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A01552 Sylua syluarum: or A naturall historie In ten centuries. VVritten by the Right Honourable Francis Lo. Verulam Viscount St. Alban. Published after the authors death, by VVilliam Rawley Doctor of Diuinitie, late his Lordships chaplaine. Bacon, Francis, 1561-1626.; Rawley, William, 1588?-1667.; Cecil, Thomas, fl. 1630, engraver. 1627 (1627) STC 1168; ESTC S106909 303,154 346

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of Powders and Liquours Experiment Solitary touching Exercise of the Body Experiment Solitary touching Meats that induce Society Experiments in Consort touching the Clarification of Liquours and the Accelerating thereof Experiments in Consort touching Maturation and the Accelerating thereof And ●●●ft touching the Maturation and Quickning or Drinks And next touching the Maturation of Fruits Experiment Solitary touching the Making of Gold Experiment Solitary touching the Nature of Gold Experiments in Consort touching the Enducing and Accelerating of Putrefaction Experiments in Consort touching Pro●●●●●● and Preuenting Putrefaction Experiment Solitary touching Wood Shining in the Darke Experiment Solitary touching the Acceleration of Birth Experiment Solitary touching the Acceleration of growth and Stature Experiments in Consort touching Sulphur and Mercury two of Paracel●es Principles Experiment Solitary touching Chameleons Experiment Solitary touching Subterrany Fires Experiment Solitary touching Nitre Experiment Solitary touching Congealing of Aire Experiment Solitary touching Congealing of Water into Crystall Experiment Solitary touching Preseruing of Roseleaues both in Colour Smell Experiments in Consort touching the Continuance of Flame Experiments in Consort touching Burialls or Insusions of diuers Bodies in Earth Experiment Solitary touching the ●●●●● in M●●●●●● from se●●● winds Experiment Solitary touching Winter and Summer ●●●●●● Experiment Solitary touching Pesil●●●all Seasons Experiment Solitary touching an Enour 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 about 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Diseases Experiment Solitary touching the A●●●●●●●●● or Preseruation of Liquours in Wells or deepe Vaults Experiment Solitary touching Stutting Experiments in Consort touching Smells Experiments in Consort touching the Goodnesse and Choice of Water Experiment Solitary touching the Temperate Heat vnder the AEquinoctiall Experiment Solitary touching the Coloration of Blacke and Tawney Moores Experiment Solitary touching Motion after the Inflant of Death Experiments in Consort touching the Acceleration of Germination Experiments in Consort touching the Putting backe or Retardation of Germination Experiments in Consort touching the Melioration of Fruits Trees and Plants Experiments in Consort touching Compound Fruits and Flowers Experiments in Consort touching the Sympathy and Antipathy of Plants Experiments in Consort touching the Making Herbs and Fruits Medicinable Experiments in Consort touching Curiosities about Fruits and Plants Experiments in Consort touching the Degenerating of Plants And of the Transmutation of them one into another Experiments in Consort touching the Proco●tic and Lownesse and Artificiall dwarsing of Trees Experiments in Consort touching the Experiments in Consort touching the Producing of Perfect P●ants without Seed Experiments in Consort touching Forr●● Plants Experiments in Consort touching the Seasons in which Plants come forth Experiments in Consort touching the Lasting of Herbs and Trees Experiments in Consort touching the seuerall Figures of Plants Experiments in Consort touching some Principal● Differences in Plants Experiments in Consort touching all Manner of Composts and Helps of Ground Experiments in Consort touching the Assinities and Differences betweene Plants and Inanimate Bodies Experiments in Consort touching the Affinities and Differences of Plants and Liuing Creatures And the Consiners and ●●●●●●● of them Experiments Pr●●●●●ous touching Plants Experiment Solitary touching Healing of Wounds Experiment Solitary touching ●●●●●●●●●●● Experiment Solitary touching Repening of D●●nk before the Time Experiment Solitary touching Pilosity and Plumage Experiment Solitary touching the Quicknesse of Motion in Birds Experiment Solitary touching the different Clear enesse of the Sea Experiment Solitary touching the different Heats of Fire and Boiling Water Experiment Solitary touching the Qualification of Heat by Moisture Experiment Solitary touching Yawning Experiment Solitary touching the Hiccough Experiment Solitary touching Sneezing Experiment Solitary touching the Tendernesse of the Teeth Experiment Solitary touching the Tongue Experiment Solitary touching the Taste Experiment Solitary touching some Prognosticks of Pestilenitall Seasons Experiment Solitary touching Speciall Simples for Medicines Experiments in Consort touching Venus Experiments in Consort touching the Insecta Experiment Solitary touching Leaping Experiment Solitary touching the Pleasures and Displeasures of the Senses especially of Hearing Experiment Solitary touching Veines of Medicinall Earth Experiment Solitary touching the Growth of Sponges Experiment Solitary touching Sea-Fish put in Fish Waters Experiment Solitary touching Attraction by Simulitude of Substance Experiment Solitary touching certaine Drinkes in Turkey Experiments in Consort touching Sweat Experiment Solitary touching the GloWorme Experiments in Consort touching the Impressions which the Passions of the Minde make vpon the Body Experiments in Consort touching Drunkennesse Experiment Solitary touching the Helpe or Hint of Wine though Moderately vsed Experiment Solitary touching Catterpillers Experiment Solitary touching the Flyes Cantharides Experiments in Consort touching Lassitude Experiment Solitary touching the Casting of the Skin and Shell in some Creatures Experiments in Consort touching the Postures of the Body Experiment Solitary touching Pestilentiall Yeares Experiment Solitary touchine the Prognosticks of Hard Winters Experiment Solitary touching Medicines that Condense and Releeue the Spirits Experiment Solitary touching Faintings of the Body Experiment Solitary touching the Vse of Bathing and Annointing Experiment Solitary touching Chamoletting of Paper Experiment Solitary touching Cuttle-Inke Experiment Solitary touching Encrease of Weigh in Earth Experiments in Consort touching Sleepe Experiments in Consort touching Teeth and Hard Substances in the Bodies of Liuing Creatures Experiments in Consort touching the Generation and Bearing of Liuing Creatures in the Wombe Experiments in Consort touching Species Visible Experiments in Consort touching Impulsion and Percussion Experiment Solitary touching Titillation Experiment Solitary touching the Scarcity of Raine in AEgypt Experiment Solitary touching Clarification Experiment Solitary touching Plants without Leaues Experiment Solitary touching the Materials of Glasse Experiment Solitary touching Prohibition of Putrefaction and the Long Conseruation of Bodies Experiment Solitary touching the Abundance of Nitre in certaine Sea-Shoares Experiment Solitary touching Bodies that are borne vp by Water Experiment Solitary touching Fuell that consumeth little or nothing Experiment Solitary Oeconomicall touching Cheape Fuell Experiment Solitary touching the Gathering of Wind for Freshnesse Experiment Solitary touching the Trials of Aires Experiment Solitary touching Increasing of Milke in Milch Beasts Experiment Solitary touching Sand of the Nature of Glasse Experiment Solitary touching the Growth of Corall Experiment Solitary touching the Gathering of Manna Experiment Solitary touching the Correcting of Wine Experiment Solitary touching the Materialls of Wild-Fire Experiment Solitary touching Plaster growing as Hard as Marble Experiment Solitary touching Iudgement of the Cure in some Vlcers and Hurts Experiment Solitary touching the Healthfulnesse or Vnhealthfulnesse of the Southerne Wind. Experiment Solitary touching Wounds Experiment Solitary touching Mortification by Cold. Experiment Solitary touching Weight Experiment Solitary touching the Super-Natation of Bodies Experiment Solitary touching the Flying of Vnequall Bodies in the Aire Experiment Solitary touching Water that it may be the Medium of Sounds Experiment Solitary of the Flight of the Spirits vpon Odious Obiects Experiment Solitary touching the Super-Reflexion of Eccho's Experiment Solitary touching the Force of Imagination Im●●a ●●ng that of the Sense Experiment Solitary touching
Preseruation of Bodies Experiment Solitary touching the Growth or Multiplying of Metalis Experiment Solitary touching the Drowning of the mne Base Metall in the more Pretious Experiment Solitary touching Fixation of Bodies Experiment Solitary touching the Restlesse Nature of Things in Themselues and their Desire to Change Experiments in Consort touching Perception in Bodies Insensible tending to Natural Diuination or Subtill Trials Experiment Solitary touching the Nature of Appetite in the Stomach Experiment Solitary touching Sweetnesse of Odour from the Rainbow Experiment Solitary touching Sweet Smells Experiment Solitary touching the Corportall Substance of Smells Experiment Solitary touching Fetide and Fragrant Odours Experiment Solitary touching the Causes of Putrefaction Experiment Solitary touching Bodies Vnperfectly Mixt. Experiment Solitary touching Alterations which may be called Maiors Experiment Solitary touching Bodies Liquefiable and not Liquefiable Experiment Solitary touching Bodies Fragile and Tough Experiment Solitary touching the Two Kindes of Pneumaticals in Bodies Experiment Solitary touching Concretion and Dissolution of Bodies Experiment Solitary touching Hard and Soft Bodies Experiment Solitary touching Bodies Ductile and Tensile Experiment Solitary touching other Passions of Matter and Characters of Bodies Experiment Solitary touching Induration by Sympathic Experiment Solitary touching Honey and Sugar Experiment Solitary touching the Finer Sort of Base Metals Experiment Solitary touching Coments and Quarries Experiment Solitary touching the Altering of the Colour of Haires and Feathers Experiment Solitary touching the Differences of Liuing Creatures Male Female Experiment Solitary touching the Com●ar●●e Magnitude of Liuing Creatures Experiment Solitary touching Exessasion of Fruits Experiment Solitary touching the Melieration of Tobacco Experiment Solitary touching seuerall Heats working the same Effects Experiment Solitary touching Swelling and Dilatation in Boyling Experiment Solitary touching the Dulcoration of Fruits Experiment Solitary touching Flesh Edible and not Edible Experiment Solitary touching the Salamander Experiment Solitary touching the Contrary Operations of Time vpon Fruits and Liquours Experiment Solitary touching Blowes and Bruises Experiment Solitary touching the Orris Root Experiment Solitary touching the Compression of Liquours Experiment Solitary touching the Working of Water vpon Aire Contiguous Experiment Solitary touching the Nature of Aire Experiments in Consort touching the Eyes and Sight Experiment Solitary touching the Colour of the Sea or other Water Experiment Solitary touching Shell-Fish Experiment Solitary touching the Right Side and the Left Experiment Solitary touching Frictions Experiment Solitary touching Globes appearing Flat at Distance Experiment Solitary touching Shadows Experiment Solitary touching the Rowling and Breaking of the Seas Experiment Solitary touching the Dulcoration of Salt Water Experiment Solitary touching the Returne of Saltnesse in Pits vpon the Sea-Shore Experiment Solitary touching Attraction by Similitude of Substance Experiment Solitary touching Attraction Experiment Solitary touching Heat vnder Earth Experiment Solitary touching Flying in the Aire Experiment Solitary touching the Dye of Scarlet Experiment Solitary touching ●●●● Experiment Solitary touching the Rise of Water by Meanes of Flame Experiments in Consort touching the Influences of the Moone Experiment Solitary touching Vinegar Experiment Solitary touching Creatures that Sleepe all Winter Experiment Solitary touching the Generating of Creatures by Copulation and by Putrefaction Experiments in Consort touching the Transmission and Influx or Im●●teriate Vertues and the Force of Imagination Experiments in Consort Moa●● touching Transmission of Spirits and the Force of Imagination Experiments in Consort touching Emission of Spirits in Vapour or Exhalation Odour-like Experiment Solitary touching the Emissions of Spiritual Species which Affect the Senses Experiments in Consort touching the Emission of Immatcriate Vertues from the Mindes and Spirits of Men either by Affectious or by Imaginations or by other Impressions Experiments in Consort touching the Secret Vertue of Sympathy and Antipathy Experiment Solitary touching Secret Proprieties Experiment Solitary touching the Generall Sympathy of Mens Spirits
not take vpon vs now to Enumerate them all The Insecta haue beene noted by the Ancients to feed little But this hath not beene diligently obserued For Grashoppers eat vp the Greene of whole Countries And Silke-wormes deuoure Leaues swiftly And Ants make gret Prouision It is true that Creatures that Sleepe and rest much Eat little As Dormise and Bats c. They are all without Bloud Which may be for that the Iuyce of their Bodies is almost all one Not Bloud and Flesh and Skin and Bone as in Perfect Creatures The Integrall Parts haue Extreme Variety but the Similar Parts little It is true that they haue some of them a Disphragme and an Intestine And they haue all Skins Which in most of the Insecta are cast often They are not generally of long Life Yet Bees haue beene knowne to liue seuen yeares And Snakes are thought the rather for the Casting of their Spoils to liue till they be Old And Eeles which many times breed of Putrefaction will liue and grow very long And those that Enterchange from Wormes to Flyes in the Summer and from Flyes to Wormes in the Winter haue beene kept in Boxes oure kyears at the least Yet there are certain Flyes that are called Ephemera that liue but a day The Cause is the Exility of the Spirit Or perhaps the Absence of the Sunne For that if they were brought in or kept close they might liue longer Many of the Insecta as Butterflies and other Flies reuiue easily when they seeme dead being brought to the Sunne or Fire The Cause whereof is the Diffusion of the Vitall Spirit and the Easie Dilating of it by a little Heat They stirre a good while after their Heads are off or that they be cut in Pecces Which is caused also for that their Vitall Spirits are more diffused thorow-out all their Parts and lesse confined to Organs than in Perfect Creatures The Insecta haue Voluntary Motion and therefore Imagination And whereas some of the Ancients haue said that their Motion is Indeterminate and their Imagination Indefinite it is negligently obserued For Arts goe right forwards to their Hills And Bees doe admirably know the way from a Flowry Heath two or three Miles off to their Hiues It may be Gnats and Flyes haue their Imagination more mutable and giddy as Small Birds likewise haue It is said by some of the Ancients that they haue onely the Sense of Feeling which is manifestly vntrue For if they goe forth-right to a Place they must needs haue Sight Besides they delight more in one Flower or Herbe than in another and therefore haue Taste And Bees are called with Sound vpon Brasse and therefore they haue Hearing Which sheweth likewise that though their Spirit be diffused yet there is a Seat of their Senses in their Head Other Obseruations concerning the Insecta together with the Enumeration of them wee referre to that place where wee meane to handle the Title of Animal's in generall A Man Leapeth better with Weights in his Hands than without The Cause is for that the Weight if it be proportionable strengthneth the Sinneues by Contracting them For otherwise where no Contraction is needfull Weight hindereth As wee see in Horse-Races Men are curious to fore-see that there be not the least Weight vpon the one Horse more than vpon the other In Leaping with Weights the Armes are first cast backwards and then forwards with so much the greater Force For the Hands goe backward before they take their Raise Quaere if the contrary Motion of the Spirits immediately before the Motion wee intend doth not cause the Spirits as it were to breake forth with more Force As Breath also drawne and kept in commeth forth more forcibly And in Casting of any Thing the Armes to make a greater Swing are first cast backward Of Musicall Tones and Vnequall Sounds wee haue spoken before But touching the Pleasure and Displeasure of the Senses not so fully Harsh Sounds as of a Sawe when it is sharpened Grinding of one Stone against another Squeaking or Skriching Noise make a Shiuering or Horrour in the Body and set the Teeth on edge The Cause is for that the Obiects of the Eare doe affect the Spirits immediately most with Pleasure and Offence We see there is no Colour that affecteth the Eye much with Displeasure There be Sights that are Horrible because they excite the Memory of Things that are Odious or Fearefull But the same Things Painted doe little affect As for Smells Tastes and Touches they be Things that doe affect by a Participation or Impulsion of the Body of the Obiect So it is Sound alone that doth immediately and incorporeally affect most This is most manifest in Musicke and Concords and Discords in Musicke For all Sounds whether they be sharpe or Flat if they be Sweet haue a Roundnesse and Equality And if they be Harsh are Vnequall For a Discord it selfe is but a Harshnesse of Diners Sounds Meeting It is true that Inequality not Stayed vpon but Passing is rather an Encrease of Sweetnesse As in the Purling of a Wreathed String And in the Rancity of a Trumpet And in the Nightinghale-Pipe of a Regall And in a Discord straight falling vpon a Concord But if you stay vpon it it is Offensiue And therefore there bee these three Degrees of Pleasing and Displeasing in Sounds Sweet Sounds Discords and Harsh Sounds which we call by diuers Names as Skriching or Grating such as wee now speake of As for the Setting of the Teeth on Edge we see plainly what an Intercourse there is betweene the Teeth and the Organ of the Hearing by the Taking of the End of a Bow betweene the Teeth and Striking vpon the String NATVRALL HISTORIE VIII Century THere be Mineralls and Fossiles in great Varietie But of Veines of Earth Medicinall but few The Chiefe are Terra Lemnia Terra Sigillata communis and Bolus Arminus Whereof Terra Lemnia is the Chiefe The Vertues of them are for Curing of Wounds Stanching of Bloud Stopping of Flaxes and Rheumes and Arresting the Spreading of Poison Infection and Putrefaction And they haue of all other Simples the Perfectest and Purest Qualitie of Drying with little or no Mixture of any other Qualitie Yet it is true that the Bole-Arminicke is the most Cold of them And that Terra Lemnia is the most Hot For which Cause the Island Lemnos where it is digged was in the Old Fabulous Ages consecrated to Vulcan About the Bottome of the Straights are gathered great Quantities of Sponges which are gathered from the sides of Rocks being as it were a large but tough Mosse It is the more to be noted because that there be but few Substances Plant-like that grow deepe within the Sea For they are gathered sometimes fifteene Fathome deepe And when they are laid on Shoare they seeme to be of great Bulke But crushed together will be transported in a very small Roome It seemeth that Fish that are vsed to
1. ibid. Of Bodies Sulphureous and Mercuriall Exp. 5. pag. 95 Of the Chameleon Exp. 1. pag. 96 Of Subterrany Fires Exp. 1. pag. 97 Of Nitrous Water Exp. 1. ibid. Of Congealing of Aire Exp. 1. ibid. Of Congealing Water into Crystall Exp. 1. ibid. Of Preseruing the Smell and Colour in Rose-Leaues Exp. 1. pag. 98 Of the Lasting of Flame Exp. 10. ibid. Of Infusions or Burialls of diuers Bodies in Earth Exp. 5. pag. 101 Of the Affects of Mens Bodies from seuerall Winds Exp. 1. pag. 102 Of Winter and Summer Sicknesses Exp. 1. ibid. Of Pestilentiall Yeares Exp. 1. ibid. Of Epidemicall Diseases Exp. 1. ibid. Of Preseruation of Liquours in Wells or deepe Vaults Exp. 1. ibid. Of Stutting Exp. 1. pag. 103 Of Sweet Smells Exp. 4. ibid. Of the Goodnesse and Choice of Waters Exp. 7. pag. 104 Of Temperate Heats vnder the AEquinoctiall Exp. 1. pag. 105 Of the Colouration of Blacke and Tawney Moores Exp. 1. ibid. Of Motion after the instant of Death Exp. 1. pag. 106 Century V. OF Accelerating or Hastening forward Germination Exper. 12. pag. 109 Of Retarding or putting backe Germination Exp. 9. pag. 112 Of Meliorating or making better Fruits and Plants Exp. 55. pag. 114 Of Compound Fruits and Flowers Exp. 3. pag. 122 Of Sympathy and Antipathy of Plants Exp. 19. pag. 123 Of Making Herbs and Fruits Medicinable Exp. 2. pag. 128 Century VI. OF Curiosities about Fruits and Plants Exp. 17. pag. 131 Of the Degenerating of Plants And of their Transmutation one into another Exp. 14. pag. 135 Of the Proceritie and Lownesse of Plants And of Artificiall Dwarsing them Exp. 5. pag. 138 Of the Ruatments of Plants And of the Excrescences of Plants or Super-Plants Exp. 26. ibid. Of producing Perfect Plants without Seed Exp. 11. pag. 143 Of Forraine Plants Exp. 3. pag. 144 Of the Seasons of seuerall Plants Exp. 6. pag. 145 Of the Lasting of Plants Exp. 5. pag. 146 Of seuerall Figures of Plants Exp. 3. pag. 147 Of some principall Differences in Plants Exp. 4. pag. 148 Of all Manner of Composts and Helps for Ground Exp. 6. pag. 149 Century VII OF the Affinities and Differences betweene Plants and Bodies Inanimate Exp. 6. pag. 153 Of Affinities and Differences betweene Plants and Liuing Creatures And of the Consiners and Participles of Both. Exp. 3. pag. 154 Of Plants Experiments Promiscuous Exp. 67. pag. 155 Of Healing of Wounds Exp. 1. pag. 169 Of Fat diffused in Flesh. Exp. 1. ibid. Of Ripening Drinke speedily Exp. 1. pag. 170 Of Pilositie and Plumage Exp. 1. ibid. Of the Quicknesse of Motion in Birds Exp. 1. ibid. Of the Clearnesse of the Sea the North Wind blowing Exp. 1. ibid. Of the Different Heats of Fire and Boyling Water Exp. 1. ibid. Of the Qualification of Heat by Moisture Exp. 1. pag. 171 Of Yawning Exp. 1. ibid. Of the Hiccough Exp. 1. ibid. Of Sneezing Exp. 1. pag. 172 Of the Tendernesse of the Teeth Exp. 1. ibid. Of the Tongue Exp. 1. ibid. Of the Mouth out of Taste Exp. 1. ibid. Of some Prognosticks of Pestilentiall Seasons Exp. 1. ibid. Of Speciall Simples for Medicines Exp. 1. ibid. Of Venus Exp. 3. pag. 173 Of the Infecta or Creatures bred of Putrefaction Exp. 3. pag. 174 Of Leaping Exp. 1. pag. 177 Of the Pleasures and Displeasures of Hearing and of the other Senses Exp. 1. ibid. Century VIII OF Veines of Earth Medicinall Exp. 1. pag. 181 Of Sponges Exp. 1. ibid. Of Sea-Fish in Fresh Waters Exp. 1. pag. 182 Of Attraction by Similitude of Substance Exp. 1. ibid. Of Certaine Drinks in Turkey Exp. 1. ibid. Of Sweat Exp. 6. pag. 183 Of the Glo-Worme Exp. 1. pag. 184 Of the Impressions vpon the Body from seuerall Passions of the Mind Exp. 10. ibid. Of Drunkennesse Exp. 4. pag. 187 Of the Hurt or Helpe of Wine taken moderately Exp. 1. pag. 188 Of Catterpillers Exp. 1. ibid. Of the Flyes Cantharides Exp. 1. pag. 189 Of Lassitude Exp. 2. ibid. Of Casting the Skin and Shell in some Creatures Exp. 1. ibid. Of the Postures of the Body Exp. 3. pag. 190 Of Pestilentiall Yeares Exp. 1. ibid. Of some Prognosticks of Hard Winters Exp. 1. ibid. Of certaine Medicines that condense and releeue the Spirits Exp. 1. pag. 191 Of paintings of the Body Exp. 1. ibid. Of the vse of Bathing and Annointing Exp. 1. ibid. Of Chamoletting of Paper Exp. 1. pag. 192 Of Cuttle-Inke Exp. 1. ibid. Of Earth increasing in Weight Exp. 1. ibid. Of Sleepe Exp. 3. ibid. Of Teeth and Hard Substances in the Bodies of Liuing Creatures Exp. 11. pag. 193 Of the Generation and Bearing of Liuing Creatures in the Wombe Exp. 3. pag. 195 Of Species Visible Exp. 2. pag. 196 Of Impulsion and Percussion Exp. 3. pag. 197 Of Titillation Exp. 1. pag. 198 Of Scarcity of Raine in AEgypt Exp. 1. ibid. Of Clarification Exp. 1. ibid. Of Plants without Leaues Exp. 1. pag. 199 Of the Materialls of Glasse Exp. 1. ibid. Of Prohibition of Putrefaction and the long Conseruation of Bodies Exp. 1. ibid. Of Abundance of Nitre in certaine Sea-Shoares Exp. 1. ibid. Of Bodies borne vp by Water Exp. 1. ibid. Of Fuell consuminglittle or nothing Exp. 1. ibid. Of Cheape Fuell Exp. 1. pag. 201 Of Gathering of Wind for Freshnesse Exp. 1. ibid. Of Trialls of Aires Exp. 1. ibid. Of Increasing Milke in Milch-Beasts Exp. 1. ibid. Of Sand of the Nature of Glasse Exp. 1. pag. 202 Of the Growth of Corall Exp. 1. ibid. Of the Gathering of Manna Exp. 1. ibid. Of Correcting of Wines Exp. 1. ibid. Of Bitumen one of the Materialls of Wilde-Fire Exp. 1. pag. 203 Of Plaster growing as hard as Marble Exp. 1. ibid. Of the Cure of some Vlcers and Hurts Exp. 1. ibid. Of the Healthfulnesse or Vnhealthfulnesse of the Southerne Wind. Exp. 1. ibid. Of Wounds made with Brasse and with Iron Exp. 1. ibid. Of Mortification by Cold. Exp. 1. pag. 204 Of Weight Exp. 1. ibid. Of Super-Natation of Bodies Exp. 1. ibid. Of the Flying of Vnequall Bodies in the Aire Exp. 1. ibid. Of Water that it may be the Medium of Sounds Exp. 1. pag. 205 Of the Flight of the Spirits vpon odious Obiects Exp. 1. ibid. Of the Super-Reflexion of Eccho's Exp. 1. ibid. Of the Force of Imagination imitating that of the Sense Exp. 1. pag. 206 Of Preseruation of Bodies Exp. 1. ibid. Of the Growth or Multiplying of Metalls Exp. 1. ibid. Of the Drowning the more base Metall in the more Pretious Exp. 1. ibid. Of Fixation of Bodies Exp. 1. pag. 207 Of the Restlesse Nature of Things in Themselues and their Desire to Change Exp. 1. ibid. Century IX OF Perception in Bodies Insensible tending to Naturall Diuination and Subtill Trialls Exp. 30. pag. 211 Of the Causes of Appetite in the Stomach Exp. 1. pag. 217 Of Sweetnesse of Odour from the Rain-Bow Exp. 1. ibid. Of Sweet Smells Exp. 1. pag. 218 Of the Corporeall Substance of Smells Exp. 1. ibid. Of Fetide and Fragrant Odours Exp. 1. ibid. Of the