
——
(22)
“our Horizon, making fo many million of miles in an inimaginable {pace of time, I fay, the Aghe beating upon the body which oppofech her, €annot chufe but make there fome fmall incifions propertionable to-her raricy and fubtilicy. And
thefe:fmall’ Atomes being cut, and
Joofened from their trunk, being compofed ef the four Elements, (as all bodies are) the heat of the light
doth tick, and incorporate ic felf with the moft humid, vifcous » and
Sluing parts of the faid Atomes, and btings them along with her, Experience fhews us this as well as Reafon ; for when one puts a. wet clothto dry before the fire, the fier
tayes beating thereon, thofe which
find no ewtrance , reflect thence, and
catty away with them fome {mall
moilt bodies; which make a kind of
mitt betwixt ‘the cloth and the frre. In like manner the beams of the Sun at his rifng enlightning the .earth ; which is humified either by rain, or the dew ofthe night; ‘raife a mit, .
which by little and little afcends hn 3 |
the
|seb eC. Cane
(23)
the tops ofthe hills; and chis mitt doth rarifie according as the Sun hath more force to draw it upwards , untilbat laft we lofe the fight thereof,
and that ic becomes pare of the aire, Which in regard of its tenuity is invifible unto us. Thefe Aromes
then are like Cayaliers
mounted on
winged cou fers , “who.go very far, untill thar the Sun fetting, takes
from them their Pegafus,and leaves
them unmounted ; and then they precipitate thenfelves in crowds. to the earth, whence they fprung, the
preatelt part of them,.and the moft heavy fall uzon the firt retreating
of the Sun’, and chat we call the
Sera, which though it be fo thin: that we cannot fee it,. yet we feel it | as fo many fmalf hammers . which:
} fttike uson our.
heads and. bodies,
§ principwly on thofe that are ancient =: } for the young men, in regard of the | boyling of their blood, and rhe hear: of their. compl2xion,. thru out of”
| them abundance’ of fpitit .which s, being Rronger
thon thofe thar fall
| fromy the. Seraiz,. te ule Be, .
them,. and:
(24
aa
and hinder them’to overate upon the bodies whente thefe fpirirs came forth,as they do upon thofe that being grown cold by age, arenot warwranted by fo trong anemanation Of the f{pitits which come out offthem. The wind which blows, andis tofled
|| , | thy | fy) | hi
to and fro, is no other than a great — rent River of the like Atomes ,° drawn
out of fome folid bodies, whichere |>4 upon the earth, and fo are banded | jy, here and there, according as they find eaife for that. effect. i Frememberto have once fenfibly feen how the wind is ingendred : I pafled over Mount Cenis, to go for Italy . cowards ‘the beginning of Summer, and.I was advanced to half the hill, asthe Sun did rife cleer and. luminous, but before Icould fee his
| |} ,
body, becaufe. the Mountains inter. _
pofed , I obferved his rayes, which did guild the top of the Mountain. Vifowhich is the Pyramid of a Rock, a good deal higher than Mount Cen, atid all the. neighbouring Mountains. Many ate of opinion,
gaat it isthe higheft Mountain in the 3 World,
|
seAOL DROP Samar |gills
TES”
SH
TRESS
(25°)
World, after the Pie of the grand Canary; and Vifo.1s alwaies covered I obferved then ,
OG
. T enariff, in this Mount with {now ; that’ abouc
that place, which was illuminated. bythe Solar rayes, there was a foe which at firft was of no: greater-exrent then an ordinary bowle, but by
degrees ic grew greater, thac at laft,. not onely the top of that Mountain. but all the neighbouring hills, were
canopied all over with: a cloud.. I was now cone to the top of Mount Cenis, and finding my felf in the fircight line which: paffethfrom the Sun to‘Mount Vifo, 1 ftayed awhile to behold it, while my people were
coming up the hill behind, for having
mote men to catty my chair than they hads'I wasthere fooner. It was riot long thie*l might perceive the faidfog defcend gently to: the place
where ¥was, and 1 began’ to feel'afechneffe thar came over my face’,
when [ turnedvit thac' way.
Wher
all my ‘Troos wis come-about me, we went defcending the other fide of,
Mount (ens, towards Saxe; and the lower
Ot
(26) lower we went, we fenfibly found that: the wina began co blow hard
fofte etn Dein befy
behind our backs, for our way obli-
ged us to go toward that fide where. the Sun was. We met with Paffengers that were going up that way we. went down;they cold us thac the wind Was very impetuous below, and did much incommodate them by. blowing in their faces and eyes, bur rhe higher they came, it was leffer and fefier : and touching our felves, when we came to the place where they
- faid: che wind blew fo-hard, we found: a kind of ftorm;. and it increafed Mill che lower we went, untill the
Sun being well advanced, dreweno
more by that line, but caufed a. wind
infome other place.
that Country
The peovle of |
aflured)
me, that ir
was there alwaies-fo, if fome! extra.
erdinary and: violent
accident did
not intervene; and divert. its -ordi. mary courfe,. which is, thar uron a
cetram hour of the day, the wind doth: raife-ie felf to.fucha rumb,” or-
point, and when the Sun is conc toa-
zesher point, another wind nfech, and: {oy
!
|
the}
|ste.le: “aaa
Emi
SEE
“Hg HE: Gg
(27) fo from hand to hand ic changes the point till che Sun fet, which alwaies
brings with ita calm, if the: weather be fair, and thac alwaies-comes from
the Mount Vifo, oppolite to the Sun, They told us alfo,thar rhe daily wind
is commonly ftronger towards
the
bottom of theMountain, than towards the cop;whereof the reafon is evident, for the naturall motion. of every body naturall doth increafe alwaies in fwiftnefle, according as -it moves forward to irs center, andthat in an unequall number, (as Galileo hath ingenioufly demonftrated , ‘I did ic alfo in another Treatife) that is to
fay, that if at the -firl! moment
it
advanceth anell, in the
it
fecond
advanceth three, inthe third five, in the fourth feven, and fe: it contmu_ethto augment inthe fame manner;
which proceeds from the denfity, and ficure, of the defcending body acting upon the ceffibilicy of the medium. And thefe fmal bodys which caufe the: wind from Mount Yifo arethick and terreftrial; for the fhow being’ comyofed of aquaticall and. earthly parts | united by the cold, when: thé heat of
.
(28),
of the Solar beams doth difunice parts flie wichthem, while the- terreltriall, being too heavy to fly upward, fall prefently downward. This
alm nets. Flee | tock | anu
makes me remember a very remark-
et (
and feparace
them ,
che vifcous
able ching, which befell me: when was with my Fleet in the Port of Scaneron, ot Alexandrette, towards the bottome of the Mediterranean Sea : there they ufe to difimbark, whenthey goto Alepps,or Babylon. I had done already what: J had inten: ded to doin thofe feas, and ‘happily: compafied my defign,foit imported me much to return to: England as foonas rotibly I could, and the rather becaufe my Shiss were battered’
i}
I
and t
i fo
felve: ad;
| Eat)
| fore
We f
pon Novy
eithe
| for.
1 Warr
bya gteat fight, which I’hid had “a- | hud
little before
again® a ‘formidable
abroy
power; which, althoughI hid ob-. had
tained the better, yet info furious 2
difpute, my Fleet was in fone dift
order, and my Ships full of wounded’.
men.
To advife therefore
‘of the
mo't expedient road to cometo fone harbour, where I might repaire umy: Ships, and be in {urery ; [ affembled | j all’
|tho
Nan |
| lites ae peal
OSE SE: SERS:
Gag
(29) all my Captains, Pilors, and’ Mari-
nets, the moft experienced of my Fleet ; and having propounded unto chem my-defign, they were all of an unanimous opinion, that che futet courfe was towards. rhe South; and to coaft upon Syria, Judea, Egypt, and Affrica,-and render our felves at the Stretght of Grbraltar ; and failing fo near the body of the Earth, we fhould have every night
fome {mall briezes.of wind, whereby
we fhouldinafhore time make our Voyage.. And befides, we fhould notbe in any great danger to meet either with Spaza/o ot French Fleets s for England was at that time in open
warte with borhthofe Kings, and we had advice that they had great Fleets abroad, to vindicate fome things we
had done in: prejudice of them:.both: thofe fixteen
months that we te-
mained Matter of thofe Seas ; therefore it-concerned us tomake towards
fome fafe Port, where we might bot hi os ee eT
cD mw co a ty = —TS
J
nl
refreth our men, and repaii our bac~ eered Veffels.
= . wee.
5a _~—
re ae =
My opinion. was clean contrary ©
(30)
to theirs, for I believed
way.
Was
to
fteer our
our bet
courfe arth Weftward , and to faile along the. coaits Coatis of Cilicia, Pamphylia, Lydia, iNot
Natolia, or Afia the léffe, and to Upon
traverfe the mouth of the Archipe- late tho fago,"o leave the AdriaticSea k on the tallth tight hand, and pafleby Sveily, Zra- -(etent,
ly, Surdinia; Corfica, the Gul ih of “Buty, Lion; andf{o coat all Spaim; telling herber
them thatit would bea great difho- elleby
nour
unto us to forfake our be and by road for fear of the enemy, being that. our chief buGnefs thither was to find’ them out,and the protection which it had pleafed God to afford us all along
in fo many combats
in going, was
Providence
vouchfafe
caufe to make us hope that the fame would
to “Mii
guide usas we fhould be reruming, That there was no deubr bur that the roid which TI protofed unto rhem, confidered fim»ly in iw felf, was ,
Without conparifon, the better, and
the more expedire to faile our of the
Mediterranean
Sea ,. and gain the
Ocean, becaufe,faid f, that althouch’
We have the’ briezes from‘off ‘he | each
10m th
Onthey
hig
Hoy
atarag
mt yy | | MyW
w3t)
th as long as we were upon the mejcoalts of Syria and Egypt, we fhall i, Mot have them atall while we faile
upon the coafts of Lybé:a, where there fure.thofe fearfull fands which they ta frall the Syrtes, which ate of a great .pxtent, the faid coaft having no hu-
finidity, for thereis neither tree nor ing erb grows. th. r2, there being nought
. (fe but moving fands;which covered wt {ad buried heretofere at one glut tt fhe puiffant Army of King Cambyfes. indyNow where there is no humidity, fae Sun cannot attraét to ‘make a Wind, fo that we fhall never find
; there, {pecially in Summer-tine, any ye fther wind buc that Regular wind ihich blowes from Eaft to Welt, aclordine to the courfe of the Sun, who
» the Fatherof winds, unlefle fome 4, wxtraotdinary wind happen, either ) ew
vom the Coaft ef Italy, which lyes North-ward,
or from the bortom of
s Pthiopia, where the mountains of the j and the fource of the
ataracts of Wyle: therefore if we ere neer the Syrres, the winds of be moft dangerous unto ‘aly would Us,
(32)
ceaufes, while they of my Council of * |
Warre ker chonfelvestirme to thei! '
experience ; which was the caufe tha
I would do nothing again& the unalbm
nimous fenfe of all ; for althougl l the difpofing, and refolugion of af/M' things depended abfolutely upon nyt felf, yet IthoughtI might be jufth/*' accufed of rafhnefs or wilfulnefs, 4/¥¢0 I fhould preferre my own advice be)! fore that of all the ret : fo wetool*i i that courfe, and went happily as fajf™ as the Syrtes of Lybia : but ther. our Land-briezes failed us, ahd fo feven and thirty dayes we had niéste other but a few. gentle Zephirg{4 ter
which came from the Weft, whithel# We were fteering ‘our courfe, ~Ww)! Were conftrained to keep at anchgjiie all chat time, with a great deal of ap}! prehenfion of fear, thx the win might come from the North, accom"
panied wich had hippened becaufe our able to hold |
a tempelts for if chal tle , we had beerrall lof anchors hid not beei among thofe now {and
| ll: i
ae
ER LOE
BE
CORPS
(33)
i,
ajtatads, for under water they ate’ of jithe: fame” nature as they aré ‘upon iaety land’, andfo we might be in rhwdanger to‘ be (nipwrackt! upon that hath nycoatt. But God Almighty, who I
vupbeen pleafed I fhould have theho-
yijnour to wait upon you this day, did
,yfucliver me from that ‘danger.
And
sagt the end of feven and thirey dayes, “awe obferved the courfe of the clouds
Jyivery high, which came from Southgeal at firit bur flowly, buc by de-
igerees. falter and’ fafter, infomuch » ‘Mlthat in the eompafie of two dayes, the wind which was forming it felf
" a great way off in Erhwpia, came in
‘aga Cempelt tothe place where werid
hat anchor, and led us to the place
Iwhither we intendedto go ; bueche
“fl Force of it was broken before, coming
“nj fo Jong a diftance. © in“9 Our of this difcourfe we may e wher every that and conclude,
og tets ifyi Wherefoever there 1s any wind, there iy be alfofome {mall bodies, or atoms, ate drawn fron the bodies ; | Peawhich
Ss
- y
i
K
a
Now fa e
}
which lye in the bodies,
whence
they come, by the virtue of the ey an ,
(34)
.
and of the Liehr, and that in effegiit
cis winds nothing eli burethe fid P
atones,azirated ,.and.chra@ on. b ny a kind of inpecuofity ; and fo thal
Winds do partake of the qualities | ‘of the place from. whence they come; ‘ C
as for example, if they cone from ith
the
South,
they are
hot;
if. fro} o
the North they are cold: if from the
Earth alone, they. are dry.; if from!
the Marine, or Sea-fide,.they are}™ umid and moit 3 1f from plac es Hel
Which produce
aromaticall fubRan.| ces, they are odoriferous, wholeforg itin fi and
pleafing; as they fay thofe which fc
come fron Arabia Fz 14, Which pro|
Max
duceth Spices,Perfu-nes and Gunmes enc of {weer fayour;and this which comes pln fron F axtenay, and. Vaxgirard «tof lon
Lares, in the feafon, of -Rofes, Dh are all perfumed : on the contrary, fe n
thofe winds thir com> fron ftinking fit |
places, as fron the ful shureous foil Pitted of
Pozsulo,
do
ifmel| Wl:
and yet
thofe that cone fron infected places, fi {x bring the contagion along with th=n, ie My third princiste thal| be, thac Pus the Air
is full throughout with fnalt: P tod badiz $.or atenes, or rather thre §
ree
Which
% ) ae
;
|
; he BPS tay) pts
Ae
PARI AOAN.t
sia
ee
LAWN C HURON Ug
.
nies
i
<i
—
,
ee
| ts. le Sea a ».
ASE ° Rene =tag
|
|
(35)
ealhich we -call our, air, is no. other ig
oe
S
°
jaa a mixture, or confufion of fuch
y}OmMes, wherein che aereall parts do Jo¢cominate, viog} 4. is Well known, that in nature
mapere cannot be actually. found any esate Element, without being blended pith others); for the outward fire ,
LV)
shot the light acting one way, and
ae | , r e ‘og Internal fireeC of every body puthice lg on another way, cauferh this arvellous mixture of all things in
i things. In that huge extent, nferein we place the air, there is yhpaicient fpace, and liberty in which wf Make fucha mixture, which Ex‘detience. as well as Reafon doth
aearme. .-Ehave feen-little Vipers, sl foone
as they. came out of the
jagegs Wherein they were ingendred ,
ofS net an 3 inch long,Do having. ; ven. kept, in a. large. Gourd ,
wipweted with. paper-tyed: round. awe hut that they; might not cet out, tag? Let aS oF WAY,
(td.
13
little. .holes
|
;
safus,
ms
:
made + with 5
(thacithe.,air might’
enter,
i pereafe in fubtance. and .bignefle orten Es fe) fly .in Gx, eight, nul prodiciou )
months
(36)
|
months,that it is‘incredible,and more did fenfibly, during the feafon' of theelk (, quinoxes, then, whet che ait is fuller ond of chofe ethereal and balfaintcall a-tithy
tomes which gavethem their balfa-te ty; mick vittue,which they-drew for thei ny nouricures
Hous
Hence ‘it came that the Cofmopoctens Jites had teafon to jay, EftIn ACre OC-lhyh.
cultus vite cibus.-
There is a hiddemyye
food *of life inthe air. Thefe fmallly ¢; Vipers had but the air onely fot hus their fuftenance, nevertheletle by thisth
thin viand, they came in fefle thanttyy: a yeartoa foot long, and proporti-he +, onably big and heavy: Vitriol, Salty | peter, and fome other fubfances, do! aay augment in the fame manner, oni inVe f
t by.attraction of air. he P Iremember, thar upon forne occas] ens
fion , eventedh or eighteen yeares it»,
ago, I had. o¢cafion to ufea pound)Ry,,
of Oyle of Tartar ; it was at ‘Parayyp hyd
where I had ‘then! no Opeticoryati, Then I defired ALexfeur Ferrier,a
Ha.|
mati univerfally known’ by all fuck}...
\ \
(
that are curious; to make mefomej} Wh de{
for he had none’ then ready “a A, ue
|
se ae. “SRA? ESR
|
OS”
Oe
peer
*
(37)
int didic expreffely for ‘me, and for
keene Calcination
of Tartar,
twenty
ilgjound may be as eaiily made as two,
lrichout increafe of«charge, therefore ula? took occafion hereby to make a imuanticy for hisown ufe. When he
Houchrit me, the oyle did {mell fo nscone of the Rofe, thar Icomplained
pat he fhould mingle ic with that eater, in regard I bad defired him
nll do it purely, by expofing it to fife humid ait, ie I verily thought var iin Rofe- water ; he fwore unto
wtiae thache hid not mingledit wich
vidi ny Itquor, bur thar he had left the
Partar calcined within his Cellar, to oes of iI Self. Tt was then in ee ae
Ie
| 2 atomes, whieh ¢come fotg fe Rotes : ann being changed into wa-
imer Sy the poweerfull attrastion of the alt‘of Tarcar, théir fmell became ve-
My Jenfble inthe place where they jmivere gathered ; as the beams of the sapun do barn, being crowded together andva Bu,ning-glats. There
(38)
bod
There happened alfo another mar- Pun
vellous thing touching this oyle of Mich}
Tartar, which may ferye to provea Hoth (
propofition which we have not yet ipire if couched: but not to interrupt ie istat courfe of the ftlory, TZ wall cell: 1c }peysc, you by way ofadvance. It was, thathur,. as the feafon of Roles was pafied, ie th the fmell of che Rofes did vaniih Jpg ) WAL
away fromthe faid oyle of Tartar, jhnit',
{o that in three or four months it }q.4,,i was quite gone. - But we were much jy... furprifed, when the next year the: Hee)i faid odour of Rofes returned as Rrong jin \ as ever it did, and‘fo sent away Ahi fo. again, towatds winter, which courle jj; ». .
it flill obferves. VVhich made Afor- Min.
fear Ferrier to keep it asa fing lar Hei, i rarity, and the laft Summer I found Bese. the effet of it ih his houfe. _WVe havein London an
Theta, unlucky } ‘io
and troublefome*confirmarion of this ‘ nh doSrine , for
the air ufeth to beg
full of fuch, atone:.
i
~The materiall®
whereof they make fircin thar great City,iscommonly of pit-coal, which jj, is brought from Meweajtle, o Scot-
land;
this coal hath in it a great)...
quantity) tt ‘4 ,|
|site «alle EP EE REA
AEF
ET
A
HS
“
¢
mG
ghee
ia
(39)
Wefyuanc.ty of volatil falcvery flaarp x ivhich being carried on by chefmoke woth. diffipate ic felf, and fill rhe ayire, wherewith “ic doth ‘fo incorpolate, that alcliough we do not feeic,
yec we find the effects, for it fpoiles uieds, Tapittties,and all other houfhold-
ltuff chat is of any beautifull fair ilhfolour, for the fuliginous aire doth
i, Armith ic. by degrees: and although jf Jme fhould' lock up his Chamber, and uitjomeé nér chithéra good while, and it Jeep icnevet. fo. clean, yet at_his ree nay Ht ag
Yb La
rial |
cilird that-ic is this aire which the jiines draw for- refpiration among
wale 1 habitants ,thereforethe flegne Od fitcle which comes from then
ye
teas
OA.
1s ¢
pahert
:
C40y
|
4s commonly blackith and fuliginous. |!
Moreover, the actimeny of this foot |whic produceth ‘another funeftous effect., eels
forit makes the people fubje& to |"
inflammations, and. by degrees to |)flied ulcerations in‘ che lungs. Ir is fo}! cortofi e, and biting, chat. if one ‘ian
put. gammons of bacon, or beef, or) #5 any other flefh -within. the chim-| My of _—
ney,itfo dries icup, that it {poiles) "to
it. Wherefore they who have weakj#t 1 dunes; quickly feel it, whence ig Lede
comesto pafle, that almoft the one Mp
halfe of them, who die in Leadon jiiiv
di¢of ptificall, and pulmonicall diejlvid:
flempers, {pitting commonly blood) «
from their ulcerated lungs... But attic, che beginning ofthis malady, the regppitieh
medy is very eafie;_ It is but to-fendynirh them toa place where the aire stu good: many. do, ufually. come
& alle
aris, who haye meansto pay thelitel;
charge of fuch a journey, and cheptn,
commonly ufe .to recover; rheih}tger healchs in perfection. The fame ine} yj conveniences are alfo, though: cheval f operations. be not fo frong in che} nd
City_of Liege, where the COMMON Fly
|
people;
are
«people burn no other than pic-coals,’ ep iwhich they call Aoville, Paris her felf alfo, although the circumambi-
gent aire be paling good, is yet . giiubject to incommodities of char nature. The exceflively {linking dirt and channels of that vaft City, mingleth of ill allay with the puI, Of 4 great deal jrity of the aire, ftufing itevery where siqwvith corrupted Atomes ,. which yer \s rhe ALL
are
not fo pernicious
as thofe of
qLondon. We findthat the moft neat
n@and polifhed filver plate, expofed to
j athe aire, becomes. in a fhort time
\ alivid and foul; which proceeds from
iwino other caufe, then from — thofe ,
plack Atomes,
(the true. colour of
» qpucrefaction which ftick unto them. ¢qqind the more polifbt and bright the ., #metal -is the. more viGble are they pil.I know a perfon of quality, (anda f@angular friend of mine) who is. lodgaed in a place, where on the one fide “ymtgteat many poor people do inkapit, where few Carts. ufe to paffe, ind fewer Coaches: his neighbours ychind his thoufe empty ther filch ad ordure in the mi ddle of the C2 fircet,
(42)
{treet, which ufeth hereby to be full
|
|. ™ of mounts of filth, whichis ufed ro Beam be carried away by Tombrells;
when they remove “you cannot imagin
thefe ordures, ie
what a ftench, glancl
atid’ kind oF infectious aire is {mele |
thereabout every where. The fer- Ht
‘wants of my faid friend, when this |"
happens, ufeto cover their: plare, | and andizons of rolithed braffe , and |}: other of their faireft houfhold-ftuff, | with cotten, or courfe bayes, other- hss
wife they would be all carnifhed ; ac
yet nothing
héreof is feen
wirhin |"!
che aire: though thefe experiences do} |" manife(tly convince, that the aire is |"
ftuffed with fuch atomes. I cannot |* omit to adde hereunto ‘anorker ex. |Mtl
periment, which is, that we find by if
the effects, how the rayes of the} Ilned ‘Moon are cold:and moift. It is wich- |ts ei
Pe es
Hoots
out controverfie, that the luminous | parts of thoferayes come from the}
Sun, the Moon having‘ no light ac)} alfwithin her, as Her eclipfes bear witneffe,* which happen when the eatth isoppofite ‘twixt her & rhe Sun; Which ‘inter‘pofition fuffers’ her not
Jtyp }they 9" t } Mt
cong My
| ae
sk
MEL
IE aRs MRI
LE
RNG
TAI
SA
(43)
1
ino have light from his rayes..
The
q
,,.foeames then which come from the »(Moon, are thofe of the Sun, which .4 glancing upon her, refle&t upon us, a
« |e
imnd fo bring wich chem the atomes. of. ithac cold and humid ftar, which par-: eae
fiticipates of the fource whence they
Beo-ne : therefore if one
fhould ex-
“mpofe a hollow bafon , or glaffe, to ,¢uaflemble them, one
fhall find, thar
whereas thefe of the Sun do burn by
“ifuch a conjuncture , chefe
clean
‘contrary do refrefh and moyften in Janotable manner, leaving an aqua‘ck , and vifcous glutining kind of
feat upon the elaffe.. One would } think ir were a folly that one fhould sig offer co. wath his hands in a well-po. oh lifned falver-bafon, wherein there is
MI) not adrop of water, yer this may be
Wl) done by the reflexion of the: Moonwn beams onely, which will afford a
1" competent humidity. to doe it ; but
it
|
they who havé tryed this, have found
ie their hands, after they are wiped, sto be much moifter than -ufually:
SIME uc chis is an infallible way to take MB) away warts from the hands, if-ic be
often ufed.
C 3
Let
V |
H a
(44)
:
1: OD
Letus then conclude out of thefe
pats, end
Premifes, and experiments, that the
aire is ful of Atomes,which are drawn from ‘bodies “by meanes of the light which refleé&ts. thereon, or which fally out by the interior naturall heat of chofe bodies, which drive
19)
healy
_ fente
quan 1ser with eflen qua (ivi
them forth, It may haply feem impoflible that there can be an ~ €Manation of fo many fmall bodies,. that fhould be fpread up and down: tec the aire, and be fo carried up and | down, and {6 far by a continuall Aux, |, GI may fayfo) and yee the body | i
whence they come receive no
dix /
Minution that is perceptible, though |
fometimes ’tis vigble enough, as by
the evaporations of the fpirits of | wine, musk, and other fuch volatif |
fubftances. Bur this objeGtion will | be null, andthe two precedent prin-. ‘ ciples will render themfelves more |
credible, when we shall fettle ano- | ther, wz. That every body, be it 4} never fo little, is divifible ad infni- |)
tum, not that it hath infinite. parts, "|
for the contrary thereof may “be demonttrated, but it is capable tay| Cau
|
NR te OR
GRE
OE
SIE
OE
;
(45) _ tbe divided and fubdivided into new
parts,. without ever coming to the lend of the divifion. And it 1s in this fenfe that out Mafters teach us that | quantity isinfinicely divitble. This is evident to-himwho fhall confider with a profound . Imagination.
Neffence,
te
and the formal! ceafon of
MG ‘quantity, which is nothing elf> Buc H diviobilicy. Buc i regard char this
i fpeculation
is _vety fubtile.
metaphyficall, I will ferve
and.
‘my ‘elf
-with fome geometticall ‘demonftta they for , truch this e prov tions to accommodate beft with the imagina‘tion. -Enclide doth, teach: us in the
tenth Propofition of his fixth book, char if one take a: fhert line, and
another long one, and that the long be divided to: divers equall parts
ewixt themfelves,.
the
little one
may be divided alfo into as many equall parts among thémfelvs,&& every one of thofe parts alfo into others, and thefe lat into fo many more, an
fo confecutively, withour being able ever to come to that which is not di- -
yifible, |
C4.
Buc
(46)
But lets {uppofe ( although ic be impoflible) thar one might divide ,
and fubdivide a line, fo that at laft we fhould come to an indivifi ble ,
and lets fee what will come of its fay then, that fince the line dothI
refolve it felf into indivifibles, flie
ought to be compofed of them ; lets | fee whether thar may be veriSe d, 4}... To which purpofeI take three indi~ vilibles, and to diftinguith the m, lec the
m be A.B. C. for if three Ons ofindivifibles make 4 lon millithree indivifibles will make ag line. one. I put them then-in a fhore Firft, I putA, then B, foneer rank; , that they touch one another: ] fay that B. mutt neceffarily poffeffe the fame Placeas A, or that it doth nor fefle it; ifit dorh poflefle the of. place, they both together . ame mal ho
extenfion, and by che fame r fon. neither
3, NOL
Co, de haat
Joco will doz
bur all the indivi bles. wi! unitet it, o..”
gether, andthe refyft of all thallb2
but onely one indivisble.
1;
t ‘be then that being not both in muf the fame place, yet touching one wy : ther,
|
| lets {
ay ee
|
Ee.
ea
rie
ie Se
(47)
‘ither, one part of B muft touch one
*)} part of A, and che other part touchltVerh icnot. Then Tadde the indivi. i bble C, whereof one part fhall touch 1} 4 pare of B which touches not A, and tl} by this means B is copulant, lying bei itween A and.C, to make the extenfi‘fon. Todothis, you fee that we mutt ds Hadmit thac Bhath parts.as the other i Hewo, which by your fuppofition are alff
kt Jindivifible; which being abfurd, the
ll fuppofition is impoilible. But to rens Ider che matrer yet more perfpicuous,
jlets fuppofe *that chefe chree indi lvifibles make one extenfion, and icompofe one line; the propofition tfalready ciced from Euchde demon-
¢Wiftraces charchis line may be divi ied
‘Minto thirty equall. parrs’, or-into: as i I/many as you pleafe: infomuch that «
iemuftbe granted that eve-y one of
« Ithefe three indivifibles may be divi+ i, §)ded into three parts, which is pomt0 @) blank agaimit the nature’ and’ denis hy Micion of an indivi%ble.
Bur-without
it M)dividing into fo many parts, Gaclide
ie Ml) Shews' by: his tenth propoficion of his
.
fir Flemene, that every line may Se
4, BM patted into two -equall parts : bueCc ..
this
£48)
|
this being compofed of indivifibles of unequall number, ic muft necefla-| tily follow, that being parted intoy two, there muft be an indivifible more}
onthe one fide than on the other, ot
that chat of the middle be parted in-
to two halfs:infomuch, that he who | denies that quantiry may not be)
divided ad infinitum, doth entangle
himfelf in abfurdities, and incom. prehenfible impoffibilities. And on the contrary, he who affents unto it, will find ic no impofhibilicy , or
inconvenient, thac the-Atomes of all
bodies. whichare in rhe aire may be divided, ftretcht and carryed to a Marvellous ‘diftance. Our very fen-
fes vetifie it in fome fort : there is no body in the World which we know fo compat, fo folid, and weighty as gold, yet neverthelefle_unto what a ftrange extent and divifion may itbe broughr> Eets take an ounce of |this mafly metall, ic fhall be buta burton as big
as my fingers end. A beater of gold will maake thoufand leayes or more
a
‘oft his ounce; one half of thefeleaves ers 9) is te
it
{hall
e
|
'
|i
te
cE
CE
’
ETE
ie Ce
nminge
aks:
le fur(hall fuffice to guild the ofwhothr ee of face of a lingot of filver,
guilded four ounces : lets give this prepare who m, the to lingot of filver e lace s gold and filver thread to’mak oreatelt eadiet them. drawit tothe let them, Jengcth and fubtilcy they.can,a hair, and draw it to the chinneffe of r of 2 fo this thread may be a quarte more + if not league long in extent, re will not the gth len this ayidin all which, 1s me be the {pace of, an Ato old a Beh d. gol not covered with dilacation! of © ftrange and marvellous the like co al this half leaf : let us do gold , it will rhe reft of the beaten this {mall appear thatby this meansfo extended be button of gold may this City of that it may reach fromand far beyond Montpellier to Parity n millions ‘-: into how. many millio lded Lins, aui s ‘of atoms might novthi Vly be cucavith (mall cifers’?
preherid thie « Now, tis ¢alie to com made:
divifibilicy this extenfiom, and ts, as bert by fuch orofie inftrumen compar aby ete mers.and cifers, isnot ang
the light hat whichis made by
*
: 50) Fayes of the Sun.’ For it is certain, that if this gold may be drawn into any our fuch a great length by{pindles , or | fel wheels of iron, fome of thefe parts |one may eafily be carryed away by thofe winged Courfers ”we fpoke of be- |wh ‘fore,I mean, by the rayes that flie |fou ‘Here ana moment from the sun to the “ Vigo earth. : *~ Tf I did not fear it would prove
tedious unto you by my prolixity, 1 would entettain you with the
ftrange
fubtiliry of
little
bodi
es which iffue forth from living bodies,
y ‘means whereof: our dogs in
Ey. Slasd will purfue the fent of a mans fieps, of of a bealts, Many mile and not onely fo, but they will s: in agreat heap of flones thar whifind ch aman hath touched with his han d: Therefore it'muft needs bethar ‘the earth,or upon the ftone,fo upon me material parts of the body remain whi ‘hath touched it,yetthe body doth ch noe fenfibly diminith, no more than Am: bergrife , and. the Spanifh skins, which willfend out ofthem an odour
during: an hundred years, withoue
any
pi it |slow
ites
|
AMEE
OEE EE
(51)
any diminution of skin or fmell. In
}our Country they ufe to fow a whole
field with one fort of grain, to wit,
ts J one ‘year with barly, the nexe with |wheat, the chitd with beans, and the
. /fourch year) they ler it reft, and
i: § ftercorize it, that it may tecover its
: J vigour by arcraction of the vitall {,1| ric ic receives from theair , and fo
plow it’ up again after the fame de-
| grees.
Now, the year that the field
| is covered with beans, the paffengersby doe ufe to fent at a good diftance off, if the wind blow accordingly, the {mellofthe Beans,’ if they be: in
|flower: Ie‘is a fmell that hath a
| fuavity withic; but fading, and at | afis unpleafant and heady. But } the fmell of Rofemary which comes | fromthe ‘coalts of Spain, goes fat | further: I havé failed by fea along | thofe coafts divers times, and I have | obferved’ alwayes, that the Mariners
know when they are within thirty or forty leagues of the Continent,
| (Idoe not exa&tly remember the di-
| ftance) andithey have this: knowledg
from the {mel of the Rofemarys which ‘ : ie
( (52) which fo abounds in the fields. of | | Spain shave {melcic as fenfibly, .as ifI had hada branch of. Rofemary 7 in my hand, and this was a day or”
two before we could difcover fand.; tis true, the wind was in. our. faces , ©
i»
and came .from the fhore.- Some | Naturalifts write that Vultures have
come two orthree
hundred leagues 7
y the fmell of carrens, off, by
.and | dead bodies left.in the field, afrer | fome- bloudy: battle; and ic was | known that thefe birds came from afar off, becaufe there was none ufed te
breed neerer'; they have a quick 7 fmelling, and it. muft be: that. the rotten atomes of thofe dead .carkafes were tranfported by the aire fo far;
3Tar FS EoA Ps 5. eget €;%eee ee wa. eoy :
weet =<4=Vi, ort nie ke ¢ge54aePee ~2 s=e>%. ; an
and thofe birds having once caught the fent, they purfue it to the very fource,and the neerer they come to it, the ftronger it is. /Wewill concludehere that which weshad to fay touching the great extent of thofe little bodies, which
bythe mediation of the Sun: beams; and of the light,-.ufe to! iflue-forth
put of alli bodies that are eanpoled }Sad hen ee I ee aoe ne oe Sa esa=Sar: Tee ee bale ar ‘a7:« wits, .bwe) eres on amr mr=itfFvy. ce tf,
me em gem ROR Shieh ar a 28 June are alia ee |S eee S>..: &einer PP eeogencape a
xml
|
OA OS RE |si at, PO tT
IS
(53) of the four Efemenrs, which throng the air,and are carried a marvellous diftance from the place, and from the
bodies whence they have their origen and fource; the proof and explication of which things hath been-the aime of my difcourfe hicherte.
Now, my Lords, I muft, if you
pleafe, make you fee how thefefmall bodies that fo fill, and compofe the air, ate oftentimes drawn toa road
alrogether differing from that which
their univerfall caufes fhould make them hold;and that fhall be our fifth | principle. One
courfe
may
remark .within.
the
and ceconomy. of nature,
fundry forts of attractions 2 as that
of {udion, or fucking, whereby I have feena
ball of lead at che bottom
of along feel exaktly wrought, fol-
tow the air, which one fucked: out ofthe mouth ofa Cannon, with that
i
=——e
2] £o >"
impetuoiry and ftrength , that it broke his teeth. |The’ attraCtion of water.or wine that is done by the
inftrument; Scyphon: is liketo:this, r 1s for by meanits of char, one. liquo made
:
($4)
made to paffe from one veffell into . another, without changing any way
the colour, or rifing of the lees, There is another. fo: of artraction; which is called magneticall, whereby theloaditone draws theiron.
Ano-
ther electrick,whereby the Jett-ftone
draws untoit ftraws
There is ano-
therof che Flame, when the fmoke ofa candle put out, draws the flame
of that which burns ‘hard by, and
makes it defcend to light that which
is out.
There is another of. Filirg.
tion, whereby a humid body mounts upon adry body, or when the contrary is done. Laftly, when the fire,
or fome -hot body draws the air; and’ that ‘which is. mixed there_ with, We willtreat onely here of the two laft fpecies ofattraction,! have fufficiz ently fpoken of the reft-in another place. Filtration may feem to hiny who hath not attentively confidered it, ‘norexamined by what circum. ftances fo hiddena fecret of nature comes to pafle, and toa perfon of
@ mean and limited.underftanding., .
fo
;
2?
Rea
e ey
, |tobe done by fome occult vittue, or |proyetry, and will perfwade himfelf,
|lthac. .
7) 5
yy‘ a io
iv
" je
(a
1
within the Filtre, or {trayning Infirument, there is fome fecret | Sympathy , which makes water to | mount up contrary to its natural
% motion.
But he who will examine the buH finefs as it ought to be, obferving
afl that is done, without omitting Hany circumflance, will find there
is nothing more. naturall, and that it is impoiibleit fhould be otherwile. ‘And we mutt. make che fame Judge-
ment of all the profound and moft myfterics. of nature , if hidden ene would take the (ainsto difcovet | them, and-fearch into them with judgement. Behold then how Filtration 1s § made, they ufe to put 2 long roung eS
§ of cloth, orcotten,
or f ongy mat-
ter, within an earthen pot of water
or other liquor , letting hang “upon: the bri» of the pot a good
part ofthe clorh, and one. fhall fee the water prefently mount up, and paffe above the brink of the vefiell, an
(56)
and drop at the lower end of the_ piece of cloth, upon the ground, or within fome veffell - and the Gardners ufe chis way “to water their plants and. flowers in’ Sum-
mer by degrees: As alfo Apothecaries , and Chymifts fepgrate their liquors. from regs and refidences. To comprehend the, reafon,
) ther
the , to Dyi their i ovat
| A, 5,
eth 4| why 8 Je they the water afcends in this manner,
Tet us neerly obferve alf that is done. That part of the cloth whichis within the water, becomes wetted,to wit.it receives
and
‘imbibes
the
fo
1) of th |fh ;
water’ | ane
through its parts chat were at firft al fporigy and ‘dry. This cloth fwells in bye receiving the water, for two bodies
joyned together, require more room than one. of them would by it felf, Let us confider this fwelling, and augmented. extenfion in the laft ' thread of them which touch the wa-
ea
| ther
cat 1 pre | Nate
) hub
tér, vz. in that on the fuperficies, § dhe which muft be diftinguifhed ‘from che .reft, and marked ar rhetwo
ends,
(as a line) wich A. B. and the thread which immediately ae
follows,
Ht,
ae
MEE Ce
ROS ——————
eS
IE ——
i
(57)
) 4 follows,
and is above it, muft be
C.D. and the following E.F, then wich
G,. H,
and fo to the end of
* Wiche roung :, I fay then chat the thread ng A.B. dilating it felf, and {welli enters which. watet che | by means of
_Bcwixt ics fibres or ftrings, apptoch-
W ethby little and little to C.D. which: His yet dry, becaufe ic toucheth not
n TD the water ; but when A.B. is growon reaf “by , ling fwel and fe ) fo grof it "Ty of the water which enters , that. dithe all a) fills all the vacuity, and . hy) Rance which lies twixtit and C.D, C.D ft again ech preff it jg) as alfo that "| by reafon of its extenfion, whichis greater then the {pace was betwaxt them. both, rhenit wets C. D. be-
caufe the thread A.B. being comprefled, the exterior patt of the be water which was init, coming to
a pufhed on upon C.D. feeks there ads, thre the in with place,and encreth and wets them, inthefame manner as at firt the exterior and higheft g fo ti) pare. became wet. C.D. bein B. A. s felfa irc e dilat : i wetted,it(hall
2equently prefling, lf| did, and conf gaintt |
on , |
}
|
|
(58)
gaint E.¥F. ic cannot chufe bnt work ; the fame effect in it, which before | the it had received by che fwelling and | pot dilatation of A.B. andfob
gentle
a DY ae degrees every thread wets its neigh-.
||
bour,untill che yery la@ thread of the ona tounge of cloth. And it is norto be fae
feated that che continuity of the wa- ayy ter will break, afcending this fcale of |. cotds, of thatirc will recoife back wards.for thofe little ladders,fo eafié
_|- 4
to be mounred, rendet the afcent he more eafie, andthe woolly fibres
#
pace ; and fo the faciliry of ger. ting upwards together with the fluidneffe of th: water, and the na
lies 1 fo
Wayes to the uniting of fubitances,
| bs
of every thread feen to reach their |He. hands to hel» hem up at every*}
|i
ture of quantity, which tends ale
— tie
and of bodies whichir-clothes, when there occurs no other sredoninans
caufe to break and divideit, caufeth
that che water keeps it-f:lf in one
_
|
piece ,and paffeth. above the brink
”
| @
i
ofthe pot. After that ics voyage is . fi™ made more eafie, for it goes after its
“naturall panching , alwayes down.
wards,< |
| ae
RE
>
AR
eae ee
CEE
(59) pot,the water fpills on che earth,oron fome veffel placed beneath,as we fee that aheavier cord being hung upona pully, rhe longeft and heaviett es falls upon the ground, and carrieth — —
Co
ae .
=
= Pn ————
—=S&S =
away the fhorteft, and lighteft, ma-
aeens oe
coe ea!
king it paffe above the pully. eae aT
<vo
=
Se
hfé the outward
But
end of the cloth
which is without the pot were hori-
_
zontall with the furfaceof the watet, and did hangno lower them, the water would be. immoveable : as the two fides ofa balance, when
———
-
there is equall weight in both. the
ee en
fcales.
And if one would
poure out
the water thatis inthe pot, in fuch
fort that the fuperficies did grow: lower then the end of the cloth,; in
thar cafe the afcending water becoming mote heavy then the defcendant on the other fide without the pot , would call back thac which iN] yas gone out before, and was ready to fall, and would make ic thruft on, ee
4
| and return to its former pace, and enter
(60) enter again into the pot, to mingle :
again with the water which lyes, therein.
You fee then all this myftery,which | at firft was fo furprizing, difplayed
and made as familiar and ‘natural: as to fee aftonc fall down from the air. |; Tis true, that. tomakea demonttra-!
tion thereof by an exa& and com- | pleat rigour, we mutt adde other circumfanc es, which we have done at length in another Difcourfe,wherein I:
have expreflely treated of this fubje&. But that which I now fay is fufficient. | upo this occafiO.to give a tinCturehow | this fo notable an aera
is made.
The other attraction which is made |
by fire, and draws *untoic the am-, |
bient air, withthe fmall bodies there- | in,is donne rhus ; The Fire acting according to its
own nature, (whic histo puth ona continuall river, or exhalation. of its
parts, from the center to the circum-
ference, and ourofits fource, )earriech away wich it the air Svhich yis ad~
Joyned, and fticking to. it onvall
fides, as the water of ativer drawes along,
is ERS aR
se
LES
* RCE
ES
(61) i*Iong withicthée earth of that chan.
mel or. bed through which ir glides.
‘For the aire being humid, and the
fire dry, they cannot do leffe. chan i} embrace, and-hug one another.
Bur
there mutt anew aite come from: the
atl
places circumjacent,to fil che
room
fell Of char which is carried. away by the
=aJ=
fire, othe:wife there woulda vacuity
happen, which nature abhors. This | new ait remains not long in the place § whichit comes to fill, but the fire,
Pa
which is ina continuall carreer, and
emanation of its parts, carties it prefently wich him, and draws .the ade. new. aire,and fo there is a‘ perpetuall, hows !
oe
atti and confant current of che aire, as aia long as the action of fire continues. el We dayly fee the experience hereof, ) for if one makes a. good fire in, ones
Chamber, indraws the. aire from the re) | door, and windows, which though is | one would-fhut, yer there be crevi-
tt b|
q
|
Hitt ia ’
=
{fle
ate |
Alt | yes | ay
cesand holes for the aire to enter,
and coming near them, one
fhall
hear a kindof whifling noife, which
the aire makes in preffing .telenter, and’tis the fame ‘caufe chat producet
(62)
ceth the found of the Organ and
Fluce ; and hewhovould ftand be-
tween the crevices andthe firé, he fhould find fuch an impetuofity of that artificiall wind, chat he -would bereadyto freeze, while héig teady to burn the other fide nextthe fire, And a candle of wax being held in
this curreof ntthe wind would mele by her flame blown againitthe wax, and wait away in avety fho:t time: Whereas if that. candle ftood in. a calme place , that her flame might burn ‘upward, it would ‘lat much longer. But if there be no paflage whereby the air may enter into the Chamber, the one part then of the vapour of the wood: which fhould
have converted
to flame, and fo
Mounted upthe funnel of che chim: hey, defcends downward .againtt its Nature, for to fupply the’ defeat of
air within the tid Chamber, «aiid
fills ic with fmoke, but at lat the fire
choaks, and extinguifheth for want of air. Whence it comes to paffe that
the Chymists have reafon
to fay,
thac the air is thefife of the fre, as well {
4
re \
| |) Wi |
j tr
TS TE
ES nea eS | ti.ll aa
| |
alle
(63)
‘dwell as. other animals. But if one Nee jpucs abaion, or veflell of Water be. fore che firé upon the hearch, chere will be no fmoke in the Chamber,
alchough it be fo clofe fhuc chac ithe air cannot enter, forthe fire ats tracts parts of the water, which is a ‘in fliquid-fubftance, and eafie ro move ek out of its place, which aquatick parts 4, prarthe themielves into air, and there-
e: by cerform the functions of the air.
,;uThis is more
evidently feen if the
st) Chamber be Jiccle, for then the .air
i WWhich is there penned in, is fooner
we Wtaifed up, and ¢arryed away.
And
ie by reafon of this atcraétion, they ufe 2 to make great fires, where there is {i §oufhold-tiuffe of men chit died of ( the Peftilence,to dit-infe& chem. For pty
this. inundation of air which is
criwn.the fre doth asit weréfweep
ithe walls,
the planks, wich other
iplaces of the Chamber, - and takes
away thofe liccle putrified, thar, Bicottofve,
and venomous bodies,
Swhich were the infeCions. that. -d(i hered unto it, drawing chem into
§ the fire, where they are partly burner, |
|
D
and \
C64)
|
and-partly fen. up into che chimney, accompanied isvith the atoms of the fire and the fmoke.: It’ is'for this reafonthaethe great: Hippocrares,who dt- 4}dod
wed fo far inco the fecrets of Nature,
disinfetedjand freed from the plague
awhole Provincesor entire Region,by
cauGng them to make great fires every where.
Now., this: manner of attraction
is. made, not onely by a fimple fire, but by: chat’ which: partakes of it, viz,by the heated fubftances : and char: which, isithe: reafon and caufe ofthe one;
other,
is alfo che canfe of the
For:the fpirits, or ignited
patts evaporating from fuch a fubftance, orhovbody, carry away with | chem theiadjacent aire, which ought
neceffatily to be nourithed by fome other aire, or by fome matter which keeps othe place of the aire, as we have fpoken of the bafon, and tub of water put before the: fire to: hinder fmoke. Ic is upon this foundation, that Phyfitians do ordain thz hot” application ef Pigeons, or young’ |
i do3s,osfeme ether hor animals, rel to’ the
PRG Se BEE ST RE
FOO.
FE RS
(65) the foles of che feet, or the hand. writs, or the ftomacks, ornavills of
i
.}) their patients, to extract out of rheir
| bodies'the wind, or ill vapours which e § infe& chem ; and in time of contra-
| cion, ot univerfall infection of the
We 4 D
aire, pigeons, cats, dogs, with other
y
..4 hot animals, ufeto be killed; which
|make continuallya great cranfpira-
os | Cion of evaporation of fpirits, becaufe 4 |) the aire by thofe attractionsirmales,
i, taking the room of the fpirics, wi, Which iffue forth of evaporation, the
wel, peftiferous’ atoms which are fcattered ‘em inthe aire, and accompany it, ufe wif to flickto their feathers, skinz, ot ah. furres. ii@ And for the fame reafon we {ee
a em ich yh
that bread coming hot from the Over, draws untoitthe muft of the
cask, which fpoiles the wine, if they pueichor upon the bung. And that | onions,g fuch hot bodies which per-
) petually exhale unto them the fiery ot Parts, which appears by the ftrength
jot Of theit fmell, are quickly taken with infeCtious airs, ifthey be expo-
feduntothem, which is one of the °
D2
fignes
| |
ei i}
a
By
(66)
fignes to know whether the whole mafle of the air be univerfally infe-
nat fety
éted.
an Hil
And one might reduce to this
head
the. grear attraction :of. air,
which is made by calcin’d bodies, and particularly by Ta:tar, allignited by the violent action of the tre
upon it, which is heaped cogether, and bodified. a~ong
ats falc: for I
have. obierved chacic attracts unto. it hine times more air then ic weighs it felf.. For af.ene fhould expofe ro
the air a pound: of fale of Fastar well calein’d, and burnt, it willafford youten pound of good oy! of Tartar,
drawing unto it, and io bodifying cbh2-circumiacent air, end chac wherewich tis mingled ; as it befell thae oyl-of Tartar. which Adou/iesr Ferrier
made me., whereof. I {pake :pefore, . Buc: methinks. thac ll this is but lictle compared to the attraction .of
air, which was made by the body of a cerrain Nunive at Rome whereof Pe-
trus Servia, Orban the bizhch’s Phyfician,mikes mention ina bookwhich
whe hath pablifhed,, touching the |
Mare
fell a 90 facy afly
.
| ig.
ae
RR
Emme
EPS oe Seer
(67) marvellous accidents which he ob-ferved in his cine. Had I not fuch an Author, I durit not produce this
Hiitory , alchough the Nunne her felf aid confirm it untome; and chat a good number of Doétors of the faculty of Phyfick- at Rome, did affure me of che cruch rhereof: There was a Nuane, chat by exceffe of fating, of watchings, and mental
orifons, was fo heated in herbody; that fhe feened to be all on fire} and her bones dryed up, and calcin’?d ; This heac’ chen, chis ‘internat
fire, drawing ‘the air fo powerftlly; thts air did: incorporate within her
body,
as it ufeth to doe in fale of
Tartar, andthe paflages being all’ open, it got to thofe parts -where there is mot feroSty., which is the’ blader, and thence fhe rendred it~
in water among herurine, and’ thac’ in an incredible quantity, for fhe: voided during fone weeks, more thin two hundred rounds of- water every foursand twency hours. With: this notable example I will puc.an: end to the experiments I have-ur-D 3 ged:
(68) ged to prove and explicate the attraétion whieh 1s made. of aire, by hoe.
and ignited bodies, which are of the mature of fire.
My fixth Principle fhall be, thac when fire, orfome hor body attracts the aire, and. that which ts within rhe
att, if it happens. that wichin that air there be found fome difperfed atoms of the fame
nature
wich the
body which draws them, rhe ateracti-
on of fuch atoms is made mote powerfully, then if they were bodtes-of a different nature , and chefe
atoms doe ftay, flick, and minele witk
more willingneffe with the body which
draws
them.
“The
reafon
hereof ‘is the refemblance and Sympathy they have one wich the ether. If I fhould nat explicate wherein this refemblance confifted, I fhould expofe my felf to the fame
cenfure and blame,
as that-which I
taxed at. th3 beginning of my Dif.
courfe,. touching*thofe who fpeak but lightly and vulgarly of the Powder of Sympathy 5 and’ fuch mrr2
vails of nature, -But -when-I thall have
|
| pen
le eT
|
SE
RE
eG
C69)
|
| have cleared that which I contetid
for byfuch a refemblance and conveniency , 1 hope then you will reft
fatisfied.
1 could make you fee that
there are many forts of refemblances which caufe an union between bodies, but I will content my felfe to
declare ones. Th
here .onely.
three fignalk
firt refemblance
fhall be
touching ‘weight, whereby bodies of the fame degree of heavineffe doe affemble together, the reafon wherewi ofis evident, for if one body were
more light, it would poffeffe a higher
Gruation thin the heavier body, as
onthe contrary, ifa body were more weighty, it would defcend lowet thar that which is leffe heavy, but both hwing the fane degree of heavinefle, they keep compatiy together in equilibria, as one may fee by experierrce in this gentile example, which fome curious fpirits ule to” produce, for to ‘make us underttand
how the four elements aré fituared
one above the other , according to’
rheir weight and heavineffe. D 4
They”
ule
{7e)
ufe to put in a viall the fcirit of 2
wine tintur’d with red, to reprefent
the fire; the fpiric of Furpentine
tinctured withblew, for the air; the
fpiric of water tinctured with green, to reorefent the element of water;
and to reprefene the Earth , the Powder of fome folid metal’ ena-
Mell’d; you fee them one upon the
other ‘without mixing , and if you
fhake them together by a violent agitation, you {hall fee a Chaos,
fuch a confufion, that it will feen
there’s no particular atomes that belong to any of thofe bedies, they ate fo. huddled pel{-mell_cogether, But when this agitation is agitated, you fhall fee prefently every one of
thefe four fubftances go to ies natural
place, calling again, and
labouring
counite all their atoms in one ditingt mafle, that you fhall fee no mixture
at all. The fecond: refemblance: of bodies which draw one another, and unite,
Is among
them
fame degree
which
are of the
of rarity and> denfity.
The nature and effe& of Quantiry bas!
1S
oe epee as
ak PO. | RAR
a
ET aaa
Te
Oe
SNS
~ Sas
C7t7).
isto reduc2tounity allchings which? it finds , if chere interpofe nor fome other {trenger power, (as the differing fubftanciall- forme,
which doth
multiply ic) doe not hinder.
And
the reafon ofthat is evident, for“the effence of Quantity isa divifibilicy,
or capacity to be divided, which 1s°: 4s much to fay, as to. make ic many; °
whence it may be inferred ©thac: Quantity it felfis not many, there‘fore fhe is of-herfelf, and in her own’: nature , 4 continued extenfion '::
feeing then that the natureof Quan-' tity 1 generall tends to tnicy, and continuity, the firft differences of
Quantity; which are rarity and den-fity, muft produce the fame effect of unity and continuity: in thofe’ bosdizs which convene inthe tame de-
gree with them. we
Forproof whereof,’
find thar water doth unite and
incorgorate
it felf frongly and ea--
fly with waterjoyle with oylé,the foi-
rit’ of wine with: {ptric’ of wine; but Water andoyle can hardly unice, nor
mercury with the friric of wine, and other: bodies ofdiffering denfiry and cenuty. .
dD. &
The:
C7)
The third refemblance of bodies which unite and keep themfelves,
{trongly rogether,is that of Figure : I willnot ferve my felf here with the ingenious conceit of a great perlo-
nace. who holds that the continuity
of bodies. refulss from fone fmall hookings ot clafpings, which keep them. together ,. and are differing in bodies of a differing nature. Bur not to-extend my felfe too. diffufiveJy. inevery particuloricy, Twill fay 1 erofie, as an apparent thing, thac every kind of body affects a particular figure. We fee it plainly.in the feverall forces of Salt, peel and fiamp them feparately, diffolve, coi-. gulate, andchange them as long as you pleafe, they come again alwayes
csbe ~~
to; their own: naturall fioure > akter
every. diffolution, and coagulation. The ordinary fale doth. form. it felf alwayes.in cubes of four-fquare faces,
falr-perer in: formes of fix, faces> eArmomac fale in Hexagons of fix
points, as the {now doth, which is
fexangulary, Whereunto Mr. DaWifon. attributes the pentagonary fiours
oe >
fj gure. of evety one of thofe. ftones
which were found inthe bladder of the number of tor, | Min eur Pelletie
fourfeore ; for che fame immediate eficient caufe, whichis rhe bladder ,
had imprinted its aétion both within
the ftones, andthe falrof the urine.
The Difillators obferve, thar ifthey rowre upon the dead head of fome
difillacion, the water which was di-
filled, ic imbibes ir, and*re-unites incontinently, whereas if one would: powre any other water of an hereto-seneous body, it fwims on the to»,. and incorporates wich
«> i —_ =oe
much: difh--
culty. The-reafon is , that rhe di-fif’d water which feems tobe an homogeneous body , although it is compofed of fmall bodies of difcre-. pint figures, asthe Chynsi/sdo plait
= ———— : eee
Ss
i Oe
—
ly demonfirate,and thefe atoms be-
eee ee oe
€-n = ~s < aia >< = —_—-.
ing chaced by the aétionof fire... outoftheir own chambers, or beds,
which appropriated
unto. them by:
an exact jufineffe, when they come: back to their ancrene habications,.
viz, tothe pores which are left in the. dead heads, they aecommodate:
ay
C74)
date themfelves, and amiably.rejoyn.
and. commenfurare together. The fame happens when.it rains after a Jong drought; for che. earth immediately drinks up the water, which ‘had been drawn up by the Sun, whereas. any, other - ftrange.. liquoz would enter with. fome- difficulty... Now, thar there are differing pores in bodies which feem to-be homogencous, Monfieur. Gafferdus affirms it;and undertakes to prove it by the
difalutio of.falts n of differing na-.
tures it)..common water, and {ayes he to this effeat; chat when you have
diffelved common falt, as much as
cat bear, ifyou put onely.a feruple more, it, will leave icentire in
the bottom,
as if ic were fand, or.
plaifter*; .neverthelefle, it. will dif, folve.a good quantity of. Salt-peter, and thoughit toucheth not chis falc;
itwill diffolve as much of Armonia.
calf falc, and fo others of different
figures.
Infomuch..as I have obfer.
ved ‘elfewhere, we fee plainly by the @coregy of Nature, chat bodies of
th fame figure ufe to mingle more
ftrongly,
>
iog SOR. GAMBLE
EES OTA,”
AGE
(75) frongly,.and unice themfelves wich: more facility, which is the reafon why thofe thar make a ftrong glue to gue together broken pots of Porcelain, or C hry al, or fuch fluff, do
alwayes mingle with the glue the powder of that body which they endeavour to reunite -* And. the Goldfmichs themfelves,
when they
goabout cto folder together fieces of gold, or of filver, they mingle thofe bodies alwaies in their own duit.
Having hitherto run through the reafons and caufes why bodies of the fame nature draw-one to anes ther with: greater faciliry and force than others, and why. th2y unire with more promprtitude; lets now fee; according to: our method, how experience, confirmes this difcourfe5
fer in naturall chings we muft have recoutfe, e# dernier reffort, to expe-
sience., And all reafoning that is not fupporced fo-onght to be repudiated, or ar*leaft fuffedted to bs illegitimate. Tis; any ordinary thing, when one finds
(76)
7
finds himflf burnt as in the hand, he holds ita good while.as near the
fire as he can, and by this.means the:
ignited atomes of the fire, .and of.
the hand mingling together, and
drawing one another, and the ftrong-. er.of the two, which are thofe ofthe
fire, having che maftery, the hand finds 1c felf much fammation
eafed of the in«
which-ic fuffered.
Tis:
an: ordinary remedy, thougha nafty one, that they who have iHbreaths,
hold their mouths open:at che mouth:
ofa Privy, aslong as they can, and by the reiteration of this remedy, they find themfelves cured at laft ,. the greater ftink ofthe Privy drawing unto it, and carrying away the Jefle , which-is that of che mouth. They who have-been: pricked, or bit bya Viper, or Scorpion; hold ovet
the bitten; or pricked place, the héad ef a Viperor Scorpion bruifed, and‘ . by this means the poyfon, by a kind: of filtration way, going onto gainethe heart of the party, returns back. to its principles, and fo leaves. the party well recovered, In time of” ‘eommon:
|
| :
GE BOLE. Pes «,the. Sh
SF AIOE
G
(77)
common contagion , they ufe to carry about them the powder of a toad, and fometimes a living toad or
f-ider (hur upinabox ; orelfe they” catty arfnick, or fome orher venomous fubtance, vehich draws unto-
it the contagious air, which otherwile would in-eét the party > and the fame powder of a toad draws unto it rhe poyfon.of a peftilentiall cole. The Scurf or Farcy ts a vyenomous and congagicus humour within the body of a horfe; hang a toad: about the neck of the horfe, ina lircle bags.
and he will be cured infallibly ; the: coad, which. ische ftronger foyfon,
drawing to it, che yenome which was nichin the Horfe. Make water to: evaporate outof a floye, or other room, clofé fhut, ifthere be norhing: chat draws this vapor, it will flick tothe walls of the ftove, and asit cools, it recondenfeth there into warer: burifyou put a bafon or buc-
ker full of water. into-any part of che Rove, ir willattract allthe varor
which filled the chamber, and fo doing , mopart of the wall‘will be
wetted,
wetted.
C78)
If you diffolve mercury;
which refolving into faoke , doth pafle into the recipient, pur ito the
head of the Limbick a little thereof,
and all the mercuryin the Limbick
will. gather there; and nothing will
pafle into the recizient. If you ditill the fpicic of falt, or of vitriol, ot the baume of Sulphur, and leaving the paflage free betwixt the {pirie and the dead head whence iciflued forth, the {piries will return: to the
dead head, which
being fixt, and
not ableto mount: up, drawes them unto.it. . |
In our Country, and. I think tis.
fo ufed here, they ufeto make rrovifion for all the year of Venifon:
patties, atthe féafon chat their fleth is beft,and moft favory, which is ta July and Augutt ; they bake ic in earthe en pots, or Rye-eruft, after they have
well feafoned it with falc and frices, and being cold, they coverit fix fingets: deep with freth butter, that the ait May not enter.» Nevertheleffe is obferved after all the diligence that one can make, that when thz Fes
zafls « EP
We
!
Ri
Wis t
Thy a
|
3
G77)
| beafts which are of che fame nature | and kind, are in Rur, che fleth which
| is in che pot fmells very rank, and | very much changed, having aitron| ger cafte, becaufe of che fpints which come ar this feafon from the living - beafts, which f,irits are ateraéted , @ naturally by the dzad fiefh ; and
then one hath much ado te. prefetve
it from being quite fpoiled : butthe
faid feafon being paffed, there is ne
danger.or difficulty to keep it guftfull all the year after. The wine-metchants obfetve in this Country, and every whereelfe where there is wine, that during the feafon that the Vines arein flower,
the wine which is in the Cellar makes akind of fermentation, and pufheth forth a‘little white-lee, (which I think they call-che mocher of ‘the wine ) upon the. furface of the wine, | whiclcontinueth ina kind of diforder, untill che flowers of the Vines be fallen; and then this agitation or fermentation being ceafed ,. all the Wine returns tothe fame. ftate it wes 1 before.
No.
(80)
Noris it lately chat this obfergaci- on bath been made, but befdes divers ||
others,.who {peak hereof, St. Ephrem riz Syrian in his'fa@ Wilkand Tefta-
ment, fome 1300 years ago, reports
this very fame citcumfance of wine,
which fenfibly fuffers an agicarionand 7 fermentation wichin the veffel the. fame tims that che Vimesfeen to ex-
ale their {pirits inthe Vineyards.He
©
makes ufe of the fame exam “fe in dry
onions, which bud in. the houfe; when: thofe in the garden begin to come out of the earrh, and.co embalme the air
with their {pirics ; faewing thereby by thefe known examples of nature, the communication between living per= fons,and the fouls ofthe dead.
Now,
thofe winy. fpirics chat iffue from the buds.and flowers, filling the air, (as the fpirics of _Rofemary uferodo in: Spaiz) they are drawn into the veffels
by the connacurall and attraQtive vem tue of the wine within:and thefe new volacil fpirits entring; do excite the
mot fixed fpirits ofthe wine, and fo
caufe a fermentation, as if one fhould. |
powre.therein new or {weet wine: for
in
Sigs <
|
aT
EERE
EOE”
PIE
RR
Rt
(87)
tie || an al! fermentations, cheré igafepara-
as I]. eion made ofthe cerreftrial parts trom
m | the oily, which come out of the effeni | tiall pares, and forthe lightelt mount 6 |)up to the fuperficies, the heaviett nt, | become Tartar Lees, which fall mto the bottom. Buc in this feafor, if te |. onebe not very carefull to keep the ) wine in a proper, and teinperate
Ht | place, and keepthe Cask full, and
iy )-well bungd, and -ufe other ndeavours , which are ordinary with
|) Wine-Coupers, ome tuns:a ‘hazard to
& -s
iit) have his wine impaired, or quite fpoi-
Wl) Jed, becaufe thatthe volatil fpirtts
e}| comming to evaporate themfelves., {| they carry away with them the fpiWi, {)‘tics of the wine thatis barrelled by def) exciting them, and mingling with them. As in like manner the oyle of i) “Tartar, which A4oxfieur Ferrier made,
ok
otenacting tot felfithe volatil.
fptrics
ef of Rofes, diffufed inthe airin theit at}. feafory, fuffered fuch afermentation, ie} and made every year new artractie
ous of the like frirics, in regard of the affinity which this oyle had con-.
| cracted withothofe firies ac its firtt
births.
.
,-
:
|e
(82)
birth , whereof ic was deprived as’ the {eafon paffed. And tis for the) yety fame reafon that atable-cloth, 7
or napkin, fpo:ced with mulberries, or red wine, 1s eafily whirerred again
at the fe fon chat the plants do flower; whereas at. any other time 7 thefe {pots can’ hardly be wafnedaway. “Bur tis not onely in Pranee
and other places, where Vines-are 7 near Cellars of wine,that this fer nen-
tation happens *; in Exgland, where
we have not Vines enoughto make wite , the fame thing i; obferved:,
yer and fome particularities beyond. Aithough
they make
mo.
wine
(in:
our Country to any .confiderable prosortion, yet we have wine there In great abundance, which is brought over by the Merchants : Ic. ufeth to cone principally from three places, wiz. from the (azaries , from
Spain,and fron Gafcony. Now thefe Regions being under different desrees and Climates in point of Ilatitude, and-confequently one Country is hotter ot colder then the other;
or that the fome vegetals grow’ to niaturity 5
| ipa Ee Seer nee SONG EES
| |
(83)
|
lat iimaturity fooner , ic comes te paffe ie thac the aforefaid fermentation
of
ih, Jour differing wines advanceth ic felf e, more orlefle, according as the Vines
ain iwhence they proceed do bud and dfiower in che region where -they miigrow + ic being confenrneous to ie|jreafon, that. every fort of wine atoe itratts more willingly the fpirits of ye} thofe Vines whence they come, than
em] Of any other. vel)
;
1 cannot forbear but I mult make
ie fome digreflion here, ro unfold fome
of.) other elects of nacure, which we fee
ni often, -and-are netiefie
curious.than
inf the moft principall which we creat of,
Welland will feem to be-derived from se more obfcure caufes, notwithtand-
ot} ingin Many circunitances they de-
of endon the fame principles, and in
{-§) many much ciffering, Iris couching mf molesor marks which hap; en toin-
{of fants, when their mothers, during the pf time.of their pregnancy , have lon-
ti: ged afterfome particular things. To nf}, proceed after my accu!tomed manrf ner, Fwill falbto exem:lifie, AcLady
of, of high condition, which many:of i . this
(84)
this Affembly know,. at leait by re-
mitation , hath upon her neck the.
igure’ of a Mulberry, as exactly as
‘ny Painter, or Sculptor can poflibly: -eprefent one, for it bears not onely
he colour, but rhe’ juft proportion sf a Mulberry, and is as it were -mboffed upomherflefh.. The Moher of this Lady being with childy he hada great mind to eate fome
Mulberries, and her imagination bes ng fatisfied, one’ of them cafually ‘elf upon her neck, the fanguine Juyce |
vhereof was foon wiped off, and
that time. “The ng he felt nothiat +hild being ‘born, the perfect fioure’
f'a Mulberry was’ fee upon her creck, inthe fame place‘where it fell
won the mothers, and every year, im Mulberry-feafon, thisimpreffion, or rather -excreflence of flefh did fwell, crow big, and itch.
Another maid which had the like
mark
of a Stawbetry , was
more
incommodated therewith, for it ins. flamed and itched in Strawberry-
feafon, but it broke like an Imro-
flume, whence ifived forth’ a fharg> colpetive
| iene
} |
nas antivir cate Sees
Ses
ak
(35)
® ffcorrofive humour. Buta skilfull Surit geon tookall away to the very roots, Woy cauterizing ; fo that fince that rime y Whe never fele any pain. or change =
y lim: that-place which did incommo-
on date herfo much, it being become a
nt Hample fear. (i. | Now then, lets endeavourto pe-
ld) aetrace five can che caufes and rea-
nt) fons of thefe marvellous effets, But y/ te go the moze hanfomly to work, iy oo within the ations of all our we Wfenfes, there is a‘materiall and cor-
it |porall participation, wiz. that fome
tr atoms ofthe body operate upon the |fenfes, entet inco theiro:gans, which
wij ferve them as funnels, to condu&
{(/] and’ carry them to che brain, and'to 7 the imagination. ‘This appears evii,|)dently in vapours and favouss. And | eee the hearing,5? the exterior Se air being agitated, doth caufe a
(s/ Motion within the! membrane,
or
ef tympane ofthe ear, which gives the
.§ like dhaking to the hammer: which . |is cyed thereunto, who beating upon his: Anvil) caufesa reciprocal! moti-
lenin the air, which is fhut wee
4
| |
i
aie
the
(86)
the crannies of the ear, and this is that. found.
which
we
ufually
call
Touching the fghr, tis evident — chac the Light reflecting upon the
body, enters inco the eyes,
and
cannot avoid , but ic muft_ bring with ic fome emanations of the body whereon ic reflects’; as we have .
eftabkiihed
chole.
in
the
fecond
Prin-
;
It remains now to fhew that the like is made. within che groflelt of our. fenfes, which is the Touch or
Feeling : Forif it. be true,
as we
have fhewn, that every body fends forth a continuall emanation of atomes- out of it felf, ic makes much for the affertion of this truch. -But to render this truth yet. more mani-
fet, and take away all pod.biltyof doubt, I will demonfirate it fo evidently to the eye, thot every one may make an exvetience thereof in a quore
cer of an hour, if he be fo curious, yea ina lefle compaffe of time. 1 believe you know the: notable
affinity which is betwixt. gold and quick-
saa
tle Boma andi pti
seitSK.
aie estat
( $7)
quick-filver; if mercury toucherh
golditticks clofe unto ir, and whii tens it in fuch fort, that ic fcarce ap-~ } peareth gold, but filver onely; if
|
nt
you cat this blanched goldinto the
i
hre, the heat chafech,
' =a)—_= cod
away che mercury,
and
drives
and the gold
returns. to its form2rcolour;* bue if you do this oftner, the gold calcines,
Io .
and then you may pound,and reduce it to powder. Now there is no diffolvane in the
5< == is
World
that can well calcine,
and
4) tf) | ‘) if,
burn the body of gold, but quickfilver. I fpeak of that-.which 1s af. feady formed by nature, withouc engaging my felf to fpeak of that whichis fpoken of among the fecrets Of Philofozhy. Take then a fpoonfullof mercury in fome porcelan, or other dith,' and finger ic with one Handif fouhave a ring of gold on
wi 0 4
thzother, ic will become white, and covered with mercury, though ic -doth not any way touchit. “Moreo-
"iW
ver, if you puta leaf of gold, or a crown of Gold in your mouth, and
a
Oo=
en a an ill CNtN a iS
4)
if you put but one of your toes ina EY.
thing
(33°)
‘thing where mereuryis, the gold which isin your: mouth, though: you {hut up your lips never fo clofe, fhall
curn white, and laden with mercury :
chenif you put this gold into the firetomakethe mercury evagorate, and. do reiterate the fame thing, your gold, -wilk becalcined , as at you had. by -amalgation —joyned ‘mercury therewith corporally. And all this will yet be done. more f{pee-
dily ;and efre@ually, if in lieu “of common: mercury, you make ule
of mercury of antimony, which 4s much hotter, and more penetrating, and: though you drive it away -by force offire, it will carry away with it-a good quantity of the fubltance of rhe gold; in fuch fore; that reiterating often this operation, there will no more gold remain for you to continue ‘your experiments. If then that cold mercury doth fo penetrare thewhole body, swe ought not to chink it (range, that fubtile: atomes
-of fruit compofed of many ignited
_ parts will patfe wich more :facilicy and ‘quicknefle.> Iwill further make rs
you
itse e
journey
h. The eteat Archicect.of nature in the fa.
‘brick Of humane body,. the mafter«
piece of corporall nature; hath placed there fome intern fpiritts, to
fetve as centinells.,. to bring their difcoveries to their General, vizs to the imagination, .which,is as it were
the Mi reffe of the whole family, wheteby a man may. know. and underftand whatis done without the Kinedome,, within the great wo'ld’s and thar ic may {hun what is noxious, and feek .after. that which. is profitable... For .thefe centinels, or
antern {pi its, with allth einhabirants of the! fenfitive organs, ate not. able tue
E2.
to
(90) to judge alone : infomuch, that if
the imacinition or thought be’ di-
firated
f{trongly to fome
object ,
thefe intern fpirits do not know whether a man hath drunk the wine which he hath. fwallowed, if ferchince feting a petfon who-’comes tofalute him, he fixeth his eye u,on him all the ’while, or if he fiftens attentively to the aire of fome melodious fong, or muficall infrument ,
for the inward ‘{ irics bring all their acquifitions to the imagination ; and if fhe be not more ftrongly tent upon another object, fhe falls a form-
ing cettain Icey’s and Images, be-
caufe that the atones frén_ without being conveyed by théfe ~inrern {lirits to ‘our imaeingtion, erect there the like edificé, or elie a mo-
del in fbort. refembling the great body whence they come'forth. And if our imagination ‘hath no: more ufe of thofe fieniffeativeatomes’ for ‘the prefent, fhe’ raneéth them in fome
prover place within * her,“Magazin , which is the memory ;4where fhe ean
repeal, and:rebuke them’ when’ fhe =
pleafeth.
pleafeth, And if there’ be any objeét which caufeth fome emotions in the iMagination, and toucheth her more near thai common objects ufe ro do , fhe fends back her centingls, che in-
ternal! {pirits; upon the confines, to bring her more particular news. And thetice it proceeds thata man being fursrized byfone particular man, or’ other objeét, who hith already fome
emmenr placein his imagination, bz
it of defire, or avérfion,
then that
man fuddenly-chingeth colour, and beconés red, thén pale, then red ‘again at divets times, according
as
the minifters; whichare thofe intern: {picits, do go quick or flow ‘towards their objets then ch3y return. wich their reportsto their Miftrefs, which is the imagination. .But. ‘befides
thefe paffages we fpeak of, which go
from, the brainto the externill parts
ofthe body, bythz miniftery of the
netves ; rhere is alfo a great road
from the brain to the heart, by which the vital fririts‘do afcend.fron the heart to thebrain, to be animated , and hereby che imagination fends :
E 3
unto:
(92). wntothe heart, thofe atomes which fhe hath, received from fome external objeg&t, and there they make
an ebullicion betwixt the vitall {1-
rits, which according to the
inter=
vening atomes, either caufe a dila-
tation of the heart, and fo eladden: it, or they do centrac&t it,and fo fad-
den it, and thefe tyyo differing and contrary actions are the firft generall effects, whence proceed afterwards the particular paffions, which require not that I purfue chem too far in this place, having done it- more par~. ticularly elfewhere, and more exprefflely. Befides thefe paffagec” whih: are common
to. all men
and women,
there is another that’s peculiar onely
to females, which is, ftom the brain:
tothe matrix, whereby it often falls out that fuch violent vapours mount upto the brain, and tho in fo great
a number, thar théy
often hinder
the operation of the brain, and ofthe imagination, caufing convulGons and follies, with other ftrange:accidents, and by the fame channel the {-irits
:|Siig a eePeenie Ee es Se SE
C93)
{sirits or atones pafle witha greater liberty and fwiftnefle to the womb or
muatrix~
when.
the
‘cafe:
‘re--
quires.
Now lets confider how the ftrong imAgination of one man doth mar-
velloufly
act ulon~ another ,min
who hithic more feeble and paffive..
We fee daily, that if-a petfon gape , thofe who fee him gaping are exciIf one
ted to do the fame.
come
perchance to conyerfe with petfens
chat are fubje& to excefle of laughrer, one can hardly forbear laughing, although one doth ‘not know th
caufe why they laugh.
If one fhonld
enter inco a Houle where all’ ‘the World is fad, he becones’ melan-~ choly,for as one faids Si vs me flere
dolendum eff primwm ipfitibi: Women
and Children being very moit and pative, are most fufcepuble of this irpleafine contagion of the -imagt-
nition. I have known a very melancholy woman, which was furbje& to»
the difeate calledthe Morher,
and
while. the continued in that’ mood ,
fhe thought her felf poffeffed, and F4-
did
(94)
did. ftrange things, which
among
thofe that knew not the caufe, pafled
for fupernaturall effedts,
and of one
pofiefled by che ill fririt:the “was a perfon of quality, and all this happened, becaufe of. the deep refentment {he had for the death of her
Husband :-She had attending her four or five young Gentlewomen :
whereof fome were her Kinf women,
and others feryed her as Chamber. Maids. All thefe cameto be poffeffed as fhe was, and: did prodigious aétions. Thefe young Maids were fepafated from her fight and communi-
cation ,and as they had .nor yet - contracted fuch profound roots -of the evill, they cameto be all cured by their abfence ; ‘and° this Lady Was alfo cured afterwards by a Phyfitian, which purged the era
bilious humors , and reftored her Mattix toits former eftate: there was neither impofture, or difimulation ij this. ; ae
I could make-a notable. recitalf of fuch pafions that happened to the
Nunnes at Ledux ;but havinz done
EC
Pee Fe reohhiigscon a aeeaiaeaa
a
(95).
i ina particular Difcourfe ac my rerun ftom thac Country, where £ as exactly asI could difeuffed an point, I will forbear’ fpeaking’ chereof at chis time, orherwife then to pray you to-remembéer, chat when two ‘Lutes, or two
Harps, near one
another, both fer to ce fame cune , if you touch the ftrings of the one
the
other
confonant
harp
will
found at rt fane*
time , though
ro. body touch it,
whereof Galileo
hatch ingenioufly
rendred
the rea-.
fon,
Now,
to make application to our’
ptrvofe of all po hath “been po duced to this effe& » Ufay thatfi iris impoNble chat tivo feverall set fons fhould be fo near one another ; as the mother and the infant when:
helies inthe womb, one may thence conclude, That all, the effets of a ftrong aaa vehement’ imagination, wor! king upon another ‘more> feeble : pafive, and tender, oughr to. be. more pai Hani us in che Mother act=-
ing upon her fon, then’ wher the:
imaginations of other perfons: act
Es;
upom:
(96) “upon them who are nothing to them. And as it 1s impoffible thar.a Mafier of Mufick, let him be never fo ex-
pert and exact, can tune fo perfectly any two .Harps, as the great. Mafter ofthe Univerfe doth the two bodies
of the Mother andthe Infant; fo it
follows. by confequence, chat the concuffion of the principall ftring .of the Mothers, which is the imagina-. tion, ought to- produce a greater {baking ofthe confonant {tringin the Infant, to wit, hisimagination, then the fitting of a. lure being touched,
upon the confonant. firings of another: and when the morher fends {pirits to fome parts of her body, rhe like muft be fent to. fome part of the childs body.. of corporall atoms, which come fiom the Malberry, or Strawberry, which fell upon the neck, and breaft, and het imagination being then. furprized ivichan-emotion b* the fuddennefs:‘ofthe accident, it: follows
ne-
ceGauly chat fhe_muft fend one of © ne
Sa
~&
thefe
ea s el s aieAcsA Sak ean cie Fe tggeice
0977)
thefe atomes alfoto the brain of the: Infant, and fo to the fame pate of the body where fhe took the fain firt, *cwixe which-and
the brain
there paffe fuch frequent and {peed y* meffengers, as we have formerly fec
forth. The Infant alfo on his part, who hath his parts alfo tunedin an: harmonious confonance withthe mo- thers, cannot faile to obferve: the ame movement of fpitits “cwixt his imagination
and his neck,.
and his
breaft, as the mother did ’ciixt hets : -
and thefe fpirics being accompanied
with atomes ofthe Mulberry, which :
the mother conveyed to” his imagination, they make a‘profound "1n- reffion, ‘and lafting mark, upon’ his
. delicate skin, wheteas that of the mothets was more: hard. Asif one fhould
jet fy a Piftol’ charged ‘with powder~
onely againfta marble, the’ powder -
dothnothing but’ fully it a lirele, which may quickly be’ rubd off ;buc
ifone fhould’ difcharge ficha Piftol ata mans face, thé graities of the pow- der Would pierce the skin, arid fo flick
and dwell there all his. life-tame, and ! make
«ys
C99) make ‘themfelves
known
by their
black-blewith colour, which. they alwaies conferve. In'like manner the {malf etains- or atomes of the fruic which. pafled from the mothers neck to the inagiaation of the Infant, and thence
to the fame place-uron his skin, do lodge, and continually dwell there
for the future, and ferve as a fource
to draw the. atomes. of the like. fruic
difperfed in the aire., according to their. feafon, (as the wine in the Tunne ¢raivs unto it the volaril fpirits of the, Vines) and in. drawing of them that part of the skin where
they: ref de: ferments,(wells,eats, and Anflanes,and fometimes breaks, Bur to. render yet: more confiderable, thefe marvellous. marks of longing ,
(fince we are. upon, this fubjed) I cannot forbearto touch alfo another
hie
circumfance, which might {eem at {rit to. bea miracle of nature, -beyond
che caufes.
which
J
haye
ailedgcd:. but having well. eventilatediit, we hall abfolutely find chac
inde, ends upon the {ame principles:
le
ee iee ro eee eRe Peheen il, ono Atae ns a ee a S 4FER on
ji
Tris, that oftentimes ic falls our, chat the impreflion of the thing defired, or longed for, by the mother, falls upon the child, although fhe touch
it not, or thar it falls upon her body; Tis fufficient that fome other thing do fall, or unexpétedly beat upon fome part ofthe woman with child,
while fuch a longing doth predominate in her imagination; and the feure of the thing fo long defired after, willbe found at laft imprinted uron the fame part of the body of the Infant, as it was upon the mother who received the blow.’ ‘The reafon
hereof is, that the atomes of the thing |
longed for being raifed up by the Iight, go to-the brain of rhe: mother with child chrough-the channel of the eyes, as wellas ocher more materiall
atomes, proceeding fromthe corpotall touch, would go thither by the euidance of the nerves. And of thefe petty bodies, the mother forms in her imagination a complete model of that whence they flow forth by way of emanarion. But ifthe women be not attached but inwardly,
si
peo
thefe
(100°). thefe atomes which are inher imagination, make no other voyage than to her heart, ahd thence to the imagination, and to the heart of the Infanr, and fo-caufe a reinforcement
ef the paffion inthém borh, which may be moved to fucha violent impetuoity, that if che mother doth not enjoy her longd-for object, this paffion may caufe the deftruction both of rhe one and ofthe other, at
leaft prejudice her notably in their health, and fo make a gteat change
inthe body. In the mean time, if fone unlooked-for blow furprize the mother inany part of her body, the foirits which refide inthe brain are immediately fent thither by her imagination, as it happens often in this cafe of longing. _But in all other fiich fudden furprizalsy either among
women-ot
men,
tranfported
with
thefe ffirics. are the
impe-
more
the. patlion -is
tuofity , che more violent. As when one loves ano-. ther paffonately,
he -runnes’
fud-
of that ——Hylax
ve lintine latrat,
denly tothe dore when any knocks, nay
hoping
af,
ca EeePare thinSumitSoS: a ee wei Ss
(Tor) hoping alivayes us the party which entirely pofiefied bus thoughts, (for Gut
aMmant
who comes thefe
fpirits
ipfe fibs [omnia finguat )
co give him wift : And being
moved
by this
fudden affaulc, being tthen mingled
with the petty bodies or atomes of the longd-for thing which roffeffeth
fo Fowerfully the fantafie, t Be tead them alone with them{elves to. the parc of the body which is firuck, as al-
foto the fame part of the body.of the Infant, as well astO his imagination.
And after that all which ha ppened is bur che fame in order to the mother and the CBC WE nthe Mulberry or Strawberry fell ucon the neck or brea of the Ladies with whom I have entetrained you. Permit me > my Lot ds, to enlarge
my- digreffion ‘alittle further inone
word, to declare unto you a mat ve ae accident, known all over the Court of England, in confirmation of the activicy and impreffion which “the imagination of the Mother makes upon the body of the Infante
whereof ‘thewas big.. A Lady that was
ON ITNT RENT Ta ANT BT4s ey
(102) was My Kinfivoman, (fhe. was the
Neece of Madam Fortefeu,the Dagh-
ter of Count edrvdel) came to vifit me fometimesin Losdon s {ne was fiir, and‘of a sood feature, andfhe
knew it well, taking great com: la-
€-ncy, and not onely to keep her felf
fo, but to adde that which fhe could
furthe s:thereu; onthe was perfwaded that the patches and flies which the put ubo1 her face, cave’ her'a erear
deal of ornament, therefore the Was
catefull to wear che mo curious fore of them:bur as itis very hatd to keep a moderation in things which depend,
more uron Opmmozthan Nature, the
Wore them. in exceffe, and patched
mot of her face with then; al: though that did not much adde
to her beaucy,*
which TY took
the
Tiberry to. rel her; yet I thoughr it no oportunigy then’ to do any” thing thar might give her the feat diftafte, fincé with fo much ClVilicy and fwveerneffe fhe came to
vifit'me.
Nevercheleffe ,6ne day
T thought good, in a kind of
dot
ling way, (fo that fhe might not
apa
aria eihtnipessane See SSS
apprehend
ae
(103)
any
difcontentment )
and Ridemem dicere rerum. quis verat 2. to tell her of it ; fo I Jer
fall my aifcourfe upon her big bel-
ly, advifing her ro have a care of her health, whereof fhe was fome-
What negligent,
according to the
cuftome of young vigorous women,
who know not yet what it is to be fubjeé&t to indiftoftions ; fhe gently thanked me for my care herein, faying,
Thar the could do
no more for the prefervation of her health than fhe did, though fhe was
in that cafe : you fhould at leaft,
replyedI, havea care of your -child,
O for thar, faid fhe, there is nothing that canbe contributed more. Yer,
I told her, fee how many fatches
you Wear upon your face, are you
not afraid chat the Infant in your Wonb may haply bebo n with fuch i-marks on his face >? Bur
faid fhe,
What danger is there that my child
Should bear fuch marks, though I put
them on artifcially 2, Then you have not heard, replyed { again, the mar-
vellous effe&Xs that the imaginations of
(104)
of Mothers work upon the bodies
of their children, while they’ ate. |
yet big with them, therefore I will. relate unto you fome of them : and fo I told -her fuadry: fortes
upon chis fubje&, as that of the Queen: of Erhiopia, who was delivered of a white ‘boy, which was attributed toa Picture of thé Bleffed
“Visgin, which the had alwaies near
the Teafter of her bed, whereunto the
bore great devotion. I urged anothet of a woman who was byought..
to bed ofa child alf hairy, becaufe of a portrait of Saint John Baptit in the Wilderneffe, where he
wore a Coat of Cammels hair. 1 related’ unto. her alfo the ftrange
antipathy which the late King Fames
“Had to a naked fword; whereof the
eaule was afcribed , in regard fore Scoteh Lords hid entred once viofently into the bed-chanber of the Queetr his mother, while the was with child of him, where het Secreta= ty, an Italian, was difpatching fome ettets for her, whon they hacked, and killed with naked (words before her
J
=
SIE IO
SARS
EE
EE
————
n
—
€ 105) her face, and threw him at her feet; and they grew fo barbarous,
that
there wanted but little bur that they o
°
3 \ihad hure the Queen her felf, who "| endeavouring to fave her Secretary, " |’by incerpofing herfelf, had her skin "| rafed. in divers places; which. BzCaan
himfelf
makes
mention
of.
Hence ic came..that her fon King James had fuch an averfion all his —_
life-time after. to. a naked fword , ghat he, could nor fee one without
| a-great,; emotion of his fpirits; alcouragious _.€“| though otherwife nough , yet he could never ovet-
<vo —
mafter his ‘paflions in this particular. I remember when he dubbed me Knight, in the ceremony of puting the point of a naked {word upon. my fhoulder, he, could ‘hot endure to look uron it, but turned his face another way, infomuch, that in lieu of touching my fhoulder, -he had
almoft
chruft
eyes.
had
Buckingham right.
the point into my not.
euided
the
his
Duke
hand
of
a-
(106) T alledged her divers fuch florieef!y)! to make her. apprehend thar a ftro ng}fien imagination of the mother might} pct caufe fome norable impreffion the body of her child to its upon fem: pre= let jJudice,
ie "3
ig ti
‘how
you are of your Pate [toin ches, and thar you have the tinually in your im-gination m ¢o:4. jeive ; for, I Janty
ae
it
have obferved, that you hive upon them ten times fince Youlooked |hha| came Mure into this room, inthe Look ing-olafs, Pring Doe you nor therefoe feare thot the] “your
o a
|
I |
of
; '
Moreover, I Pray confid e poy
carefull
‘Moons
|
child may be born with Half . Patch
upon his face> or rather | Noy that all the black patches whi ch you oy bear np and down i {mall Portions , | cy ‘May affemble in one, and-ap ‘in the middle of its forehead,peare roo ‘Molt apparent and’ remarkable the hs, Of the vifage, and may be as part i)Mark bro asa Jacobus; and then what a gracad qlver e ]w,. do you
think > Would it be to-tke child? O: me, faid {ne, rath er then that fhould happen , I would wear
}4 lo i Hh.
ho ‘more patches while I am | nar : Thereuvon® at that with ftant fhe pulled them all ofin.’ the > Wthiy child
and
|
tsjand hurld them ‘ng friends faw her iit} patches, they: iyonjeame to pafle,
away. Whe her afterwards witkou demanded bow it chat fhe who was
pe jefteemed to be-one of the moftcu~’ idet}fious beauties of the Court). in fat} point of patches, fhould fo fuddenly vk | give ‘over the wearing of them: fhe
anfwered, thather Uncle, in whom
fhe had a great deal of confidence, aftured her, chat if fhe wore them du‘ring che time that fhe was with child
space i in the mid{t of his foreh: vn | Now, this conceit was fo lively en-
gtaven in her ymagination, that fhe éould not be rid of it : And fo this
j roor Lady, who was fo fearfull chit I her child might not bear fome black
|.mark in his fice, fhe could not frevent, but that it came fo into th2
" World , and had a {pot as large las a Cw of: Gold in the rata: j-of its Forehead , accor ding as fhe a. before ficuted in her Imacimation : it was a Daughter that
| thebrought forth, very beautifull ‘throughout; ‘this "excepted, And
tis
(108)
tis but few month s ago thatI fayy!
|
her bearing the faid mole or {por, which proceeded. from, the force
of che imagination of her Moather. I'need notrell you of your neighbour of Carcaffona, whe lately was| brought to. bed. of a prodigious| Montier', exactly refembling» an} Ape, which
fhe took pleafure ro|
look u on during the time the| was with child, for I conceive. you |
know the fiory better than I... Nor
| ai
that‘ of the woman of St. Maxient, who-could not. forbear going to | fee an unfortunate Childe of .a | poote woman, which was borne | Without
.armes ;. and: fhe her felf|
Was ‘delivered afterwards of, fuch | a Monfter ; who nevertheleffe. had if)
fome
fmall
exerefcencies
of fle(h
upon the fhoulders ,..about..the place .whence the armes fhould | have come forth. .As~alfo of her who was defirous to fee: the ex. ecution of a Criminall; svho: had
isi neck broken -according...co. the
laws of France, whereof the.took 'W
EY
te Peers nie |Sigs
(109)
an affrighment, which madedo de¢p /-a print upon her intagination, that prefently. fhe fell in about of her child , and before they could carry her toher lodging, fhe was brought | to bed before her time of a child | which
had his. head
fevered’ ftom
| his body, both the parts yet fhed| ding-~“frefh’
blood.,
befdes
that
tt} avhich was abundantly fhed in the et. Womb, as if the Heads-man. had jot} -dorie.'an' execution alfo upon. che Not} tender young body within che many trix of the Mother. . Thefe three 0} Examples, and many othe:s ‘truly
fal
alledged,
which
I could produce,
Wi
the Rrength of, the 'Imagination,
uci
would: engage me roo far, iff fhould
hdl’ eh@’ eg id]
-undertake to: cleer che caufes, and unwrap the difficulties which would, -be-found greatet then in any of -thofe inftances wherewithI- hive
ef} although they .manife(tly
prove
et] © -entetcained you, becaufe thar thofe
of °farts had the power. to caufe {uch sig .Cflentiall changes,and fearfull effects,
lem
«Upon.
ok
brought to their fhapes of perfection,
bodies
that:
were.
already and
andit may be well believed, that in fone of them there wasa tranfmu-
|
tation ef one’ fpecies to another, and rhe introduction of a new inform-
ing form inthe fubject :matter, totally differing from: that which_
hid been introduced at firft, ac leaft
if chat be crue which mot Naturalifts tell us:of, at the animation of the Embryointhe womb: but this digreffi-
on hath been already too lone. Eft mods inrebus, {unt certi denique frnesy
Duos ulira cirrague mequit confistere retum,
To retutnthen tothe great channel, andthreid of our, Difcourfe; the examples and experiments which I have already infifted* upon in con-
firmation of the reafons which I have | alledged, do clearly demonftrate, chat the bodies which draw the
a- |
comes difperfed in the aire ,. artract unto themfelves with a greater power and energy fuch as are of their.
own nature,then fuch as are hetero- |
geneous ,and of a ftrange nature; As
wine doth the vinall fpirits ; The oyl
of
j [paix Sait
ee RT 4
eA
SE
ee
aa
ae ews ee es: oes hs a
> eee poe
.
Saas
Cary
W
of Tartat fermented by the levain of Rofes,the volatil {pirics: of the rote’; The fleth of deer, or venifon buried in
ctult,che ‘{pirits of thofe -beafts; and
contequently all the other
chings
wheteot Ihave {poken, The Hiftory of the Tarantula ia the Kingdom of .Naples is very fax mous ; you know how the. venomie of this animal afcending by the hurt thatthe party hath received, being pricked therewith towards the head and
the heart, doth
excite in -hig
Imagination an impetuous defire te hear
-fome
melodious
aires, and
molt commonly they. are -delighted with differing aires Therefore when they liften to an aire thar pleaferh them, they begin ro dance in-
ceflantly, and thereby they fall a
{weating in abundance, in: fuch fore thar this {wear makes a ereat part
of the: yvenome to evaporate, beGdes the found of the mufick doth raife a Motion, and caufeth
among the aerean
an agitation
“and vaporous
fririts which are in the brain, and
about the hare, and diffuled up and F
down
Ke !
(112) @ownthrough the whole body fro-
portionably according to the nature,
‘and cadenceoffuch muiick ;as when Timotheus tranfported Alexander the Great with (uch a vehemency to
Such and fuch paflions as he pleafed ';. Inthe like manner alfo ic happens, thar when one Lute
doth found, it
makes the firings of the other co fhake by the motions and tremblings
whichit caufech in'the aire, though it be not touched otherwife at. all: We find’ alfo oftentimes’ that the
founds which are no. other things than rhe mocions.of the aire, caufe the like motion in the water ; as
the tharp found: whichis .caufed by rubbing hard with ones finger the brim of a claffe full of water, dork excite a noife,a turning, and boun-
dinginthe water of certain drops,
asit the water did dance according tothe cadence of the found: The harmonious found aifo of bells-in chote Countries where they ufe to be
rung to ‘particular tunes<doth make the like imorefion uvon the fuper- |
Gcies of the rivers'that ate nigh the | fieeple, .
ig e eey S i
_ |
; |.
.
, | . | ¢ |
,
%
4 4)
“7
-
SESS
SS
Y
Sere
Ss
e -
oo.
kre
C113)
fteeple,-efpecially in the night time
when
)
, , : ; s y '
=
there is no
other
motion,
which ftops, or choakes the orher fupervenienc one ; For theaire being
contiguous,
or
rather
continuous
Wich the water, and che wacer being fufcestible of motion, there’s the dike motion caufed in rhe fluid parts of the warer as began inthe aire, and
| | |
|
the fame contrast which is betivixe the agitated aire,and che water which Asbychis meanes alfo moved: hap. pens alfo to be betwixt the asitated air,and the vaprous f,irits which are in thole bodies who have been bit by the Tarantula, which {-iries by confequence are moved by the agitated air, chat is co fay by the found ;snd
thatthe more efficacioufly, thac this agitation or found is prosertioned to the nature and temperature of the «| . party hurt: And chis intern agira1. |- tionof the ns its and vapours hlps ,| them to difcharge the varourous venone of the ‘Tarantula whi-h
is
je | . Mixt among all their humours; In | - the like ‘manner ’ ftariding puddie
waters, and
corrupted aires. being F2 putrifiec
<114) ‘Purified by lonz repofe, and the mixture of-other nokome fubitances
are refin’d and purit’d by motion; ‘but. wintér approching,
which de’
voures thefe-beafts, people are freed from this malady; but at the recurne of the feafon when they were pricked, the miuchisf comes again ,
and rhey muft:dance again as they.
did the year before: The reafonis; that che heat of fummer doth ia: and ratie us the venome of the beaft , whereby ic becomes as malignant vas it was before ;* And and furious
the poyfon being heated, and evaro-
rating it felf, and ‘difperfing in the
aire the Ievamof the fame poyfon, which remaines in the bodies of chem wwho-have been hurt, drawes ic unto
ic felf, whereby fuch a fermentation is wrought, which infects the other.
humours, whence a kind of {moke
ifuing,and mounting to the braines
of thefe poot
fick
bodies,
doth
“hfe! ‘to;.pioduce fuch ftrange effeats,
.
>
ti
5
F
« ‘Tris alfo well) known, that where
aheré are great dogs , or maltifis, as Shine
Cae
in
1
ER
et gyDP igi
EE
ee
RE
iti
RESAS
Reis
Cae
On xe
stand.
(115)
in England, if any be bitten» peri chance by any of thefe dogs, they,
commonly ufe co kill chem, though
they be not mad,for fear chit the
Ievain of the canine.
choler
which.
ematnes within the body of the party bit. draw unto it che malignint fpi-. rts of the fane doz, which. mighe cometo diitenper th2 fpirits of the. patty: Andchisis not onely praétifedin England,where there are fuch dangerous d 3, burvalfo. in Fravce ,. according to the report of Father Cheron, Provinciall of the (Carmeljres in this Country, in his Examen de. /4 Theologie myfirque, newly, imprinted,and which I have lately read, Twill fay nothing of artiiciall nofe-,. that are made of th: Geh of other
men, for remedy of the deformity of
thofe who by an: extrene exceffe of. cold have lo% their own; which. new noles do purrife as. foon: as rhote perfons out of whofe fubtance they, Were taken come to die, asif thar {mall parcell of fleth engrafted. upon the face did five by the
{irits ic
drew Gonitsfirt root. and fource s , F 3
For -
Sti
(116) For alchough this be conflantly avouched by confiderable authors, yet
I will not infift more upon ir, and de-
fire you co think chac I offer nothing. unto you which is not verified by folid
tradition, fuch, asir were
a
weakneffe to doubt of ir. Buc ic is high timetharI fhould come now tomy feventh, and lait princi Je; ic is the lat cutn of che engine, andas1 hope will quite batrer down the gare which hinders us anentrance to the knowledge of this fo marvellous a myftery, .and. Which will imprine fuch a lawfull matk upon the doétrine which I hold forth, that icwill paffe for current money. This principle 1s, chat the fource of thefe fpirits or the body which attracts them to it felfe,
draws likewife afterthem that which accompanies them, as: alfo that which: fticks, and is glued, and united unto them. This conclufon needs not much proof, being evident enough ofic felf, if there be nailes, pins or | ribands tied tothe end of a tong cord or chitin, and if there
:
be a
knurle
ge
hig
,
a ee er nie a Oe
tee,
> Sn eS ee
yO
eer
C1r7): kimirle eicher of wix, gun, or glue, and that1 take this cozd or chaim
by onz end, and draw it after me,
until che other laftend come to my’ hands, it canaot-be otherwife bur
—thirdtake into-my hinds at che: fame tine the naile, the pins, the ribands,
the knurle, and aff that is applied thereunto : I will therefore relate: unto you onely fone experiments thit hive bzen. nade in confequence of this princizle, whtch> will moft
ftronzly conirm the oth2rs ptodu,
ced before.
,
The great fertility, and ‘riches’ of-
Enaland, confifts ‘chiefly in patturage
forthe nourifhment of beafts.. We: have che faireft in che world , with: abundance
of other
aninals , and
principally of Oxen & Cowes, Ther’s
not the meanet Cortager but “hath a
Cow to furnifh his finily- with milk. Iris che orincwiall futenince of the poorer fort of peosle, as ’tis’ alfo in” Switzerlacd, which makes ‘them ‘very carefull ia the good keeving, and
health of their’ Cowes; Now, ft happen that insboyling the ‘milk ic fells: Fa
tens bb
( 118 } FY.
{wells fo high rhat it fheds over the bam of the skillet, and fo comes to fall into the fire; the good woman, of
maid, doth prefently give over whatfoev-r the is.doing,.and, runs to the skillerswhich fhe takes of the Gre, and at «the fame ':time «takes (a hindfullof fale, which ufeth to be
commonly in the comer of che. chimmey to keep it dry, and throws: it upon the cinders whereon the’ milk vras fhed: Ask her wherefore fhe doth fo, and fhe will ell you, that it is to. prevent, that the Cow which gaye ‘ehis milk may not have fone hurt upon her udder, for wichout this re-
medy it would.come to be hard and ulcerared,and {ne would come to piife blood, and fo be in. danger to die: Not that. this. extremity ‘will befall her the very firft time, but, fhe will grow ul-difzofed, and. if this Should happen often, would in a fhore
time.
mifcarry.
It might
feem that fome fuperfticton or folly may fie herein, but che infallibilicy ofthe effe@ .doth. warrant -from the laf; and. for-the fir many belicne that
[i a
sa MLR “eR f
5 ox
SES ane
aaa ea Re
:
—abetie
ants Ue, eS ¥ co Soa See ae
shai
7
( 119)
"1. chat the malady of che Cow.-is funpernaturall, onan effect of forcery5
. | and confequently chat the remedy , | whichT have alledged is fuperftici-ous; but it is eafie to difabufe any man of this perfwafion, by. declaring | “how the butineffe goes according to the foundations which.I have laid; | The milk falling from the burning
Aw oe .—=
coiles is convetred.ro vapour, which
difperiech, and filereth.it felf through : the circumambient aire, where it |
meets
che
Sayes, which
light ,
and. the: folar
cranfpore _ it.furcher , ,
augmenting: and extending ftifl far+ |
ther the {phere of ics activiry : This vapour of the milkis not alone. or.’
fingle, but is. compofed. of fiery atones which accompany the fmoke &. vapour of che milk, which mingles ° unite themfelves therewith + now the
{,here of the faid vapour extending ic felfunto. the place where the cow -
Sn
is, her udder, which is the fource
whence the milk proceeded, attracts
| ! unto it the {aid Malignant vapour, , ftaying, and fiicking it {elf there: °
s
°
ar eeSoe:
s
F
soo)PogeMa.c
=
< sk,
: Pe
(120) together withthe fiery atomes that accompanied it. The udder is in: part glandulous, and very tender, andfo confequently very fubje& toinflammations, and this fire doth. hear, infame, and make it {well,. and in fine makes ic hard and ulcera-
ted; The
inflamed, and ulcerated
udder is near the bladder-, which. ‘comes likewife to: be inflamed, ma-
king che anaftomofes, and communication whichis betwixt th: veines and the arreries toopen; and to calt forth blood, and to regorge into the: bladder,whence ordinarily the urine
ufethto come forrh, and empty it felf: But whence cones it, you will: fay that-the falc- remedies all chis ? It is becaufe ic is of a nature
cleane
contrary to ‘the fire, the one being: | Fos, and volaril,; the other, cold and
fixed; Infomuch’ that- where they ufe to. meet, thefale as ic were;. knocks down the fire; by preci_ita-. | ting and deftroying irs action, as it~
may be obferved in a.yery ordinary accident; The chimneys which ars
Fulliof foot. ufeto take fire very
eahily
ET bien, Ee eee
Gy
anes EE EE
— Ee FY ee
—
(x21)
eafily, now; the ufuall- remedy, for” that is to difchatge a musket into the. funnell: of the chimney which loofneth. and brings down with ic the fred foot, and then the diiordet,
cea-
feth, but if the-e be no musket of
piftoll, or other mirument to dgay ° down the toot, they ufe to catt a’ great quantity of falcon the are below, and that choakes,:and hindreth : the afomes offre,
which otherwile
would inceflanrly mount up, and joyn with them aoove, which by this meanes «wanting nouriture confume th=mnfelves, and come
to ‘norhine $°
The fame thing befalls the atomes: which are in a train toaccompany the
: vapour of the milk, for the fale «doch
precipitate and kill ic upon the very place, and if any do chance to {cape y and fave themfelves by the greit firuglings they make, and go along with the faid vapour, they ate ne-yertheleffe’ accompanied with» rhe atomes and fririt of che falr, which Ricks unto them:
which like god |
writers never leave their hold uhull the better <of theif, ad- they hive got
verfary|
Sa 9 Gl
a
dea
od
aR
re em
eam aca
uy €122)
“verfary : And you ‘fhall obferve-by
the by, that there is mot amore -excellent balme for a burn, than the
{; Lic of falc in-a moderate quantity. ‘Ieis chen-apprent, chac: ’tis impolli‘bleto employ any meanes more efficacious to hinder theill effets of
‘the fire-upon the udder of the cow,
thin to calt upon het milk,bsing fhed Over upon the cirders, a fufficient
“quantiry of fale. This effe@ touching
the confervation of the cowes udder
Im order to the burning of. her milk, “makes me call to mind that which divers hayetold me to hive feen both In -France and ‘England, viz. when
the Phyficians do examine the milk
of a nurce for the child of a perfon -
of quality, they ufe to make proofs fundy Waies before: they- cone to. judge~definitively of the goodneffe thereof, as by the tafte,-by the Imell, by tha colour, and confftence thereof; -And fometine they -caule-irte be boyled-untill iccome to: an -evaporationand , fee its refidence, with orhet accidents, “and ci-cumPances
which may |
bevlearne »and teested , y
1
a ROLE ance ameetin BEEsite aes
he BS sa “eases EOE, | EAE BE
ER eeoS oan GS Sak sa Serer
€123>)
by thefe means : Bue chofe of whofe: milk this laft experiment hich made, feel themfelvyes. tormentedbeen in their papps and duges, while theit milk 1s. a boyling; therefore. ha. vinz once endured this pain 5 they will never confent chat their fhall. be carried away out of milk their fight and prefence , although. they wil willingly fubmie to any proof then that by-fire. «Now other .-to confirm this experiment of the attra étion which the Cowes. Udder makes ofthe fire, and vapour of the.burned milk, Tam going ro declare unto you another of the fame nature, whereof I my felf have feenthe. truth more ‘than once, and whereof any one may eablymake tryal. Take the excrements of a dog,and hurle it-into the fire more then once, at the begin-
ning you fhall find him heated,.and moved, bueina thore time
you
{hall fee him as if he were burned all ever, panting, and ftretchino out his
tongue, as if he. had run , courfe : Now, this alteration. a lone befalls
- him. becaufe his entrailes .drawing ee
unto
oC r24)
|
burn’d anto them the vapour of the our rhe vap t tha h exctetnent, and wic ompante aromes of fire whieh did acc lam’d, inf and d nge cha it, they ateio s a fevet thar che dog having alwaie e ro take upon hin, and not being abl
do lock any nourifhm=nt, his flancks at lait. th dea “his up, which caufeth e this ulg div to. per Jt were not pro ons as experience among fuch-cerf thing any are fubsect to make ufe of
the fame~ for doing of mifchief, for
, would effests which happen to bealts thoul ne ifo , ies falf upon mens bod it ex-the n upo n fio ctu con try fucha artrem a crements : There hippened ‘a to ofe kable thing to this pur the d lan Eng in neighbour of mine He re: the d nie our fat time f faj te child, hada very pretty, atrd detica his eyes e and because he would hav ained' ert ent he alwayes upen hin, ofhim w Pfa e, houf the nutfeathis man, ten, for he was a pragmaticall
and I had — and. of good addreffes, day occafion to ule fuch'a man ; One e a wif his and ‘J fouad hin very fad, ‘the
ing weeping 5 whereok demand reafon
+
*
dig
_ |
. |
pe SE
‘
=
<
rn
nO
8
:
LS
eae
mt
ee
Wet
(125)
reafon, they told me that their fittle
child was veryill, and thacheh da Burning-fever, which inflamed all
| kis body over, which: appeared by
|
|
the redneffe of his face, that he for-.
ced himfelf to.go-to-ftool , but he
| could do little, and that lictlé which he did was covered with blood, and that he refufed alfo rofuck : And that which troubled them moft, was.
that they could not coniecture any caufe how this indifpofition fhould:
~ | |
befall him,* for his nurfe_ was very well, her milk was as good as could be wifned ;- and in all-orher things there was as much-care had of him as could be’; I rofd them that rhe Jat time Iwas wich them, I obferved one particularity whereof I thoughy fic to give them notice , bur fomething or other (till diverted me, Ic
was, that their child making a fiene that he was defirous to be fet on his feet, he fet fall his excrement: on
the ground, and his nurfe-prefenrly took the Fire-fhovel, and covered it with embers, and then threw ali’
into the fire, the mother began to make
‘“
:
EM,
:
(126) make -her excufes, chat they were
not fo carefull to correct chis ill habicof the child, faying, that as he ad-
vanced in years, he fhould be:corrected for it; | replyed, that twas not
for this conSderation that I held this difccurse wich her, but I was curious to know the reafon of her
childs diftemper,. and cenfequently to ind fome remedy;..and thereupon I related
unto them the like acci-
dent, which had happened two ot three years beforetoachild of one of the moft iluftrious Magiitrates of the Parliament of Paris, who was
‘bred upinthe houfe ofa Door af Phyfick .of great. re>utation in th2 fame town: Itold rhem alfo what have now. relared unto you touching the excrements of dogs ; and I made reflexions unto them upon that which they had often heard, and which is often practifed in our Country, which 13, that within: the villa-
ges, which are alwayes dirty in the Winter, if ic happens that there bea
Farmer who. is more cleanly thin others , and keeps. more neatly, rhe ap=<|
approcshes to his houfé than his neighbours do, the boyes ufe to come
thither in che night-time,
ea s5 > cra —=
or when
it begins to be dark ; to difcharge
} their bellies there , becaufe that in
, | fuch Villages there is not much
} commodity of eafements:
befides
that in fuch places,fo fitly accom-
modated,thefe gallants,
the boyes,
até out of danger to fink into the
" | dic, which othenwife might rife up a > pTL_==--
| higher then their fhooes.; but the
good Houfwifes in the motning when * |they open their doors, ufe to find | fuch anill-favoured {mell,that it tran| {ports them with choler :. but they * | who are acquainted with this trick
¥ }go frefently and make red-hot a
I |broach. or fire-fhovel , and then » |thruit ic into the excrements all hor,
* jand when it grows cold, they heat
" |it again oftentimes to the fame pur-
| pole : In the mean
time the boy
I pwhich made the ordure feelsa kind
" }of pain and collick in his bowels,
ie pwith an inflammation in his. funda-
fe pmenr, ind.a continuall. defire to go ito fool, and he is hardly quir of ic | : cll:
€ 128’)
tilt he fuffer a kind ‘of fever all chat day, which is the cause that he returnes thither no more : And thefe wonen to be freed from the like affronts. do: paffe among the
Fenorit for Sorcereffes, and Witches, betng -chey caf torment — people in thar fithion without feeing ortouching then. This Gentlemin did not difallow whie I told
him, bet wis conirmed farther when I bid» hint look into: the: fundanent “of his child, for wich-
ouc dowbe hs would ‘findit very red, and indamed ; and that vifting hin, he fhould find chat ic |
was full of pinveles, and excozta- | ted ; It was mot fong after rhe|
this poot liccle languithing child with much pain ant picifull cryes, |
voyded fone {mall matter, which | in ftzad of fufering ic to be calt] wich) into the fire , or covered
embets, I cauiéd to be put in-| co a bafonof cold water whiclr was fet ina freth place, which!
was continued to be done every}
|
time |
|
(129)
| time chat the child gave occafion, | He began to amend the very fame
hour, and within fouror five dayes | he was perfectly well recovered. But fearing ro ctrefpafle coo much upon your patience ; I will in| tertaine you but with” one expe‘| riment more very familiar i our | Countrey ; and afterwards I will | make a fummary of all thac hath been faid, to make you perceive the
force, and yalue of this whole Di. courfe,
We have in England (as I touched efore) excellent pafturage which
1) nourifh
and fac che Cartle, fo a-
bundantly, that ic falls out often,
that the Oxen have fo exceffive fore of fac, that ic doth extend
it felf m a great quantity to their legos , as alfo to their feet,. and hoofs , which oftentimes
caufech
Impoftumes in the bortom of their feet, which fwell, and.caft out a ereat deal of core,
and
putrified
matter, which hindrech: the beaft to
go ; The Owners are very forry when
they obferve ir, though che beef be
never
(130)
nevet the worfle for rhe Shambles? yet are they daniniaed’ thereby, in at egaitd that not being able ro bring | YW them to Lexden, (where the bet | Welt market is for fac Beefs through all © oA Exglana,
as “Paris is for eAuver gue,
Normandy , and other of France,)
being. able don, they them upon fiefh is not
I fay the
Provinces Grafiers nor
Mar
|M Creal
to bring them to Lox ft aré coniraimed to kill Me the place, where their tt worth half the price — /toty
tac chey might have got in Lon-
0%
don. Now there is a remedy for this inconvenience, which is, that
|i “tr
one mutt obferve where the Oxe,
ory
Cow,
oth
of Heifer, doth fet uvon
the Earch.
his fick foot,
th2 firit . Mee
time char he rifeth up in the morning, and in that very place one mult cut out a Earth Where the that foot, and a tree, or upona
inh, {ti}
green. curf of thir fit bealt hath trod wich © Wplce, put this turf uvon {i te hedge lyinz oven told|
to the North wind + and if chac (mi wind coneto blow uponthe curfof | Earth, the beat will be cured. within
three of four dayes very perfealy; 3 ue
pag le “DR
Smite aE ie
(131)
fhouid puc thac Turf South-wind, or Sourh-
which in /holouxe is called
aunt, here in Montpellier te
iz, and in Italy le Scirocco )
) diftemper in the Oxe will int we |creale. Thele circumfances will
mot feem fupetftitious unto you pwhen youwill have confidered how that by-che tepofe of the night the cofrupe
matrer, or core; doth ufe
fo gather in a great quantity un-
der the foot of the fick Oxe,
and
comming inthe morning to fer his foot upon the ground, «he’ prefferh
forth the Impoiume, the Matt er Iwhereof fticks to that part\of the
makes impreifiens |Each: ,Nowand this curf of Eart
upon
h being | and exrofed in fome proper place to receive the dry cold blatts pf the Northern winds ,° the dry told blats of chat wind do int ermingle with the. faid corrupted :}mpoRumated- marcer,which ftre tchJogats {pirits all along the air, the ulferated foot of the animal, which is ‘We fource of all, draws them unto HY | an
132)
|
and with them ic attra&ts alfo the theb cold dry atomes. which caufe the tts cure, the malady requiring no other Vitn help, than to be well dyed, and bilo refrefhed.
Butifone fhould exyole | ten
this turf to a moit hoctifh wind, it. itn
fuch would produce contrary effe“ts. ls whee my all nth s, Lord my ld, Beho
formed, I confeffe they are ill fil’d, |natu and: solidhed , but let us try whe- der, cher-being put together, and moun- quite ted they will make the Engine g°3 | buh
but if thefe wheeles
being well
joyned, and placed to draw the conclufon , or this unfhaken cat, raque to a good port, you will e nefl good the hive , I prefume
t0 th Oe
to catdon the groffe, and rude exprefions of my languags, and paffing by the words you will content your {elves with the naked
ih trurh of rhings.Let us therefore apply) that thar which hath been fpoken to
which is pracul’d whensa wounded erfonis cu°ed.Let us concder Maier
Howe! wounded upor his hand, anda}. great inflammation hapened upon his! hurt, his garteris taken covered a _Wh the
‘the blood that iffued fom the wound, ir is fteeped in abafon of water where Vitriol was diffolved, one keeps the )bafon inthe day time ina clofer, in | the moderare heac. of the Sun » and )tpatnight in che chimney comer, in |fuch iort thatthe blood which is upyon the garter way be alwaies ina good iG} naturall temperamenc ineither cols | der, nor hotter thanin the degree re. quired for a healchfull body, what
eught then. to refule , (accardmg
to the dodtrine that we endeavour ¢} to eftablifh,) from all this 4 In the | firt ylace the Sun, ©and the light wili-atcra&t from a greatexrent and
if ditance the fpirics of the blood Which are ucon che garter, and
Jthe: moderate heat of the hearth , which acts ‘gently uvon the com-.
wi} pofition (which comes ro the fime thing, as
if one’
thould
catry ic
fdryin his gocket to makeit fee] }the temperate hear of the body)
j-J fay’ the moderate
hear
of the
P-hearch doth puth our the aid arames,
Mas the water which
gatlers ir l¢
i round in che filtration: or Rraininss
drives
(134)
dtives on that Which mounts up,
to make it go falter, and more -ealily, making it alfo to ailace ir felf,; and’ difill, and fo march of themfelves a.
good way in the air, to help thereby: the attraction of the Sun and ofthe light.
Secondly, the {,irit of the Vie triol, being incorporated: with the blood, cannot chufe but make the
fame. voyage together with the; aThirdly, tomes of the blood.
rhe wounded
hand expires,
and
exhales in the mean time continu-
ally abundance of hot fiery {pi:its ,
which gufh forch as a tiver out of the inflamed hurt; which cannot be
but chacthe wound muft confequent-
ly draw unto it the air whith is next ir. Fourthly, this air -drawes unco it the other air which is nexcit, |,
and that the néxt- to it alfo, and fo there is a kind of current of air drawn round. about the wound.
Fifchly, wich chis air come ro incorfo-
rate at lait the atomes, and fpr tits ofthe blood, and ofthe Virriol tie and fred) which were diffufed : | ;
rae
4 |
|
(135)
4 good way offin the aire’ by the. ats
Cractions of the light, and of the
Sun. Belides, it may well be that
from
che beginning, the orbe and
{rhere of thefe acomes, and {pirits did extend it felf.in’ fo great a diftance without having need of the
attractions of the aire , or of the lioht, co.make them come thither,
Sixthly,thef2 acomes of blood,finding the proper fource, and originall roor Whence they came, do ftay:, and
{lick there,-and
fo
reenter
Into
their natu-all beds, and primitive receptacles, whereas the ether aire is bie a paflenger, and evaporates away as foon as it comes,even as when j 1 is carried away through the funnel “T of the chimney, fo foon’
“y drawn into the ‘chamber
as’ it is
by the
Ki door, Seventhly ,the atomes of: the | blood being joyned infeparably with
ih) the fpitits of the Vitriol, both the
il} one, and the ether do joyntly } imbibe together within all the ty corners , fibres, and
orifices. of
Hy the vemes: which: lye oven -about i
tO
the wound |of the | G
party . hurr, which
(136)
which hereby are comforted, and in | fine imperceptibly cured. fuch e Now to know wherefor an effe& and cure is fo haprily’ performed, we muft examine the nature of Victiol; which is compo-
fed: of two parts, the one fixed,”
the
other
-volatil.
The ~ fixed,
which, is the fale, is fharp and biting , and cauftique in fome
gree.
de.
The volatil is {mooth, fott,
balfamicall,
and aftringing-,
and
‘tis for that’ reafon that vitriol is made ufe of as a foveraign re~ medy in the medicine for theinflammations of the.eyes, and when they are’ corroded, and fcorched by fome fharp and
or defluxion.
As
burning humot
alfo in injedti-
ons where excoriations and fecalCings ufe to happen, as alfo in the beft’ plaifers to ftanch the
blood, and iwcarfiare the hurt. Bat they who well ‘know how-to draw
the fweer oyl of vitriol, whichis the pure volatil part thereof, know alfo chat in the whole clofer of nature
there isno balm like this oyl. re (Ms
(137)
this balm‘of {weet oy! do h heafe
in a very fhort: time all kind of hurts which are net mortall,. ic cures, and confolidates the brok en
veines of rhe breaft, as fat as the } ulcers of the lungs, which is an in| curable malady without this balm ,
| Now ‘tis the volatil pare of } Vitriol, which is tranfported the by | the Sun (the great Diftiller of naj ture) and which by that meanes | doch dilate ic felf in the aire, and jthac
the wound,
or
part
which
jtecelved the lefion-, drawes > and | incorporates wich the blood, to-
|gether wich ics humours and {pie yfits. And tharbeing crue, we canmot expe& a greater effe& of the
volatil vitriol, but chit it fhould , Wfhuc the veines, fanch the blood,
e/f2ad fo in a fhore compafle of time
(mon fort, as itcame from the Drug .
<apuis, without any preparation G2
or
addition
(158)
|
addition at all’, and
-to.. difolve
u Ml
It in fountain’ water, or rather in raine water, in fuch a proporiion,
Ha
that puting’
therein a. knife, _or
fome polifbed tron,it fhould come out
“ ae ee ii | Aiea
changed
into the colour of
copper: And ‘into this. .water they did pur a clouc or rag-of cloth embrued with the blood ef the party hurt (the rag being firlt dry,) but if ic was. yet frefh , and moxt |
with the reaking blood, there was
no need but to powder ir with the fmall rowder of the fame vitiol,; in.
ii
fuch fort, that the powder might in-
corporate it felf,and imbibe the blood.
remaining yet humid; and keep both. the one andthe otherin a temperate,
heat,and place, viz. the powder in.” .ones pecket,and the water (which. ad- ? mics not of this comodity) in a chamibér where thé héat was temrerate,)_ and eyery-tine that on2 put. new.wa-!
..,
tet of victiol with frefth powder and new clorh,or other bloudied ftuff che patient’ fnould feel new eafementas atthe wound hidbeen then dreft wich
“= gone foyeraign medicament.
And for
a
‘(189 )
:
for this reafon they wied to reitérars: chis manner of dreifing both evening and morning: But now, the mot part of chof:
who make ufe ofthis remedy of the
Powder of Sympathy,do endéavour to have Vitriol of! Rome, or of C‘IprUs,
and
calcine-ic white ih the Sun?
And befides,: fome? ufe to -adde the Gumme! of Tragava:tha, ic Vee
ing eafie to adde unto things alread ¥ Invented, Touching my felf, I have feen fuch great and admirable effedts of plane Vicriol of eighteen pence the
pound; as of thie’ Powdér) Which is ufed to be prepared ‘now at a greater price : yet notwithitandin¢ I donotblame
th2 prefent, practife;
on th: contrary’ I commend it, for ir 13 founded ugon reafon. Fift, ic feems that che pureft and béft fort of Viriot doth produce 'th2 beft-operation:
ih
Secondly, ic feems alfo rhat the moderate calcining thereof! ac th2 rayes: of the Sun doth cake ©away. the fuperfluous humidity of the G 3
‘Vitriols:
(140).
Vicriol ;and this calcination
doth not touch any -pare but that which is good: as if one fhould boyle broth fo cleer. that ic comes to be gelly, which certainly would renderit more nourifhing, | Thirdly, ic feems that the expoling of the Virriol to the Sun
to.
receive
calcination,
renders
its’ fpiits more ficly .difpofed to be cranfported- through © the aire by the Sunne quires, i
when need re-
For it owght not to be doubted but thac fome pare of the etherean fire of the Solar rayes doth incorporate withthe Vitriol, as ‘tis plain. fy difcovered by calcining: Antimony with a burning-elaffe, for ic much augments the weight of it. almo& half in half; and in» this cafe the
part of chat luminous
fubftance
which remaines
Vicriol,
in
the
thus is made apt ,.and difpofed to be carryed in the aire.by a
femblable light, and Solar rayes. As we fee that to make the tongue ,
:
of
(147)
of a pump draw the warer
the
eafier from the bortom ofa well, one dethufe to caft a little water from.
above upon it. Now, the ‘light -catrying with ic fo eafily the fubftance that is fo. connaturall to it, carries alfo with the more - facility that which is incorporated with it, Fourthly, thefe Solar rayes being embodied withthe Vitriol,
are in
apofture to communicate unto it a more excellent vertue than ic hath of ic felf, as we find that Anumony
calciti'd in the Sun, becomes (wheteas it was rank’ poyfon before) a moft foveratgn and balfamical medicament, and a moft excellent firengthner of nature.
Fifthly, the Gumme of Tragagantha, having a glutinous faculty5. and being for the reft very innocent, may
watds the wound, My
contribute fomerhine to-
confolidation .of the
Lords, I could
adde. unto:
what is fpoken many moft inaportant’ confiderations. touching the form G4 and:
‘
(142))
and effence-of Virriol, whereof the fubftance is fo noble, and the origen
fo admirable, that ene may avouch
with good reafon, that ic is one of
the moit excellenr bodies: which nacure hath produced. The Chymists do affure us thar ic isno other chen a corporification of the univerfall {pirie which animates and perfeSs all that hath ‘exiftence inthis
fublunary World, which
fawn in thacabundance by a Lover
is
fo appropriatedby. , meanes whereof I my felf have in affiort time, by . expofing it onely unto the oxen aire; madean-attraction ofa celeftiall Viz triol cen times more in weight, which Was Of a muvellous pureneffe and vertues a priviledge which hath not been given but todt, andto gure virgin falt-peter. | But to anatomife-as we ought the nature of this tranfcendent individuall; which nevertheleffe in fome fathion may be faid to be univerfall, and: fundamentrall co all bodies;
it
would require a Difcourfe far more
ample then I have. yet,made,
Bur as
(143)
as I' perceive I have already enters tained. you fo longa tine, it would prove. avery g ereat indiferecion to crench further |upon your goodn-fe, . who have hitherto liQhed unto me -
wich fo much attention ‘and pati-ence, 1 fhould go about*ro enter | into any new: matter, and embark my felf for a further’ voyage.
Whe: fsre remitting ‘divers: matters ro fone <other time, when you fhall pleafe vovorder me, comming now
again co the senetall confideration of this Sympathericalf cure, I will’ puta period rocthis Difcoutlfe, after chat k.fhall hive’ cold yo two. or three words, which
fmallimio:tance
will nor'bé‘of |
forthe bagi
tiod of all which hath bee ralledged* by.me hitherunto, P have deduced unto you the> admirable caufes of the operations,’ and ftrange effe&s ofthe Powder of* Sympathy from: their firlt® root. Thefe fundamientall “caufes. are fo” erichaining one within che other, that it feems ‘there can beno defaulc,*.
fiop ,.of interruption,’ in-thxir pro-+ G 5. ceedings >
(344)
eeedings. .But we thall berhe bers
ter fortified in. che belief of their vertue and efficacy, and how. they come to produce the effe&ts of {.
-Many fair cures, if we confider thar
then when fome change is practifed in. one of thefe caufes; orin all-of
them together, we fee and perceive immediately an effect altogether differing from the former: If I had never feen'a Watch o; Clock, I thould be juflly. furprized.,. and: Should remaine afionithed to-fee a. hand ,. or a needle, fo regularly.
marke the journall hours, and mo»
tion of the Sun, upon: the fat of a. Quadrant; and thatit fnould turn, and: make its round every four and! twenty hours , there being no» thing feen that fhould puth on the: faid needle : Bur. if I look-on-the
other fide, I fee wheels, refforts;: and counterpoifes , which are in: petpetuall’ motion: ; +which~ havingEY Bie, ee well’ and foberly confidered , I prefently fufpe& that. thofe wheels: are: the- caufe of rhe Motion, and?
tumings: of. the: faid. Needle, als
iD at aDy ra eS aan aes oie en ee tes
~
fi)
he
though:
|
Ain
CS iia T ne amet SO loge a OE gilts Sate ies. TH
aig
+
Oe
rat Wee
# eee SS
E
¥
a
+
et
a 42
(245°)
|
. | echough*I ‘cannot prefencly difcernes | or know how thofe moving wheele do caufe a motion in the needle of . the quadrant , becaufe of the platethar lyeth interpofed berwixt them. Therefore
1. reafon* thus
within
my felf ;:That every effec wharfoye ever mutt have of pure necellic fone caufe, and therefore that rhe
body moved there oughe necefla-. rily to. receive. ics motion from fome other body which‘ts contigu-. y ous to it. “Now I fee no other bod the of dle Nee the es which mak quadrant to move and tum,
then:
the {aid wheels; therefore Imuft of: force be perfwaded tonattribute the , motion untothem. But afterwards; mothe d ppe flo e hav when 1fhall taken: tion of thofe ‘wheeles ,. and away
the Counterpoile , and obs
: {erved that fuddenly the Needle ng lyi app chat and e, ceafed to: mov ng: goain the Counterpoile, and givithe ne, jiberry for the wheel to tur ry’ ina ord her Needle returnes to train, oc by making one wheeleto go’
t,. fahter By putting my finget-untoiore
bo
Up
746)
er by adding more weight to the Counterpoife, the needle do th halen, and advance its Motions Proportionably. Then: I gtow to be:convinced and enurely: {at isfied ; and fo I abfolutely conc lude thac thefe wheels and counter; oifes are
the ‘true caufe of the mo tion ofthe needle. In‘the fame manner ‘ye If interes rup
ting the action of any of
caules which I. have-eftabli thofe thed for
the true foundation of the. Sym
vathetical] ‘Powder, I alre-, retard or kinder «the cure of the wound; [ may
voldly conclude, rhat the
fores faid caufes are-the legiti mate. and genuine true caufes of the cure, and
that we need nor amufe o-f to. make indagarii ns for any eth felyes er, Letusthen examine our buf ineffe by that bias, I hie affi rmed thar pane a
the Tighe Cranfporting the atomes of the Vitriol,and of the blood, and’ dis Jating-them toa great extent in the ate
,the: woundo: place hurt; .dozh attract'them, and thereby is immedi *
ne ee =
ately folac’d and eafed, and con fequently
= =
a> \
aaa om | ~ e
—
ie
ee
ee
eS
(147)
quently ‘comes to bz healed by the {riries of. the Vitriol , which is of
a Balfamicall’ virtue.. Bur. if you put the bafon, or Powder with the
cloth embrued with blood » Within an Armory, Of inro'a co:ner of fone
cold roo; or into a Cave, where the light never comes, ner freth 2 ir,which makes the-+ lace co‘rurted; and to hive il felis; in thir cafe the wound can-receive nov amendments
hor any good effet from the faid
Powder. And ir will fay] oucin the fame manner, if having: pur the: ba‘fon, or Powder, in fome By-corner,;
‘and that) you> cover. iewith: fome
thick ,. ftufing , and {fongy cloth ,
which may-imbibe the aromes ‘thar ufe tocome forth, and which retain
the light: and
rayes
which enter
therein, whereby they are ttoored 3 and. quire. loft. Moreover, if you fuffer the water’ of Vitriol> to cone
geale into ice’, wherein the eloch
is dipped,
the
patty
hure>fhalt
be.-fenfible at the beginning: vety great ‘coldim his wound of a ; but when it isiced allover, he thall fee neither
: neither
(148), heat nor
cold, an regard:
thar congealed coth doth contitpate ° the pores of the water, which. nevertheleffe doth: not ceafe to. tranfpire, and fend forch fpiars. If one fhould wath.the cloth, {pots eed with blood, in Vinegar, or Lye, (which by their penetrating acrimony tranfpore all the fpirics of the biood ) before the Vitriol- be applied, ic will produce no effect; yet if ic be wafhed but with pure’ f&mple water, ir may nevertheleffe do fomething, for that water carrie’
not away fo much; but the effect will nor be fo great, as if the blood{potted piece had not been’ wafhed at all, for then iris full ofthe f{pirirs of the blood. The fame cure 1s per-. formed by applying the remedy to: the blade of a fword: which’ hath: wounded aperfon’; ific come not to paffe chat the fword be too much’heated by the fire,for then ic would make alf the {pirics of the blood to evapoerate,and in that cafe the fword would?
ferve but alittle ro perform the cures.
Now: the reafon why the fword aa® ; |
| aa
cS
“perr es
Oe
ae
e
a
(149)
be dieffed in order to the cure,
Is, becaule the fubtil fpirits of blood
do penetrate the: fubQance of the blade , as far as the extent
which
the {word made within the body of the wounded party, where they ufe to: make their refidence, there
cing nothing to chafe them away,
unleffe it be the fire, as I faid before,
Forexperiment whereof, hold it over a Chaing-difh of moderate fire, and you fhall difcern: on the fide oppofice to: the fire a fittle humidicy Which refembleth the {pots that ones breath makes upon looking. glafles, or upon the burnifned blade of a fword: If you look uron it athwart fome glafle which makes the ob/ect feem_ bigger, you fhall find that this foft dew of the fcirits
confifts mn little bubbles, or blown
bladders; and when once they are enturely evaporated, you fhalf difcernno more upon the wearon, unleffe it were thtuita: new into the body of ai living perfon. Nor from the beginning fhali you difcover any fuch’ thing, bur precifely upon that part = thi
C150) the blade,
which had ‘entred
wound: This fubrill.
penetration
the-
of the
f.irits into the hard fteel,, may confirm the-beligf of che entrance. of fuch {.trits into-the skin of'a Woman
big with child, as I remind to have: rrosofed unto. you ins my |fixts Principle remarkable inv its own places . Now then, avbile the Apints lodge in’ the iword, .thzy, may. ferve as grere helss forthe) cure, of che Patient;
but: when the fire nach dri-
ven them a'l-away, the remedy ap»
plyéd-to the fwo ‘dy will not: avarle ° any) thing ar all. Furthermore 5 af
any violent heat.accompanics thefe
atones,it indames the wound; -buc
common fale may: remedy that, che
hunidity. of water humectates. the hare, and che cold cawleth a chilneffe in the oarty wounded. To confirm: all thefe~ partreulirs, I could-adde to thofeI have already related.» many notable Examples: T have: already more, bue I-feir teo much exercifec
eur parienee:,
therefore I will induitrioully. prerer-: Trait:
Cony
Ht
toad
Patte Teal (
sR
CTSE YY
mit che mentioning of them at this time, but I offer to entertain i parti-
culiany ofthis Honovrible A ffembly therewich, if they have the curio fity co be informed of them. I conclude then,
Mefheurs , by
reprefenting unto you that allthis my teryis guided and governed all along by true naturall wayes and citcumttanc:s , although by the agency and reforts of very fubril fpirits. Tam perfwaded my Difcourfe hath convincingly fhewed you, that in this Sympatheticall cure, there is no need } to admit of an action diliant from the
| Patient.
I have traced unto youa
real Communication twixt the one and the other, wz. ofa Balfamicall
fubftance, which corrorally mingleth } withthe wound.”
| .Now tisa poor kind of pufilfa-
}nimity
and faintneffe of hea-t, or
rather a groffe Ignorance of the | Underfanding , co pretend any ef| fests of Charme or Magick herein, of toconfiine alf the actions of Nature | to the groffeneffe of our fenfes, when iwe have not fufficiently confdered,
nor
(152) flor examined
the true caufes aud
principles whereon tis fitting we
fhould ground our judgement : we need ner have Fdoubien toa Demon or Angel in fuch dithculties,
Nee Deus interfit, wifi dignuns vindice noaus
2
ru iaerit, SERRE,
TEAOM
rE
wix “ee? s+,i Lad
s
4
——ae
*
~~
5
oan <= ‘1a: ‘
Tae
ats > mine aretine
+ ee
eae
en
Caen
add
~
A Tableofthe mof excelfent things delivered in this difcourfe,
N
introdu€ion.
into the difcourfe.
Pt ,&e. Whether horfes have their fwiftnefle by nature,or do gain ir by accidentorart, -p 3 That Sir Keselm Digby was the frft that
introduc’d into this quarter of the world
the curing of wounds by the Powder of Sym-
pathy.
me
Ps
A rate hiftory of acure performed by the Powder of Sympathy, pé An excellent difcourfe of light, P9
By what means the wind is ingendred.p24 That young Vipers have grown toa great bignefle, being nourifhed onely with the air, A relation of oyle of Tartar, thar fel. as
ifithad been calcind in Rofe-water, ahd why. P37 The incommodities of Sea-cole, that it is the caufeof inflammations and ulcerations of the lungs, and of confiumptions, P40 To wath ones hands often ina filyer bafon in the moon, anin fallible way to rake away warts from the hands, P 43
_ Way our Enplith Doggs- will purfue a
pso fentmany miles. An experiment of beaten Gold. p 48. Beanes and Rofemary when they are in flower may be {melt many miles,
That Vultures have come
pst 200, er ho miles
The Table. miles after a batrle by the imell ofthe dead ¢arkafes. $2 An experiment of a ball of lead, &c. and of wine made by the inftrument
Of How
ots: filtrarion Row
Scyphon,
it is made:
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a)
Mi
p 60
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Anradmirable hiftory of'aNunne
~
thit was troubled‘ with wind.’
i
anc
fre atrracts rhe ambient aire withthe
Phat'a Bafon of water f{erup n an earch p62 ‘ ‘prevents fmoke, ?
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te
ABSee:
fmall bodies therein,
oe ie
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at
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The way to make feverall colours appear p70 in’a glaffe. rarity and denfiry of the fame naBodies of p74 ture keep ftrongly rogether, » A way tocure a burne,the biing of a y-per,
J dies M prey Coy
8p 96597
nu
a
the feurfe’ or farcy'in a hoife, and to avoid eens
a contapron, it
An obfervation of Mercury and of Venifon
fy
73
re:
Séveral cutious obfervations of wine, yd the Vines are in flower,& of onyons.p79,&¢,
Th Dutt
The ftrength of Imagination ina Lady who had the ‘figure of a Mulberry on ticr neck,andof amaid whohad the makofa
MI 7] Mh | it
Strawbeiry.
) Ar
p84
A difeourfe of Gold and quick-filver. y87 A‘curious difcourfe of the imagination.p$4
Of womens longing.
pos
An excellent hiftory of a Lady and hetchitd!
:
|
pio2
Tite reafon of the Antipathy betwéen King Fames anda naked fword,
.
P i04 The
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T
Syn
Se
thy,
An T
Enema renter ciate, LGN RELoe an
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same
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: The! Table. The force of the imagination proved by! 34
‘Examples,ofa Wiman who was deliycieLof
2 child refembling an Ape, of one that b ought forth.a child without armes, and of another that was brought robéd of a child
whofe head was newly fevered from ‘his bo-
dy. | / pros & ig The diftory of the Tari:ntula withthe cure
thereof,
pir
Why the Ringing ofBells caufe the fame found upon the water. pir3 Nofes made of flethdecay, when the party
dies from whom the ficfh was taken, plrg Milk boyling ‘over into. the fire without prevention caufesan inflammation in the Cowtsuddér. P 120 S:verall waies to try whether the milk of a nurfe be good or no, pr23 The cafting of ones excrcments into the fire will caufea feavorin the party, p24 The hiftory of a ch'ld cur’d of a feaver by purting its excrenttntsinto water. p 126
After what manner country people ufeto
make children Icave fouling of their doo’s in the night. ~play
A remedy for Oxen thar are troubled: with
‘umpoftumes in the bortomes.of their feet,
pizg9
The manner of applying the powder of Sympathy-for-the cure of wounds... p133
Seven
reafons.why the Powder of Sympa-
thy doth itseffed, An hiftory of Vitriol.
134 p13z6
The ancient way -of making the ete oe
ve
ee ee
The Table. of Sympathy and of applying ic: p.137 The modern way of making the Powder of Sympathy. p 439 Five reafons why the modern way is better then the ancient,
-pi4
The fumming up of the difcourfe for con-
Grmation of whac hath
been
intended:
Ebcuscattte 2cc20t0Se er }Books printed for, and to be
I fold by Thoma Davis atthe {
Bible in St: Pauls Churchyard,
}M
After Paul Bains his PraGticall
Commentary on the Ephesians, lately reprinted with Additions. Fol. Speidells Geometrical Extractions, | newly reprinted with Additions , 406 Oxghtreds Trigonometria with Fi, Hgures. 40, | Dr. edmeshis SubRance of )ftian Relizion in 52 Leétures, Chri. for the I s2 ec ofthe Year, go. | Hewes his Phrafes reorinte d, witk #20
Addition of feveral! new ones
. 8. A Book very afefull for all GramntarSch ools,
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