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A03361 A briefe and pleasaunt treatise, intituled, Naturall and artificiall conclusions: written first by sundrie scholers of the Vniuersitie of Padua in Italie, at the instant request of one Barthelmewe a Tuscane: and now Englished by Thomas Hill Londoned [sic], as well for the commoditie of sundrie artificers, as for the matters of pleasure, to recreate wittes at vacant tymes; Naturall and artificiall conclusions. Hill, Thomas, b. ca. 1528. 1581 (1581) STC 13480.5; ESTC S106219 21,960 64

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with the licour of the freshe Wormes of the grounde or rather the water of Artely distilled beeyng before some what brused suche a Sworde dagger or knife saieth he shall after haue suche a straunge edge if the same red hotte be quenched fower or fiue tymes in it that with the same you maie cutt Iron so easely as if it were Lead Also he writeth that if Steele bee often molten in the Furnace and so purified vntill the same bee so white as Siluer in a maner and then after of the same fashion grauyng Instrumentes with their edges and poin●tes orderly like as to the art of grauyng belongeth whiche instrumentes beyng redde hotte quenchte a●ter into the iuice of Radishe and the destilled water of the Wormes of the yearth mixed together Or els with that water of the Wormes drau●en through a cleane Linnen clothe so that there be so muche of this water as of the iuice of the Radishe and then those instrumentes quencht foure or fiue times in the aboue saied licour And after will the edges and poinetes of the instrumentes bee so hard that you maie cut and graue in any stone and Iron so easely as the same were Lead How to keepe weapons cleane and faire for a long tyme. ANd to do this take Barrowes greace common Oile newe Waxe Ceruse of eche a like these tēper together very well ouer a soft fire vn●ill thei be throughly incorporated and after anoint the burnished weapon with this ointment and it shall so continue in the same brightnesse in secula secu●orum And there can not be a greater secrete inuented for the keepyng bright of weapons then this is if these wordes bee well vnderstanded How to make Steele so soft as past a proper secret DOe thus Take the gall of an Ore Bans vrine ●er●es and the ●y●e of the Nettle of eache of the●e take a little quantitie and mi●e them very diligently together then after quenche the Steele red hot in this licour sower or fiue times together and it will after become so soft as paste And this is a ●ight proper and necessarie secrete to be vnderstanded of all suche workemen as dooe any matters in Steele as grauyng and suche like if these wordes be well marked ¶ How to make Hens laye Egges all the winter through TO doe this take the toppes of the Nettles when they begin to come vnto seede and drye them whiche so dryed giue a little of the same with Bran and Hempseede mingled together to your Hens and thei shall euery daie after laye you an Egge a peece ¶ How to make thy Chamber appeare full of Snakes and Adders TO doe this kill a Snake puttyng the same into a pan with Waxe and lette it so long boyle vntill the same be through drye and of that waxe make a Candle lightyng the same in the Chamber and then after shall appeare as though there were a thousande creepyng in thy Chamber ¶ How to make letters appeare of the colour of Golde Copper or Siluer AND to doe this take very cleere Christal and worke the same into merueilous fine pouder on a Marble stone and after mixe the same pouder with the white of an Egge vntill this be so prepared to write withal And after with this confection write what letters you will lettyng the same drye and after rubbe a golde Ring or any peece of golde on the same letters and all the letters shall appeare like gold And in the like sort maie you make the letters either appeare like siluer or copper ¶ How to make any peece of Iron to appeare like golde AND to doe this take foure pintes of Raine water into which put ten drammes of Roch Allum and ten drammes of Orpiment of Romain Vitrioll and Salt Gemme of each one an vnce and a scruple of Coperas all these boyle together after put there into a quart of Vineger and of Tartare and common Salt finely beaten to pouder of eache three vnces all these incorporate againe ouer a soft fire very well and after occupie the same whiche maketh a colour like vnto golde ¶ How to haue freshe Roses at all tymes of the yeare sundrie waies taught AND first if you will haue fresh Roses at any tyme so well as in the Moneth of May then gather the buddes halfe open in a maner in the Euenyng when as the Sunne is set and touch them not with thy hande in the gatheryng but with a sharpe knife properly gather them after laye the Roses vppon a boord lettyng them to lye abroad in a faire night al y ● night through and then after haue in a readinesse a newe earthen potte well glased within and with out into wh●che put the former Roses before the Sunne be vp in the mornyng and stop close the mouth of that pott with claie mixed with Horsdung and flocks all tempered well together before whereby no ayre of the Roses maye passe or breathe forthe After sette the same potte into the grounde coueryng it in drye Sande and lette no moyst place bee neere or about the same And now on this wise may you haue freshe Roses at any tyme of the yeare Also take of the Rose buds in the spring time when thei begin first to open and put tho●e into a greene Cane yet growyng cleanyng the same by little and little vntill you maie handsomely putte in those buds and after tye that place with a threed stoppyng the same about that no ayre breathe out and after couer that neece of the Cane or Reede so bounde and stopped about vnder the earth bowyng downe the same stalke by little and little that the same breake not and couer the same well with the earth lettyng it there remayne so long as you lift and when you bee mynded to haue them forthe then cleane the Cane by little and little that you spoyle not the bu●des and after set theim in the Su●ne or in luke warme water a●d they s●a●be open and faire in a short space as in the middest of Maie Also if you will make drye Roses to become freshe then take a newe glased pot and wet the same with in w●th Rose water and after shut that pot with the Roses very close lettyng it so to stande for fiue daies and they shall be freshe ¶ How to make Beanes and other seedes growe vp in foure houres AND first to make Beanes grow vp in an houres space take the Beanes and put them in hot Oile lettyng them there remaine for a xl daies and after drye them And when you will make the proofe of them then set the Beanes and goe to dinner and by that tyme you rise againe from the Table and goe to looke on them you shall finde them growe vp well a spanne high And the like maie you doe with the Gourdes And now to make the Gourdes growe vp in the space of foure houres bothe with leaues and flowers take the seede of the Gourde and let them lye in the bloud of a s●nguine
¶ A briefe and pleasaunt treatise entituled Naturall and Artificiall conclusions Written first by sundrie scholers of the Vniuersitie of Padua in Italie at the instant request of one Barthelmewe a Tuscane And now Englished by Thomas Hill Londoned as well for the commoditie of sundrie Artificers as for the matters of pleasure to recreate wittes at vacant tymes Imprinted at London by Ihon Kyngston for Abraham Kitson 1581. The Preface to the Reader WHere of late gentle Reader in my Preface of that treatise of the Interpretation of sundrie dreames bothe of Iosephes and Salomons togethe● I did there promise to set forth a little treatise of Naturall Artificiall Conclusions whiche now I haue performed wishyng the Reader to giue his fauourable reading report of them not set foorthe for any necessitie of them but rather for the recreation of wittes at vacant tymes And yet I must confesse that some of them bee necessarie for sund●ie Artificers to knowe and the rest for matters of pleasure as in the readyng of them shall appeare Whiche gentle Reader takyng in good part and construyng my meanyng vnto the beste then promise to further you shortly with my treatise of Problemes and then naturall answeres annexed and that aptly answered And a brief Herball verie rare for the meruailous matters that naturall taught in the same And a treatise of the rare and straunge wonders seen in the aire for these many yeres paste in sundrie Realmes and Countries right pleasaunt to reade All whi● he gentle Reader looke for at the Printers handes so shortly as maie bee In the meane tyme buye and giue the readyng of these vnto the better hope of the rest Naturall and Artificiall Conclusions The propertie of the Adamant Stone FIrst if any holde the Adamant Stone in his hande vnder a goblet or siluer bole or vnder a table and that the same bee moued to and fro in the hand then in the like maner will the Iron or Needle styng in the goblet or on the table moue to and fro and round about Also the Adamant sometimes with the one corner will drawe Iron vnto it and with the other corner put the Iron from it Also if any annointeth this Stone with Garlicke it doeth then hinder the Stone from drawyng any Iron or Needle vnto it although the Needle should bee laied on the Stone And some write that this Stone will drawe Glasse vnto it in like maner as it doeth the Iron The secret properties of the Egge ANd first the round Egge set vnder the Henne bringeth foorthe a Hen chicken and the long Egge set vnder the Hen bringeth forth a Cocke chickē Also the Egge with the shell laied to steepe in Vineger for three daies space doeth after so softē it that any maie worke the same at length like vnto Waxe And the same Egge afterward laied in water doeth come againe vnto the former state Also if an Egge bee painted with sundrie colours and the same set vnder a Henne to bryng forthe she shall hatche a chicken hauyng the like feathers vnto the coulours painted on the Egge Also the Egge laied for three daies to steepe in strōg Vineger and after for one whole Monethe laied to drie againe in the Sunne will after come vnto the hardnesse of a stone ¶ A proper conclusion of an Hasellsticke FIrst take an Haselsticke of a yarde long beyng newe cut of and thesame cleaue iuste in the middle giuyng the one ende so cleaued vnto thy companion to hold in bothe his handes and th'other ende holde your self in bothe your handes after suche sorte that bothe the inner partes of the sticke maie looke one right against the other in the laiyng doune on the grounde and must also bee laied a sunder vnto the breadth of twoo fingers in suche sorte that thei maie touch together by an ouerthwart maner at some one place within a while after you shall see them drawe and ioyne together againe of them selues And this vnderstande that the sticke must bee newe cleaued soone after the cuttyng vp of it for otherwise this sticke woorketh not the proper effect ¶ A proper practise to make a Capon to bryng vp yong Chickens FIrst to doe this take a Capō and pull the beallie bare of feathers and after rubbe the naked place with Nettles settyng yong Chickens vnder hym and he will then meruailouslie cherishe them and bryng them kindely vp And the rather if you so accustome to vse the Capon the like for a tyme For by that meanes he is moued the willynger to cherishe bryng vp and feede yea and to loue them so well as the Hen naturally would doe And the reason of this is in that thorowe the prickyng of the Nettles he is thereby the rather desirous to touche the soft doune and feathers of the yong Chickens sittyng vnder hym ¶ To make any foule of what condition the same bee to haue feathers all white TO doe this take the Egges and roll them in the iuice of the herbe called Mouseare or in the herbe called Houselike or otherwise in oile after the minde of Cardanus and after put the Egges againe in the Neast for after the hatchyng their feathers shall grow white ¶ To make a Candle burne in the water AND to doe this take Waxe Brimstone and Vineger of eche a like boile these altogether ouer the Fire vntil the vineger appeare all consumed and then after of that Waxe remainyng make a Candle and you shall see the proper effecte as aboue is written ¶ To make a woman that she shall not eate of the meates set vpon the Table TO doe this take a little of the grene Basill and when one bringeth any dishes of meate vnto the table then put the same hearbe secretly vnder one of the platters or dishes that she espie it not and as long as the hearbe so lieth on the table the woman shall eate nothyng of that meate in the platter or dishe whiche couereth the hearbe ¶ A proper secret of the Philosophers to make a Stone to burne without fire AND to doe this take Calamite Brimstone vnflecked lime pitche Ceruse of eche of these three drāmes of Camphora one dram Asphaltum three drammes all these make in pouder and put the same into a strong potte well stopped and after make a fire vnder the potte encreasyng the same by little and little vntill the pouder in the potte become so hard as a stone and when you will haue it burne then rubbe the same well with a clothe and it will burne sodainl● and whē you will put the same out then spit vpon it and after set the same in a moist place and it will goe out ¶ To make one to see fearfull sightes in his sleepe ANd to doe this take the bloud of a ●●●apwyng and therewith annoint the pulses of thy foreheade be●ore thy goyng to reste and then after in thy sleepe thou shalt see bothe meruailous and fearfull sightes as Vitalis Medicus writeth Also he writeth
three or foure times or o●tner aboute thy hande and the other ende of the Corde or Rope winde about by the top of the Palme betweene the fore finger and thumbe that the one part of the corde maie reache vnto the Nayle and the head or other ende vnto the bottome of the Plame by whiche it must againe be winded about and after that winded againe once or twise aboute And this so done then with a vehement plucke and force assaye in the same part by which it is so ouer winded or runne with the Corde for that the substance of the Corde or Rope whiche is vnder doeth defende that the hande can take no harme by the hasty and strong pull and take heede that the vttermost folde of the Corde slyde not in thy hande And to conclude this conceiue that in the mightie and hastie plucke together the one folde of the Corde doeth so cut the other in sunder and then especi●lly when as that parte shall bee sette soft whiche is betweene the hand and the nayle and that both the hande be strong and then plucke out right and quick And now if you will conceiue this order in the windyng of the Corde about both the handes you may so breake the same with the onely strength of the handes yea suche strong Cordes or Ropes as will well holde a Bullocke or Cowe vnto the admiration or wondering of the lookers on ¶ How to make white Flowers like as the Lilly white Rose and suche like to be red AND to doe this fill a pint pot of the best red Wine vnto the middle of it and within the mouth of the pot hāg the white ●lowers so deepe in that thei touch not the wine after that couer the mouth of the pot very close so that no aire of the wine breath out and then let it so stande for one whole daie and they will after become red of colour And to make suche flowers that be● naturally white to become red dooe this first take grose earth driyng the same very well in the Sunne that you maie after bryng the same into very fine pouder and after put the same earth into a pot or halfe Tubbe where you mynde to plant your white flowers to become redde and after they be so planted in the earth then let thē not be watered at any tyme with any other water then this whiche is made on this wise Take water puttyng therein a certaine quantitie of Brasill finely cut and boyle the same vnto a third parte whiche water after take and beyng through colde water by little and little the same earth as bothe at mornyng and euenyng and water it at no tyme with any other water then this vntil you see that the same water first haue taken effect ¶ How to make a hollow Ring to daunce by it self a proper secrete AND to doe this take a Ring rounde about hollowe into whiche put quicksiluer and stopp the same fast that it runne not forth After heate the Ring somewhat in the fire or lette it lye neere vnto the fire and beeyng hot laie the same on a Table or Stoole which by and by after wil begin to daunce of it self vntill it be colde againe ¶ To make Glewe to holde together so hard as a stone a proper secret AND to do this take vnfleke Lime and quench the same with wine and beate the same into fine powder mixing therewith both Figges and Swines greace and after labour them well together for this as Plinie writeth passeth the hardnesse of a Stone Also take Greeke Pitch Rosin and the powder of Tyle stones these mixe together and when you will occupie of the same then heate it ouer the fire and worke therewith for when the same is colde it holdeth them together so harde as any Nayle Also take of Spuma ferri one pounde of Tyle shardes tw●● pounde ●f vnslekt Lyme foure pounde of Oyle of Linseede so muche as shall suffice to prepare and worke them together for this Glewe is merueilous strong whiche neither feareth nor yeeldeth to water nor fire ¶ To make an Apple moue on the Table a proper secrete HOw to doe this take an Apple and cut the same in the middest and in the one halfe make a rounde hole putting therein a black ●eetle and so laie the same half on the Table and it will then moue ¶ To make Roses and other flowers that be red to become white AND to doe this take Brimstone beating the same into fine pouder whiche powder burne on a newe Tylestone holdyng suche red flowers or Roses ouer the smoake of it whiles it so burneth and thei will after become white and on this wise you maye make your Roses halfe white and half red or one leafe white and an other red by a cappe of paper so cut for the nouce ¶ How to write letters on the Egshell that the same letters maie appeare within on the Egge AND to do this take a little quantitie bothe of Gales and Allome whiche woorke together with Vineger after write with this licour what you will on the shell and that dryed laye then the Egge●●triue or els anoynt the Egge aboute w●th Waxe vnto the thicknesse of a Paper or somewhat more and with a fine bodkin write deepe letters that the hoales may be open and the letters apparant into the whiche holes poure of this licour and when the same is dryed on the Egge then seeth the Egge vntill it bee harde and after laye the same to soake in sharp Vineger through the which soaking the letters will so passe through the shell that the letters maie be seen on the Egge after the shell is pulled of How to make a Bottle or a narrowe mouth pot full of water or milke not to spill or shed forthe TO doe this take the Bottle or narrowe mouth Pot and fill the same vnto the brimme after couer the mouthe with a Paper and then turne the mouth dounward on the mouth of an other pot and nothyng shall shed forthe as by a triall in fillyng the one pot with Milke and the other maie be seene How to kill Fleas diuers waies AND first to gather all the Fleas of thy Chamber into one place anoint a Staffe with the greace of a Foxe or Headghog and laie the Staffe againe where you list in your chamber and it shall so gather al the Fleas by it Also sill a dish with Goates bloud and set the same by the bed and all the Fleas will come to it roūd aboute And the like will they doe by the bloud of the Headghog Also take the fat of a Goate and anoint what you list therewith and set the same vnder your bed and all the Fleas will gather vnto the same Also take Lupines or flat Beanes boyle them in water with Wormwood and that water sprinkle well aboute the Chamber and al the Fleas shall auoyde that Chamber Also take an Apple of Coliquintida and infuse the same in
water and in that water boyle Wormewood whiche cast aboute the Chamber killeth all the Fleas And the like doeth the Peache leaues or Veruein or Colyander boyled in water and so cast about ¶ How to make a pot of Glasse not to sinke in the water a proper secrete TO dooe this first fill a glass pot full of Water or Wine vnto the brimme for otherwise it sincke●h downe is drowned in the settyng of it in the water the reasō of which appeareth by this demonstration Imagin that the pot be D. whose necke is A.B.C. the vacant parte of it A B. in that A.B. doe●h beare about water through the ayre which is contained therein and the waight of the glasse A. B draweth towarde the Centere and A.D.C. cannot descende by straight line downe for that it shall labour in vaine And therefore the signifier D. howeth in that D when as the wine is set in the water it resisteth not and therefore A.B. doeth descend vntil it come vnto the vpper face of the water but when A.B. shall bee in the vpper face of the water the part E. is then drouned in that it is the neather parte and all the necke of the pot How to make a thin Glewe very profitable a proper secrete AND to dooe this take the Glewe made of Fishes beatyng the same strongly on an Anuell vntill it bee thinne whiche after laie to soake in water vntil it become very soft and tender which will be within fiue or sixe houres and then work it like past to make small rolles therof which when it is like vnto paste stretch it or drawe it out very thin and when you will worke with it then put of the same into an earthen pot wi●h a little fayre water ouer hot embers and skimme the same very cleane and let it so seeth a little while after worke with the same keepyng it still ouer the hotte embers vntill you haue do●n with it for so it fasteneth and bindeth the stronger And in suche sorte that it fastneth peeces of glasse together How to draw a Ring of beyng very hard thrust on and the finger swelled AND if either man or woman hath thrust a Ryng so harde on their finger that he or she cannot drawe the same of through the swellyng of the finger then threede a Needle and drawe the same vnder the Ryng and winde the thred about the finger on the other side and so often winde the thred aboute and diligently consider that the whole ioynt and parte of the finger liyng or beeyng betweene the ioynt and the Ring be couered about with the threede and that no parte be seen of the skinne through the close coueryng of the threed and euen drawe the Needle againe vnder the Ryng and winde the threed like about on the other side and that speedely whereby the Ryng drawne and remooued on the thred by little and little may so passe ouer the ioynt and come of But whylest you are in the doyng of this make no tariaunce or delaie for that the finger doeth so lightly swell that without great paine the Ryng can not be drawne of To make fruites as Apples Peares Quinces and suche like to haue what proper forme you will on them AND to doe this counterfaite on a peece of wood beyng in bigne●se to the fruite whiche you desire what forme you will Or els cutte Romaine or other fashione letters in it to expresse if you list some proper worde which so done then make a moulde with Water and Chalke vnto the thicknesse of thy little finger the same part into the iust hast And when this moulde is drie whiche soone drieth separate then the same from the wood with Oile before And when you haue gotten of the moulde from the wood and parted it in two iust halfes then take the same moulde and binde it mos●e close vnto the fruite beeyng growne vnto his halfe bignesse and let it so continue vntill the fruite become vnto his full bignesse and thē take the moulde away and you shall see the tryall of the former taught How to cut a Glasse a proper secrete AND to doe this steepe a threede in Oile and Brimstone mixt together and compasse the glasse with the thred in the place where you would haue it parted and after kindle and light the sam● and so often doe thus vntil the place he hot and after compasse the same with a threed wet in cold water and it will part so cleane asunder as if the same had been cut with a sharpe painted Diamond How to soften Christall to imprint what you list therein a proper secrete AND to doe this take the bloud of a Lambe and the bloud of a Weather mixyng these together after take thy Christall stone heating it in the fire burning hot and then quenche it in the bloud whiche after will become so soft as paste then with a Copper print worke therein what you list and after set the same abroade in the ayre and it will come againe vnto the former hardnesse How to walke on the water a proper secrete FOR to do this take two little Timbrels and binde them vnder the soles of thy feete and at a staues end fasten an other and with these you maie safely walke on the wate● vnto the wonder of all suche as shall see the same if so be you often exercise the same with a certeine boldnesse and lightnesse of the bodie ¶ To make a Candle to burne a proper secrete FOr to do this first make a weeke of Silke and infuse the same in the Oyle of Hempseede and whē the weeke shall bee sufficiently soaked role the same in Snowe vntill it bee of the bignesse of a greate Candle whereby it maie so be wel wrought together and after light the same settyng it in a sticke and it will giue the like light as a Waxe Candle Also make a Candle of Purpen stone waxe together about the which role Snow and the Snowe will burne vntill it bee all wasted Also take Snow and mixe therewith the powder of Camphire and of the same make a Candle and it will burne beeyng lighted ¶ How to drawe many Candles the one after the other beyng la●ed a foote distaunce or more asunder FOR to dooe this take Brimstone Orpiment and Oile these labour together and make thereof an oyntment after take so many Candles as may well serue your Table whiche laie on the Table a large foote asunder and all a roe the one behinde the other as long as you list to laie them yea a hundred maie you late downe on this wise a length if you laye them streight then take a long threed and anoynt the same in this oyntment whiche after laye a long on the Candles and after drawyng the formost all will followe by order ¶ How to cut an Apple into many peeces without harmyng of the skinne or paryng TO doe this take a most fine Needle with a small threede and thrust the same
by little and litle vnder the paryng and thrust it in againe right against the place vntill you haue so gone rounde about the outside of the Apple And this also remēber that you thrust the needle through the parting at streight corners one against the other of the Apple and this so often doe vntill you come againe vnto the first place where you began And if so be you would deuide the same in sixe or eight peeces then draw the thred againe by a like distaunce alwaies takyng heede to deuide the Apple vnder the skinne and whē you haue thus doen with the Apple and the peeces yet couered with the skinne thē draw ou● the endes of the thred and you shall a●●er deuide the Apple within without ha●●●yng of the paring or skin into so many peeces as you list And when you haue thus drawne ●ut and taken the thred quite awaie you man keepe the Apple so long as you thinke requisite How to make a Cup of Glosse beyng set in the fire not to burne AND to doe this take what Cup or Pot of glasse you list and seeth the same in common Oyle by the space of fiue houres and after take it foorth and it will be then made so strong that the said Cup of glasse or pot will endure the heate of the fire How to m●ke a Candle to be maruailed at a proper secrete AND to doe this take foure vnces of salte Niter sixe vnces of fine Frankēsence three vnces of brimstone sixe vnces of Oyle and sixe vnces of the Mi●ke of Cataputia all these beate fine mixe together after take thrée vnces of Waxe and make then a Candle of altogether in the ende of which Candlesticke sticke deepe a Needle and after set the same in a narrowe mouth glasse full of water and you shal see after what the same will doe ¶ How to make quick siluer in a ma●er so hard as siluer AND to doe this take the strongest Vineger and whites of Egge● wel beaten together and three vnces of quicksiluer vnto one of the other these first still together in a Limbecke wel luted and in that distilled water put the quicksiluer and it will bee after so harde that you maie work it with the hammar Also take quicksiluer and washe it in the distilled water of mans bloud and euery tyme you wash the same let it drie and in the ende it wil come to be so harde as siluer How to see many and diuers straunge sightes in an Vrinall AND to see these take a newe and cleane washed Vrinall into which poure either cleane water or other runnyng water after take the white of an newe layed Egge and a little Saffron bindyng it in a cleane linnen cloth after that poure a little of the water into a dishe and put the cloth with the Saffron into it so long vntill it haue coloured it somwhat and beyng on this wise thē beate the white of the Egge with this water seuē or eight tymes with thy ●inger and then poure the same into the Vrinall and you shall after see in it Towers Castels Hilles and many other straunge sights How to catch Foules without a Net TO doe this take Arsnick puttyng the same in water and in that water boyle Wheate or any other graine and cast the same forthe vnto Foules and so many as eate thereof will not be able afterwarde to flye away And take the iuyce of Celidone and infuse Wheate in the same lettyng it there remaine for thrée daies after giue the same vnto Foules to eate and such as eate thereof you maie after take with the hand Also take Wheate puttyng it in Wine Lees and let the same remaine there eight daies after that put it into the iuyce of Celandine and Horehounde to steepe whiche so doen then giue of the same vnto the foules to eate and suche as eate thereof cannot after flye a waie How to make a loafe of bread newe set vpon the Table to leape of TO doe this take a quill fillyng the same with Quicke siluer and stopping it close thrust the same after into a hot loafe newe drawne out of the Ouen and the loafe will by and by daunce on the Table How to make an Egge flye about amerry conclusion AND to do this take a Gose Egge and after the opening and cleansing of it take a Backe that flyeth in the Euenyng whiche put into the shell then glewe it fast about on the toppe and the Backe wil so flye awaie with it which perhappes will bee thought of some to flye about in the ayre of it self ¶ How to make Artificiall fire diuers waies and that maruailous AND first to make a flame of fire to passe sodeinly out of the mouth of a pot full of water take an Egge makyng an hole in the head and drawe out all the substaunce of the same whiche so dooen then fill the same with the pouder of Brimstone and vnsl●ckt Lime mixed together shuttyng the mouthe with Waxe and then let it fall to the bottome of a quarte potte full of Water takyng quickly your hande awaie and sodainly will issue forthe a flame out of the mouthe of the potte And also if thou wilt spit fire out of thy mouthe without paine and to dooe thee no harme take the pouder of the Willowe sticke finelie beaten and searsed with the whiche ioyne a little newe Silke makyng it rounde vp like vnto a ball into whiche put this pouder wrappyng the Silke well aboute it and after putt it within with the pouder a little fine Flaxe and then properly stitche it vp rounde aboute whiche so dooen then cut it open a little on the one side puttyng a quicke coale or a light Candle vnto it to set it on fire a little then put it againe into thy mouthe holdyng the same softly with thy teethe and tournyng also the parte cut inward in thy mouthe and when thou wilt spit fire out then holde the hall strongly in thy mouth and blowe and the lookers on shall see then a greate flame issue forthe of thy mouth and doe there no harme at all Also to make a fire flye vp in the ayre Take Towe and wet the same in Aquauitae and after put fire to it and blowe the same awaie which after will flye vp in the ayre and burne ¶ How to knowe a naturall precious stone from a counterfaite AND to dooe this rubbe the same on Leade and if it chaunge the colour then it is counterfaite if it chaunge not then it is a naturall Stone Also if the stone haue like vnto a Bladder within then it is counterfaite ¶ How to make a man appeare on a flame burnyng without any harme TO do this take Brimstone Orpiment and common Oyle of these make an oyntment with the whiche anoynt thy garment all about and thy head and handes and after light the same and it will burne all at once without harme Also take iuyce of ●dders tongue the iuyce of March Mallo●es